Key Takeaways
- The main types of scholarship
- Where the money actually is
- Timing is half the battle
- How to strengthen your application
- Get a second pair of eyes
Top European business schools cost less than their US peers, but tuition for a bachelor’s or master’s can still run into the tens of thousands of euros. Scholarships close that gap — and far more students qualify than apply. This guide explains the main types, where to find them, and how to give yourself the best shot.
The main types of scholarship
Merit-based awards go to applicants with strong academic records, test scores, or admission-essay performance; at many schools these are awarded automatically from your application, with no separate form. Need-based awards and fee waivers depend on family income and are usually requested with supporting financial documents. Targeted scholarships support specific groups — women in business, students from particular regions, first-generation students, or applicants to a particular programme. External funding comes from governments, foundations, and employers rather than the school itself.
Where the money actually is
Most large European schools — Bocconi, HEC Paris, ESADE, IE, ESCP, London Business School and others — run their own scholarship schemes, and the details (amounts, deadlines, eligibility) change each cycle. Always read the official “scholarships” or “financial aid” page for your exact programme and intake rather than relying on third-party summaries. Beyond the schools, look at government schemes (for example Erasmus+ mobility funding within Europe, and national grant programmes in your home country) and at foundation and corporate scholarships in your field.
Timing is half the battle
The single most common reason strong candidates miss out is a missed deadline. Many merit awards are tied to early admission rounds, and need-based aid often has its own earlier cut-off. Build a sheet listing each school, the scholarship, the deadline, and the documents required, and work backwards from the earliest date. Applying in round one rather than round three can be the difference between a full award and nothing.
How to strengthen your application
Scholarship committees fund a clear, credible story, not just grades. Be specific about what you want to study and why, show evidence of drive (projects, work, results), and tailor each essay to the named award rather than reusing a generic one. For need-based aid, present your financial documents cleanly and completely the first time. And apply to several — treat scholarships as a portfolio, not a single bet.
Get a second pair of eyes
A reader who knows what these committees look for will catch the weak claim, the vague paragraph, and the missed eligibility criterion before you submit. YourDreamSchool’s coaches have been through European admissions themselves and can help you map the awards you actually qualify for and sharpen the applications. If funding is what stands between you and the offer, start early and ask for help.
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