Cameroon is often called "Africa in miniature" — and this applies equally to scholarship eligibility. As a bilingual Commonwealth member with both French and English as official languages, Cameroonian students are eligible for scholarship programmes that most other African applicants cannot access. An Anglophone Cameroonian from Buea or Bamenda can apply for Chevening and Commonwealth scholarships. A Francophone student from Yaoundé or Douala can apply for the French Government Scholarship through Campus France. Both groups can apply for DAAD, Erasmus Mundus, and global programmes.
The University of Yaoundé I, University of Buea, and IRIC (Institut des Relations Internationales du Cameroun) produce graduates who are increasingly competitive for international scholarships. Cameroonian students in public health, environmental science, agriculture, and development fields are particularly competitive for development-focused awards.
The French Government Scholarship is the dominant pathway for Francophone Cameroonian students — administered through the French Embassy in Yaoundé and Campus France Cameroun. The programme provides placements at French universities with tuition coverage and a monthly living allowance. Sciences Po Paris, Université de Paris, and the Grandes Écoles have specific Francophone Africa fellowships that Cameroonian students are well-positioned to access.
For Anglophone Cameroonians, the Chevening Scholarship is fully accessible. Cameroon's Commonwealth membership since 1995 makes all CSC scholarships available. The Chevening selection process places significant weight on leadership potential and post-scholarship return impact — Cameroon's ongoing development challenges provide a compelling narrative for applicants committed to national contribution.
Scholarship Trends for Cameroonian Students in 2026
The scholarship landscape for Cameroonian students has evolved considerably entering 2026. Established programmes like Chevening, Commonwealth, and DAAD continue to offer places specifically open to Cameroonian applicants, and several newer initiatives — including expanded Mastercard Foundation Scholars Program partnerships with African universities — have increased the total number of funded places available.
Scholar Africa tracks over 400 verified scholarships updated weekly. Based on this data, Cameroonian students currently have access to a broader range of destinations than at any point in the past decade: the UK, Germany, China, Japan, Canada, Australia, and the USA all offer substantial publicly funded scholarship programmes with documented histories of awarding to Cameroonian nationals.
One important development: several programmes that previously required physical document submission at embassies now accept fully online applications. This has reduced the time and cost burden for applicants in areas with limited embassy access. Confirm the current submission format on each scholarship's official website before preparing documents.
More Scholarships for Cameroonian Students Worth Applying For
The following programmes are worth researching in addition to those profiled above. Eligibility requirements and application windows vary — always verify on the official scholarship website:
- African Union Scholarships — The AU Commission offers intra-African mobility scholarships for students pursuing postgraduate study within Africa. Priority is given to STEM fields and governance. Check the AU Commission website for current intake cycles.
- World Bank Group Graduate Scholarships (JJ/WBGSP) — Fully funded Masters scholarships for nationals of World Bank member countries (which includes all African nations). Priority given to applicants who will return to work in a developing country. Deadline: typically February of each year.
- Hubert H. Humphrey Fellowship Programme — A US government funded programme for mid-career professionals from designated countries. Provides 10 months of non-degree study and professional development in the USA. No GMAT or GRE required. Check the US Embassy in your country for country-specific deadlines.
- King Abdullah University of Science and Technology (KAUST) Fellowships — Saudi Arabia-based research university offering fully funded Masters and PhD fellowships in STEM. Open to students worldwide. Award: Tuition + living stipend + health insurance + relocation. Rolling admissions.
Document Preparation: A Practical Timeline
One of the most common reasons Cameroonian scholarship applications fail is late or incomplete documentation. The following timeline is based on the actual processing times reported by applicants tracked through Scholar Africa:
- 6+ months before deadline: Register for IELTS or TOEFL. Book at your nearest test centre immediately — popular slots fill 2–3 months out. Target IELTS 6.5+ (academic) for most Masters programmes; 7.0+ for Chevening and Fulbright. TOEFL equivalent: 88–100.
- 4–5 months before deadline: Request official transcripts from all previous institutions. African universities often take 3–6 weeks to issue certified copies. Request 3–4 sets simultaneously.
- 3–4 months before deadline: Approach referees. Provide each referee with: (1) your updated CV, (2) the scholarship's specific evaluation criteria, (3) a brief on your goals, (4) the submission deadline with 2 weeks' buffer. Follow up at 4 weeks and 2 weeks before your buffer date.
- 2–3 months before deadline: Draft your personal statement. Have it reviewed by at least two people who can assess both the content and the scholarship's specific requirements. Generic statements that do not address the scholarship's stated values are rejected at first screening.
- 1 month before deadline: Complete your application form. Prepare digital copies of all documents in the required formats (usually PDF, under stated file size limits). Many portals have strict file size limits (2MB per document is common).
- 48–72 hours before deadline: Submit. Do not wait until the final day. Upload confirmation screens as PDF. Note your application reference number in multiple places.