
Japan's 2026 student visa rules: streamlined COE process, ¥2M financial proof, 28h/week work permission, NHI enrollment required. MEXT scholarship guide with benefits (full tuition + stipend) and application channels. Cost estimates for Chinese students planning to study in Japan.



Thailand Ministry of Education mandates all schools to accept foreign students regardless of nationality from 2025 academic year, launches G Code identity system for students without Thai documentation. Offers scholarships and long-term student visas, significantly enhancing education inclusivity.

Malaysia launches 10-year Higher Education Blueprint, targeting 260,000 international students by 2030 with 8.5% annual growth. Focus on postgraduate recruitment, offering Muslim-friendly environment and affordable tuition, emerging as SEA education hub.

Korea and Taiwan significantly ease student visa policies in 2026: Korea waives bank proof for vocational students with TOPIK 3, increases work hours to 35/week; Taiwan offers 2-year open work permits, PhDs can deduct 3 years from permanent residency.

Australia implements major reforms to Temporary Graduate Visa (Subclass 485) in 2026, reducing age limit to 35 (with PhD/research exemptions), raising IELTS to 6.5 overall (no band below 5.5), doubling visa fee to AUD 4,600, and scrapping COVID-19 extension.

Ireland implements multiple adjustments to student visa policies in 2026, including standardized financial proof (€10,000 for first academic year), partial tuition prepayment, potential caps on language school enrollment, and retention of the 24-month graduate work visa (Stamp 1G). This article explains the impact of new rules on Chinese students applying to Ireland and coping strategies.

Singapore's Ministry of Manpower announces that the Local Qualifying Salary (LQS) will increase from S$1,600 to S$1,800 per month effective July 1, 2026. This adjustment directly affects S Pass quota calculations and indirectly raises the employment threshold for international students seeking work passes after graduation. Meanwhile, Japan has relaxed employment restrictions for technical school graduates, expanding pathways to non-related industries.

Japan revises technical school graduate visa policy, moving deadline forward and allowing graduates to work in industries unrelated to their major