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60+ American Universities with Full Scholarships for International Students (2026)

The complete list of 70+ U.S. universities that give full funding to international students for bachelor's degrees — including Ivy League schools, top liberal arts colleges, and hidden gems.

William Kaseu
William Kaseu
March 27, 20267 min read
60+ American Universities with Full Scholarships for International Students (2026)

Here is the complete list of U.S. universities that provide full funding to international students pursuing bachelor's degrees. These schools meet 100% of your demonstrated financial need — covering tuition, housing, food, books, and more.

Make sure to apply through the Common App and submit your CSS Profile (or the school's alternative financial aid application form) before the deadline.

Pro Tip

For the full step-by-step application process, read: How to Get a Full Scholarship for Your Bachelor's Degree in the USA

Pro Tip

Want to know the deadlines? See Part 2: Full List with Deadlines.

Research Universities#

These are large universities with extensive research programs, graduate schools, and a wide range of majors.

#UniversityLocation
1Princeton UniversityPrinceton, NJ
2Harvard UniversityCambridge, MA
3MITCambridge, MA
4Stanford UniversityStanford, CA
5Yale UniversityNew Haven, CT
6University of ChicagoChicago, IL
7Duke UniversityDurham, NC
8Northwestern UniversityEvanston, IL
9University of PennsylvaniaPhiladelphia, PA
10California Institute of TechnologyPasadena, CA
11Cornell UniversityIthaca, NY
12Brown UniversityProvidence, RI
13Dartmouth CollegeHanover, NH
14Columbia UniversityNew York, NY
15Vanderbilt UniversityNashville, TN
16University of Notre DameNotre Dame, IN
17Washington University in St. LouisSt. Louis, MO
18Rice UniversityHouston, TX
19Emory UniversityAtlanta, GA
20New York UniversityNew York, NY
21Tufts UniversityMedford, MA
22University of RochesterRochester, NY
23Case Western Reserve UniversityCleveland, OH
24Lehigh UniversityBethlehem, PA
25Brandeis UniversityWaltham, MA
26Johns Hopkins University (COF Required)Baltimore, MD

That's 26 research universities — including all 8 Ivy League schools — that fully fund international students.

Liberal Arts Colleges#

Liberal arts colleges are smaller, undergraduate-focused schools with small class sizes and close faculty relationships. Don't underestimate them — many are more prestigious and better-funded than large universities.

#CollegeLocation
1Amherst CollegeAmherst, MA
2Williams CollegeWilliamstown, MA
3Swarthmore CollegeSwarthmore, PA
4Bowdoin CollegeBrunswick, ME
5Pomona CollegeClaremont, CA
6Claremont McKenna CollegeClaremont, CA
7Wellesley CollegeWellesley, MA
8Barnard CollegeNew York, NY
9Davidson CollegeDavidson, NC
10Grinnell CollegeGrinnell, IA
11Middlebury CollegeMiddlebury, VT
12Smith CollegeNorthampton, MA
13Vassar CollegePoughkeepsie, NY
14Wesleyan UniversityMiddletown, CT
15Washington and Lee UniversityLexington, VA
16Colgate UniversityHamilton, NY
17Bates CollegeLewiston, ME
18Colby CollegeWaterville, ME
19Haverford CollegeHaverford, PA
20Macalester CollegeSaint Paul, MN
21Mount Holyoke CollegeSouth Hadley, MA
22Colorado CollegeColorado Springs, CO
23Lafayette CollegeEaston, PA
24Franklin & Marshall CollegeLancaster, PA
25Pitzer CollegeClaremont, CA
26Scripps CollegeClaremont, CA
27Trinity CollegeHartford, CT
28Union CollegeSchenectady, NY
29Berea CollegeBerea, KY
30Kenyon CollegeGambier, OH
31Connecticut CollegeNew London, CT
32Oberlin CollegeOberlin, OH
33Whitman CollegeWalla Walla, WA
34Reed CollegePortland, OR
35Harvey Mudd CollegeClaremont, CA
36Soka University of AmericaAliso Viejo, CA
37Thomas Aquinas CollegeSanta Paula, CA
38Deep Springs CollegeDeep Springs, CA
39University of RichmondRichmond, VA
40Carleton College (COF Required)Northfield, MN
41Hamilton College (COF Required)Clinton, NY
42College of the Holy Cross (COF Required)Worcester, MA
43Bryn Mawr College (COF Required)Bryn Mawr, PA
44Denison University (COF Required)Granville, OH
45Skidmore College (COF Required)Saratoga Springs, NY

That's 45 liberal arts colleges — for a total of 71 schools that fully fund international students.

What Does "COF Required" Mean?#

You'll notice that some schools are marked COF Required (Certificate of Finances). Here's what that means:

Some schools require international applicants to submit a Certification of Finances form before an admission decision can be made. This form asks you to declare your funding source — family, sponsor, or financial aid — and may require supporting bank statements.

This is important to understand:

The financial certification form is just a formality. These schools are not asking you to show money you don't have. They only need documentation to understand your financial situation. If you cannot pay anything, you simply write $0 or "Not able to contribute" on the certification form.

Pro Tip

Certificate of Finances ≠ proving you can pay. It's required paperwork for the visa process later. Don't let this form scare you away from applying.

How to Use This List#

  1. Pick 8–15 schools from this list that interest you
  2. Apply through the Common App at commonapp.org
  3. Submit your CSS Profile at cssprofile.collegeboard.org before the deadline
  4. Write strong essays — this is what sets you apart from thousands of other applicants
  5. Check deadlines — see Part 2 of this list for every school's deadline

Tips for choosing schools#

  • Mix selectivity levels — don't just apply to Harvard and Princeton. Include schools with higher acceptance rates like Whitman (~50%), Reed (~41%), Berea (~30%), and Macalester (~30%)
  • Consider location — do you want a big city (NYU, Columbia, UChicago) or a small town (Bowdoin, Grinnell, Deep Springs)?
  • Check program strength — some schools excel in specific areas. Harvey Mudd is legendary for STEM. Oberlin is renowned for music. Middlebury is famous for languages
  • Look at women's colleges — Wellesley, Smith, Mount Holyoke, Barnard, Bryn Mawr, and Scripps all fully fund international students and can be less competitive

Special Mentions#

Berea College — Free for Everyone#

Berea College is unique: every student receives a full-tuition scholarship, regardless of nationality or financial situation. You don't need to apply for financial aid — it's automatic. Berea also provides housing, meals, and a laptop. In return, students work 10–15 hours per week on campus.

Deep Springs College — Two Years, Completely Free#

Deep Springs is a two-year program on a ranch in the California desert with ~30 students total. Tuition, room, and board are free for everyone. After two years, students typically transfer to top universities (Harvard, Yale, Brown, UChicago) with full scholarships.

Soka University of America — Hidden Gem#

Soka is a small liberal arts university in Southern California with about 450 students. They offer generous financial aid to international students and have one of the highest study-abroad participation rates in the country (over 80% of students study abroad).

Frequently Asked Questions#

Do all 71 schools cover 100% of financial need?#

Yes. Every school on this list meets 100% of demonstrated financial need for international students. The amount you receive depends on your family's financial situation — if your family can contribute $0, the school covers everything.

What if I can't afford the application fees?#

Many of these schools offer application fee waivers. You can request a waiver through the Common App or directly from the school's admissions office. The CSS Profile also offers fee waivers for low-income students. See our list of schools with CSS fee waivers.

Should I apply to all 71 schools?#

No — applying to 8–15 schools is the sweet spot. Each application requires essays, and the quality of your essays matters more than the number of applications. Pick schools that genuinely interest you and where you'd be happy to attend.

What's the difference between research universities and liberal arts colleges?#

Research universities are larger (5,000–50,000+ students), offer more majors, have graduate programs, and emphasize research. Liberal arts colleges are smaller (1,000–3,000 students), focus exclusively on undergraduates, and emphasize broad education and close faculty relationships. Both can provide excellent full scholarships.

William Kaseu

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