Plan Your Studies in Fransa - Fransa'da Eğitim (tr)
A complete planning guide covering the French academic calendar, Campus Fransa procedure, credential recognition, language requirements, and how to choose between universities and Grandes Ecoles.
Plan Your Studies in Fransa
Studying in Fransa requires careful planning, but the process is more structured and supported than in most countries. Campus Fransa, the government agency dedicated to uluslararasi ogrenciler, provides a clear pathway from initial research to enrolment. This guide walks you through every step — from understanding the French academic system to building a realistic timeline.
Understanding the French Higher Education System
Fransa's higher education system is built on the LMD framework (Licence-Master-Doctorat), aligned with the European Bologna Process:
| Degree | Duration | ECTS credits | Equivalent |
|---|---|---|---|
| Licence | 3 years | 180 | Bachelor's |
| Master | 2 years (after Licence) | 120 | Master's |
| Doctorat | 3+ years (after Master) | — | PhD |
This means French degrees are recognized across Europe and compatible with international credential systems. One important distinction: the French Licence is 3 years (not 4 as in the US), and the Master's is 2 years, so the total time to a Master's degree is 5 years from high school — the same as the US but structured differently.
Other degree types you will encounter
- BUT (Bachelor Universitaire de Technologie) — 3-year professionally-oriented degree at IUTs (Instituts Universitaires de Technologie), combining academic study with internships
- Diplome d'Ingenieur — 5-year engineering degree from an Ecole d'Ingenieurs (Grande Ecole), typically entered after 2 years of classes preparatoires or via parallel kabul
- Diplome de Grande Ecole — typically a Master's-level degree from a business or management Grande Ecole
- BTS (Brevet de Technicien Superieur) — 2-year vocational diploma, similar to an associate degree
The French Academic Calendar
The French academic year follows a fairly standard European structure:
| Period | Dates (typical) | Activity |
|---|---|---|
| Semester 1 | Early September - late January | Lectures, tutorials, projects |
| Exam period 1 | January | First semester exams |
| Semester 2 | Late January/February - late May/June | Lectures, tutorials, projects |
| Exam period 2 | May-June | Second semester exams |
| Resit exams | June-July | Second-chance exams (rattrapage) |
| Summer break | July-August | Vacation, internships |
Key breaks during the year
- Toussaint (All Saints') — 1-2 weeks in late October/early November
- Christmas/New Year — approximately 2 weeks in December/January
- Winter break — 1-2 weeks in February/March (varies by zone)
- Spring break — 1-2 weeks in April (varies by zone)
Ipucu: Fransa divides the country into three school zones (A, B, C) with staggered vacation dates. Check which zone your city falls in when planning travel.
Some programs — particularly at business schools — offer January or February intakes in addition to the standard September start. Check your target program for available entry points.
The Campus Fransa / Etudes en Fransa Procedure
If you are from one of the 60+ countries covered by the Etudes en Fransa platform, this is your mandatory basvuru pathway. It centralizes your basvurus, document verification, and visa pre-approval into one streamlined process.
Countries covered by Etudes en Fransa
The platform covers students from countries across Africa, Asia, the Middle East, and the Americas. Major countries include Algeria, Morocco, Tunisia, Senegal, Cameroon, India, Cin, Vietnam, Brazil, Colombia, Mexico, Turkey, and many more. Check the Campus Fransa website for the complete list.
Students from EU/EEA countries and some others (US, Kanada, Avustralya) typically apply directly to universities or through Parcoursup, without using Etudes en Fransa.
Step-by-step Etudes en Fransa process
- Create an account on the Etudes en Fransa platform (etudes-en-france.campusfrance.org)
- Complete your profile — personal information, academic background, language skills
- Upload documents — transcripts, diplomas, language certificates, CV, motivation letter, passport
- Select programs — choose up to 7 programs, ranked by preference
- Pay the Campus Fransa fee — typically EUR 50-200 depending on your country
- Attend an interview — at your local Campus Fransa office (in person or video), where an advisor reviews your project and motivations
- Receive the pedagogical opinion — Campus Fransa issues an opinion on your basvuru (favourable, reserved, or unfavourable)
- Universities make decisions — you receive acceptance or rejection from each program
- Accept an offer — confirm your chosen program
- Begin visa procedure — with your acceptance, apply for your ogrenci vizesi
Etudes en Fransa timeline
| When | What |
|---|---|
| October-November | Create account, begin filling in your profile |
| November-January | Upload documents, select programs |
| January-March | Campus Fransa interview |
| March-May | Receive universite decisions |
| May-June | Accept offer, begin visa basvuru |
| June-August | Visa processing |
| September | Arrive in Fransa, begin studies |
Ipucu: Start the Etudes en Fransa procedure as early as possible. The interview is a crucial step — prepare by being able to clearly explain why you chose Fransa, why you chose your specific programs, and how they fit your career plans. Advisors are looking for a coherent study project, not just good grades.
Parcoursup — For Bachelor's Applicants
If you are applying for a first-year Licence (Bachelor's) at a French public universite and you are either French, EU/EEA, or in certain other categories, you will use Parcoursup — the national kabuls platform for undergraduate programs.
Parcoursup timeline (for September entry)
| When | What |
|---|---|
| December-January | Platform opens; browse programs |
| January-March | Register and submit wishes (voeux) — up to 10 program choices |
| March-April | Complete and confirm basvuru files |
| June | Main kabul phase — receive offers (accept, decline, or waitlist) |
| June-September | Complementary phase for remaining spots |
Uluslararasi ogrenciler from Etudes en Fransa countries do not use Parcoursup — they use the DAP (Demande d'Admission Prealable) procedure or Etudes en Fransa instead.
Language Requirements
Language requirements depend on whether your program is taught in French or English.
For French-taught programs
| Test | Minimum level typically required | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| DELF B2 | B2 | Most common requirement for Licence programs |
| DALF C1 | C1 | Required or preferred for competitive Master's programs |
| TCF | B2-C1 (scores vary) | Alternative to DELF/DALF; valid for 2 years |
| TCF DAP | B2+ | Specific version required for DAP basvurus |
The DELF (Diplome d'Etudes en Langue Francaise) and DALF (Diplome Approfondi de Langue Francaise) are lifelong certifications — once you pass, you never need to retake them. The TCF (Test de Connaissance du Francais) is a proficiency test valid for 2 years.
For English-taught programs
| Test | Typical minimum score |
|---|---|
| IELTS Academic | 6.0-7.0 (varies by program) |
| TOEFL iBT | 80-100 (varies by program) |
| Cambridge C1 Advanced | 170-185 |
| Duolingo English Test | Accepted by some institutions (check individually) |
Ipucu: Take your language test 9-12 months before your intended start date. Test centres can fill up quickly, and you may need to retake if your score is not high enough. Many Alliance Francaise centres worldwide offer DELF/DALF preparation courses and testing.
Choosing Between Universities and Grandes Ecoles
This is one of the most important decisions for students considering Fransa. Here is a practical comparison:
Choose a public universite if:
- You want the lowest possible tuition (EUR 170-3,770/year)
- You are interested in fundamental research, humanities, social sciences, law, or medicine
- You want broad program choices across all fields
- You prefer a large, diverse student body with more academic freedom
- You plan to pursue a PhD or research career
- You value being in the European universite tradition with ECTS credits and easy mobility
Choose a Grande Ecole if:
- You want intensive, structured training with small class sizes
- You are targeting careers in French corporate leadership, consulting, investment banking, or specific engineering sectors
- You value powerful alumni networks and guaranteed internships (stages)
- You are willing to pay higher tuition (EUR 5,000-50,000/year) for stronger immediate career outcomes
- You are applying at the Master's level, where international kabul tracks are most developed
- You want a highly selective credential recognized by French employers
The hybrid option
Many students do both — completing a Licence at a public universite and then entering a Grande Ecole for their Master's. This combines low-cost undergraduate education with the career advantages of a Grande Ecole degree.
Credential Recognition
If you have international qualifications
Fransa uses ENIC-NARIC Fransa (under the Fransa Education International umbrella) for credential evaluation:
- For universite kabul: universities evaluate your transcripts directly. If your home country's Bachelor's degree is 4 years, you may be able to enter directly into a Master's program (M1). If it is 3 years, this aligns directly with the French Licence.
- For professional purposes: you can request an official attestation of comparability from ENIC-NARIC Fransa, which states the French equivalent of your degree.
- ECTS equivalence: if you studied in another European country, ECTS credits transfer directly. Universities generally accept 60 ECTS per year of completed study.
Classes preparatoires and credential stacking
The Grandes Ecoles system often involves classes preparatoires (CPGE) — 2 years of intensive post-secondary study that prepares students for the concours (entrance exams). Uluslararasi ogrenciler can bypass CPGE by:
- Applying directly to the Grande Ecole's international kabul track (most common for Master's)
- Using their Bachelor's degree for parallel kabul (kabuls paralleles) into the 3rd, 4th, or 5th year of an engineering cycle
- Entering via specific international programs that do not require the concours
Building Your Planning Timeline
Here is a comprehensive timeline for a September start:
| When | Action |
|---|---|
| 18 months before | Research programs and universities; begin learning French if needed |
| 12 months before | Take DELF/DALF or IELTS/TOEFL; attend Campus Fransa fairs; narrow program shortlist |
| 10 months before | Begin Etudes en Fransa procedure or direct basvurus |
| 9 months before | Apply for burslar (Eiffel, Erasmus+, universite-specific) |
| 8 months before | Complete basvuru files; prepare for Campus Fransa interview |
| 6 months before | Campus Fransa interview; receive universite decisions |
| 5 months before | Accept offer; begin visa basvuru |
| 3 months before | Visa appointment; arrange housing; buy saglik sigortasi |
| 1 month before | Book flights; prepare documents for arrival; join student social media groups |
| Arrival | Welcome week; OFII validation; city registration; open bank account |
Ipucu: Join Facebook groups and forums for uluslararasi ogrenciler in your target city before you arrive. Groups like "International Students in Paris/Lyon/Toulouse" are invaluable for housing tips, administrative advice, and making friends before you even land.
Key Resources for Planning
- Campus Fransa (campusfrance.org) — official portal for uluslararasi ogrenciler, program search, and Etudes en Fransa
- Parcoursup (parcoursup.fr) — national undergraduate kabuls platform
- ENIC-NARIC Fransa (france-education-international.fr) — credential recognition
- CIEP/Fransa Education International — DELF/DALF test centres and information
- CROUS (etudiant.gouv.fr) — student housing, restaurants, and financial aid
- CAF (caf.fr) — housing benefit basvurus
Sonraki Adimlar
With your plan in place, move on to the detailed guides:
- Explore programs and universities — find the right institution and program
- Understand the kabuls process — basvurus, documents, and deadlines
- Calculate costs and find funding — budget planning and burslar
- Prepare for your visa — visa types, documents, and arrival steps
Sık Sorulan Sorular
When does the academic year start in Fransa?
What is the Etudes en Fransa procedure?
Do I need to take DELF or DALF to study in Fransa?
What is the LMD system?
How far in advance should I start planning?
Can I transfer credits from another country to a French universite?
Should I choose a universite or a Grande Ecole?
What is a Diplome Universitaire de Technologie (DUT)?
İlgili rehberler
Why Study in Fransa
Fransa combines near-free public universite tuition, prestigious Grandes Ecoles, and one of the richest cultural experiences on earth — here's why over 400,000 uluslararasi ogrenciler choose it every year.
🎓Programs & Universities in Fransa
A comprehensive guide to French higher education institutions — public universities, Grandes Ecoles, business schools, engineering schools, and the 1,500+ English-taught programs available.
📝Admissions & Application to French Universities
Navigate the French kabuls process — Campus Fransa, Etudes en Fransa, Parcoursup, Grandes Ecoles concours, DAP procedure, and basvuru timelines for uluslararasi ogrenciler.
💰Costs & Funding for Studying in Fransa
A complete breakdown of ogretim ucretleri, yasam masraflari, burslar, CAF housing aid, and budgeting for studying in Fransa — one of the most affordable destinations in Europe.
🛂Visa & Arrival in Fransa
Everything you need to know about the French ogrenci vizesi (VLS-TS), Campus Fransa procedure, OFII validation, saglik sigortasi enrollment, and your first weeks in Fransa.
🏡Living in Fransa as a Student
Everything you need to know about student life in Fransa — major cities, CROUS housing, private accommodation, transport, healthcare, French culture, and making the most of your time.
💼Work & Career Opportunities in Fransa
Part-time work rules, student job opportunities, mandatory internships (stages), post-graduation APS permit, and career pathways for international graduates in Fransa.