Oregon Promise Grant
Oregon Promise is a state grant that helps cover tuition costs at any Oregon community college for recent Oregon high school graduates and GED test graduates.
- Provider
- State of Oregon
- Host country
- United States
- Deadline
- Varies by term
Eligibility & requirements at a glance
Oregon Promise Grant is open to African students applying to study in United States at the Community College level, with tuition grant funding. Below is a quick summary of who can apply, what's covered, and the key dates — full details are further down the page.
- Who can apply
- Community College · applicants for United States
- Funding
- Tuition Grant
- Study level
- Community College
- Deadline
- Varies by term
Key eligibility criteria
- Oregon residents
- recent high school or GED graduates with minimum 2.5 GPA
- must enroll at an Oregon community college within 6 months of completion.
About the Oregon Promise Grant (2026)
Oregon Promise Grant eligibility for United States applicants
Always cross-check eligibility against the sponsor's official site before applying — sponsor rules can change between intakes.
- Oregon residents
- recent high school or GED graduates with minimum 2.5 GPA
- must enroll at an Oregon community college within 6 months of completion.
Documents required for the Oregon Promise Grant application
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
- Country-of-origin proof (national ID or birth certificate) — required by many Africa-focused funders
How to apply for the Oregon Promise Grant 2026
A practical, sponsor-agnostic sequence used by >95% of international scholarship applicants. Adapt to the sponsor's specific portal — the order rarely changes.
- 1Confirm eligibility on the official site
Open https://oregonstudentaid.gov/oregon-promise.aspx and verify the sponsor's stated criteria match your profile — currently: "Oregon residents; recent high school or GED graduates with minimum 2.5 GPA; must enroll at an Oregon community college within 6 months of completion.". Sponsor rules change between intakes, so always confirm against the live call.
- 2Secure a study place or admission offer
Apply to the host university or programme first where required, and obtain a conditional admission letter. A growing number of sponsors only fund applicants who already hold an offer.
- 3Sit 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.
- 4Draft your essays and statements
Write a 500–1,000-word personal statement and any additional essays the sponsor specifies. Anchor each essay in concrete examples and tie your goals back to the sponsor's mission.
- 5Complete the online application
Create an account on https://oregonstudentaid.gov/oregon-promise.aspx, 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.
- 6Submit by Varies by term (aim 7 days early)
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.
- 7Prepare for shortlist interviews
If shortlisted, State of Oregon 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.
Oregon Promise Grant deadline & application 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.
- 12 months out
Register for tests (IELTS/TOEFL/SAT/GRE), shortlist 3–5 universities, identify referees.
- 6 months out
Sit your tests, draft a personal statement, request transcripts and confirm reference letters.
- 3 months out
Finalise essays, upload supporting documents, complete the online application portal.
- 1 month out
Final review, double-check uploaded files, submit a week before the deadline to avoid portal issues.
- Application deadline
Submit by 23:59 in the sponsor's stated time zone — usually local to the sponsor, not your country.
Ready to apply?
Cross-check the latest eligibility rules and deadline on the sponsor's official portal before you start your application.
Visit official siteFrequently asked questions
Who can apply for the Oregon Promise Grant?+
Applicants must be eligible African nationals applying at the Community College level, meet the academic and English-language requirements set by State of Oregon, and be able to relocate to United States for the duration of the programme.
Is the Oregon Promise Grant fully funded?+
Funding model: Tuition Grant. 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 term. 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.
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