Don’t have a Dutch address? Brexit could cost British students a pretty penny

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DUO, the government agency tasked with implementing education policy, already issued a warning a year ago: British students in Dutch higher education with no official address in the Netherlands could get into trouble as a result of Brexit. This is the case, for instance, for students whose landlords do not allow them to register with the municipality.

Some 3,400 British students are enrolled in a Bachelor’s or Master’s programme in the Netherlands. They pay the same tuition fees as Dutch students, and they are sometimes entitled to student financing. After Brexit, nothing is going to change for British students who were already enrolled in the Netherlands, Minister of Foreign Affairs Stef Blok promised in 2018.

Covid
However, these students have to be able to prove that they were studying and living here before Brexit. Especially the latter can sometimes be difficult. About a hundred British students at Maastricht University, for example, are not registered with a Dutch municipality, Observant reports. Due to coronavirus measures, some of them are studying remotely from the UK and others live just across the border, in Belgium or Germany.

They are at risk  of having to pay the much higher institutional tuition fee, which is paid by other non-EEA students and can range from 8,000 to 32,00 euros per year at Maastricht. The university is therefore making every effort to get British students registered at the UM Guesthouse, which currently has about 270 empty rooms available, before January 1.

Brexit Information Desk
According to the government website Brexit Information Desk, the future tuition fees for British students in the Netherlands will depend on the agreements made between the EU and the UK about their future relationship. In the absence of such agreements, UK citizens “will be treated as non-EU citizens” and will pay higher tuition fees.

This will apply to 99 percent of newly enrolling British students after 1 January, according to a  spokesperson for Minister of Education Ingrid van Engelshoven. In any case, British students would do well to register with a Dutch municipality before 1 January.

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