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The Swedish Council for Higher Education (UHR) is a public agency that facilitates skills attainment for Sweden’s current and future needs.

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  • Higher Education Studies
    • Higher education in Sweden
      • Introduction to higher education
      • What are the benefits of university studies?
      • Study levels and degrees
      • Doctoral (third-cycle) education
        • Admission and entry requirements
      • Application and tuition fees
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      • What the law says
      • How is the quality of your education monitored?
      • Your right to complete your studies
      • Appealing admission decisions
      • Cheating and plagiarism
    • Universities and university colleges
      • Universities and university colleges
      • Contact information for Sweden's universities
    • Information for asylum-seekers
      • Higher education studies
      • Other study options
      • Evaluation of foreign qualifications
  • Road to studies
    • Admission to university studies
      • Application process
      • What do I need to be accepted to a course or programme?
      • Bachelor's level entry requirements
      • Master's level entry requirements
      • Prior learning and exemptions
      • Merit rating
      • Selection
      • Admissions statistics
    • I have an academic degree, what do I do now?
      • Assessment of qualifications for job purposes
      • Professional degree and recognition in Sweden
      • Teachers
      • Supplementing your foreign degree
    • Högskoleprovet - Swedish Scholastic Aptitude Test
      • What is the Högskoleprovet?
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Site content

  • Higher Education Studies
    • Higher education in Sweden

      • Introduction to higher education
      • What are the benefits of university studies?
      • Study levels and degrees
      • Doctoral (third-cycle) education
      • Application and tuition fees

      Laws and rights

      • What the law says
      • How is the quality of your education monitored?
      • Your right to complete your studies
      • Appealing admission decisions
      • Cheating and plagiarism

      Universities and university colleges

      • Universities and university colleges
      • Contact information for Sweden's universities

      Information for asylum-seekers

      • Higher education studies
      • Other study options
      • Evaluation of foreign qualifications
  • Road to studies
    • Admission to university studies

      • Application process
      • What do I need to be accepted to a course or programme?
      • Bachelor's level entry requirements
      • Master's level entry requirements
      • Prior learning and exemptions
      • Merit rating
      • Selection
      • Admissions statistics

      I have an academic degree, what do I do now?

      • Assessment of qualifications for job purposes
      • Professional degree and recognition in Sweden
      • Teachers
      • Supplementing your foreign degree

      Högskoleprovet - Swedish Scholastic Aptitude Test

      • What is the Högskoleprovet?

      Other ways of studying

      • Distance education
      • Adult education
      • Folk high school
      • Higher vocational education
  • Student life
    • Life of a student

      • What's it like to study at a university?
      • Examinations and grading
      • Higher education terminology
      • Study skills
      • Guidance

      Impact your studies

      • Your influence as a student
      • Student unions

      Practical aspects

      • Accommodation
      • Right to participate
      • Student finances
      • Studying as a parent

      Students with disabilities

      • Access to assistance

      Break from or change in studies

      • Deferment of studies
      • Leave from studies
      • Longer period of illness
      • Changing programmes or university
  • Study abroad
    • Good to know about studying abroad

      • Exchange student or freemover?
      • Tips for studying abroad
      • Preparing for studies as a freemover
      • Studying abroad for people with disabilities

      Exchange programmes

      • Travelling as an exchange student
      • Erasmus+
      • Nordplus
      • Erasmus+ Joint Master’s Programmes
      • ASEM-DUO

      Traineeship or placement

      • Overseas placements
      • Erasmus+ traineeships
      • Traineeships at EU institutions
      • IAESTE

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  1. Your right to complete your studies

    Your right to complete your studies Courses and programmes are changed and cancelled, degree-awarding powers are taken away and students take leave from their studies. How do you complete your education when things like this happen? If you've started ...

    Page last updated
    2025-04-11
  2. Application process

    Application process You can apply for courses taught in Swedish on Antagning.se, and for courses taught in English on Universityadmissions.se. The entire process is managed electronically, making the process fast and easy. Just like Studera.nu, both ...

    Page last updated
    2025-04-11
  3. What do I need to be accepted to a course or programme?

    What do I need to be accepted to a course or programme? You have to meet certain entry requirements in order to study at university. Here, you can find an overview of who can apply and what is required. You don't need to be a Swedish citizen or live in ...

    Page last updated
    2025-02-17
  4. Master's level entry requirements

    Master's level entry requirements If you've completed a bachelor's degree in a foreign country and meet the English and/or Swedish requirements for the course or programme, you can apply for master's level studies in Sweden. Sweden offers a number of ...

    Page last updated
    2025-04-11
  5. Admissions statistics

    Admissions statistics To get an idea if you have a chance of being offered a place in the course or programme you applied for, you can check admissions statistics for the previous year. Please note that statistical information regarding admissions in ...

    Page last updated
    2025-04-11
  6. What is the Högskoleprovet?

    What is the Högskoleprovet? The Högskoleprovet - or Swedish Scholastic Aptitude Test (SweSAT), as it's called in English - is a standardised test that can be used as a way to compete for a place in courses and programmes at Swedish universities. Who ...

    Page last updated
    2023-11-08
  7. Assessment of qualifications for job purposes

    Assessment of qualifications for job purposes You may be eager to enter the job market, but aren't sure how your foreign qualifications are interpreted here in Sweden. Knowing more about them can help you determine if you can get a job right away, or ...

    Page last updated
    2025-04-11
  8. Professional degree and recognition in Sweden

    Professional degree and recognition in Sweden Some professions are regulated by Swedish Law. This means that if you have a foreign professional degree, you must have it formally recognised before you can practice that profession in Sweden. Many ...

    Page last updated
    2025-04-22
  9. Supplementing your foreign degree

    Supplementing your foreign degree If you’ve completed a degree programme abroad, you can supplement it with additional studies in Sweden. To be entitled to work in some professions in Sweden, supplementing your degree is required. It’s possible for you ...

    Page last updated
    2025-03-06
  10. Distance education

    Distance education As a distance student, you can study when and where you'd like. This means freedom, but also demands discipline in order to succeed at your studies. There are as many reasons to choose distance studies as there are distance courses ...

    Page last updated
    2025-04-11
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The Swedish Council for Higher Education (UHR) is a public agency that facilitates skills attainment for Sweden’s current and future needs.

Contact

Swedish Council for Higher Education
Telephone: 010-470 03 00
(closed for lunch 12–13)

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