The USA route
Study in the USA
From community colleges to Ph.D. programs, the United States offers the world's largest higher-education system. Here is how the route works, step by step.
Why the USA
Why study in the United States
Unmatched breadth
Thousands of accredited institutions across every field, from two-year community colleges to world-leading research universities.
Funding for graduate students
Master's and Ph.D. students can earn tuition waivers and a stipend through teaching and research assistantships.
Optional Practical Training
Eligible graduates can gain real US work experience through OPT, with a STEM extension for science and engineering fields.
Flexible pathways
Start at a community college and transfer to a university, or enter a bachelor's or graduate program directly.
Where you can study
Types of institutions
Community colleges
Two-year public institutions offering associate degrees and transfer pathways to universities, usually with the lowest tuition.
Colleges
Four-year institutions focused on undergraduate education, often smaller classes and strong teaching.
Universities
Large institutions offering bachelor's, master's, and doctoral programs with research opportunities.
Graduate schools
The master's and Ph.D. divisions of universities, where assistantship funding is most common.
Program levels
Programs you can apply to
English language programs
Intensive English preparation before degree study, often on university campuses.
Associate degree
Two years at a community college; complete a credential or transfer into year three of a bachelor's.
Bachelor's degree
Four years of undergraduate study with broad flexibility to choose and change majors.
Master's degree
One to two years of focused graduate study; assistantships can cover tuition and living costs.
Ph.D.
Four to six years of research-intensive study, very often fully funded through assistantships or fellowships.
Checklist
Documents you will need
- Valid passport
- Academic transcripts (with certified English translations when needed)
- Diplomas and certificates
- Statement of purpose
- Recommendation letters (usually 2 to 3)
- English test score (TOEFL, IELTS, or Duolingo)
- SAT/ACT or GRE/GMAT where required
- Proof of financial support
- CV or resume (graduate applications)
Plan ahead
A typical application timeline
Most students should plan 12 to 18 months ahead of their intended start. Fall (August/September) is the main intake; many schools also admit for Spring (January).
12 to 18 months before
Free evaluation, school list, and test planning. Register for TOEFL/IELTS and any required SAT/ACT or GRE/GMAT.
10 to 14 months before
Take your tests. Request transcripts and recommendation letters. Draft your statement of purpose.
8 to 12 months before
Submit applications. Most deadlines for Fall fall between December and March; graduate funding deadlines are often December to January.
4 to 8 months before
Receive admission decisions, compare funding offers, and accept your program. The school issues your Form I-20.
2 to 4 months before
Pay the SEVIS fee, complete the DS-160, and attend your F-1 visa interview with a complete, well-organized file.
Final weeks
Arrange housing, attend pre-departure orientation, and plan your arrival before the program start date on your I-20.
Tests
Tests you may need
English proficiency
TOEFL, IELTS, or Duolingo English Test. Nearly every program requires one; minimum scores vary by school.
SAT or ACT
Required by some bachelor's programs, though many universities are now test-optional. Check each school's policy.
GRE or GMAT
Required by some master's and Ph.D. programs (GRE) and many business schools (GMAT). Requirements vary widely by department.
Funding
Scholarships and assistantships
This is where your advisor's lived experience matters most: he funded two master's degrees and a Ph.D. in the United States through a Fulbright scholarship, a fellowship, and teaching assistantships.
Merit scholarships
Offered by many universities to strong undergraduate applicants, sometimes automatically with admission.
Teaching assistantships (TA)
Graduate students teach or assist courses in exchange for a tuition waiver and a monthly stipend.
Research assistantships (RA)
Professors fund graduate students to work on research projects, also with tuition support and a stipend.
Fellowships
Competitive awards from universities and foundations that fund study without a work requirement.
Visa overview
The F-1 student visa, explained simply
What follows is general guidance to help you understand the process; it is not legal advice. You file your own application with the US authorities.
Admission and Form I-20
After you accept an offer and show proof of funding, your school issues the Form I-20, the document that supports your visa application.
SEVIS registration
You pay the SEVIS I-901 fee, which registers you in the US student tracking system, and keep the receipt.
DS-160 and interview
You complete the DS-160 form online, pay the visa fee, and book an interview at the US embassy or consulate in your country.
Preparation support
We help you organize your file, understand what officers typically look for (genuine student intent, funding, ties to home), and practice presenting your plans clearly.
After graduation: OPT awareness
Optional Practical Training allows eligible F-1 graduates to work in their field in the US for 12 months, and STEM graduates can apply for a 24-month extension. Rules evolve, so always confirm current requirements with official sources.
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