Academic Jobs - Home of Higher Ed Logo

Foreign Universities Accelerate Entry into India: Joshi Announces Fast-Tracking for 60% Cheaper Global Access

156views
Submit News
a grassy area with a bunch of bricks in it
Photo by srihari kapu on Unsplash

India's Bold Push for International Campuses Gains Momentum

India's higher education landscape is undergoing a transformative shift as foreign universities accelerate their entry into the country. On April 14, 2026, Higher Education Secretary Vineet Joshi announced the fast-tracking of approvals, highlighting that students can now access world-class global degrees at nearly 60% lower cost compared to studying abroad. This development, marked by the issuance of a Letter of Intent (LoI) to Birkbeck, University of London for its Bengaluru campus, underscores the government's commitment to the National Education Policy (NEP) 2020's internationalization pillar.

Joshi emphasized, "The handing over of the Letter of Intent marks a gateway to global learning for Indian students. It reflects the confidence that leading international institutions have in India’s rapidly evolving higher education ecosystem." This initiative not only democratizes access to premium education but also aims to curb the massive forex outflow on overseas studies, positioning India as a global education hub by 2030.

NEP 2020 and UGC Regulations: The Enabling Framework

The National Education Policy 2020 (NEP 2020) laid the groundwork for foreign higher educational institutions (FHEIs) to establish campuses in India. To operationalize this, the University Grants Commission (UGC) notified the UGC (Establishment and Operation of Campuses by Foreign Higher Educational Institutions in India) Regulations, 2023. These regulations allow top-ranked global universities—those in the top 500 of QS World University Rankings, Times Higher Education, or with outstanding expertise—to set up wholly-owned campuses without equity caps or profit repatriation restrictions.

Key features include a single-window clearance system via the UGC portal, where applications are processed within 45 days for in-principle approval. Post-approval, campuses must notify UGC before admitting students or collecting fees. Degrees awarded are equivalent to those from the parent institution, ensuring seamless recognition for further studies or employment. Fees must be 'reasonable and transparent,' with no government cap, but subject to UGC oversight to prevent profiteering.

This framework addresses previous barriers like FDI restrictions and bureaucratic delays, fostering a 'fast, fair, and future-ready' environment as described by Joshi.

Fast-Tracking Approvals: From Application to Operation

The streamlined process involves three stages: application submission with details on rankings, governance, finances, and programs; UGC's in-principle approval (valid for two years to set up campus); and final notification for operations. Foreign universities must maintain academic standards identical to their home campuses, with Indian faculty comprising at least 75% where applicable, and robust grievance redressal mechanisms.

Since 2023, UGC has issued LoIs to over 17 institutions, with many slated to open by 2026-27. Special zones like Gujarat International Finance Tec-City (GIFT City) offer additional incentives, including tax benefits and regulatory autonomy for International Branch Campuses (IBCs).

UGC fast-tracking process for foreign university campuses in India

Who's Coming: A Growing List of Global Players

The roster of approved FHEIs reads like a who's who of international academia:

  • University of Southampton (UK, Gurugram - operational since 2025)
  • Deakin University (Australia, GIFT City)
  • University of Wollongong (Australia, GIFT City)
  • Birkbeck, University of London (UK, Bengaluru)
  • University of Bristol (UK, Mumbai)
  • University of Liverpool (UK, Bengaluru)
  • University of York (UK, Mumbai)
  • University of Aberdeen (UK, Mumbai/Navi Mumbai)
  • Western Sydney University (Australia, Greater Noida)
  • Victoria University (Australia, Noida)
  • La Trobe University (Australia)
  • Illinois Institute of Technology (USA, Mumbai)
  • Queen's University Belfast (UK, GIFT City)
  • Coventry University (UK, GIFT City)
  • University of Surrey (UK, GIFT City)
Many focus on STEM, business, and analytics, aligning with India's skilling needs.

Hubs like Mumbai (5+ campuses), Bengaluru, and GIFT City are emerging as epicenters, with projections of 30+ by 2030.

60% Cheaper: Breaking Down the Affordability Edge

Studying abroad costs Indian families INR 30-60 lakhs annually, including tuition (INR 20-40L), living expenses, and forex losses. Foreign campuses slash this by 50-60%. For instance, University of Southampton Delhi charges INR 12-19 lakhs/year—half the UK equivalent. Birkbeck promises similar savings, enabling middle-class access without visas or cultural shocks.

Economic Times reports detail how this equity boost targets India's 50% GER goal by 2030.

Student Benefits: Global Degrees, Local Convenience

Students gain identical curricula, faculty exchanges, and dual credentials. Programs emphasize employability with industry ties, internships, and research. Reduced costs retain family support networks, minimizing dropout risks. Early successes like Southampton report high employability (90%+ within 6 months) and alumni pathways to parent campuses.

Cultural adaptation is seamless, with diverse cohorts fostering global mindsets essential for Viksit Bharat.

Economic Ripple Effects: Curbing Brain Drain and Forex Leakage

India's 7-13 lakh outbound students drain $3.4B+ annually (FY24). Foreign campuses could retain 20-30%, saving billions while boosting local economies via jobs (faculty, admin) and infrastructure. NITI Aayog envisions India as a $10B education exporter by 2047.

GER rose from 27% (2019) to 28.4% (2024); campuses accelerate to 50%.

Stakeholder Perspectives: Enthusiasm Meets Caution

Government hails it as NEP success; UK/Aussie unis eye India's 40Cr+ youth market. Experts like Prof. Sally Wheeler (Birkbeck VC) praise partnerships. Indian unis worry on competition but see collab opportunities.

UGC Regulations PDF ensures safeguards.

Navigating Challenges: Quality, Fees, and Integration

Challenges include ensuring parity in faculty quality, infrastructure, and outcomes. UGC mandates audits, but critics flag high fees (still premium) and local relevance. Regulations prohibit online-only; full-time physical campuses required. Ongoing monitoring prevents dilution.

  • Fee transparency to avoid gouging
  • 75% local faculty hiring
  • Annual UGC compliance reports

Case Study: University of Southampton's Trailblazing Success

India's first foreign campus (Gurugram, 2025) enrolled 200+ in BSc/MSc programs. Fees at INR 16-41L total; scholarships up to INR 1.5L/year. High satisfaction, with pathways to UK. Enrollment grew 50% YoY, proving viability.

Students at University of Southampton Delhi campus

Future Outlook: Hubs, Collaborations, and Global Leadership

By 2030, 50+ campuses projected, with GIFT City as fintech-ed hub (Deakin, Surrey). Twinning/dual degrees expand options. Joshi envisions India attracting inbound students, reversing 25:1 outflow ratio. Actionable: Aspiring students monitor UGC portal; unis partner for research.

This era promises a vibrant, inclusive higher ed ecosystem driving India's $5T economy.

Portrait of Jarrod Kanizay
About the author

Jarrod KanizayView author

Academic Jobs In House Author

Discussion

Sort by:

Be the first to comment on this article!

You

Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

New0 comments

Join the conversation!

Add your comments now!

Have your say

Engagement level

Browse by Faculty

Browse by Subject

Frequently Asked Questions

📢What did Education Secretary Vineet Joshi announce about foreign universities?

Joshi announced fast-tracking of foreign university entries under NEP 2020, enabling 60% cheaper global degrees in India. LoI to Birkbeck London for Bengaluru campus highlights this shift.130

🏫Which foreign universities have UGC approval for India campuses?

Over 17, including University of Southampton (Gurugram), Deakin (GIFT City), Birkbeck London (Bengaluru), Bristol (Mumbai), Liverpool (Bengaluru), and more from UK/Australia/US.

⚖️How do UGC 2023 regulations work for FHEIs?

Top 500 ranked unis apply via single-window; 45-day in-principle approval; full setup in 2 years. Degrees equivalent, fees reasonable, 75% local faculty.UGC PDF

💰What are the cost savings with foreign campuses?

60% lower than abroad (e.g., Southampton INR 12-19L/year vs. UK double). Saves forex, visas, living costs.

📈How does this help India's GER target?

Boosts enrollment capacity, equity; supports 50% GER by 2030 amid 1M+ outbound students.

⚠️What challenges do foreign campuses face?

Quality parity, high fees, local integration. UGC audits ensure standards.

🗺️Where are most campuses opening?

Mumbai (York, Bristol), Bengaluru (Liverpool, Birkbeck), GIFT City (Deakin, Surrey), Noida/Greater Noida (Western Sydney, Victoria).

🌍Are degrees from Indian campuses recognized globally?

Yes, identical to parent; valid for jobs/studies worldwide.

📝How to apply to these campuses?

Via university portals post-notification; standard eligibility (12th/UG scores, English proficiency). Scholarships available.

🚀What's the future for foreign unis in India?

50+ by 2030; twinning programs, research hubs. India to export education.

💸Impact on forex outflow?

$3.4B+ saved annually as students stay home.