Employment, Social Affairs & Inclusion

Authored by ec.europa.eu and submitted by FutureRick

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As a student in Sweden, you can get financial support. There are various forms of financial support, but they all have in common the fact that you apply for them via the Swedish Board for Student Finance (CSN).

There are different types of student financial support depending on your age and what you are studying. From the autumn term of the year in which you turn 20, you can apply for student aid (grants and loans) to study at folk high school, adult secondary education programme (Komvux), national adult education programme, or another compulsory or upper secondary school. Until the spring term of the year you turn 20, you are eligible for study allowance instead.

If you will be attending a college or university, or taking certain other courses after upper secondary school, you can apply for student aid even if you are younger than 20 years old (there is no minimum age limit for financial support for this level of studies).

If you will be attending a certain national upper secondary school for students who are deaf, hearing impaired or have another disability, you can apply for a study allowance for people with disabilities.

You can apply for financial support for studies both in Sweden and abroad. Special rules apply to foreign citizens.

If you are unemployed and have a short prior education and need education at the primary or upper-secondary level to be able to get a job, you may qualify for the Education entry grant (studiestartsstöd).

As a student, you may also be entitled to certain discounts and special insurance.

What conditions do I need to meet?

As mentioned in the previous section, the type of support you can get depends on your age and what you will be studying. You can get financial support to study abroad if you meet certain requirements. If you are a foreign citizen and are planning to study in Sweden, you can receive Swedish financial support for studies if you meet certain requirements.

You are eligible for a study allowance if you are between the age of 16 and 20 and are studying full-time at upper secondary school, adult secondary education programme (Komvux) or folk high school. The study allowance consists of a grant and in some cases a supplementary allowance (extra bidrag) and a boarding supplement (inackorderingstillägg).

From the autumn of the year in which you turn 20, you can apply for student aid if you are studying at folk high school, adult education, and adult secondary education programme (Komvux), national adult education programme, or another compulsory or upper secondary school.

If you will be attending a college or university, or taking certain other courses after upper secondary school, you can apply for student aid even if you are younger than 20 years old (there is no minimum age limit for financial aid for this level of studies).

The upper age limit for student aid is 56 years, regardless of the level of your studies. Some restrictions apply from the year you turn 47.

Student aid consists of both grants and loans. You can choose whether you want to apply for loans or just receive grants. The loan must be repaid within 25 years and should be completely repaid by the time you are 60 years old. How much you pay depends on the size of the loan, the interest rate and how many years you have left to pay back the loan. The amount you pay will usually increase year after year. If you are having difficulties repaying your loan after your studies or if you have exceptional individual reasons, you may apply for a reduction of your annual amount based on your income.

Study benefits for people with disabilities

You can apply for a study allowance for people with disabilities if you have a hearing impairment or motor impairment when attending a national upper-secondary school. You can receive a study allowance for people with disabilities if you attend the national upper secondary schools for the deaf and hearing-impaired in Örebro or the national upper secondary schools for young people with severe disabilities in Angered, Kristianstad, Skärholmen or Umeå. The grant is intended to help you pay for extra expenses, such as the cost of food, housing and travel home.

It is a grant directed at those who are unemployed, who have a short prior education and need education at the primary or upper-secondary level to be able to get a job.

Some of the requirements you need to meet to have the right to the education entry grant are the following:

being unemployed and having been registered as a job seeker with the Public Employment Service for at least six months;

having a short prior education and having an extensive need for education at the primary or upper-secondary level to be able to get a job;

not having received student aid in the past three years;

studying at least 50% of full time for at least three weeks.

What am I entitled to and how can I claim?

Support Allowance (SEK per month) Study grant 1,050 (1,250 from March 2018)

If you are a Swedish citizen you do not need to apply for study allowance (studiebidrag) when you study in Sweden. Extra supplements (extra tillägg) and boarding supplements (inackorderingstillägg) must be applied for. Application forms can be found under the heading Forms to fill in. How much assistance you receive depends among other things on your household finances and the distance to your school.

If you are a foreign citizen, you need to apply for study allowance. Application forms can be found under the heading Forms to fill in.

Support (SEK per week - full time studies) Grant 723 Loan 1,820 Total 2,543

There is also a higher grant (högre bidrag), which you can receive starting from the year you turn 25 and if you meet all requirements. Since 2011 you can, under certain conditions, get the higher grant if you are under 25 years and unemployed. The highest weekly grant you can receive is SEK 1,683 if you are a full-time student. In addition, you can take out a loan of SEK 860.

If you have children, additional costs or have worked before your studies you can get an extra supplement .

If you are studying part-time or just for a short period, amounts may be lower. If you work while studying you can also get a reduced student aid depending on how much you earn. If you study for 20 weeks full-time over a 6-month period, you can earn up to SEK 88,132 without your student aid being reduced. This amount is called the free amount (fribelopp).

You can apply for financial support for studies, both grants and loans, on CSN's website: www.csn.se . If you have e-ID you can fill in, sign and send your application directly via the website. If you do not have e-ID you need to print, sign and submit the application by post to CSN.

Study allowance for people with disabilities

The size of the study allowance for people with disabilities depends on things like how much you pay for your accommodation and what income you receive. Contact CSN for more information.

Postal address: CSN i Eskilstuna, Box 488,

You can receive the education entry grant of SEK 2,161 per week for 50 weeks for full-time study. If you study half time, the grant is paid for 100 weeks at SEK 1,619 per week if you are studying 75% of full time or SEK 1,082 per week for 50%).

Municipalities assess whether the student is entitled to the education entry grant. The application is submitted to the municipality (it is not possible to apply directly to the CSN).

As a student, you are entitled to various discounts. To benefit from some of these, you will usually need to show a student ID card (Studentkortet) or a Mecenat card (Mecenatkortet) . You can usually obtain both cards automatically or by applying through the companies’ websites.

When you attend a Swedish college or university in Sweden, you are covered by an injury insurance policy through Kammarkollegiet (Swedish Legal, Financial and Administrative Services Agency).

If you are studying at another school, please ask your school if you are covered by an insurance.

If you are studying abroad, it is important that you have a private insurance. Costs for medical care can otherwise become very expensive. From CSN you can apply for a loan for insurance.

E-ID - see the chapter on Benefit during sickness.

Annuity loan (annuitetslån) is a loan for students calculated with a special annuity formula. This means as a rule that the annual amount you pay back later increases year after year.

“ The free amount ” (fribeloppet) is the limit which tells you how much income you may earn alongside your studies without your student aid is being reduced.

Forms you may need to fill in

You apply for financial support through CSN’s online application on the website (in Mina sidor), www.csn.se .

Who do you need to contact?

Swedish Board for Student Finance (CSN)

cogepitome on October 15th, 2018 at 10:19 UTC »

Then if you go to uni you get up to ~380 USD per month (for full time studies), for free- and the option to take a loan of an additional ~800 USD for a silly small rent.

That’s how my three years of engineering at one of Sweden’s top universities, during which I had a student apartment for one year and no side job, left me with a final loan of 3500 USD, alcohol expenses included.

(Also off topic but I have allergies like a mofo so thank heavens for medical expense limits)

TheGameWriter on October 15th, 2018 at 09:42 UTC »

We used to get this in England too. Up to £20 a week to stay in college.

It was then scrapped when it become mandatory to attend college or get an apprenticeship.

-edit-

I have been corrected several times. I know our one in England was means tested and the Swedish one isn't. But, we had something 'similar'.

epic_horup on October 15th, 2018 at 09:31 UTC »

In Denmark it is available for every student over the age of 18, usually the amount is about a 150$ for students still Living at home. For student Living by Them selves it can be as much as 8-900$, depending on distance to school and your parents income. This goes from highschool to university.