Understanding the Wallonia-Brussels Federation's Higher Education System
The Wallonia-Brussels Federation (FWB), also known as the French Community of Belgium, oversees higher education for French-speaking regions in Wallonia and the bilingual Brussels-Capital Region. This includes prestigious institutions like the Université Libre de Bruxelles (ULB), Université Catholique de Louvain (UCLouvain), Université de Liège (ULiège), and Université de Mons (UMONS), among others. Higher education in FWB encompasses universities, university colleges (haute écoles), and specialized institutions offering bachelor's, master's, and doctoral programs.
Historically, tuition fees, referred to as 'minerval' in French, have been kept relatively low and uniform to promote accessibility. For over 14 years, the standard minerval stood at €835 per year for most full-time students, with variations based on institution type, program level, and additional fees for goods and services (Fabs). This model aimed to ensure broad access but faced criticism for not reflecting economic realities or incentivizing efficient resource use.
Budgetary Pressures Sparking the Reform
The push for reform stems from mounting budgetary constraints within the FWB government. Announced in late 2025 as part of the 2026 budget, the changes address a decade-plus freeze on fees amid rising inflation and education costs. Officials cite the need for €255 million in savings for 2026, escalating to €500 million by 2029, partly through higher education adjustments.
Minister-President Elisabeth Degryse, responsible for higher education, emphasized that the overhaul balances fiscal responsibility with equity. By introducing progressive fees, the government seeks to protect low-income families while generating revenue from higher earners—estimated to fund infrastructure and quality improvements without broadly deterring enrollment.
Key Features of the New Tuition Fee Structure
Starting September 2026 for the 2026-2027 academic year, the minerval will shift to a unified, income-based model across all FWB higher education institutions. Gone are institution-specific variations and Fabs; instead, fees are standardized into four tiers determined solely by household income.
| Tier | Annual Fee | Eligibility Criteria | Expected % of Students |
|---|---|---|---|
| Scholarship-eligible (lowest income) | €0 | Recipients of FWB study grants (allocations d'études) | ~10% |
| Modest income | €374 | Household resources below threshold (adjusted for dependents) | ~10% (up from 1%) |
| Intermediate income | €835 | Middle household brackets | ~22% |
| Full rate (higher income) | €1,194 | Above intermediate threshold | ~58% |
Household income calculation includes taxable earnings, allowances, and benefits, minus deductions for family size. Applications are centralized via the FWB student grants service, streamlining what was previously handled by individual institutions' social services.
Eligibility and Application Process Step-by-Step
To determine your tier:
- Submit income declaration during enrollment (online portal opening summer 2026).
- FWB administration verifies via tax data and family status within weeks.
- Institutions receive binding category assignment; appeals possible for errors.
- Non-EU students face separate surcharges (€4,175+), with limited exemptions for top performers or bilateral agreements.
This process ensures transparency but raises concerns over data privacy and processing delays during peak enrollment.
Financial Aid Enhancements and Exemptions
To mitigate impacts, the reform expands scholarship access—now covering full minerval for eligible low-income students—and boosts grant amounts. Existing aids like Coopération au Développement bursaries remain. Repeat-year penalties are softened for tier 1-2 students. For details, visit the official FWB guidelines at FWB higher education fees page.
Statistics project 20% more students qualifying for reduced fees, aiming to maintain enrollment equity.
Student Protests and Stakeholder Reactions
Opposition has been vocal. In March 2026, ~3,000 students marched in Brussels, organized by FEF (Fédération des Étudiants Francophones), decrying a '43% hike' for over half of students. Protests at ULB and UCLouvain featured symbolic €1,200 barriers.
FEF president criticized the model as 'university-centric,' arguing it burdens middle-class families amid rising living costs. Unions threaten strikes if unaddressed.
Perspectives from Universities and Experts
Institutions like ULB welcome standardization, expecting €50-100 million extra revenue for research and facilities. ARES (Académie de Recherche et Enseignement Supérieur) endorses the equity focus. Experts note FWB fees remain competitive in Europe (e.g., vs. France's €170-€3,700 or Netherlands' €2,300).
However, non-EU enrollment rose 37% despite prior hikes, signaling resilience.
Disparities for International and Non-EU Students
Non-EU nationals face steeper surcharges, jumping to €4,175 from prior levels, targeting 'non-exempt' students. Exemptions apply to refugees, exchange programs, and high-achievers. This aligns with trends curbing 'visa shopping' while preserving diversity—non-EU numbers grew despite increases. For more, see UMONS circular on non-EU fees.
Regional Comparisons: FWB vs. Flanders and Beyond
- Flanders: Facing €75M cuts, universities hiked fees €150; non-EEA caps incoming 2026.
- France: Variable €170 (public) to €3,700+ (private).
- Germany: Often €0-€500/semester.
FWB's model positions it mid-tier, progressive like Nordic systems.
Potential Impacts on Enrollment, Equity, and Debt
Projections: Minimal enrollment drop (1-2%) due to aids, but middle-income shifts may spur debt. No comprehensive studies yet, but parallels Flanders' post-hike stability. Equity gains via expanded low-fee access could boost underrepresented groups.Eurydice on reforms
Implementation Timeline and Future Outlook
Parliamentary vote April 2026; circulars issued March. Pilot tests for portal in spring. Long-term: Indexation planned, reviews every 3 years. Optimism for hybrid funding blending fees, grants, industry ties.
Photo by Roger Starnes Sr on Unsplash
Practical Advice for Students and Families
- Assess household income early; use FWB simulators (launching June 2026).
- Apply scholarships pre-enrollment.
- Explore part-time work, loans via banks.
- Monitor updates via ARES or student unions.
For balanced views, read ACA analysis.
