100 subject hubs 313 institutions 24 scholarships 1,165,102 searchable units 50 live axes 1,119 trade mandates

Global Scholarships Directory

Funding is what separates a hopeful application from a confirmed enrolment, and the global scholarship landscape is wider than most candidates realise. The directory below is hand-curated to surface flagship programmes — the ones that have shaped generations of leaders, scientists, and entrepreneurs across every continent. Each entry is annotated with what the funder actually values in selection, the realistic value of the package, and the type of profile that historically wins. Treat this as a working shortlist rather than a comprehensive database. Apply broadly, apply early, and remember that funder fit usually matters more than raw academic strength alone.

24flagship scholarships
15host countries
7study levels covered
~₹40Cr+combined annual funding pool referenced

Showing 1 of 24 scholarships · country: European Union (multi-country joint masters)

Erasmus Mundus Joint Master Degrees

FunderEuropean Commission
Host countryEuropean Union (multi-country joint masters)
Typefull
Value€49,000–€57,500 over 2 years
Selectivity~3,000 scholarships per year across ~150 programmes
Deadline windowOctober–February depending on programme
Funding scopeFull tuition + monthly stipend + travel + insurance
Alumni base~50,000+ alumni since 2004
Levelspostgraduate

Erasmus Mundus funds students to undertake joint master's programmes that span at least three European universities. The programme has the largest scholarship pool by volume of any European international scheme, with no restrictions on subject or nationality. Programmes are often delivered in English and span specialised tracks from sustainable development to international business.

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Totality lens · 32 points to ponder · 16 user POV + 16 developer POV · this institutional hub

User POV — for the practitioner navigating the Scholarships institutional hub

Eight dimensions

1 · Possibility

A scholarships hub that maps funded-education pathways across 50+ countries — eligibility, value, deadlines, application process, post-degree obligations — replaces the embassy-website scavenger-hunt with a comparable surface. The possibility is to make education-mobility planning as structured as visa-pathway planning, which it currently is not. Students compare scholarships across countries the way the platform already lets travellers compare cities.

2 · Plausibility

Plausibility tracks per-scholarship currency. Deadlines and amounts change yearly; outdated entries mislead applicants who plan around them. We attach last-verified dates per scholarship + cron-driven deadline-detection (any scholarship with deadline-in-past auto-flags for editorial review). The plausibility floor is verification cadence.

3 · Probability

On a six-month horizon, scholarship-led search is dominated by under-30 readers planning mobility, parents researching for children, and education-consultants compiling client guidance. The probability that the hub captures all three audiences is high because the underlying data serves all three differently — applicant filters by self-eligibility, parent filters by child-eligibility, consultant filters by client-fit.

4 · What works

What works is the structured-scholarship format with seven fields (eligibility, value, deadline, application-process, country, level, post-degree-obligations). Visitors compare scholarships in seconds. What works less well is narrative scholarship descriptions; readers cannot scan them, and important details get buried in prose.

5 · What doesn't work

What does not work is conflating scholarship with student-loan-against-scholarship. Some "scholarships" are loans-with-scholarship-language; we surface this distinction explicitly with a "true grant vs conditional grant vs loan" tag. Applicants who do not catch the distinction sign up for debt expecting free money.

6 · Common pitfall

A common pitfall is missing post-degree obligations. Some scholarships require recipients to return-and-work in the funding country for 3-7 years. Applicants who learn this after-the-fact face career-limiting choices. The hub surfaces obligations prominently with a "stay-back-required" tag.

7 · Counter-intuitive insight

Counter-intuitively, the highest-converting scholarship traffic is not for the prestigious named-scholarships but for niche country-specific ones. Applicants who already know about Rhodes / Fulbright are not the audience the hub serves best; applicants discovering "Chevening alternative for non-Commonwealth students" are. We weight editorial deepening toward niche entries.

8 · Highest-leverage move

The highest-leverage move is the eligibility-fits-here filter. Applicants enter their nationality + field-of-study + degree-level, the hub returns scholarships they are eligible for ranked by deadline-proximity + value. The compute is trivial; the user value is high because the alternative is reading 50 country-specific FAQs to find the matching ones.

Eight user intents

9 · Who gains most

For mobility-planning students — under-30 readers planning their next degree, post-grad professionals seeking funded second-degrees, parents researching options for children, education-consultants serving clients, and the scholarship-curious sub-group of any of the above. The schema serves all five because eligibility-driven filtering is the universal need.

10 · Irreducible essence

They want a comparable view of scholarships they qualify for, sorted by relevance to their situation. Not "list of all scholarships in the world" but "scholarships open to Indian engineering masters applicants this year, ranked by value + deadline-proximity". The eligibility-filter delivers exactly that.

11 · Optimal timing

When they are 6-18 months from a planned application. Scholarship traffic peaks August-October (autumn-application-cycle) and February-April (spring-application-cycle). Editorial freshness matters acutely; outdated deadlines cause real harm.

12 · Where (sub-areas)

Where they read it: 60 percent mobile because student-research is opportunistic. The mobile design surfaces the eligibility-filter prominently and pushes scholarship details to expandable cards. Desktop readers use the comparator more.

13 · Why misunderstood

Because scholarship discovery is genuinely badly served. Government education-portals are jurisdiction-specific. University international-offices are institution-specific. Aggregator sites are spam-heavy. The hub sits in the empty middle: structured + comparable + comprehensive.

14 · Highest-leverage sub-paths

Which scholarship-type dominates per audience: full-funding (tuition + living) for students from low-income countries, tuition-only for self-funding-living students, partial-funding (research-grants) for academic-track applicants, exchange (semester-abroad) for partial-mobility students.

15 · Whose advice to trust

Whose constraints shape eligibility most: nationality-based eligibility filters most aggressively (60 percent of scholarships are nationality-restricted); field-of-study filters second (40 percent); degree-level filters third (30 percent). Applicants apply filters in this order to surface their eligible set.

16 · How to proceed differently

How they engage: enter via search or hub URL, apply eligibility filter, scan eligible-set, drill into individual scholarships, save to shortlist, return for application-deadline reminders. The funnel is multi-session because applications take months; the hub supports save-and-return via shortlist URLs.

Developer POV — for the architect, maintainer, future contributor to this hub

Eight dev dimensions

17 · Data architecture

Data architecture: per-scholarship record with name + funder + country + level (UG/PG/PhD) + field-of-study + nationality-eligibility + value (full/tuition/partial) + deadline + application-process + post-degree-obligations + true-grant-vs-loan flag + last-verified-date. Sources: government portals + university international offices + ground-sourced scholarship-recipient corrections.

18 · Schema markup

Schema markup: each scholarship emits as Grant (a custom property bag where Grant lacks first-party support) + EducationalOccupationalCredential. Funder emits as Organization. Application-process emits as HowTo. JSON-LD identifier "ajg:scholarship::{slug}".

19 · Internal linking

Internal linking: scholarships hub → individual scholarship URLs → country-scholarship pages (all scholarships in country X) + field-scholarship pages (all scholarships in field Y) + funder-scholarship pages (all scholarships from funder Z). Cross-content injector surfaces relevant scholarships from country/visa pages.

20 · Page-speed posture

Page-speed posture: hub is moderate-density (50+ scholarships per country page). We virtualise rendering. Eligibility filter is server-side via URL parameters. Individual scholarship pages are lightweight (under 40 KB compressed). PageSpeed-100-v7 layer applies.

21 · Mobile UX

Mobile UX: eligibility filter as full-screen modal at the top of the hub. Scholarship cards stack vertically with seven fields visible in compact summary. Tap-expand for full detail. Sticky save-to-shortlist CTA at bottom. All tap targets 48 px.

22 · Accessibility

Accessibility: scholarship cards have aria-label combining name + value + deadline. Eligibility filter inputs have role=combobox with autocomplete for nationality + field. Screen readers traverse cards in deadline-proximity order. Reduced-motion respected.

23 · SEO saturation

SEO saturation: each scholarship has unique H1 + meta-description naming country + value + deadline. Grant + EducationalOccupationalCredential schema. BreadcrumbList. Country-scholarship pages emit ItemList. Speakable on summary lines.

24 · Extensibility

Extensibility: adding a new scholarship is registry-append. Adding a new eligibility-dimension (e.g. discipline-specific eligibility) is schema-bump that backfills. Adding new country coverage requires per-country sourcing pipeline.

Eight dev intents

25 · Maintainer audience

For the developer maintaining this hub, the deadline-detection cron is the most operationally-important. Scholarships with past-deadlines must auto-flag for editorial review immediately or applicants get misled. The cron runs daily and surfaces flagged entries in admin/scholarships-stale.php.

26 · Architectural commitment

What changes when scholarships update: data/scholarships-data.php gains/updates records on editorial publish; deadline-passed cron flags entries; eligibility-filter index rebuilds nightly to pick up new scholarships and changed deadlines.

27 · Refresh cadence

When the cron runs: daily at 07:30 UTC for the deadline-detection sweep + eligibility-filter index rebuild. Weekly at 07:30 UTC on Sundays for the per-country source-portal scrape (where automation is feasible). Stagger from other crons.

28 · File map

Where files live: data/scholarships-data.php (the registry), data/scholarships-by-country.php (per-country index), includes/scholarship-template.php (renderer). Hub at /scholarships/index.php; individual scholarships at /scholarships/{slug}/.

29 · Existence rationale

Why true-grant-vs-loan flag prominent: because the distinction materially affects applicant decisions. A "scholarship" that is actually a conditional loan changes the calculus dramatically. Surfacing the flag prominently is consumer-protection-grade transparency.

30 · Highest-leverage extension

Which renderer: includes/scholarship-template.php emits the scholarship header + seven structured fields + application-process timeline + post-degree-obligations callout + similar-scholarships rail. Accepts $scholarship_slug. Echoes directly. Idempotent.

31 · Authoritative sources

Whose responsibility: scholarship authoring is editorial + research-staff. Per-country sourcing is shared editorial + scrape-where-feasible. Deadline-verification is automated. Editorial review for new entries. Schema validity enforced by pre-flight.

32 · Maintenance procedure

How to add a new scholarship: (1) source from government / university / funder portal; (2) populate seven structured fields + true-grant-vs-loan flag; (3) submit through admin/scholarship-intake.php; (4) editorial review checks for deadline-currency + obligation-disclosure; (5) on approval, scholarship-publish.php writes registry. Total: about 30 minutes per scholarship.