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24th Jun 2026

Netherlands reports first-ever decrease in foreign enrolment for 2025/26

Short on time? Here are the highlights:
  • International student enrolment declined marginally over the past academic year
  • In absolute terms, the decrease is close to zero, but it is notable nonetheless as the first such dip in 20 years
  • The lower numbers in 2025/26 are concentrated at the undergraduate level, which opens the door to concerns about the impact of declining bachelor’s enrolments over time

Peak body Nuffic reports that Dutch higher education institutions enrolled . That total is 133 fewer than the year before, and represents a decrease of 0.1%.

Needless to say, that is a minor difference, but notable all the same as it is the decline in the country's foreign student base in 20 years. “Although it is a slight decrease, it certainly indicates a break in the trend,” says Nuffic researcher Jonatan Weenink.

Foreign enrolment in Dutch higher education, 2006–2025. Source: Nuffic

Within that overall trend, commencements dipped by -0.4%, driven largely by softer undergraduate numbers. Bachelor programme enrolments declined by -3.8% for universities and -2.9% for universities of applied sciences. That decrease, however, was largely offset by growth in graduate studies this year with enrolments in master's programmes rising at both universities and universities of applied sciences, 2.9% and 8.4%, respectively. Nuffic points out, however, that that growth at the graduate level is "largely attributable" to transfer students who were previously studying in the Netherlands.

Reflecting both on that transfer trend as well as the relatively longer-term stays of undergraduate students, Mr Weenink cautions: "The fact that intake for bachelor's programs continues to decline likely indicates that the drop in total numbers will continue for some time. If you disregard those transfer students, there is also a decline in the university master's. In the long term, therefore, the decline in the bachelor's programme also carries over to the master's.”

Indeed, we have been tracking a slowdown in undergraduate enrolments in the Netherlands over the last couple of years. The slowdown appears to be tied in part to more restrictive policies introduced by the Dutch government over the last few years, including a reduction in the number of English-taught degree programmes.

Notable shifts in sending markets

Among non-European markets, China stands as an important contributor to the softening enrolment trend in 2025/26. Chinese commencements dropped by -27.5%, which also moved the country, for the first time, out of the top five sending markets for the Netherlands. “A possible explanation for this is the rising position of Chinese universities in international rankings, making students more inclined to study in their own country,” says Mr Weenink.

Echoing a pattern we have seen in other leading destinations, some of that decline from China was made up for by an increase (+16.5%) in new master's enrolments from India.

Top 15 countries of origin for international students in Dutch higher education for 2025/26, with Germany, Italy, and Romania in the top three spots and with China, Türkiye, and India as the top non-EU senders. Source: Nuffic

Germany has traditionally been the largest sending market for Dutch higher education, and that remains true in 2025/26. But here too we see a declining trend, with the number of German commencements dropping by -8.9% in 2025/26. Nuffic notes that German enrolments in Psychology studies have been particularly affected by new requirements for clinical master's programmes in the field that have been in place in Germany since 2020.

For additional background, please see:

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