MS Programs in Denmark for Nepali Students: Engineering & IT Guide 2026
Danish master's are 2 years (120 ECTS). Non-EU tuition: DKK 50,000β120,000/year (NPR 82β198 lakh). Strong in engineering, IT, life sciences, and business. DTU and Aalborg rank in QS top 150 for engineering. After graduation: 2-year Job Search Visa (extended from 6 months in 2023). IELTS 6.5 required. Apply by February 1 for September entry. No GMAT required at most universities.
Why Denmark for a Master's Degree?
Denmark offers master's programs at world-class institutions β DTU (Technical University of Denmark) ranks in the QS top 100 for engineering and technology globally. Aalborg University (AAU) is renowned for its distinctive Problem-Based Learning (PBL) methodology where students tackle real industry challenges in teams β a format praised by Danish and international employers. Both universities produce graduates with strong applied skills directly valued by Danish companies such as Vestas (wind energy), Novo Nordisk (pharmaceuticals), Maersk (shipping/logistics), and Orsted (offshore energy).
Denmark's master's programs are 2 years (120 ECTS) β consistent with Germany, Australia, and NZ but longer than UK (1 year) and Ireland (1 year). The 2-year structure allows for a substantial final semester thesis often conducted in collaboration with a Danish company, creating strong industry ties and employment connections before graduation. Many DTU and AAU thesis projects are in direct partnership with Danish and Scandinavian corporations.
The 2-year Job Search Visa introduced in 2023 (extended from the previous 6 months) gives Danish master's graduates significant time to find skilled employment. With DKK 140+/hour wages and Denmark's consistently low unemployment rate for STEM graduates, employment within 2 years is realistic. Danish permanent residence is achievable within 5β8 years for graduates who integrate into Danish professional and linguistic culture.
Types of Master's Programs and Top Universities
DTU (Technical University of Denmark, QS top 100 engineering): MSc in Engineering (Electrical, Mechanical, Civil, Chemical, Environmental), MSc in Computer Science and Engineering, MSc in Sustainable Energy, MSc in Biotechnology, MSc in Quantitative Biology and Disease Modelling. Programs fully in English. Entry: strong bachelor's in relevant field (60β65%+ GPA), IELTS 6.5. Tuition DKK 85,000β120,000/year. Located in Lyngby, 15 minutes from Copenhagen.
University of Copenhagen (KU, QS top 100 globally): MSc in Computer Science, MSc in Bioinformatics, MSc in Chemistry, MSc in Physics, MSc in Public Health, MSc in Global Health. Strong research environment. Tuition DKK 65,000β95,000/year. Entry: relevant bachelor's, IELTS 6.5β7.0, GPA 60β70%+ equivalent.
Aalborg University (AAU, top PBL university globally): MSc in Engineering (numerous specializations), MSc in Computer Science, MSc in Medialogy, MSc in IT β Communication Technology. PBL approach: 50% coursework, 50% group project work on real problems. Tuition DKK 48,000β70,000/year β more affordable than DTU/KU. Campuses in Aalborg and Copenhagen. Strong employer relationships.
Copenhagen Business School (CBS): MSc in Business Administration and Information Systems, MSc in Applied Economics and Finance, MSc in International Business and Politics, MSc in Business, Language and Culture. Strong Nordic corporate connections. Entry: relevant bachelor's, IELTS 7.0, sometimes GRE/GMAT for quantitative programs. Tuition DKK 80,000β110,000/year. One of Europe's largest business schools.
Entry Requirements and Application Process
Academic requirements: a relevant bachelor's degree with strong GPA. Danish universities assess international qualifications on a case-by-case basis. Tribhuvan University (TU) and Kathmandu University (KU) degrees are recognized. Required GPA: minimum 60β65% (approximately 3.0/4.0) for most programs. DTU and competitive KU programs prefer 65β70%+ (approximately 3.3/4.0). Some programs have specific prerequisite courses β check the program page carefully.
English requirements: IELTS 6.5 overall (no band below 6.0) for most master's programs at DTU, KU, Aarhus, and CBS. Some KU and CBS programs require 7.0. TOEFL iBT 83β100+ or Cambridge Advanced (CAE) are also accepted. No GMAT or GRE required at most Danish public universities β a meaningful practical advantage.
Application documents: academic transcripts and degree certificates from all post-secondary qualifications (with certified English translation if not in English), IELTS score, motivation letter (1β2 pages: why Denmark, why this specific program, relevant academic and professional background, career plans), and CV. Letters of recommendation are not typically required at Danish public universities β check program-specific requirements.
Submit application to each university's online international portal by February 1 for September entry. No application fee at most Danish public universities. Rolling admissions β apply early for competitive programs. Response time: 4β8 weeks. After receiving offer, immediately apply for Danish study permit through SIRI (newtodenmark.dk) to allow 1β3 months processing time.
Tuition Fees and Total Cost
DTU 2-year master's: Tuition DKK 100,000 Γ 2 = DKK 200,000 (NPR ~330 lakh). Copenhagen living DKK 108,000 Γ 2 = DKK 216,000. Total DKK 416,000 (NPR ~687 lakh) before work earnings or scholarships. After 2 years of part-time work (DKK 200,000β240,000): net family cost DKK 176,000β216,000 (NPR ~290β357 lakh) over 2 years.
AAU 2-year master's: Tuition DKK 60,000 Γ 2 = DKK 120,000 (NPR ~198 lakh). Aalborg living DKK 84,000 Γ 2 = DKK 168,000. Total DKK 288,000 (NPR ~475 lakh) before earnings. After work earnings: net family cost DKK 48,000β88,000 (NPR ~79β145 lakh) over 2 years. Significantly more affordable than DTU.
SDU 2-year master's: Tuition DKK 55,000 Γ 2 = DKK 110,000. Odense living DKK 72,000 Γ 2 = DKK 144,000. Total DKK 254,000 (NPR ~419 lakh). After work: net family cost near zero for students who work consistently.
Study permit fee (DKK 2,345) plus flights (NPR 100,000β180,000) and initial setup (DKK 5,000β8,000) add approximately NPR 150,000β250,000 to first-year costs.
Scholarships: DTU, KU, and Government Awards
Danish Government Scholarships for developing country students: full tuition waiver plus DKK 8,500β9,500/month living stipend. Administered through selected Danish universities. Apply through the university's international admissions process β indicate scholarship interest in your application. Limited seats per program β GPA 3.5+/4.0 and strong motivation letter are essential. DTU, KU, Aarhus, and SDU participate. Apply by the program's JanuaryβFebruary deadline.
DTU Excellence Scholarship: partial to full tuition waiver for the highest-ranked international applicants. Assessed automatically with admission β no separate application. Top 5β10% of international applicants typically receive this. Complements part-time work income to significantly reduce net cost. DTU also has supervisor-funded research project positions for highly qualified master's students (DKK 30,000β40,000/month as research assistant) β ask your potential supervisor.
Erasmus Mundus programs including Danish universities: several EMJMD programs list DTU, KU, or AAU as partner institutions. These are fully funded (β¬1,000β1,400/month stipend plus full tuition waiver) for non-EU students. Find Erasmus Mundus programs at erasmusmundus.eu, filtering by Danish partner institutions. Separate applications from regular master's applications β apply OctoberβJanuary for the following October entry.
Career After Danish Master's: Job Search Visa and Work Permit
After completing your Danish master's, apply for the Job Search Visa (JobsΓΈger Visum) β 2 years to find skilled employment in Denmark (extended from 6 months since 2023). Apply at your local Danish authority (statsforvaltning or UdlΓ¦ndingestyrelsen) before your study permit expires. During the Job Search Visa, you can work in any role while searching for a qualifying skilled position.
Once you find skilled employment: your employer applies for a Work and Residence Permit on your behalf. The Pay Limit Scheme requires an annual salary of DKK 486,000+ (approximately DKK 40,500/month). The Positive List scheme covers specific occupations in shortage (IT specialists, healthcare workers, engineers). These lead to long-term residence and eventually Danish permanent residence after 4β8 years depending on Danish language acquisition.
Danish language is important for long-term career outside the Copenhagen international tech bubble. Most jobs in Denmark outside international tech companies, academia, and English-speaking startups require Danish B2βC1. Free Danish language courses (Danskuddannelse 3 for higher-educated immigrants) are provided by Danish municipalities β enroll as soon as you receive your residence permit. Reaching Danish B2 while completing your master's significantly improves both employment prospects and long-term residence pathway.
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