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Universitäten

Ruprecht-Karls-Universität Heidelberg

Baden-Württemberg, Germany

About Ruprecht-Karls-Universität Heidelberg

Ruprecht-Karls-Universität Heidelberg, founded in 1386, is Germany's oldest university and one of Europe's leading research institutions. It is a comprehensive research university offering over 160 fields of study across 14 faculties, from theology and law to medicine and engineering. The university has held the title of "University of Excellence" continuously since 2007 and currently hosts three Clusters of Excellence.

As of the latest published figures, Heidelberg enrolls 32,178 students in total, of whom 6,633 are international students. The university maintains 721 ERASMUS arrangements and approximately 180 international degree programmes, reflecting a strong commitment to global academic exchange. Its annual budget totals roughly €995 million, supported by state grants and third-party research funding.

The university is spread across several distinct areas of the city: the historic Altstadt (Old Town) housing humanities and law faculties, the large natural-science and medical campus at Im Neuenheimer Feld, and a further clinical campus in Bergheim. A University Hospital Mannheim is also affiliated.

Key facts

Founded
1386
Students
32,178
International
6,633 international students (~21% of total enrolment)
Faculties
14

Germany's oldest university, founded in 1386 — over 630 years of continuous operation

University of Excellence status held continuously since 2007; three active Clusters of Excellence

6,633 international students from a wide range of countries; 721 ERASMUS partner agreements

14 faculties spanning theology, law, medicine, natural sciences, engineering, and humanities

Non-EU students pay €1,500/semester tuition fee (Baden-Württemberg state policy) plus a €161.10 semester contribution

Multiple Nobel Prize laureates associated with the university across its history

Admissions & costs

Tuition & fees

As Baden-Württemberg charges a non-EU tuition fee, international students from outside the EU/EEA with a foreign university entrance qualification pay €1,500 per semester for bachelor's, Staatsexamen, and consecutive master's programmes. EU/EEA students are exempt from this fee. All enrolled students pay a semester contribution of €161.10 (current rate), which covers administrative costs and a public-transport semester ticket. Non-consecutive (professional) master's programmes and continuing-education programmes carry separate, programme-specific fees.

Admission requirements

International applicants must hold a higher-education entrance qualification assessed as comparable to the German Abitur by the Central Office for Foreign Education (ZAB/KMK anabin). Applicants whose school qualification is only partially comparable may be required to complete a Studienkolleg preparatory year and pass the Feststellungsprüfung (FSP) before enrolling in a degree programme. Master's admission requires a completed first university degree that qualifies for the chosen programme; additional restrictions such as above-average grades or minimum credit hours in related subjects may apply by programme. Applicants from India, China (including Hong Kong and Macau), and Vietnam are required to hold an APS (Akademische Prüfstelle) certificate before their student visa can be issued; this is a German Embassy requirement and applies to Heidelberg as it does to all German universities. German-taught programmes require a recognised German-language certificate (DSH or TestDaF); English-taught master's programmes require evidence of English proficiency. Application is handled through the university's own portal (heiCO) or through uni-assist depending on the programme.

Application deadlines

Application deadlines for bachelor's and Staatsexamen programmes vary by selection procedure and subject; there is no single university-wide deadline. Master's programme deadlines are similarly programme-specific. Enrolment windows (once admitted) are: undergraduate unrestricted — 1 Dec to 30 Apr (winter semester) and 1 Jun to 31 Oct (summer semester); master's with restrictions — 1 Oct to 30 Apr (winter) and 1 Apr to 31 Oct (summer). Prospective students should check the programme-specific page in the study-programme finder well in advance, as international applicants typically need extra lead time for language certificates, APS processing, and visa appointments.

Languages of instruction

The majority of bachelor's and Staatsexamen programmes are taught in German; a very good command of German is required for these tracks. A growing number of master's programmes are offered in English; applicants to English-taught programmes must demonstrate very good English language skills. Specific proficiency examinations accepted (e.g. DSH, TestDaF, IELTS) are determined at the programme level — check individual programme pages in the study-programme finder.

Campuses & locations

Altstadt (Old Town)

Historic city-centre campus housing administration, theology, philosophy, law, and humanities faculties

Im Neuenheimer Feld

Large modern campus for natural sciences, mathematics, computer science, physics, astronomy, and the university hospital

Bergheim

Campus for behavioural and empirical cultural sciences, psychology, and medical facilities

Mannheim

Affiliated University Hospital Mannheim; separate clinical teaching site approximately 20 km from Heidelberg

Living in Baden-Württemberg

Heidelberg is a mid-sized city of approximately 160,000 residents in the Rhine-Neckar metropolitan region of Baden-Württemberg, about 80 km south of Frankfurt am Main. It is widely known for its Baroque Altstadt, the Heidelberg Castle ruins, and the Philosopher's Walk overlooking the Neckar river. The city has a large student population relative to its size, giving it a lively cultural scene, affordable public transport, and strong cycling infrastructure. Frankfurt Airport is the nearest major international hub, reachable by regional train in about one hour.

Student life & support

The Studierendenwerk Heidelberg manages student housing across multiple residential halls; demand regularly exceeds supply, so early application is strongly recommended — the university's International Relations Office provides a housing guidance document for arriving students. The International Relations Office (Seminarstraße 2) operates Welcome Centres in the Altstadt and at Im Neuenheimer Feld campus, offering drop-in advisory hours and online consultations for practical matters including visa, health insurance, and finances. The International Student Centre (ISZ) at isz.uni-heidelberg.de provides German-language courses at all levels (including DSH preparation) throughout the academic year. A Buddy Programme pairs new international students with experienced Heidelberg students. Orientation Days for new international students are held at the start of each semester.

204

Accredited Programmes

108

Master

95

Bachelor/Bakkalaureus

1

Kirchlicher Abschluss

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