An offbeat study abroad destination is suddenly trending among international students
ET Online September 14, 2025 04:40 PM
Synopsis

West Africa has emerged as Africa’s fastest-growing region for international student interest, with a 25% rise from April to July, driven by searches from Nigeria, China, Ghana, Singapore, and the US. Botswana saw a 58% surge, while South Africa remains the leading hub. Visa and financial barriers are pushing students toward regional and affordable study options, even as African universities gain global recognition.

West Africa has become the fastest-growing region in Africa for international student searches, recording a 25% rise between April and July this year, as per a report by The Pie News. The data, based on roughly 60,000 searches across Keystone Education Group websites, revealed the growth was driven by both local and international interest.

Across Africa, Botswana recorded the highest surge in student interest with a 58% rise during the same period. South Africa continues to be the leading education hub, ranking 19th globally and drawing more than half of all African destination searches, but it is West African nations that are now witnessing the sharpest growth in demand.

According to the search data, students in Nigeria, China, Ghana, Singapore and the US have driven the growth.


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Visa difficulties and financial constraints continue to affect the ‘big four’ study destinations, prompting more students in Asia to opt for affordable choices closer to home, driving intra-regional mobility.

For African students, access to the US has become tougher in recent months, with many embassies on the continent severely impacted by a nearly month-long suspension of student visa interviews, preventing some from joining American universities this semester.

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Adding to these hurdles, it was revealed last month that the US State Department reduced the validity of student visas to just three months for 21 African nations, creating further obstacles for those aspiring to study in the US.

Across Africa, higher education enrolment among those aged 15–35 has more than doubled since 2000, rising from 4% to 9%.

At the same time, African universities are gaining more recognition globally, with Surtees pointing out the growing number of African institutions in international rankings, including Egypt’s Kafrelsheikh and Mansoura Universities.
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