Tag Archives: African Master’s Scholarships

Mastercard Foundation Scholars Program 2027: How African Students Win Funded Master’s Spots

The Mastercard Foundation Scholars 2027 cycle opens with 40+ partner universities across Africa, Europe and North America, and selectees receive full tuition, stipend, mentorship and mandatory return-to-Africa career support. For Nigerian, Kenyan, Rwandan, Ghanaian, Ugandan, Senegalese, Ethiopian and Zimbabwean undergraduate and master’s applicants, this is the most prestigious fully-funded scholarship available without country quotas. Below is a step-by-step playbook for the 2027 application window, including how to differentiate at the essay stage and what the post-graduation career covenant actually requires.

What the scholarship actually covers

The Mastercard Foundation Scholars Program funds talented young Africans facing financial barriers. Coverage includes 100% of tuition, all university fees, a living stipend, return air travel from your home country, a laptop, books, visa fees, and a structured mentorship and leadership development programme. Master’s scholarships typically run one to two years; bachelor’s scholarships run three to four years. Total package value sits between USD 60,000 and USD 250,000 depending on host university.

The programme is not a stand-alone application — you apply through a Mastercard Foundation partner university. Some require you to apply to the academic programme first and tick a Mastercard Foundation box; others run a parallel scholarship application that opens once admission is offered. Always check the partner university’s specific process and deadlines, which vary by school.

The 40+ partner universities in 2026–2027

The North American partners include University of Toronto, McGill University, University of British Columbia, University of California Berkeley, Stanford, Arizona State, and Duke. African partners include University of Cape Town, Makerere, Kwame Nkrumah University, Ashesi (Ghana), African Leadership University (Rwanda), Strathmore (Kenya), University of Pretoria, American University in Cairo and University of Ibadan. European partners include University of Edinburgh, University of Cambridge African Studies, Sciences Po Paris, Sciences Po Nancy and KU Leuven (Belgium).

Each university funds a different number of scholars per cycle — typically 5 to 50. The University of Toronto’s program is among the largest, accepting 40+ scholars annually. The Cambridge African Studies partnership is among the smallest, funding only 4–6 master’s students. Apply to two or three partners simultaneously when their deadlines overlap; nothing in the rules prevents that, and selection cycles run independently per institution.

The 2026–2027 application timeline

Major timeline anchors. African partner universities typically open applications August through November 2026 for September 2027 entry. North American partners open October 2026 through February 2027. European partners open October 2026 through January 2027, with Cambridge closing in early December and Edinburgh in late January. Decisions cluster between February and May 2027. Scholarship orientation runs August or September 2027.

The standard documents are: completed academic application, two academic references, undergraduate transcript translated to English, statement of purpose (typically 500–1,000 words), Mastercard Foundation-specific scholarship essay (typically 500–800 words on leadership and intended impact in Africa), CV/resume, English proficiency test (IELTS 6.5 or TOEFL 90 for most partners), and proof of African citizenship. Some partners add a video interview round.

Drafting your Mastercard Foundation application this month? Send your CV, transcript and draft essay through https://linktr.ee/travelexpore and we will return red-line edits within 48 hours.

How to actually win — what selectors are reading for

The Mastercard Foundation essay rubric weighs four things heavily. (1) Demonstrated leadership in your home community before the application, not aspirational future leadership. A 200-hour volunteer project that quantifies impact beats a four-year membership in a student club. (2) Specific, measurable post-graduation plan tied to Africa — name the sector, name the country, name the problem. Generic ‘I want to help my community’ essays are filtered out in round one. (3) Financial need substantiated with parental income evidence and household composition — the programme exists for students who cannot otherwise afford the degree.

(4) Fit between the degree programme and the post-graduation plan. A Kenyan applicant pursuing a Master of Public Health at the University of Edinburgh whose career plan is to launch a maternal health social enterprise in Kisumu, with a partner already identified, beats an applicant pursuing the same degree with a vague hospital-management career plan. The career-covenant return-to-Africa expectation is real: most scholars work in Africa within 12 months of graduation, and the programme tracks this.

Frequently asked questions

Is the Mastercard Foundation Scholars 2027 cycle open?

Partner universities open applications between August 2026 and February 2027 for September 2027 entry. Check each partner university’s website for their specific deadline.

Do I need to be admitted to the university before I can apply for the scholarship?

It depends on the partner. Some universities require admission first; others let you flag scholarship interest during the admission application. Always read the partner-specific instructions.

What undergraduate GPA do I need?

Most partners require a 3.0/4.0 (or equivalent first-class or strong upper second). Top partners (Stanford, Cambridge, Edinburgh) typically require a first class or 3.5+. Lower partners accept high second class with strong leadership evidence.

Can African students apply to multiple partner universities at once?

Yes. You can apply to multiple partner universities simultaneously, and each runs an independent selection. Coordinate your essays so the leadership and impact narrative remains consistent.

Is the return-to-Africa requirement legally binding?

It is a career covenant, not a legal contract. The programme provides career support to help scholars return to Africa within 12 months of graduation. Compliance is tracked and used in future cohort selection.

Speak with our team

Send us your case on https://linktr.ee/travelexpore and a counsellor will reply with a step-by-step plan, no obligation.

What stays with you

  • 40+ partner universities; deadlines spread August 2026–February 2027 for September 2027 entry.
  • Apply to two or three partners simultaneously — selections run independently per university.
  • Lead with demonstrated leadership, financial need evidence and a country-and-sector-specific post-graduation plan.

Share this story

  1. Mastercard Foundation Scholars 2027 is open. Here is the partner university map and the essay rubric that wins.
  2. The fully-funded master’s scholarship that funds your tuition, stipend and return air travel — and how Africans actually win it.
  3. Apply to two or three partner universities at once. Here is how to make the narrative consistent.

Have a question about your case? Tap our team via https://linktr.ee/travelexpore and we’ll come back to you with a written next step.

Aga Khan Foundation ISP Scholarships 2027 for Africans: Master’s and PhD Funding Across Asia, Africa and Europe

The Aga Khan Foundation Scholarships 2027 (formally the International Scholarship Programme, or ISP) is one of the most underused funding streams for African Master’s and PhD students. Run by the Aga Khan Foundation across 16 countries — including Kenya, Tanzania, Uganda, Mozambique, Madagascar, Mali and Egypt — the ISP combines a 50% grant and a 50% interest-free loan to fund graduate study at top universities anywhere in the world.

What is the Aga Khan Foundation Scholarships 2027?

The Aga Khan Foundation has run the International Scholarship Programme since 1969. The award is structured as a hybrid loan-grant: 50% of the value is a grant the student does not repay, and 50% is an interest-free loan repayable over 5 to 10 years after graduation. The 2027 cycle keeps that structure and emphasises support for development-relevant graduate study — education, health sciences, public policy, environment, agriculture, hospitality, journalism and media. Per the Aga Khan Development Network ISP page, applications open in early January each year and close on March 31.

Application is country-specific: applicants apply through the Aga Khan Foundation office in their country of origin or residence. Eligible African countries include Kenya, Uganda, Tanzania, Madagascar, Mozambique, Mali and Egypt, with applicants from other countries considered case-by-case via global offices.

Who is affected?

The ISP fits African graduates planning to pursue a Master’s or PhD at a top university and who can demonstrate a commitment to returning to their country to apply their training. The programme is well suited for a Kenyan public health graduate aiming for an MPH at Johns Hopkins, a Tanzanian education researcher targeting an EdD at Oxford, a Ugandan environment specialist heading to a Master’s in environmental policy at Cambridge, a Malagasy hospitality manager pursuing an MBA at INSEAD, a Mozambican agriculture researcher heading to a PhD at Wageningen, an Egyptian public policy graduate targeting an MPA at Harvard Kennedy, and a Malian media professional pursuing journalism at Columbia.

The unifying thread is graduate-level (not undergraduate) study, demonstrated financial need, and a clear plan to return and apply learning in the home country.

Key requirements & deadline

To qualify for the Aga Khan Foundation Scholarships 2027, African applicants need: a confirmed admission letter (or strong application in progress) for a Master’s or PhD at a recognised university, a strong undergraduate record (typically First Class or Upper Second), demonstrated financial need (the ISP does not fund applicants who can fully self-finance), evidence of leadership or community engagement, and a guarantor or co-signer for the loan portion. See our Commonwealth Scholarships 2026/2027 guide for parallel African scholarship pathways.

  • Award structure — 50% grant + 50% interest-free loan covering tuition, fees and basic living costs.
  • Deadline — March 31 each year for the following academic year.
  • Levels — Master’s and PhD only; undergraduate study is not funded.
  • Repayment — Loan portion repayable over 5 to 10 years after graduation, interest-free.

Need help with your Aga Khan Scholarship application?

Travel Expore helps African Master’s and PhD candidates navigate the Aga Khan Foundation Scholarships 2027 end-to-end — from country office liaison to recommendation letters — with consultants serving applicants from Nairobi to Dar es Salaam to Cairo. Start your free eligibility check at https://linktr.ee/travelexpore.

Why it matters for African students

The ISP matters because it fills a gap that fully funded scholarships often miss. Chevening, DAAD and Erasmus Mundus award fully funded packages but cap at one or two specific countries. The ISP funds graduate study at any recognised university, including US Ivy League, UK Russell Group, Canadian U15, top European business schools, and South Asian institutions. The hybrid structure means more applicants can access it than fully grant-based programmes — the loan portion is interest-free and repayable over a decade.

Per the Aga Khan Development Network, ISP alumni now number over 7,000 across the 16 eligible countries, with strong representation in education, health and public policy roles in their home countries.

Frequently asked questions about Aga Khan Foundation Scholarships 2027

What does the Aga Khan Foundation Scholarships 2027 cover?

Tuition, fees and basic living costs for Master’s and PhD study. The award is 50% grant and 50% interest-free loan. Travel costs may be included case-by-case.

What is the deadline for the Aga Khan Foundation Scholarships 2027?

March 31, 2027 (for the 2027/2028 academic year). Applications open in January at the Aga Khan Foundation country offices. Late applications are not accepted.

Which African countries are eligible for the ISP?

Kenya, Tanzania, Uganda, Madagascar, Mozambique, Mali and Egypt are the African countries with dedicated AKF country offices. Applicants from other African nations are considered case-by-case at the global level.

Does the Aga Khan Foundation Scholarships 2027 fund undergraduates?

No. The ISP funds Master’s and PhD study only. Undergraduate study is not eligible.

Do I need a guarantor for the Aga Khan Scholarship?

Yes. The 50% loan portion requires a guarantor or co-signer who is a credit-eligible adult in your home country.

Can I use the Aga Khan Foundation Scholarships 2027 at any university?

Yes. The award can be used at any recognised university worldwide. Strong applications typically include admission to a top-50 ranked institution in the field of study.

Key takeaways

  • The Aga Khan Foundation Scholarships 2027 is a 50% grant + 50% interest-free loan for African graduate students.
  • The application deadline is March 31, 2027 for the 2027/2028 academic year.
  • Eligible African countries include Kenya, Tanzania, Uganda, Madagascar, Mozambique, Mali and Egypt.
  • The ISP funds Master’s and PhD only — undergraduate study is not eligible.
  • The loan portion is interest-free and repayable over 5 to 10 years after graduation.

Get expert help with your Aga Khan Foundation Scholarships 2027 application

Travel Explore helps African applicants — from Nairobi, Dar es Salaam, Kampala, Antananarivo, Maputo, Bamako and Cairo — navigate this process end-to-end. Talk to a consultant at https://linktr.ee/travelexpore.

Related reads on Travel Explore

Share this story

  • African Master’s and PhD candidates — the Aga Khan ISP is the funding nobody talks about
  • 50% grant, 50% interest-free loan — the African graduate scholarship hiding in plain sight
  • Why Aga Khan beats Chevening for some African graduate paths in 2027