Sudan, a predominantly Arabic-speaking country in Northeast Africa, has a long history of higher education and international scholarship participation. Arab League membership connects Sudanese students to scholarships from Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Jordan, and Gulf states. The African Union framework provides intra-African options, and international programmes from Germany (DAAD), Japan (MEXT), and China (CSC) have historically awarded to Sudanese applicants. Applicants should note that the political situation since 2023 has affected some scholarship channels — always verify current embassy operations in Sudan and check programme-specific eligibility notes before applying.
This guide compiles the most consistently funded, high-value scholarships open to Sudanese nationals — based on data from Scholar Africa's database of 250+ active scholarships. Each entry includes the host country, degree level, funding scope, and the current deadline.
The programmes listed below are a mix of government-funded schemes, university-specific awards, and private foundation scholarships. Sudanese students benefit from eligibility across African Union programmes, bilateral government scholarships, and several scholarship frameworks tied to Sudan's regional and linguistic affiliations.
Note on deadlines: Most major scholarships open applications between August and November for programmes starting the following September. For January intake programmes, deadlines typically fall in September–November of the preceding year.
Scholarship Trends for Sudanese Students in 2026
The scholarship landscape for Sudanese students has seen meaningful growth entering 2026. Arabic is the official language. For English-medium programmes, IELTS preparation is required — plan at least 6–9 months ahead. Arab-destination scholarships and Chinese government scholarships (which do not always require English) are among the most accessible entry points. Scholar Africa tracks over 400 verified scholarships updated weekly, and Sudanese students currently have documented access to funded places in: Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Jordan, Germany, Japan, China, and Turkey.
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.
Top Scholarships for Sudanese Students
The following are high-value, well-documented scholarships with consistent records of awarding to Sudanese or African applicants:
- Chevening Scholarships (UK) — Fully funded one-year Masters at any UK university. Open to students from eligible Commonwealth countries and beyond. Covers tuition, living allowance, flights, and visa costs. Typically opens in August; deadline around November. Sudan's Chevening eligibility — verify current status with the British Embassy in Khartoum given recent political developments.
- DAAD Scholarships (Germany) — Germany's academic exchange service funds thousands of African students annually. Options range from short research stays to full Masters and PhD programmes. The Development-Related Postgraduate Courses (EPOS) programme is particularly accessible. Deadlines vary by programme; most fall October–January.
- Commonwealth Scholarship (UK) — Funded by the UK Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office. Covers tuition, living allowance, airfare. Primarily for Masters and PhD. Applications handled through the national nominating agency in Sudan. Deadline: typically December–January.
- Mastercard Foundation Scholars Program — Partners with leading African and global universities to fund academically talented but financially constrained students. Covers full tuition, room and board, books, and travel. Application through partner universities.
- MEXT Scholarship (Japan) — Japanese government scholarship for undergraduate, Masters, and PhD study in Japan. Covers tuition, monthly stipend, travel. Embassy recommendation route opens around April–May each year.
- Korean Government Scholarship (KGSP) — Fully funded study in South Korea. Includes 1-year Korean language training, tuition, monthly stipend, airfare. Embassy track opens around February–March.
- Chinese Government Scholarship (CSC) — Full funding for study at Chinese universities. Bachelor, Masters, and PhD available. Includes tuition, accommodation, stipend. Applications processed via embassy. Sudan has CSC agreements and China has continued scholarship programmes for Sudanese students. Apply through the Chinese Embassy when operational.
- Fulbright Foreign Student Program (USA) — Fully funded graduate study in the USA. Contact the US Embassy or Fulbright Commission in Sudan for country-specific details. Applications typically open in the spring.
More Scholarships for Sudanese 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.
- World Bank Group Graduate Scholarships (JJ/WBGSP) — Fully funded Masters scholarships for nationals of World Bank member countries. Deadline: typically February each year.
- Hubert H. Humphrey Fellowship Programme (USA) — For mid-career professionals from designated countries. Provides 10 months of non-degree study and professional development in the USA.
- KAUST Fellowships (Saudi Arabia) — Fully funded Masters and PhD fellowships in STEM at King Abdullah University of Science and Technology. Rolling admissions.
- Erasmus Mundus (EU) — Joint Masters degrees across multiple European universities. Covers full tuition, a monthly allowance, travel, and installation costs. Deadlines vary by consortium, typically January–March.
Document Preparation: A Practical Timeline
One of the most common reasons scholarship applications fail is late or incomplete documentation. The following timeline is based on actual processing times reported by applicants tracked through Scholar Africa:
- 6+ months before deadline: Register for IELTS or TOEFL (or DELF/DALF for French-language programmes). Book at your nearest test centre immediately — popular slots fill 2–3 months out. Target IELTS 6.5+ (academic) for most Masters programmes.
- 4–5 months before deadline: Request official transcripts from all previous institutions. Universities in Sudan often take 3–6 weeks to issue certified copies. Request multiple sets simultaneously.
- 3–4 months before deadline: Approach referees. Provide each referee with your CV, the scholarship's evaluation criteria, your goals, and the deadline with a 2-week buffer.
- 2–3 months before deadline: Draft your personal statement. Have it reviewed by people who can assess both the content and the scholarship's specific requirements. Generic statements 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).
- 48–72 hours before deadline: Submit. Do not wait until the final day. Save upload confirmation screens. Note your application reference number in multiple places.