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🇹🇷 Turkish citizens · 🇮🇹 Italy · Student

Student visa approval odds for Turkish citizens going to Italy

Studying in the Schengen area for more than 90 days needs a national long-stay (Type D) visa from the specific country, not a short-stay Schengen visa. Requirements vary by country but always include a university admission, proof of funds or a scholarship, health insurance, and accommodation. Once genuinely admitted and funded, approval is generally strong.

Last reviewed July 2026. Source: European Commission — Migration and Home Affairs .

For Turkish citizens applying, a student visa to Italy is decided mainly on whether you are a genuine student who can fund and complete the course. Public statistics point to an approximate base approval of around 87% for this route — but your own profile can move that figure a lot in either direction. Turkish applicants see moderate refusal rates that are highly sensitive to documented ties and finances.

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Your trip

The essentials. Pre-filled if you came from a specific page.

Key requirements

  • University admission / enrolment letter
  • Proof of funds or a scholarship (e.g. a German blocked account, ~€11,904/year in 2025)
  • Health insurance valid in the destination country
  • Proof of accommodation
  • National long-stay (Type D) application at the country's consulate

Money & funds

Country-specific: e.g. Germany requires a blocked account of about €11,904/year (2025); others accept a scholarship award or bank evidence of living costs.

Typical timeline

National (Type D) processing varies by country from a few weeks to a couple of months — apply as early as your admission allows.

Common refusal reasons

  • Funds or scholarship not adequately proven
  • Admission not genuine or incomplete
  • Missing or insufficient health insurance
  • Doubts about genuine study intent
  • Incomplete national-visa documentation

What actually moves the needle

Admission to an accredited institution

This is the heart of student decisions for Italy. Make it concrete and documented rather than assumed.

Clearly documented funding for tuition and living costs

Officers weigh this alongside everything else — gather clear evidence before you apply.

A credible study plan that fits your background

Officers weigh this alongside everything else — gather clear evidence before you apply.

Context for Turkey applicants

Turkish applicants see moderate refusal rates that are highly sensitive to documented ties and finances. Your personal profile matters far more than any nationality-level pattern, so focus on the levers above.

Avoid the common pitfall

The most frequent reason this route fails is unclear funding or a course that does not fit your profile. Address it directly and you remove the biggest doubt.

Frequently asked questions

Do I need a Schengen visa or a national visa to study in Europe?

For courses over 90 days you need the destination country's national long-stay (Type D) visa, not the short-stay Schengen visa.

How much money do I need to study in Germany?

Germany typically requires a blocked account of about €11,904 per year (2025) to prove living costs, unless you have an equivalent scholarship.

Is health insurance required for a student visa in Europe?

Yes. You must show valid health insurance in the destination country, often statutory or an approved private policy.

Are European student visas hard to get?

With a genuine admission, clear funding, insurance and accommodation, approval is generally strong. Weak funding or an unconvincing study plan are the main risks.

Can I work while studying in the EU?

Many EU countries allow limited part-time work for students (rules and hour caps vary by country) — check the specific country's regulations.