How a weaker rupee is shaping study abroad

Postofday
7 Min Read

For an Indian student, the dream of studying abroad is rarely just an individual dream. It is a family aspiration. It represents years of planning, saving, sacrifices, and often a significant financial commitment from parents who want to create better opportunities for their children.

In 2026, however, this dream is facing a new challenge. The declining value of the Indian rupee has made international education more expensive, creating uncertainty for thousands of students who are preparing to take the next step in their academic journey.

A university’s tuition fee may remain unchanged, but the cost of that education in Indian rupee terms can increase significantly due to currency fluctuations. For a family planning an investment of ₹40 to ₹60 lakh (approximately USD$47,000 to USD$71,000) or more, even a small movement in exchange rates can create a financial gap of several lakhs (thousands of dollars).

The reasons behind the rupee’s depreciation are complex, driven by global economic factors, a stronger US dollar, inflation pressures, and changing investment patterns. But for students and families, the impact is much simpler: the same dream now costs more.

The recent geopolitical uncertainty in West Asia has added further pressure on the rupee. Over the past few months, concerns around the conflict, rising crude oil prices, and global market volatility have contributed to a sharp weakening of the Indian currency against the US dollar.

For students planning overseas education, this has created an immediate challenge because many of their expenses, including tuition fees, accommodation, travel, and living costs, are denominated in foreign currencies. A currency movement that may seem small in financial markets can translate into a difference of several lakhs for a student and their family.

India at large, has always been a price-sensitive market and international education is no exception. While Indian students value quality education, global exposure, and career opportunities, affordability, for most Indians, remains a key factor in decision-making

For most families, funding overseas education is a carefully constructed financial plan. Savings, education loans, scholarships, and part-time work opportunities often come together to make the dream possible. When currency movements disrupt that calculation, families are forced to rethink their choices.

While Indian students value quality education, global exposure, and career opportunities, affordability, for most Indians, remains a key factor in decision-making

“Over the past few years, the depreciation of the rupee, combined with higher tuition fees and inflation, has significantly increased the overall cost of studying abroad,” says Suneet Singh Kochar, CEO, Fateh Education.

“Students and families are now approaching decisions with greater financial scrutiny. Affordability and return on investment have become key considerations, although the aspiration to study abroad remains strong. Students are simply becoming more deliberate and informed in how they pursue it.”

One of the biggest impacts we are seeing is students returning to banks to request additional education loans. Families that had calculated their requirements months earlier are finding that the original loan amount may no longer cover tuition fees, accommodation, living expenses, and other costs. The gap created by currency movement has become an unexpected financial burden.

The impact is not limited to tuition fees. Accommodation costs, travel expenses, visa fees, and rising inflation in many developed economies have added further pressure on student budgets.

“Students are feeling the impact not only through the falling rupee, but also through increasing living costs, higher visa fees, and inflation in advanced economies,” says Jazz John, National UK Head, Edwise International.

PeriodINR per US$1
2021₹73
2022₹82
2023₹83
2024₹86
Dec 2025₹89
Jan 2026₹90
Mar 2026₹94
Jun 2026₹95

“We are seeing some students look beyond the traditional choices and explore destinations such as Germany, Ireland, and other European countries where affordability can be more favourable.”

This shift in student behaviour is becoming increasingly visible. Some students are delaying their plans, while others are exploring alternative destinations, shorter programmes, scholarships, or institutions that offer stronger return on investment.

Recently, a student who had secured admission to a postgraduate programme in the UK decided to defer the intake after the family realised that the revised financial requirement was several lakhs higher (several thousand US dollars higher) than originally planned. The student did not abandon the dream of international education, but chose to take more time to strengthen the financial plan.

This is an important moment for global universities to understand. Indian students are not moving away from international education. Their aspirations remain strong. However, their decision-making process is becoming more informed, more financially conscious, and more focused on value.

Universities that recognise these realities and support students through scholarships, flexible payment options, transparent cost communication, and strong career outcomes will continue to remain attractive to Indian applicants.

As I often say: “For an Indian student, the dream of studying abroad is measured not only in grades and ambitions, but also in exchange rates. When currencies move, dreams do not disappear, but the distance to reach them becomes more expensive.”

The future of international education will belong to institutions that understand not only where students want to go, but also the financial journey they must undertake to get there.

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