Australia As of July 2024, there are 118,109 Indian students in Australia. After peaking in 2009, the number of Indian students studying in Australia fell following
violent attacks against Indians in Australia. By 2015, the number had risen to exceed the 2009 number. During 2013–14, 34,100 Australian visas were issued to Indian students, a rise of 38% as compared to the previous period. There were 115,000 Indian students present in Australia in 2020, and 77,000 Indian students present in Australia in 2021. According to data furnished in India's
Rajya Sabha in 2021, the number of Indian students registered in Australia was as high as 92,383. In the second half of 2022, India overtook China as the number one country lodging student visa applications in Australia. Due to border closure starting the second half of 2020, the number of new Indian students studying in Australia declined by 83% At least 12,740 Indian nationals holding Australian student visas were stuck outside Australia as of January 2021. In March 2021, Indian students and other temporary visa holders staged protests in
Delhi and
Chandigarh, objecting to Australia's uncompromising approach that kept them out of the country for a year despite the COVID-19 cases in India being relatively low at the time. Some Indian students made the switch to Canada owing to its friendlier approach towards international students. There have been calls for fast-tracking permanent residency for onshore Australian residents from India, with stress on creating smoother pathways to migration for international students.
Ban on students from Punjab, Haryana, Uttarakhand, Uttar Pradesh, and Jammu & Kashmir In the first half of 2023, reports emerged that students from
Punjab and
Haryana were banned or restricted from applying to five Australian universities. The universities feared their ability to fast-track applications would be compromised by
Home Affairs due to the number of applicants from these states intending to actually work, and not study. In 2020–21, at least 600 student applications with forged documents from these states surfaced to light. In mid-2023, Australian universities expanded the bans to include
Uttarakhand,
Uttar Pradesh, and
Jammu & Kashmir. In 2025, several Australian universities revised their restricted regions list in response to a significant rise in student visa misuse by individuals seeking migration opportunities rather than pursuing genuine education. Among the Indian states included were Punjab, Haryana, Uttar Pradesh,
Rajasthan,
Gujarat, and Jammu and Kashmir.
Canada As of 2025, there were 137,608 international students from India enrolled in Canadian institutions.
Historical trends The number of Indian students in Canada exceeded the number of Chinese students in Canada in 2018, with the Indian student population quadrupling between 2015 and 2019. With the ban being extended further, Indian students from
Punjab reportedly travelled to Canada through
Moscow,
Mexico,
Serbia,
Qatar,
Dubai among other locations, paying up to three times the regular air fare. Canada also does not accept
RT-PCR tests from Indian labs because of which students travelling from India are forced to get tested elsewhere before entering Canada.
University of Ottawa professor
Amir Attaran slammed Canada PM
Justin Trudeau's decision to ban flights from India as racist, pointing out that the
United Kingdom experienced 6500% higher cases than Canada in the same time period but did not face a similar travel ban to Canada.
Student Visas and Migration Canada is a preferred destination for Indian nationals due to multi-year Post-Graduation Work Permit (PGWP) offered indiscriminately for strengthening the underfunded Canadian education system. Provisions were also available until recently for an easier transition to permanent residency in Canada, and the strong diasporic presence of the community in certain provincial areas offered additional benefits. Also, international students do not need to pay tuition in advance or deposit money in Canada to show that they are able to stay and live in Canada without being a burden when applying for a study permit. The decisions of Australia and New Zealand to close borders to international students in 2021 also contributed to the surge in Indian student migration to Canada. According to student reports from India, study permit refusal rates to Canada were as high as 60% during the Fall 2021 semester. The primary reason for the majority of study permit refusals was poor
IELTS scores and academic plans that did not match the students’ profiles.
Deportation of Punjab-based students Around 700 students from Punjab faced deportation from Canada early in 2023 after it came to light that their education offer letters were fake.
Chandigarh University offered to help out students facing deportation by offering them admission in the same batches, and by using credit score mapping to transfer their course units. Previously, Indian international students bought IELTS certificates and applied for admissions, which resulted in higher number of international students pursuing their studies in Canada without the needed English proficiency to be functional in Canada. The Canadian government also offered a reprieve. In June, Canada's immigration minister Sean Fraser said genuine students who are victims of fraud would be allowed to stay after an investigation.
New Zealand There were 22,225 Indian students enrolled in New Zealand, as of 2015. A 26% student visa refusal rate was reported for Indian students applying to study in New Zealand between July 2019 and February 2020.
United Kingdom There are 92,355 Indian nationals on study visas in the UK, as of 2025. The number of Indians granted study visas grew by 307% between 2019 and 2022, increasing from 34,261 to 139,539. India also displaced China as the most common nationality granted UK study visas, with the East Asian country recording 102,842 such nationals in 2022. Together, Indian and Chinese nationals comprise half of all study visa grants in the UK.
United States of America 331,602 Indian students were recorded in the United States as of 2025. Indian students pumped US$7.6 billion into the US economy during the 2019-20 period.
Historical trends In 2010, the number of Indian students studying in the US crossed 100,000. According to the 2017 report, the number of Indian students in the USA numbered 186,000. In 2019, Indian students opting for the US declined by 4%. At least 207,000 international Indian students were recorded to be present in the United States in 2020. As of 2022, India has surpassed China to become the top country with most international students in the United States.
Impact of educational programs Students seeking international education are profoundly impacted by the programs they select and the less academically and pedagogically proficient departments that deliver them. These factors shape not only their academic trajectories but also their professional and financial prospects. Many international students from India perceive a U.S. degree as a gateway to work visas and enhanced job opportunities, often using it to navigate the absence of clear, legally accessible pathways to achieve their U.S. aspirations. However, the financial burden of pursuing these degrees, coupled with uncertainties in securing employment in labor markets characterized by less proficient knowledge, skills, and refined abilities, poses significant challenges. High tuition costs, combined with a low return on investment, can leave students in considerable debt, particularly when academic programs lack strong faculty expertise or resources. Furthermore, cultural differences and limited assimilation into U.S. norms—beginning with culturally aligned classroom behaviors and expectations—highlight potential challenges and frictions that international students might introduce to organizations operating under U.S.-centric standards. These factors underscore the difficulties international students face in achieving their goals, emphasizing the need for both government and educational institutions to proactively address these issues.
Impact of the Covid-19 pandemic Enrolment in the 2020 Fall Semester dropped by 43% following the
COVID-19 pandemic. In July 2020, the American administration announced that international university students may have to leave the United States if their studies moved completely online, putting the future of tens of thousands of students in jeopardy. First-time student visa applicants expressed their concerns about shut embassies and limited staff availability, with many postponing their study plans. In May 2021, certain categories of Indian students were exempted from US travel restrictions.
Student Visas and Migration The country-cap on
Green Cards has been widely criticized for perpetuating an arbitrary immigration system that has seen little meaningful reform since the 1960s. Despite being the birthplace of Silicon Valley, the United States continues to rely on a paper-based system rather than adopting a modern, digital, and computerized system suited for the 21st century. Indian-American advocacy groups have criticized the outdated frameworks and systems, especially in comparison to those of countries like Canada, Australia, New Zealand, and Japan, arguing that it leaves qualified Indian professionals in the U.S. waiting decades to obtain permanent residency, despite their significant contributions to the economy and society. They say that the current exploitative visa schemes coupled with the systemic inefficiency is one which forces immigrants to "engage in a life of indentured servitude," reflecting the
thirteenth amendment. For many Indian students, the prospect of securing permanent residency through legal recognition of their contributions is a key motivator for studying in the U.S. However, the lack of such opportunities, combined with a system that only favors illegal immigrants, has been reflected in shifting admission trends, with more students choosing Canada over the U.S. The U.S. lawmakers have expressed their disapproval of the U.S. immigration system that has driven international students, particularly those from India, north to Canada. == Europe ==