Study Abroad ROI for Indians: When It's Worth It and When It's Not

India is one of the world's top source countries for international students. Over 1.3 million Indian students study abroad annually, according to Ministry of External Affairs data. The United States, Canada, United Kingdom, Australia, and Germany collectively host roughly 85% of them. This number grew 23% between 2021 and 2025, fuelled by aspirational parents, aggressive international university marketing, and a widespread belief that overseas education automatically translates to superior career outcomes.

That belief is partially true and frequently over-applied. This analysis provides the actual numbers: full investment costs by country, realistic salary outcomes, and an honest, course-specific verdict on when overseas education justifies the extraordinary investment it requires.

The Full Cost Reality: What Studying Abroad Actually Costs

Most conversations about study abroad cost focus on tuition fees. The full picture includes living costs, health insurance, flights, visa fees, and the opportunity cost of income foregone. Here is the realistic total for a 2-year Master's programme (the most common Indian overseas student pathway):

United States of America

| Cost Component | Range | |---|---| | Tuition (2 years) | $50,000–$100,000 (₹41–83L) | | Living costs (2 years) | $28,000–$40,000 (₹23–33L) | | Health insurance | $3,000–$5,000 (₹2.5–4L) | | Visa, flights, misc | $3,000–$5,000 (₹2.5–4L) | | Total range | ₹69–124 lakh |

Loan scenario: Many families finance this with 80% loan. On ₹80 lakh at 10.5% interest over 7 years, total repayment including interest exceeds ₹1.3 crore.

United Kingdom

| Cost Component | Range | |---|---| | Tuition (1-year Master's) | £20,000–£35,000 (₹22–38L) | | Living costs (1 year) | £14,000–£20,000 (₹15–22L) | | Health surcharge, visa, misc | £3,000–£5,000 (₹3–5L) | | Total range | ₹40–65 lakh |

UK's 1-year Master's is more affordable in absolute terms, but the 2-year Graduate Route visa (post-study work) gives less time to recover the investment while earning UK wages.

Canada

| Cost Component | Range | |---|---| | Tuition (2 years) | CAD $30,000–$50,000 (₹18–30L) | | Living costs (2 years) | CAD $30,000–$40,000 (₹18–24L) | | Visa, health, misc | CAD $4,000–$6,000 (₹2.4–3.6L) | | Total range | ₹38–58 lakh |

Canada's permanent residency pathway (Express Entry) makes it attractive for those planning to immigrate, but recent immigration policy tightening and increased study permit refusals have reduced predictability.

Germany

| Cost Component | Range | |---|---| | Tuition (2 years) | €0–€3,000 (₹0–2.8L) at public universities | | Living costs (2 years) | €20,000–€28,000 (₹18–26L) | | Health insurance, visa, misc | €3,000–€5,000 (₹2.8–4.6L) | | Total range | ₹21–34 lakh |

Germany is dramatically more affordable — but with important constraints: (a) most programmes are in German; (b) English-medium programmes exist but are fewer; (c) German job market integration requires German language proficiency for most non-tech roles.

Australia

| Cost Component | Range | |---|---| | Tuition (2 years) | AUD $50,000–$80,000 (₹27–43L) | | Living costs (2 years) | AUD $40,000–$55,000 (₹22–30L) | | Visa, health, misc | AUD $5,000–$8,000 (₹2.7–4.3L) | | Total range | ₹52–77 lakh |

Australia's 2-year Temporary Graduate visa (485 visa) provides post-study work rights, and the pathway to skilled migration (subclass 189/190) is structured but increasingly competitive.

Post-Graduation Salary Scenarios

If You Stay in the Destination Country

USA (CS/Tech roles, major tech hub):

  • Entry-level software engineer: $90,000–$130,000 (₹75–108 LPA equivalent)
  • Bonus: $10,000–$25,000
  • OPT (3 years for STEM) provides time to settle before H-1B uncertainty
  • Break-even vs total ₹90 lakh investment: 12–18 months of salary if employed

USA (Non-CS roles):

  • Finance, marketing, operations: $65,000–$90,000 (₹54–75 LPA)
  • Breaking even requires staying in the US for 2–3 years
  • H-1B lottery risk (33% annual selection probability) creates significant uncertainty

UK (Post-study):

  • London tech salary: £50,000–£75,000 (₹54–81 LPA)
  • Non-London: £35,000–£55,000 (₹38–60 LPA)
  • Break-even on ₹50 lakh investment: 12–18 months in London tech

Germany (Post-study):

  • Tech roles in Munich/Berlin: €60,000–€85,000 (₹56–79 LPA)
  • After taxes (Germany has high taxes): effective take-home much lower
  • Break-even on ₹27 lakh investment: 6–9 months — excellent ROI if German language proficiency is achievable

Canada (Post-study):

  • Tech roles in Toronto/Vancouver: CAD $70,000–$100,000 (₹42–60 LPA)
  • High cost of living (especially Vancouver, Toronto) reduces effective savings
  • Break-even on ₹48 lakh investment: 12–20 months

If You Return to India

This is where the ROI calculation becomes most critical for families whose primary goal is a better Indian career, not immigration.

Return to India premium over Indian-educated peers (2025–26 data):

| Background | India Entry Salary Expectation | |---|---| | MS CS from Top 30 US University (MIT, Stanford, CMU, UIUC) | ₹30–55 LPA at top Indian tech/product companies | | MS CS from Top 50–100 US University | ₹18–30 LPA | | MS CS from Lower-Ranked US University | ₹12–20 LPA (limited premium over IIT/NIT graduate) | | UK Master's (Top 10: Oxford, Cambridge, Imperial, UCL) | ₹20–35 LPA depending on field | | UK Master's (Mid-tier Russell Group) | ₹12–20 LPA | | Germany Master's (TU Munich, KIT) | ₹15–28 LPA (with German language bonus for specific roles) | | MBA from HBS/Wharton/Stanford | ₹45–80 LPA at premium Indian employers | | MBA from Top 50 Global School (not Top 20) | ₹18–30 LPA — often similar to good Indian MBA |

The uncomfortable truth for returning students: The salary premium that overseas education produces upon return to India is real for top-tier programmes but much smaller for mid-tier overseas programmes than families typically expect. An MS from a US university ranked 80–150 does not produce dramatically better India-career outcomes than an IIT/top NIT, yet costs 8–10× more.

Course-by-Course ROI Analysis

MS Computer Science (USA): Clear Positive ROI from Top Programmes

This is perhaps the only category where overseas education from top US programmes has unambiguously strong ROI even accounting for full costs:

  • US tech salaries are genuinely 3–5× higher than Indian equivalents at comparable companies
  • OPT (Optional Practical Training) for STEM students provides 3 years of US work authorisation
  • Top CS MS programmes from CMU, Stanford, UIUC, Cornell, Michigan provide access to US tech hiring ecosystems that Indian credentials cannot access equally
  • Verdict: Strong ROI for Top 30 CS programmes; declining ROI for Top 50–100; poor ROI for lower-ranked programmes

The H-1B uncertainty: Since H-1B visa lottery selection is approximately 33% in 2026, roughly 67% of students who want to stay beyond OPT cannot. This substantially changes the ROI calculation. Students should have a credible Plan B that includes returning to India.

MBA from Global Top 10

  • Harvard, Wharton, Stanford, LBS, INSEAD: Total investment ₹1.25–1.5 crore
  • US/Global median salary: $175,000–$200,000 (₹145–165 LPA equivalent)
  • Break-even in USA: 12–15 months
  • India-return premium: ₹45–80 LPA (vs IIM-A at ₹32 LPA median)
  • Verdict: Strong ROI if you can access these programmes; the IIM-A comparison is real but these global names open doors to PE, VC, and global strategy roles IIM-A does not equally

MBA from Global Rank 20–50

  • Total investment: ₹70–100 lakh
  • US/UK median salary: $120,000–$150,000 (₹100–125 LPA equivalent in USA)
  • India-return premium vs IIM-A: Minimal to negative
  • Verdict: Strong only if you intend to build a US/UK career; poor for India-return objective vs investing that ₹70–100 lakh elsewhere

Undergraduate Degrees Abroad

The ROI case for undergraduate (4-year) study abroad for Indian students is generally poor:

  • USA 4-year undergraduate: ₹1.2–2 crore total
  • UK 3-year undergraduate: ₹55–85 lakh total
  • Indian alternatives at their quality (IIT, NIT, DU top colleges): ₹8–25 lakh total
  • Entry salary difference between US undergraduate and IIT in India (for India careers): modest
  • Verdict: Only justified for entry into Ivy League, Oxbridge, or comparable institutions where the institutional brand generates long-term global opportunities; mid-ranked overseas undergraduate degrees have poor India-career ROI

STEM Masters (Non-CS): Varies Significantly

  • Electrical Engineering from strong US programmes: Good ROI (semiconductor sector growth creating demand)
  • Data Science from top programmes: Good ROI (similar to CS)
  • Mechanical, Civil, Chemical from mid-ranked programmes: Poor ROI; fewer US sponsoring employers
  • Biotech from top US (Johns Hopkins, MIT, UCSD): Potentially strong for biotech career building
  • Management/Finance MS from mid-tier: Poor ROI vs Indian alternatives

Scholarship Availability: Reducing the Investment

The ROI calculation changes substantially with scholarship support:

Fully-funded US PhD programmes: Teaching/research assistantships cover tuition and provide $18,000–$28,000/year stipends. For research-oriented students, this is the optimal US pathway — full education + stipend + research experience with no debt.

Fulbright-Nehru scholarship: US government-funded; covers tuition, living, and travel for 1-year study. Highly competitive but free.

German DAAD scholarship: €861–1,200/month stipend covering living costs; significant tuition coverage. Germany's low base costs make DAAD recipients essentially studying at near-zero net cost.

Commonwealth Scholarship (UK): Fully-funded; highly competitive; for students targeting UK specifically.

Canadian university merit scholarships: Many Canadian universities offer 25–50% fee waivers to international students with strong academic records.

Institutional assistantships: Many US and Canadian universities offer graduate assistantships (teaching or research) that provide tuition waivers + monthly stipends. These dramatically change ROI — a fully-funded MS is a different financial proposition than a fee-paying MS.

A Decision Framework

Before committing to study abroad:

Tier 1 Decision: Do you intend to build a career in the destination country? If yes, overseas education makes sense at a wider range of institutions. If no (India return), the ROI bar is much higher.

Tier 2 Decision: Can you access a Top 30 programme in your field (CS, finance, policy)? If yes, the brand premium justifies the investment. If no, honestly evaluate Indian alternatives.

Tier 3 Decision: Have you exhausted Indian premium options? If IIT, IIM-A/B/C, AIIMS, IIM-Calcutta, or equivalent are accessible to you, these often provide better India-career ROI than all but the very top global alternatives.

Tier 4 Decision: Is partial or full scholarship funding available? If yes, re-run the numbers — the decision tree shifts significantly with funding.

Conclusion

Study abroad delivers genuine career ROI in specific circumstances: top-programme CS/tech MS from US for students willing to work in the US, top global MBA for those targeting global strategy roles, and Germany for students willing to learn German and build European careers. The ROI becomes questionable for mid-ranked US/UK/Australian programmes — particularly for students who return to India.

The Indian education system has genuine world-class options at the top that are deeply undervalued in the aspirational fever around overseas study. An IIT CS degree is better India-career preparation than an MS from a US university ranked 100–150. An IIM-A MBA is better India-career preparation than an MBA from most non-Top-20 global programmes.

The financially sound principle is: choose the best-quality institution you can access in your target geography, and base that geography decision on honest career intention rather than aspirational immigration plans.

Dheya's career counsellors help Indian students make study abroad decisions with real data — comparing overseas programme quality, full costs, and career outcomes against Indian alternatives. Get your study abroad ROI analysis at Dheya.com →