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China Government Scholarships 2026

Tianjin University International Student Scholarship 2026 Open for Admissions

Tianjin University (TJU), one of China’s oldest and most prestigious institutions, has officially opened applications for the 2026 Tianjin University International Student Scholarship, inviting outstanding international students to pursue undergraduate studies across a wide range of programs.

The scholarship is designed to support talented global learners with excellent academic records and strong motivation to study in China. It offers several categories of financial support to help students achieve their academic goals at TJU.


Tianjin CSC Scholarship 2026 Categories and Coverage

The Tianjin University International Student Scholarship provides four funding categories (Type A, B, C, and D) for Bachelor’s degree applicants.

  1. Type A: Tuition subsidy of RMB 20,000 and a living allowance of RMB 1,400 per month for 10 months.
  2. Type B: Tuition subsidy of RMB 20,000.
  3. Type C: Tuition subsidy of RMB 10,000.
  4. Type D: Tuition subsidy of RMB 6,000.

The scholarship covers one academic year and may be renewed based on academic performance.


Eligibility Criteria

Applicants must be non-Chinese citizens holding valid passports. Those who were previously Chinese citizens must meet the requirements outlined by China’s Ministry of Education regulations. Candidates should have completed high school and be under 25 years of age at the time of admission.

Students applying for Chinese-taught programs must submit HSK Level 4 or Level 5 certificates with a minimum score of 180. For English-taught programs, applicants must provide IELTS 6.0 or TOEFL 80. Native speakers or those who completed their high school education in English may submit a certificate of English-medium instruction instead.

Applicants under 18 years old by September 1, 2026 must provide a guardian certificate issued by the Tianjin District Notary Office, and the guardian must be a permanent resident of Tianjin.


Application Process

All applicants are required to complete the China Scholastic Competency Assessment (CSCA) and obtain an official score report before applying. The CSCA test is organized by the China Scholarship Council and serves as a key academic evaluation metric.

After obtaining the CSCA results, candidates must submit an online application via the Tianjin University International Student Service System at tju.at0086.cn/student. Applicants should upload all required materials, fill in the scholarship application form, and ensure accuracy and completeness of the information provided.

Shortlisted students will be invited for an interview to evaluate academic performance, comprehensive skills, and language proficiency. Admission results will be announced afterward, and selected students will receive the Admission Notice and Visa Application Form (JW202/JW201) in July 2026.


Application Deadline

The last date to apply for the Tianjin University International Student Scholarship 2026 is April 1, 2026. Due to limited quota in each school, applicants are strongly advised to apply early.


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Engr Nida Sangal

Nida Sangal is an IT graduate, international education journalist, and scholarships mentor whose work sits at the intersection of technology, global student mobility, and access to funded higher education. She covers scholarship announcements, fellowship cycles, university funding decisions, and the policy developments shaping international student recruitment across North America, Europe, Asia-Pacific, and the Gulf. Drawing on a technical background in information technology and years of direct mentorship experience guiding applicants through competitive scholarship processes worldwide, Sangal brings a practitioner's precision to her reporting. Her coverage goes beyond announcement summaries — she interrogates funding mandates, tracks shifts in eligibility criteria across academic cycles, and contextualizes individual awards within the structural forces driving global higher education access, from rising tuition costs and bilateral education agreements to the expanding role of foundation philanthropy in developing-world student funding. As a scholarships mentor with a global following, Sangal understands what applicants actually need from scholarship journalism: not recycled listings, but timely, accurate reporting that helps serious candidates make informed decisions about where to apply, when, and why. That reader-first discipline shapes every article she writes. She reports for Fully Funded Scholarships as a Senior Correspondent, covering government-sponsored scholarship programmes, university-administered awards, research fellowships, and international internship funding across all academic levels — undergraduate through postdoctoral.

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