Study in Sweden
Student-visa requirements for Sweden by nationality, the maintenance requirement, funding routes, and a working timeline — sourced from official Swedish government pages and date-verified.
At a glance
- maintenance requirement (per year)
- 127,872 SEK
- Living cost (per month)
- 10,656 SEK
- Visa fee
- 1,500 SEK
- Typical processing
- ~12 weeks
- Main intakes
- Jan, Aug
- Nationalities covered
- 32
Understanding the Sweden student visa
Who needs a Swedish student visa, and what it covers
A student visa (or study permit/residence permit, depending on the country) is the legal authorisation that lets international students live in Sweden for the length of an approved course. It is granted against a confirmed place at a recognised institution and proof that you can support yourself while you study — so the application is really about assembling and evidencing a specific set of documents rather than passing an exam.
This page brings those documents together for Sweden: 5 core requirements that almost every applicant must meet, plus 4 that apply only in certain situations. Each one below is explained in full — what it is, why it's asked for, how to obtain it, and the mistakes that most often cause delays or refusals. Every figure is dated and linked to its official Swedish source so you can verify it yourself before you act.
How the money requirement actually works
For Sweden, the headline maintenance requirement is about 127,872 SEK for one year. This is the single most important number in the whole application: insufficient or poorly-evidenced funds is the most common reason student visas are refused, so it is worth getting exactly right rather than approximately right.
Authorities care not just about the amount but about how the money is held and for how long. Many require the balance to have been in an eligible account for a set period before you apply, and to be traceable to a legitimate source. Large, unexplained deposits made just before applying are a classic red flag. If you are sponsored, you will usually need the sponsor's own financial evidence and proof of your relationship as well.
As a sanity check, the figure works out at roughly 10,656 SEK per month — close to the 10,656 SEK/month living cost the same source quotes. High-cost cities can run above this, and consulates may ask for more than the published minimum, so budget with a margin.
Timing: when to start and how long it takes
Once you submit a complete application, Sweden typically takes around 12 weeks to decide it. In practice the real bottleneck is often appointment availability rather than the decision itself — visa-centre and embassy slots in peak season fill up months ahead, so the calendar, not the paperwork, is what catches most applicants out.
The main intakes for Sweden are January and August. Work backwards from your intended start date: secure admission first, then the funds and insurance, then book the visa appointment as soon as you are eligible. Leaving any step late tends to cascade into the next one.
What it costs, beyond the visa fee
Budget for several separate costs, not just one. For Sweden these include the visa/permit fee itself (around 1,500 SEK); the proof-of-funds you must show (about 127,872 SEK, which you keep — it is not a fee), on top of one-off costs like language tests, document translation, and travel. The interactive cost calculator further down this page totals these for your situation.
Where you can choose how to pay — moving tuition or proof-of-funds money across borders, for example — the method matters: bank wires often lose 3–5% to exchange-rate margins and fees that a specialist transfer can avoid. Whatever route you use, keep every receipt; a clean, traceable money trail is itself part of the evidence.
Working during study, and what happens after you arrive
Most study destinations let students work a limited number of hours during term and more during official holidays, but the exact cap, and whether it applies to your specific visa, changes from country to country and is revised fairly often. Rather than rely on a number that may be out of date, confirm the current work allowance for Sweden on the official source linked on this page before you count on any income.
Arrival is not the finish line. Many countries require you to complete steps after you land — registering your address, collecting a residence card, activating health cover, or enrolling formally — within a set window. Build these into your plan so your legal status stays valid from day one.
Student visa by nationality
Funding & scholarships
Plan it
Frequently asked questions
How much proof of funds do I need for a Sweden student visa?
You need to show about 127,872 SEK for the year. This is the official Sweden figure; banks add a margin, so confirm the exact amount with the source linked on this page.
How long does a Sweden student visa take to process?
Typically around 12 weeks once you've submitted a complete application, though embassy appointment availability is often the real bottleneck. Apply as early as you can.
What documents do I need for a Sweden student visa?
The core documents are: Notification of admission (Antagning.se), Maintenance requirement (proof of funds), Tuition fees paid (non-EU/EEA), Valid passport, English language proof. Each is explained in full on this page with how to obtain it and common mistakes to avoid.
Do I need health insurance for a Sweden student visa?
Required for studies shorter than one year; longer stays are covered once you receive a Swedish personal number.
How much is the Sweden student visa fee?
The visa/permit fee is around 1,500 SEK. Other costs (insurance, proof of funds, tests) are separate — use the cost calculator on this page.
When should I apply for a Sweden student visa?
Start as early as your documents allow — typically as soon as you have your admission confirmation and can show the required funds. Processing takes roughly 12 weeks once submitted, but appointment availability is often the real bottleneck in peak season, so book the earliest slot you can.
Can I work on a Sweden student visa?
Most student destinations allow a limited number of working hours during term and more during official holidays, but the exact cap (and whether it applies to your visa) changes periodically. Confirm the current Sweden work allowance on the official source linked on this page before relying on any income.
What happens if my Sweden student visa is refused?
A refusal letter states the reason — most often under-evidenced finances, an incomplete document set, or doubts about your intent to study. You can usually correct the issue and reapply, and in some countries appeal. Read the stated reason carefully, fix that specific point, and strengthen the rest of the file before trying again.