All scholarships
Masters, PhD, PostdocFully Funded Verified active

DAAD Scholarships Germany: General Information for Applicants

Last verified 12 May 2026 by the Scholarships for Africans editorial team

Explore general requirements and benefits for DAAD scholarships in Germany, offering support for international students, doctoral candidates, and postdocs across various academic levels and disciplines.

Provider
DAAD Scholarships Germany
Host country
Germany

About this scholarship

The German Academic Exchange Service (DAAD) offers a wide range of scholarships for international students, doctoral candidates, and postdocs looking to pursue academic endeavors in Germany. This page provides general information regarding application conditions, requirements, and the selection procedure for DAAD scholarships. Specific details about individual scholarship programs, including eligibility and benefits, are available in the DAAD Scholarship Database. ## Eligibility Requirements Applicants generally do not face age limits, though most programs have stipulations regarding the time elapsed since the last degree. Exceptions exist for circumstances such as pregnancy, childcare, care of relatives, disability, or chronic illness, which may delay studies. Final-year students are often eligible to apply, but must complete their degree before the funding period begins. Those already in Germany can apply if they have been in the country for a maximum of 15 months by the application deadline. Dual nationals should apply from their country of origin. DAAD scholarships are primarily for full-time, in-person study or research in Germany; distance learning or part-time courses are not eligible. Applicants generally need to reside in Germany for the entire duration of the scholarship. While many programs are open to almost all subjects, some have restrictions or are highly specialized (e.g., architecture, music, computer science). ## Application Process and Selection Criteria Application procedures vary, with many requiring online submission via the DAAD portal. Key documents often include a letter of motivation, which should detail academic background, reasons for studying in Germany, and expected outcomes. For research grants, a detailed proposal outlining the project's objectives, methodology, and timeline is required. The use of AI tools in application preparation is permitted, provided applicants adhere to principles of good scientific practice, maintain originality, ensure transparency, and declare AI tool usage. Letters of recommendation from university teachers are usually required. Scholarship applications are reviewed by independent selection committees comprising university teachers, researchers, and DAAD Lecturers. Selection criteria include academic achievements (grades, academic progress), the quality of the study or research project (originality, relevance, feasibility, preparation), and the applicant's potential (motivation, prospects, extracurricular commitment). Special circumstances such as disability, chronic illness, or caregiving responsibilities are considered to ensure equal opportunities. ## Scholarship Benefits Scholarship payments vary by academic level and program. Master's students typically receive EUR 992 per month, doctoral candidates and postdocs EUR 1,300 (EUR 1,400 from February 2026), and university teachers EUR 2,000 to EUR 2,150. These payments may not cover all living expenses, particularly in high-rent areas, so additional personal funds might be necessary. DAAD also provides an allowance for travel expenses, with options to support environmentally friendly travel choices. Under certain conditions, additional benefits for accompanying family members are available, including a partner allowance of EUR 276 per month and a child allowance of EUR 259 per month per child. Scholarship holders must have health insurance, and in many programs, DAAD arranges and pays for private health insurance. However, certain pre-existing conditions and pregnancies may have specific coverage limitations, requiring direct contact with DAAD. Part-time work or a second scholarship is permissible with DAAD approval, but income exceeding EUR 603 gross per month may lead to deductions from the scholarship. It's important to note that DAAD scholarships generally **do not cover tuition fees**, except in specific circumstances where the university waives them or the program is tuition-free. International students, particularly those in Baden-Württemberg and some programs at the Technical University of Munich, may incur tuition fees.

What's covered

The award components below were extracted from the sponsor's published description. Always cross-check the exact figures, ceiling amounts and conditions on the official site before you budget around them.

  • Return airfare
  • Health insurance

Eligibility criteria

Always cross-check eligibility against the sponsor's official site before applying — sponsor rules can change between intakes.

  • These scholarships are open to international students, doctoral candidates, and postdocs from various disciplines who wish to study or research in Germany, provided they meet specific academic and program-specific requirements. Most scholarship programs require that only a certain amount of time has elapsed since the last degree was obtained. Applicants already in Germany are eligible if they have been in the country for a maximum of 15 months by the application closing date, unless otherwise specified.

Required documents

A planning baseline drawn from how 90%+ of African scholarship sponsors structure their checklist. The sponsor's portal is the source of truth for any single application.

  • Valid international passport (bio page scan)
  • Most recent academic transcripts (sealed or e-verified copies)
  • Curriculum vitae / résumé (1–2 pages, reverse-chronological)
  • Personal statement or motivation letter (500–1,000 words, tailored to the sponsor)
  • Two to three reference letters (academic for students, professional for working applicants)
  • Proof of English proficiency (IELTS, TOEFL or Duolingo) — Medium-of-Instruction letter may substitute for Anglophone-Africa graduates
  • Passport-sized photograph meeting ICAO biometric standards
  • Research proposal or statement of purpose (500–2,000 words for PhD)
  • Published or unpublished writing sample (PhD and research-led Masters)
  • Financial-need declaration or family-income statement (sponsor-specific template)
  • Country-of-origin proof (national ID or birth certificate) — required by many Africa-focused funders

How to apply

A practical, sponsor-agnostic sequence used by >95% of international scholarship applicants. Adapt to the sponsor's specific portal — the order rarely changes.

  1. 1
    Confirm eligibility on the official site

    Open https://www.daad.de/en/study-and-research-in-germany/scholarships/important-information-for-scholarship-applicants/ and verify your country, level of study and English-language status against the current call. Sponsor rules change between intakes — never rely on third-party summaries alone.

  2. 2
    Secure a study place or admission offer

    Identify a supervisor whose research aligns with yours, exchange emails, and either obtain a conditional offer or confirmation that they will host your project. Many DAAD Scholarships Germany awards require this before the funding application opens.

  3. 3
    Sit required tests and gather documents

    Register for IELTS / TOEFL / Duolingo (or SAT / GRE where required), request official transcripts, brief two or three referees, and prepare passport and identity documents at high resolution.

  4. 4
    Draft your essays and statements

    Write a focused 1,000–2,000-word research proposal and a separate personal statement. Tailor every paragraph to the sponsor's stated priorities — generic recycled essays are the most common reason strong applicants are rejected.

  5. 5
    Complete the online application

    Create an account on https://www.daad.de/en/study-and-research-in-germany/scholarships/important-information-for-scholarship-applicants/, fill in every field, and upload the required documents in the formats specified (PDF, max file size, single-file vs multi-file). Save progress frequently — most portals time out after 30–60 minutes.

  6. 6
    Submit at least one week before the deadline

    Sponsor portals routinely slow or fail in the final 24 hours. Submit early, download the confirmation receipt, and screenshot the submission timestamp. Late submissions are not accepted under any circumstances.

  7. 7
    Prepare for shortlist interviews

    If shortlisted, DAAD Scholarships Germany will contact you within 4–12 weeks. Re-read your essays, rehearse 3–5 likely questions out loud, and confirm your time zone for any video interview.

Deadline timeline

The sponsor has not published a fixed deadline yet. Use the milestones below as a generic 12-month plan; substitute dates once the intake window opens.

  1. 12 months out

    Register for tests (IELTS/TOEFL/SAT/GRE), shortlist 3–5 universities, identify referees.

  2. 6 months out

    Sit your tests, draft a personal statement, request transcripts and confirm reference letters.

  3. 3 months out

    Finalise essays, upload supporting documents, complete the online application portal.

  4. 1 month out

    Final review, double-check uploaded files, submit a week before the deadline to avoid portal issues.

  5. Application deadline

    Submit by 23:59 in the sponsor's stated time zone — usually local to the sponsor, not your country.

Editorial verification note

Auto-curated from official source (top-tier batch).
Last checked 5/12/2026

Frequently asked questions

Who can apply for the DAAD Scholarships Germany: General Information for Applicants?+

Applicants must be eligible African nationals applying at the Masters, PhD, Postdoc level, meet the academic and English-language requirements set by DAAD Scholarships Germany, and be able to relocate to Germany for the duration of the programme.

Is the DAAD Scholarships Germany: General Information for Applicants fully funded?+

Funding model: Fully Funded. Where listed as fully funded, the award typically covers tuition, monthly stipend, health insurance and round-trip airfare. Always confirm the latest funding breakdown on the sponsor's official page.

When is the application deadline?+

The application deadline is varies by intake — see the official site. Submit at least one week early — sponsor portals frequently slow or fail in the final 24 hours, and late submissions are not accepted under any circumstances.

What documents do I need to apply?+

At minimum: passport bio page, academic transcripts, CV, personal statement, two to three references, and an English-language test score (IELTS, TOEFL or Duolingo). Research-led Masters and PhD applications also require a research proposal and a writing sample.

How can I improve my chance of winning?+

Apply early, tailor every essay to the specific sponsor (do not recycle a generic statement), secure at least one reference who knows your work in detail, and apply to two or three additional scholarships in parallel — never rely on a single application.

Guides for this scholarship

Explore related programmes

Long-form sponsor guides, country pages and category pages connected to this scholarship.