Fewer Indian families are wiring money overseas to pay for their children’s education this year. Fresh data from the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) shows that remittances for foreign studies have dropped to their lowest level in seven years, and the reasons are tied closely to new rules in popular study destinations like the US, UK, Canada, and Australia.
Between January and June 2025, Indians sent about $1.16 billion abroad for education. That’s a 22% drop compared to the same period last year and the lowest figure since 2018. Even in June alone, the amount slipped to $139 million—numbers not seen since the peak of the COVID-19 disruption in April 2020.
The biggest reason: studying abroad is getting harder and more expensive.
Put simply, students now face more hurdles, higher costs, and greater uncertainty when applying overseas.
This slowdown is showing up in India’s education loan market too. Bank loans for studies abroad are growing at a slower pace, while NBFCs (non-banking financial companies) expect their education loan growth to halve this fiscal. Even within NBFC portfolios, the share of loans linked to US studies has already dipped.
As Crisil Ratings’ Malvika Bhotika explained, “While banks do have a large domestic portfolio, around 50% or just over that is linked to overseas education.”
Experts say two clear trends are emerging: