Studying in Düsseldorf
Düsseldorf has a comfortable mid-sized university scene: one full research university, one university of applied sciences, two private institutions specialising in design and management, and a music conservatoire of national reputation. Most degree programmes are taught in German; master's and doctoral programmes increasingly offer English tracks.
Universities in Düsseldorf
- Heinrich-Heine-Universität (HHU)
- The city's research university, on a green campus in Bilk. Faculties include medicine, the natural sciences, law, economics, philosophy and the arts. About 35,000 students. A large university hospital sits next door.
- Hochschule Düsseldorf (HSD)
- The university of applied sciences in Derendorf. Engineering, business, social sciences, communication design. Strong on practice-led programmes with industry projects.
- Robert Schumann Hochschule Düsseldorf
- A small conservatoire focused on classical music performance and music education.
- Kunstakademie Düsseldorf
- One of Germany's most famous art academies. Selective, project-based, no normal tuition fees, hard to get into.
- Private and specialised institutions
- The IST University of Management, the GISMA campus, FOM business school and a handful of others run programmes in business, sport management and design, usually with tuition fees and flexible part-time formats.
Applying
Three application paths cover most situations.
- Hochschulstart — the centralised national platform for restricted-admission ("NC") programmes such as medicine, dentistry, veterinary and pharmacy.
- Uni-Assist — the clearing house most German universities use for applicants holding non-German qualifications. You submit your documents once; Uni-Assist forwards them to each chosen university.
- Direct application to the university for some open-admission programmes and most master's programmes.
Deadlines for the winter semester usually fall in mid-July; for the summer semester in mid-January. Some master's programmes have earlier deadlines — check each one separately.
Language requirements
If your degree is taught in German, you prove your level with one of:
- DSH-2 from a German university testing centre.
- TestDaF with at least 4 in each section.
- telc Deutsch C1 Hochschule.
- Goethe-Zertifikat C2 or equivalents.
For English-taught programmes the typical bar is TOEFL iBT 80–100 or IELTS 6.5–7.5, depending on the course.
Fees and the semester contribution
Public universities in North Rhine-Westphalia charge no tuition for first or consecutive master's degrees, regardless of nationality. What you do pay is a Semesterbeitrag of around €300–€350 per semester. It covers:
- The Semesterticket for unlimited public transport across the VRR network, with extensions into NRW.
- Student union (AStA) contributions, sports facilities and cultural events.
- Administrative and re-registration fees.
Private institutions and certain non-consecutive master's programmes charge tuition that can run from €3,000 to over €20,000 a year.
BAföG and student loans
BAföG is the federal student aid programme: a means-tested mix of grant and interest-free loan, repayable on a capped basis after graduation.
- Eligibility is broader than people assume — German citizens, EU citizens with certain residency, and some permanent residents qualify.
- Apply at the Studierendenwerk Düsseldorf office (or online). Bring your parents' income statements if you are under 30.
- Other paths. KfW student loans, scholarships (DAAD for international students, the Begabtenförderungswerke for German residents) and university hardship funds round out the picture.
Student housing
The Studierendenwerk Düsseldorf operates a network of subsidised student halls scattered across the city. Rents are well below the open market — a furnished room runs around €300–€450 a month including utilities — and demand is correspondingly high. Apply as early as your acceptance letter, even before you confirm enrolment.
If you do not get a hall, look at:
- Privately rented WGs (shared flats) via WG-Gesucht and Studenten-WG.
- Smaller private student residences (THE FIZZ, the Niederkasseler Studenten-Wohnen and others), unsubsidised but immediately available.
- Sublets via university noticeboards, especially around semester start.
Health insurance for students
Anyone enrolled at a German university must hold valid health insurance. Two paths:
- Statutory student insurance. Under 30 (or before your 14th semester), a reduced public-insurance rate of about €130 a month applies. The fund you choose tells the university you are insured.
- Private student insurance. Some international students arrive on private cover. You can stay private, but you usually cannot switch back to public during studies, so think carefully.
EU citizens with an EHIC from home are covered for emergency care but must still register a regular German policy if enrolled long-term.
Working as a student
Students from inside the EU/EEA can work freely. Students from outside the EU/EEA can work 140 full days or 280 half days a year (recently raised; the exact figure is set in federal law and changes occasionally). Above that, special permission is needed.
Common student jobs in Düsseldorf:
- HiWi — student research or teaching assistant at the university (around €13–€15 an hour).
- Werkstudent — a part-time role at a regular employer alongside studies, up to 20 hours a week during term. Common in Vodafone, the agencies, and the start-ups in the MedienHafen.
- Mini-job — a small job up to the federal monthly cap (around €538 in 2024, periodically raised), with simplified tax handling.
- Internships — mandatory ones inside a curriculum are unpaid or minimally paid; voluntary ones must pay at least the German minimum wage.
Related reading: health insurance, housing, learning German, working.