




| Programme | Duration | Tuition / year | Tuition — full course |
|---|---|---|---|
| Medicine (MD) | 6 years | €13,000/yr | €78,000 |
Translations and legalisation take 6–8 weeks; exam preparation runs in parallel. Begin 6–9 months before your target intake.
applications open in spring; exams June–September. We submit well before the deadline and track confirmation.
Visa (for non-EU), accommodation and airport pickup are all arranged before you land.
Yes — a written exam in Biology & Chemistry at high-school level. We provide original past papers and coach you weekly until you consistently pass. We confirm the current year's exact dates and whether remote sittings are offered.
The entire programme — lectures, textbooks, exams — is in English. You take basic Polish courses during the early years so that from your clinical years you can take patient histories on the wards. Students consistently report this is manageable — and it becomes a professional asset.
The first years are pre-clinical (anatomy, physiology, biochemistry — labs and lecture halls). Around year 3 you transition to the wards: clinical rotations run at the university's affiliated teaching hospitals in Kraków, covering internal medicine, surgery, paediatrics and the other core specialties, with final state examinations at the end of the course.
No. Like most EU universities, Jagiellonian University uses the ECTS credit system: exams typically allow resit attempts (commonly two resits), and failing a single exam does not expel you. The exact retake and year-repeat rules are set by the faculty — we walk you through the current official regulations before you apply, so there are no surprises.
Polish specialisation requires passing the LEK exam (available in English for the exam itself) and Polish language for clinical work; most international graduates use the degree to enter residency across the EU or the UK.
Yes — Jagiellonian University is EU-recognised (automatic recognition in all 27 member states under Directive 2005/36/EC), listed in the relevant WHO/ECFMG directories for medicine, with established routes to the UK (GMC / UKMLA-PLAB) and USA (USMLE). We verify your specific home country's rules before you commit.
Tuition is €13,000/yr for Medicine (MD). Over the full 6 years that is roughly €78,000 in tuition, plus living costs in Kraków of about €500–750/month (€30,000–€45,000 across the course). Realistic all-in total: €109,500–€126,000. Our placement service adds €0.
High-school diploma and transcript (with Biology and Chemistry), certified translation, notarisation/apostille as required for your country, application form, passport copy, and for some intakes a CV and motivation letter. We prepare and submit the entire file for you, free.
For the October intake the key deadline is mid-July; applications open in spring; exams June–September. We build your timeline backwards from your target intake — contact us early.
Yes — a written exam in Biology & Chemistry at high-school level. We provide original past papers and coach you weekly until you consistently pass. We confirm the current year's exact dates and whether remote sittings are offered.
Yes — lectures, seminars and exams are 100% in English. You also take basic Polish courses so you can communicate with patients during clinical training; the university teaches you exactly the clinical vocabulary you need.
The first years are pre-clinical (anatomy, physiology, biochemistry); clinical rotations begin around year 3 and run through the university's affiliated teaching hospitals in Kraków. We connect you with current students so you hear first-hand how rotations are organised.
No. Like most EU universities, Jagiellonian University uses the ECTS credit system: exams typically allow resit attempts (commonly two resits), and failing a single exam does not expel you. The exact retake and year-repeat rules are set by the faculty — we walk you through the current official regulations before you apply, so there are no surprises.
Polish specialisation requires passing the LEK exam (available in English for the exam itself) and Polish language for clinical work; most international graduates use the degree to enter residency across the EU or the UK.
Yes — Jagiellonian University is EU-recognised (automatic recognition in all 27 member states under Directive 2005/36/EC), listed in the relevant WHO/ECFMG directories for medicine, with established routes to the UK (GMC / UKMLA-PLAB) and USA (USMLE). We verify your specific home country's rules before you commit.
Nothing — €0, ever. The university pays us a commission when you enrol. You receive free: eligibility assessment, exam preparation, complete application handling, visa support, accommodation arrangement and support throughout your studies.
An advisor contacts you within one working day: can you get in, what you need, and your exact timeline.