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Spectrum Overseas Education Consultants Pvt Ltd is a trusted consultancy firm in Pakistan, helping students and professionals pursue education and career opportunities abroad. We provide expert guidance for study visas, work permits, and immigration to countries like the UK, USA, Canada, Australia, and more. With personalized support and a commitment to transparency, we turn global dreams into reality.

A fully funded scholarship means the scholarship organization covers most of your major educational and living expenses.
Typically, this includes:
✓ Full tuition fees (100% of university costs)
✓ Monthly living stipend (€500-2,000 depending on country)
✓ Health insurance (mandatory coverage)
✓ Sometimes accommodation
✓ Sometimes travel support (one-time airfare)
The idea: You attend university with minimal financial stress. Your scholarship covers the big bills. You work part-time if needed, but you’re not desperate.
Important caveat: Even “fully funded” scholarships don’t cover everything. Personal expenses, phone bills, leisure activities—you still pay for these. But the main costs are covered.
A partial scholarship covers only specific expenses. Not everything.
Common partial scholarship options:
The expectation: You cover remaining costs. Through family support, part-time work, or personal savings.
But here’s what students miss: A partial scholarship is still valuable. A €10,000/year tuition waiver is massive. It’s the difference between affording university and not.
Expense | Fully Funded | Partial Scholarship |
Tuition Fees | 100% Covered | 50-80% or Not Covered |
Monthly Living (€800) | €700-1,200 stipend | You pay or small stipend |
Health Insurance | Covered | Sometimes covered |
Travel/Accommodation | Sometimes included | Rarely included |
Total Coverage | 80-95% | 30-60% |
Read “scholarship” and assume full funding
❌ Skim eligibility without reading details
❌ Believe social media summaries (“£0 to study in UK”)
❌ Don’t compare what different scholarships actually cover
❌ Hear from friends about their scholarship (which might be different from yours)
Example: Your friend gets a “full scholarship” to UK worth £15,000/year. Sounds amazing. But that only covers tuition. Living costs are £15,000-18,000/year—your friend has to pay that. Is it “full” or “partial”? It depends on your definition.
Now you understand the difference. But why is fully funded so hard to get?
Simple math:
University has a budget: €500,000/year
Cost per fully funded student: €20,000/year (tuition + stipend)
Available slots: 25 students maximum
Applications received: 2,000
Acceptance rate: 1.25%
Partial scholarships are more available because they cost less. A €5,000 tuition waiver can help 100 students instead of 25. So acceptance rates are 4-5x higher.
This doesn’t mean fully funded is impossible. But it explains why you hear about so many partial scholarships.
• You have no family financial support
• You cannot take education loans
• You need every expense covered
• Your family would struggle with partial support
Reality check: Many successful students have actually gone with partial scholarships. They worked part-time or had family support. They still studied abroad. They still built careers. Don’t let “not fully funded” stop you from applying.
Here’s what strategic students do: They don’t choose between fully funded and partial. They apply to both.
If you get fully funded—amazing. If you get partial—still great. You still study abroad.
Reality: A €10,000 tuition waiver is worth applying for. It significantly reduces your burden. Many students have successful careers on partial scholarships.
Reality: In most cases, you can have both. A partial scholarship from University A doesn’t prevent a fully funded opportunity from University B. Check specific terms, but generally you can hold multiple offers.
Reality: Partial is real support. €5,000-15,000/year is meaningful. Combined with part-time work or family support, it makes study abroad feasible.
The result: Students make informed decisions instead of assumptions. They apply to realistic scholarships. They avoid disappointment.
Fully funded is ideal. But partial is real opportunity.
The biggest mistake isn’t choosing partial over fully funded. The biggest mistake is not applying because you assume you don’t qualify.
Apply to everything you’re eligible for. Let the scholarship committee decide. Don’t decide for them.
