Enter Your Budget Inputs
Example Data Table
| Budget Item | Sample Amount (USD) |
|---|---|
| Tuition and academic fees | 18,000.00 |
| Application and test fees | 350.00 |
| Visa and permit fees | 600.00 |
| Health insurance | 1,400.00 |
| Round-trip flights | 1,300.00 |
| Arrival and setup costs | 1,100.00 |
| Accommodation per month | 900.00 |
| Food per month | 320.00 |
| Transport per month | 120.00 |
| Utilities per month | 110.00 |
| Books and supplies per month | 90.00 |
| Personal spending per month | 180.00 |
| Program length | 12 months |
| Emergency reserve | 10% |
| Inflation buffer | 4% |
| Scholarships and waivers | 6,000.00 |
| Savings available | 4,500.00 |
Formula Used
Monthly Living Cost = Accommodation + Food + Transport + Utilities + Books + Personal Spending
Program Living Cost = Monthly Living Cost × Program Months
One-Time Costs = Tuition + Application Fees + Visa Fees + Insurance + Flights + Setup Costs
Base Total = One-Time Costs + Program Living Cost
Emergency Reserve = Base Total × (Emergency Reserve % ÷ 100)
Inflation Buffer = Base Total × (Inflation Buffer % ÷ 100)
Gross Total Budget = Base Total + Emergency Reserve + Inflation Buffer
Total Funding = Scholarships + Savings + Family Support
Gap or Surplus = Total Funding − Gross Total Budget
Home Currency Total = Gross Total Budget × Exchange Rate
How to Use This Calculator
- Enter the study currency, home currency, and exchange rate.
- Add your program duration in months.
- Fill in one-time costs like tuition, visa, insurance, and flights.
- Enter monthly living expenses for housing, food, transport, utilities, books, and personal spending.
- Add reserve percentages for emergencies and price changes.
- Include all confirmed funding sources, such as scholarships and savings.
- Click Calculate Budget to view totals above the form.
- Use the export buttons to download the summary as CSV or PDF.
Frequently Asked Questions
1. What does this calculator estimate?
It estimates total study abroad costs using tuition, living expenses, travel, visa, insurance, setup costs, funding, and currency conversion inputs.
2. Why should I include an emergency reserve?
An emergency reserve helps cover surprises like medical visits, deposit losses, urgent travel, or sudden rental increases during your program.
3. What is the inflation buffer for?
The inflation buffer adds a safety margin for rising prices, exchange rate changes, and campus cost increases over time.
4. Can I use this for short courses?
Yes. Enter the correct program length in months and adjust your one-time and monthly expenses accordingly.
5. How should I estimate monthly housing costs?
Use realistic rent values from university housing pages, student forums, or current listings in your target city.
6. What if my scholarship covers only tuition?
Enter the tuition coverage under scholarships, then keep your living expenses separate so the funding gap remains accurate.
7. Why does the calculator show both gap and surplus?
A negative balance means you still need more money. A positive balance means your current funding exceeds the projected budget.
8. Can I save the results for later review?
Yes. After calculation, download the result summary as CSV or PDF for planning, applications, or family discussions.