How Much Money Needed in Bank Account to Study in France

Last Updated: March 11, 2026

🕑 17 min read

To study in France, Indian students need a minimum bank balance showing €7,380 per year (approximately ₹6,64,200) as financial proof for the Campus France procedure and student visa application. This translates to €615/month in available resources. However, the actual recommended bank balance is ₹6.5-8 lakh to account for visa processing margins, initial travel costs, and first-semester living expenses. Unlike Germany’s blocked account system where you must lock €11,904 upfront, France offers more flexibility — you can show a combination of savings, fixed deposits, education loan sanction letters, and sponsor guarantor letters (attestation de prise en charge) to meet the financial requirement.

Money Needed in Bank Account to Study in France — Quick Answer

Financial ComponentAmount (EUR)Amount (INR)
Campus France Minimum (per year)€7,380₹6,64,200
Monthly Proof Required€615/month₹55,350/month
Recommended Bank Balance€7,200-8,900₹6,50,000-8,00,000
AVI (Blocked Transfer) Amount€7,380₹6,64,200

Source: Campus France 2025-26 Financial Requirements, French Consulate India Visa Guidelines | EUR 1 = ₹90 (approx.) | Updated: March 2026

Last Updated: March 2026 | Data verified against Campus France 2025-26 financial guidelines, French Consulate India visa requirements, and Kadamb Overseas student visa records (students placed since 2010)

What Is the Official Campus France Financial Requirement?

Campus France, the official French government agency responsible for promoting French higher education and managing international student applications, sets the minimum financial resource requirement for non-EU international students. As of the 2025-26 academic year, the requirement is:

RequirementAmountNotes
Minimum monthly resources€615/monthAs per French immigration code (CESEDA)
Annual minimum (12 months)€7,380/year€615 x 12 months
Annual minimum in INR₹6,64,200At 1 EUR = ₹90
2-year Master’s total minimum€14,760 (₹13,28,400)Usually only 1 year’s proof required at visa stage

Source: Campus France Financial Requirements 2025-26 | CESEDA Article R313-7

This €615/month figure is the bare minimum set by French immigration law. It is meant to cover basic living expenses including accommodation, food, transport, and personal needs. However, it is important to understand that this is the legal threshold — not what you will actually spend. Realistic monthly expenses in France range from €580-900 in regional cities and €900-1,300 in Paris. The financial proof requirement simply establishes the minimum standard that French authorities accept during visa processing.

Important: You typically need to show financial proof for only the first year (€7,380) at the time of your visa application, not for the entire 2-year programme. The French consulate expects that you will sustain yourself through part-time work, scholarships, or continued family support during subsequent years.

What Documents Can You Use to Prove Financial Resources?

The French visa application process accepts multiple forms of financial proof. You do not need to rely on a single source — a combination of documents is acceptable and, in practice, advisable. Here are all the accepted proof types:

1. Bank Statements (Releves Bancaires)

Bank statements are the primary and most commonly accepted form of financial proof. The French consulate and Campus France require the following specifications:

RequirementDetails
Statement DurationLast 3-6 months (6 months preferred by most consulates)
Minimum BalanceMust show at least €7,380 (₹6,64,200) or equivalent in INR
Account HolderStudent’s own account OR parent’s/sponsor’s account with letter
FormatOfficial bank letterhead with stamp, or digitally signed PDF from net banking
CurrencyINR statements are accepted; euro equivalent will be calculated at prevailing rates
Balance PatternStable or gradually increasing balance preferred; avoid sudden large deposits just before application

The French consulate pays close attention to the pattern of your bank statements. A savings account that has consistently maintained ₹6-8 lakh over several months is viewed far more favourably than an account where ₹7 lakh suddenly appears two weeks before the visa application. Visa officers are trained to identify last-minute fund parking, and it can lead to a visa refusal. Start building your balance at least 4-6 months before your visa appointment.

“The biggest mistake I see Indian students make with France visa financials is last-minute fund dumping. A student will have ₹1 lakh in their account for 5 months, and then suddenly ₹8 lakh appears in month 6. The French consulate sees right through this. We advise our students to start systematic deposits at least 4-6 months before the visa date — even if it means ₹1-1.5 lakh per month from family savings or FD maturity. The trajectory matters as much as the final number.”

— Saumitra Rajput, Founder, Kadamb Overseas (Ahmedabad)

2. Fixed Deposit (FD) Certificates

Fixed deposits are an excellent supplementary proof of financial stability. The French consulate accepts FD certificates as evidence of available funds. Key points about using FDs:

  • FD certificates must be from a recognised Indian bank (nationalised or scheduled commercial bank)
  • Maturity date should ideally be before your departure date, or the FD should be breakable on demand
  • FD holder can be the student or parent/legal guardian (with a sponsorship letter)
  • Multiple FDs can be combined to meet the total requirement
  • Recommended: Get a bank letter confirming FD details on letterhead with seal, rather than just submitting the FD receipt

Many Indian families prefer using FDs because they demonstrate long-term savings capability. A combination of ₹3-4 lakh in savings account plus ₹3-4 lakh in FDs is a strong financial profile for a France student visa.

3. Education Loan Sanction Letter

An education loan sanction letter from an Indian bank is one of the strongest forms of financial proof for a France student visa. It demonstrates that a regulated financial institution has assessed the student’s profile and committed to funding their education. Here is what the consulate expects:

Loan Document DetailRequirement
Sanction LetterMust state approved loan amount, borrower name, purpose (education in France), and university name
Minimum Loan AmountShould cover at least €7,380 (₹6.64 lakh); higher amounts strengthen the application
Disbursement StatusSanction letter is sufficient; full disbursement is not required before visa application
Accepted BanksSBI, Bank of Baroda, PNB, HDFC Credila, Avanse, ICICI Bank, Prodigy Finance, Auxilo
Loan TypeBoth secured (collateral-based) and unsecured (non-collateral) loans are accepted

Most Indian banks offer education loans of up to ₹7.5 lakh without collateral and ₹20-40 lakh with collateral for studies abroad. Since the France financial requirement is relatively modest (₹6.64 lakh), even a collateral-free education loan can fully cover the financial proof requirement. Popular options include SBI Scholar Loan, Bank of Baroda Vidya Lakshmi, and HDFC Credila’s overseas education loan.

4. Sponsor/Guarantor Letter (Attestation de Prise en Charge)

If a family member or sponsor is funding your education, you need an official sponsorship declaration known as the Attestation de Prise en Charge. This is a formal document where the sponsor legally commits to covering your living and educational expenses during your stay in France.

The Attestation de Prise en Charge requirements differ depending on whether your sponsor is based in India or in France:

Sponsor LocationDocuments Required
Sponsor in India (Parent/Guardian)
  • Signed sponsorship letter (on stamp paper recommended)
  • Sponsor’s bank statements (3-6 months)
  • Sponsor’s income proof (salary slips, ITR, or business registration)
  • Relationship proof (birth certificate, family documents)
  • Sponsor’s passport copy or Aadhaar card
Sponsor in France
  • Attestation de Prise en Charge (official form from prefecture)
  • Sponsor’s titre de sejour copy
  • Sponsor’s last 3 months bank statements
  • Sponsor’s last 3 payslips or avis d’imposition
  • Proof of relationship

For most Indian students, the sponsor is a parent based in India. In this case, the parent’s bank statements must show sufficient balance (€7,380 or more), and the sponsorship letter should clearly state the parent’s willingness and financial capacity to support the student’s studies in France. This letter should be notarised or executed on stamp paper for additional credibility.

5. AVI — Attestation de Virement Irrevocable

The AVI (Attestation de Virement Irrevocable) is a unique French financial instrument that provides one of the strongest forms of financial proof for visa applications. It works as follows:

  • What it is: An irrevocable bank transfer order where a bank in India commits to transferring a fixed monthly amount (at least €615) to the student’s French bank account every month during their study period
  • How it works: You deposit €7,380 (₹6,64,200) or more in a designated bank account in India. The bank then issues a certificate guaranteeing monthly transfers to your French account
  • Why it is strong: Because the transfer is irrevocable, the French consulate considers this an almost guaranteed source of funding
  • Which banks offer it: SBI, Bank of Baroda, and some private banks offer AVI services. You may need to specifically request this service from your bank branch
  • Timing: The AVI should be set up before your visa appointment. The bank will issue a certificate that you submit with your visa application

While the AVI is not mandatory, it is the most visa-officer-friendly document you can provide. If your financial profile has any weaknesses (irregular income, self-employed sponsor, or lower-than-ideal savings balance), an AVI can significantly strengthen your visa application. The downside is that the funds are locked until they are transferred, so you lose liquidity on that amount during the transfer period.

While the official minimum is €7,380 (₹6,64,200), our experience with hundreds of France visa applications tells us that maintaining a higher balance significantly improves visa approval chances. Here is our recommended financial preparation strategy:

Financial ProfileMinimum Recommended (INR)Ideal Range (INR)Proof Strategy
Strong Profile (salaried parent, stable income)₹6,50,000₹7,00,000-8,00,000Bank statements + parent ITR
Moderate Profile (self-employed parent, business)₹7,00,000₹7,50,000-9,00,000Bank statements + FD + business proof
Loan-Based Funding₹6,64,200 (in sanction letter)₹8,00,000-10,00,000Loan sanction letter + some savings
Sponsor-Based (France-based)Sponsor must earn €1,500+/monthSponsor earning €2,000+/monthAttestation + sponsor financials
Kadamb Overseas Recommended₹6,50,000₹7,50,000-8,00,000Combination approach (see below)

The Ideal Combination Approach

Rather than relying on a single proof document, we recommend combining multiple sources. A typical strong financial profile for a France student visa from India looks like this:

  • ₹3-4 lakh in savings bank account (student’s or parent’s, maintained for 4-6 months)
  • ₹2-3 lakh in fixed deposits (parent’s or student’s name)
  • Parent’s ITR showing annual income of ₹5 lakh+ (shows family can sustain support)
  • Education loan sanction letter of ₹5-8 lakh (even if you do not plan to use the full amount — it shows backup capacity)
  • Sponsorship letter from parent on stamp paper with notarisation

This combination approach works because it tells a convincing story to the visa officer: the family has existing savings, the parent has ongoing income capacity, and there is a bank-approved loan as a backup. The total provable financial resources in this scenario could be ₹10-15 lakh, far exceeding the €7,380 minimum and making a very strong case for visa approval.

“I tell every student and parent who walks into our Ahmedabad office — do not just meet the minimum ₹6.64 lakh. Aim for ₹7.5-8 lakh in demonstrable resources. Keep ₹3-4 lakh as stable savings over 4-6 months, back it up with FDs and a loan sanction letter, and get a proper sponsorship letter notarised. The visa officer does not just look at the number — they look at the story your documents tell about your family’s financial stability.”

— Saumitra Rajput, Founder, Kadamb Overseas (Ahmedabad)

Bank Statement Format and Presentation Tips

The way you present your bank statements can make or break your visa application. Here are the format requirements and best practices based on French consulate preferences in India:

Format Requirements

ElementWhat French Consulate Expects
DurationLast 3-6 months. 6 months is strongly recommended for Delhi/Mumbai consulate
Bank LetterheadMust be on official bank stationery with bank logo, branch address, and IFSC code
Authorised SignatorySigned and stamped by bank manager or authorised officer
Account DetailsAccount number, account holder name, account type (savings/current), and account opening date
Transaction DetailsAll transactions with date, description, debit, credit, and running balance
Closing BalanceFinal balance clearly visible, must be ₹6,64,200+ (or combined with other proof)
Date of IssuanceStatement should be issued no more than 2-3 weeks before visa appointment

Red Flags That Visa Officers Watch For

Based on our experience with hundreds of France visa applications at Kadamb Overseas, these are the financial red flags that commonly lead to visa refusals or additional scrutiny:

  • Sudden large deposits: A dormant account suddenly receiving ₹5-7 lakh in one transfer 2-3 weeks before the visa application
  • Round-trip transfers: Money coming in from one account and going back out repeatedly (suggests borrowed funds)
  • Inconsistent income: Parent claims ₹8 lakh/year income but bank shows minimal salary credits
  • Multiple account consolidation: Closing 4-5 small accounts and dumping everything into one account just before the visa application
  • Overdraft or negative balance: Any period of overdraft or negative balance in the statement period
  • Unexplained cash deposits: Large cash deposits without any traceable source

France vs Germany: Financial Proof System Comparison

Indian students frequently compare France and Germany as study destinations. One of the most significant differences lies in how each country handles financial proof for student visas. Here is a detailed comparison:

ParameterFranceGermany
Annual Financial Proof€7,380 (₹6,64,200)€11,904 (₹10,71,360)
Monthly Equivalent€615/month€992/month
Funds Locking MechanismNo mandatory blocked account; flexible proof acceptedMandatory blocked account (Sperrkonto) — funds locked and released monthly
Where Funds Are HeldIndian bank account (savings, FD, or AVI)German blocked account (Expatrio, Fintiba, or Deutsche Bank)
Upfront Money Required₹6.5-8 lakh (accessible)₹10.7 lakh (locked in Germany)
Education Loan Accepted?Yes — sanction letter is sufficientYes, but loan must be disbursed into the blocked account
Sponsor/Guarantor Accepted?Yes — Attestation de Prise en ChargeYes — Verpflichtungserklarung (formal obligation)
FlexibilityHigh — combination of multiple proofs allowedLow — blocked account is almost always required
Better For Middle-Class Families?Yes — lower amount, more flexible proof optionsMore expensive upfront, but funds are returned monthly

The key difference is accessibility. France requires ₹4-5 lakh less upfront compared to Germany, and the funds remain in your Indian bank account (accessible in emergencies), whereas Germany’s blocked account locks ₹10.7 lakh in a German bank that releases only €992/month. For Indian middle-class families who may need to stretch their resources, France’s more flexible system is a significant advantage.

However, Germany’s blocked account has its own merit — since the money is already in Germany, you do not need to worry about currency transfer each month, and the monthly release acts as enforced budgeting. Each system suits different family financial situations.

Step-by-Step Financial Preparation Timeline

Here is a practical timeline for building your financial profile before your France student visa application:

Timeline (Before Visa Date)Action
6 months beforeStart maintaining minimum ₹3-4 lakh in savings account. Begin systematic monthly deposits of ₹50,000-1,00,000
5 months beforeApply for education loan if needed. Process takes 2-4 weeks for sanction letter
4 months beforeSet up FDs if using them as proof. Get parent’s ITR filed and processed
3 months beforeContinue deposits. Bank balance should now be ₹5-6 lakh with stable monthly credits
2 months beforePrepare sponsorship letter (if applicable). Get it notarised. Set up AVI if using this route
1 month beforeFinal deposits to reach ₹7-8 lakh. Ensure no large unexplained withdrawals
2-3 weeks beforeGet fresh bank statements issued on letterhead. Collect all documents — FD certificates, loan sanction letter, ITR
Visa appointment daySubmit complete financial documentation package: statements + FD + loan letter + sponsor letter + ITR

Total Money Needed: Complete Breakdown Including All Costs

Beyond the visa financial proof, here is how much money you actually need to have arranged before departing India for France:

Expense CategoryAmount (INR)Notes
Bank Balance / Financial Proof₹6,64,200-8,00,000Must be in account at visa stage; usable after arrival
First Year Tuition (Public Uni Master’s)₹3,39,300€3,770 at non-EU rate (may be lower at some universities)
Campus France Fee₹16,000-18,000Non-refundable application processing fee
Visa Fee₹8,900€99 for VLS-TS long-stay student visa
Flight Ticket (One-Way)₹30,000-50,000Book early for better rates; Delhi/Mumbai to Paris
OFII Stamp (on arrival)₹22,500€225 — mandatory visa validation
Initial Setup Costs₹15,000-25,000Bedding, SIM card, initial groceries, transport card
Housing Deposit (caution)₹27,000-45,0001 month rent as deposit; refundable at end of lease
TOTAL READY CASH NEEDED₹7,83,900-9,58,700Note: Bank balance amount overlaps with living expenses

In practice, the bank balance amount (₹6.64-8 lakh) overlaps significantly with your first-semester living expenses. This means you do not need ₹6.64 lakh for proof PLUS another ₹6.64 lakh for living. The money shown in your bank account IS what you will use for living expenses after arrival. The additional costs (visa fee, flight, Campus France fee, tuition) are on top of this. So the total fresh money needed is approximately ₹8-10 lakh when including first-year tuition, visa costs, travel, and living expenses.

“Many families in Gujarat come to me thinking they need ₹15-20 lakh ready before they can even think about France. When I break down the numbers — ₹6.5-8 lakh in bank balance that doubles as your living fund, ₹3.4 lakh tuition, and ₹1-1.5 lakh in processing costs — they realize that ₹8-10 lakh is all that is needed to get their child to France. Compare this to Canada where you need ₹20-25 lakh just for the first year, and France becomes the obvious choice for budget-conscious families.”

— Saumitra Rajput, Founder, Kadamb Overseas (Ahmedabad)

Common Mistakes That Lead to France Visa Rejection on Financial Grounds

Based on our experience handling France visa applications since 2010, here are the most common financial mistakes Indian students make that result in visa refusals:

Mistake 1: Relying Solely on a Loan Sanction Letter Without Any Savings

While an education loan sanction letter is strong proof, submitting it as the ONLY financial document (with zero savings in the bank account) raises concerns. The visa officer may question how you will manage day-to-day expenses while waiting for loan disbursement. Always pair a loan sanction letter with at least ₹1-2 lakh in savings.

Mistake 2: Using a Third-Party Sponsor Without Proper Documentation

Having an uncle, cousin, or family friend sponsor your studies is acceptable, but the documentation must be impeccable. A simple typed letter without proof of relationship, without the sponsor’s financial documents, or without proper attestation will not be accepted. If using a non-parent sponsor, the relationship proof and the sponsor’s financial capacity documentation must be thorough.

Mistake 3: Submitting Statements From Multiple Accounts Without Explanation

If you need to combine balances from 2-3 accounts to meet the ₹6.64 lakh requirement, you must provide statements for all accounts along with a covering letter explaining the combined position. Simply attaching 3 different bank statements each showing ₹2-3 lakh, without context, can confuse the visa officer.

Mistake 4: Not Matching Financial Proof With ITR

If your parent claims an income of ₹3 lakh per year on their ITR but the bank account shows ₹8 lakh in savings, the discrepancy raises questions about the source of funds. Ensure that the parent’s declared income (ITR) is consistent with the bank balance. If the parent is in business and has variable income, submit GST returns and business registration documents as additional proof.

Special Situations: Scholarship Students and Fee Waiver Recipients

If you have been awarded a scholarship or fee waiver, your financial proof requirements may be reduced:

SituationFinancial Proof Impact
Eiffel Scholarship (€1,181/month)Scholarship letter itself serves as financial proof; minimal additional proof needed
Charpak Scholarship (€700-1,050/month)Scholarship letter covers most of the requirement; small supplementary proof may be needed
University Fee Waiver (EU-rate fees)Reduces tuition burden but €7,380 living cost proof is still required
Erasmus Mundus (fully funded)Scholarship award letter serves as complete financial proof
CROUS Bourse (need-based grant)Grant notification reduces the gap that must be proven through other sources

If your scholarship covers €615/month or more, you effectively have no additional financial proof requirement for living expenses. This is one reason why applying for the Eiffel or Charpak scholarships is worth the effort even if your family can afford the costs — it simplifies the visa process significantly.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I use my parent’s bank account for financial proof instead of my own?

Yes, absolutely. Most Indian students use their parent’s bank account for financial proof because they typically do not have sufficient savings in their own name. You need to submit your parent’s bank statements along with a sponsorship letter (Attestation de Prise en Charge) signed by the parent, and proof of relationship (birth certificate). The parent’s ITR and income proof should also be included. This is the most common setup and is fully accepted by French consulates in India.

Is a blocked account required for France like Germany?

No, France does NOT require a blocked account (Sperrkonto). This is one of the biggest advantages of choosing France over Germany for Indian students from middle-class families. You show your financial proof through regular Indian bank statements, FDs, and loan letters. The money stays in your Indian account and you transfer it to France as needed after arrival. You can also set up an AVI (Attestation de Virement Irrevocable) for stronger proof, but even this keeps funds in your Indian bank until they are transferred. The total amount required for France (€7,380) is also ₹4-5 lakh less than Germany’s blocked account requirement (€11,904).

What if my family income is low but we have savings from years of accumulation?

This is a common situation for Indian families where parents may earn modestly but have accumulated savings over time. In this case, submit the bank statements showing the accumulated balance along with the parent’s ITR (even if income is modest). Add a covering letter explaining that the savings are from long-term accumulation. Fixed deposit certificates held for several years are particularly strong evidence of genuine long-term savings. An education loan sanction letter as backup further strengthens this type of profile. We have successfully processed many such applications at Kadamb Overseas.

How soon after visa approval should I transfer money to France?

You do not need to transfer the full amount before departure. Most Indian students carry €500-1,000 in cash or forex card for immediate expenses upon arrival (airport transfer, first few days of food, SIM card). Within the first 2-3 weeks in France, you will open a French bank account (commonly at BNP Paribas, Societe Generale, or Boursorama — many have English-friendly branches). Once your French account is active, transfer ₹2-3 lakh to cover the first 2-3 months of expenses. Continue transferring as needed using services like Wise, Remitly, or traditional bank wire transfers.

Can I show cryptocurrency or stock market investments as financial proof?

No. French consulates in India do not accept cryptocurrency holdings, stock market portfolios, or mutual fund statements as primary financial proof. These are considered volatile assets with uncertain value. If you have investments, liquidate the portion you plan to use for studies and deposit the proceeds into a savings account at least 3-4 months before your visa application. The savings account statement will then serve as your financial proof.

Key Takeaways — Money Needed in Bank Account for France Student Visa

  • Official minimum: €7,380/year (₹6,64,200) — equivalent to €615/month as per Campus France guidelines
  • Recommended balance: ₹6.5-8 lakh in demonstrable resources (combination of savings, FDs, and loan sanction)
  • No blocked account needed: Unlike Germany’s €11,904 Sperrkonto, France accepts flexible proof from Indian bank accounts
  • Best strategy: Start deposits 4-6 months early, combine savings + FDs + education loan sanction letter + sponsor letter
  • AVI option: Attestation de Virement Irrevocable provides the strongest financial proof but locks funds temporarily
  • Avoid red flags: No sudden large deposits, no round-trip transfers, ensure ITR matches bank balance pattern
  • Total cash needed: Approximately ₹8-10 lakh including tuition, visa fees, travel, and first-year living expenses

Need help preparing your financial documents for a France student visa? Book a free consultation with Kadamb Overseas — we have helped hundreds of students from Ahmedabad and Gujarat prepare successful France visa applications since 2010.

Related Reading: Total cost to study in France for 2 years | Is France cheaper than UK and Canada? | Documents required for Campus France application | Part-time jobs for Indian students in France

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Saumitra Rajput

Saumitra Rajput

Saumitra Rajput is the founder and lead counsellor at Kadamb Overseas, India's trusted Europe education consultancy based in Ahmedabad. With 14+ years of hands-on experience, he has personally guided 500+ students to universities across Germany, Switzerland, France, Italy, Austria, and Spain. Saumitra has visited partner universities across Europe, holds deep expertise in European visa processes, scholarships, and student life, and has achieved a 97% visa success rate for his clients. He is the host of the YouTube channel "Europe with Saumitra", where he shares first-hand insights on studying and living in Europe. His mission: make Europe accessible to every Indian student, with zero consultancy fees.

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About the author

Saumitra Rajput is the founder and lead counsellor at Kadamb Overseas, India's trusted Europe education consultancy based in Ahmedabad. With 14+ years of hands-on experience, he has personally guided 500+ students to universities across Germany, Switzerland, France, Italy, Austria, and Spain. Saumitra has visited partner universities across Europe, holds deep expertise in European visa processes, scholarships, and student life, and has achieved a 97% visa success rate for his clients. He is the host of the YouTube channel "Europe with Saumitra", where he shares first-hand insights on studying and living in Europe. His mission: make Europe accessible to every Indian student, with zero consultancy fees.
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