Origins of the name The programme is named after the Dutch philosopher, theologian,
Renaissance humanist,
monk, and devout
Roman Catholic,
Desiderius Erasmus of Rotterdam, called "the crowning glory of the Christian humanists". The programme's origins can be traced through a series of significant events documented on the official European Commission programme page: • From 1973 to 1976, the first European-level education action programme was established. • Between 1976 and 1987, the foundations for what would later become Erasmus were laid through the "Joint Study Programme" (JSP) scheme in higher education. The organisation and execution of the JSP was entrusted to the
European Cultural Foundation. This initiative gained traction as more universities and students participated, contributing to the development of mobility, partnership, and joint curricula. • From 1985 to 1987, the "Erasmus" proposal was developed and negotiated. In 1985, the Directorate for Education and Training presented the proposal to the
Council and
European Parliament. The Council officially adopted the "Erasmus" programme on June 15, 1987, and it was officially launched on July 1, 1987. The responsibility for the central operations office of the programme was in the hands of the European Cultural Foundation until 1995. This active collaboration between AEGEE and the European Commission and especially Domenico Lenarduzzi, Ministry of Public Education, allowed the approval of the Erasmus programme in 1987. It became an integral part of the Socrates I (1994–1999) and Socrates II (2000–2006) programmes. From 2007 it became one of the elements of the Lifelong Learning Programme (2007–2013). In June 1984, the European Council decided in Fontainebleau to establish an ad-hoc European citizens' committee with the mission to make proposals to improve the image of the European Union. Each council member would select a member and together they should present a set of proposals to be approved at a future European Council. Under the chairmanship of Pietro Adonnino, the committee presented two successive reports that were approved at the Council session in
Milan on the 28–29 of June 1985. Under the proposals that were advanced in these reports was the suggestion (to be found in the second report from number 5.6: University Cooperation) that the ministers for education and universities and higher-education establishments • should establish a cross-frontier cooperation enabling students to pursue part of their studies in an establishment in a member state other than their own; • should implement, a comprehensive European inter-university programme of exchanges and studies aimed at giving this opportunity to a significant section of the EU's student population. These suggestions were advanced by the Belgian member Prosper Thuysbaert and were discussed and approved by the committee.
1987 European Commission proposal By the time the Erasmus Programme was adopted in June 1987, the
European Commission had been supporting pilot student exchanges for six years. It proposed the original Erasmus Programme in early 1986, but reaction from the then member states varied: those with substantial exchange programmes of their own (essentially France, Germany and the United Kingdom) were broadly hostile; the remaining countries were broadly in favour. Exchanges between the
member states and the
European Commission deteriorated, and the latter withdrew the proposal in early 1987 to protest against the inadequacy of the triennial budget proposed by some member states. In 2004, the Erasmus Programme was awarded the
Princess of Asturias Award for International Cooperation.
Lifelong Learning Programme 2007–2013 After 2007, the
Lifelong Learning Programme 2007–2013 replaced the Socrates programme as the overall umbrella under which the Erasmus (and other) programmes operated.
Erasmus Mundus The
Erasmus Mundus programme is a parallel programme oriented towards globalising European education and is open to non-Europeans with Europeans being exceptional cases.
Citizens' initiative for more money 2014–2020 In May 2012,
Fraternité 2020 was registered as Europe's first
European Citizens' Initiative and a goal to increase the budget for EU exchange programmes like Erasmus or the
European Voluntary Service starting in 2014. It ultimately collected only 71,057 signatures from citizens across the EU out of 1 million signatures needed by 1 November 2013.
Erasmus+ Programme 2014–2020 Erasmus+, also called Erasmus Plus, has been the new 14.7 billion euro catch-all framework programme for education, training, youth and sport from 2014 to 2020. The Erasmus+ programme combined all the EU's schemes for education, training, youth and sport, including the Lifelong Learning Programme (Erasmus,
Leonardo da Vinci, Comenius, Grundtvig), Youth in Action and five international co-operation programmes (Erasmus Mundus, Tempus, Alfa, Edulink and the programme for co-operation with industrialised countries). The Erasmus+ regulation was signed on 11 December 2013. Erasmus+ provided grants for a wide range of actions including the opportunity for students to undertake work placements abroad and for teachers and education staff to attend training courses. Projects are divided into two parts – formal and non-formal education – each of them with three key actions. Erasmus+ key action one provides an opportunity for teachers, headmasters, trainers and other staff of education institutions to participate in international training courses in different European countries. The staff home institution must apply to receive the grant to send its staff members abroad for training. Some parts of Erasmus+ are also open to activities in countries beyond the EU. As an example, in Central Asia's
Kazakhstan, 40 projects were supported involving 47 Kazakh universities with more than 35.5 million euros. With
Brexit, the UK government decision not to participate in Erasmus+ meant UK students (9,993 in 2018) lost access to the Erasmus programme and EU students (29,797 in 2018) lost access to UK universities, despite some Conservatives such as
Suella Braverman having benefitted from it and promises made by then-Prime Minister
Boris Johnson that "There is no threat to the ERASMUS scheme." The UK opted not to take part as an associated third country in the new Erasmus+ programme. The UK decided to utilise the funds that would have been paid into Erasmus+ to create the
Turing scheme, allowing 40,000 students p.a., from age 4 to university age, to gain experience overseas, without being limited to European destinations. In December 2025, the UK government announced it would aim to secure a deal to rejoin Erasmus+, a government spokesperson stating, "At the summit in May, we agreed to work towards association to Erasmus+, ensuring it is on the right terms for the UK.".
Erasmus+ Programme 2021–2027 On 30 May 2018, the European Commission adopted its proposal for the next Erasmus programme, with a doubling of the budget to 30 billion euros for the period 2021–2027. Further negotiations were expected to take place during the 2019–2024 European parliamentary term with the European Parliament and the European Council before the final programme is adopted. The agreement between the European Parliament and the European Council was adopted and the publication of the new regulation 2021/817 establishing the new Erasmus+ programme was made on 28 May 2021. For the second phase of the programme, the EU has made the commitment to expand Erasmus+ further and to enrich it by introducing a new 'greening' dimension as well as a strong new digital education component. The new greening dimension is designed to contribute to combating climate change and addressing other global challenges including health, while the digital education strand seeks in particular to improve the quality of online education in Europe which has grown considerably in the aftermath of the Covid 19 pandemic. Further transversal priorities for the programme are the commitment to social inclusion and diversity, and to promoting stronger participation in democratic life, common values and civic engagement. ==Participation and impact of the programme==