https://www.mpowerfinancing.com/en-lk/financial-empowerment/financial-assistance-postgraduate-students-sri-lanka-2026
Pursuing a postgraduate degree in the U.S. or Canada offers incredible opportunities for Sri Lankan students—advanced technical training, global career networks, higher earning potential and professional credentials that command significant premiums in Colombo’s job market. However, the financial investment required can feel overwhelming for families accustomed to Sri Lankan education costs. A master’s program in the U.S. typically costs US$50,000-80,000 total (LKR 15.4-24.64 million at LKR 308/USD), while Sri Lankan university education costs a small fraction of this amount.
Fortunately, substantial financial assistance for postgraduate students is available to make international education achievable. Sri Lankan students can access multiple funding sources including international scholarships awarded based on merit rather than family wealth, university assistantships providing tuition reduction plus stipends, and no-cosigner education loans that evaluate your future potential instead of requiring property collateral. This comprehensive guide explores all major types of financial assistance for Sri Lankan students pursuing master’s degrees and PhDs abroad, with particular focus on no-cosigner loans that eliminate the traditional barriers Sri Lankan students face when seeking education financing.
With the right combination of financial assistance for postgraduate students—scholarships reducing total borrowing needs, strategic loan selection and understanding of available funding mechanisms—studying abroad becomes an achievable investment in your future rather than an impossible financial burden for your family.
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Key statistics for Sri Lankan postgraduate students and international education in 2026
Types of financial assistance for Sri Lankan postgraduate students
As a Sri Lankan student, you cannot qualify for U.S. federal loans (FAFSA) or Canadian government student loans reserved for citizens and permanent residents. However, multiple other funding sources exist specifically designed for international postgraduate students. Understanding each type and strategically combining them maximizes your financial assistance and minimizes borrowing needs.
International scholarships and grants: Free money that doesn’t require repayment
Scholarships and grants represent the most advantageous financial assistance for postgraduate students because they reduce your total costs without creating debt obligations. International scholarships are typically awarded based on academic achievement, leadership skills, specific talents, research potential or demographic characteristics (women in STEM, students from underrepresented countries), while grants are generally need-based.
University-funded scholarships:
Most U.S. and Canadian universities offer merit-based scholarships specifically for international students:
Graduate school merit scholarships:
Department-specific scholarships:
Diversity scholarships:
Research-specific scholarships:
How to maximize university scholarship opportunities:
External scholarships from organizations and foundations:
Many nonprofits, foundations, corporations and government agencies offer scholarships for international graduate students:
Examples of external scholarships:
Search strategies for finding external scholarships:
Important timeline note: External scholarship deadlines often fall months before university application deadlines. Start researching and applying in August-October for programs starting the following August-September.
Graduate assistantships: Tuition reduction plus monthly stipend
Universities offer research assistantships (RA) and teaching assistantships (TA) providing substantial financial assistance through combination of tuition waiver or reduction plus monthly stipend in exchange for 15-20 hours weekly work.
Research assistantships (RA):
What they involve:
Financial benefits:
How to secure RA:
Teaching assistantships (TA):
What they involve:
Financial benefits:
Requirements and considerations:
How teaching assistantships benefit Sri Lankan students particularly: Many Sri Lankan students have strong technical skills from rigorous GCE A-Level mathematics and science training but less experience with U.S.-style classroom communication. TA positions dramatically improve English presentation skills, teaching abilities and confidence—all valuable for career regardless of whether returning to Sri Lanka or staying abroad.
Strategic approach to assistantships:
Financial aid from Sri Lankan sources
Government and institutional programs:
While limited compared to some countries, Sri Lanka offers some support for international education:
Central Bank of Sri Lanka higher education loans:
University of Colombo, University of Moratuwa, University of Peradeniya scholarships:
Private sector and corporate scholarships:
How to access Sri Lankan government financial assistance: Contact the Ministry of Education and relevant professional organizations in Sri Lanka before departing for information about government scholarships, loan programs and corporate opportunities.
On-campus employment during studies
While F-1 visa restrictions limit work options significantly, Sri Lankan students can work part-time on campus to cover personal expenses.
Permitted on-campus work:
Common on-campus jobs:
Benefits beyond income:
How to secure on-campus employment:
Private education loans: When scholarships and assistantships leave funding gap
After exhausting scholarships, assistantships and family contributions, many Sri Lankan students need education loans to cover remaining costs. Two main categories exist:
1. Loans requiring U.S. or Canadian cosigner:
Traditional student loan lenders (banks, credit unions, specialized lenders) offer loans to international students but require creditworthy cosigner who is U.S. citizen or permanent resident.
Advantages:
Challenges for Sri Lankan students:
Practical reality: Most Sri Lankan students don’t have access to qualified cosigners, making these loans largely inaccessible despite attractive terms.
2. No-cosigner loans for international students:
Some lenders specialize in loans for international students without requiring cosigner or collateral. These lenders assess your future potential rather than current family wealth.
How no-cosigner loans work differently:
Instead of evaluating your family’s property holdings in Colombo or parents’ income, no-cosigner lenders consider:
Advantages of no-cosigner loans:
The advantages of no-cosigner loans for Sri Lankan postgraduate students
No-cosigner international student loans eliminate multiple barriers that traditionally prevent talented Sri Lankan students from accessing international education. Understanding these advantages helps you appreciate why no-cosigner loans represent critical financial assistance for postgraduate students.
Greater financial independence and family property protection
Traditional Sri Lankan education loan challenge:
Commercial Bank of Ceylon, Sampath Bank, Bank of Ceylon, Hatton National Bank and other Sri Lankan lenders require substantial property collateral for large education loans:
Who this excludes:
How no-cosigner loans solve this:
No-cosigner international student loans evaluate YOU—your academic credentials, chosen university, field of study and career potential—not your family’s real estate portfolio. This means:
Psychological benefit often overlooked: When family property securing your education loan, the psychological pressure can be enormous: “If I fail or cannot repay, family loses home where grandparents live.” No-cosigner loans place responsibility on you alone without endangering family’s foundational assets.
Opportunity to build U.S. or Canadian credit history
Why this matters for your future:
Repaying no-cosigner loan responsibly builds credit history in U.S. or Canada—valuable asset if:
How credit building works:
Strategic advantage for Sri Lankan students planning OPT work: During OPT period when earning USD and potentially interested in staying in U.S. longer-term, having established credit from education loan repayment gives you enormous advantage over international students who haven’t built credit. You can rent better apartments, get credit cards with rewards, negotiate better terms on everything.
Streamlined application process without cosigner complexity
Traditional loan with cosigner requirements:
Applying for education loan requiring U.S./Canadian cosigner involves:
No-cosigner application process:
Why this speed matters:
Flexible funding for comprehensive educational expenses
U.S. program flexibility:
No-cosigner loans for U.S. study can typically be applied toward wide range of education-related expenses:
Total cost of attendance:
U.S. universities calculate “cost of attendance” including all expenses listed above. No-cosigner loans can cover up to full cost of attendance, enabling you to focus on studies rather than constantly worrying about money for rent, food or textbooks.
Example comprehensive budget for two-year master’s program in U.S.:
If family contributes US$30,000, you win US$20,000 in scholarships and work on campus earning US$10,000, you need loan of US$76,000—no-cosigner loans can provide this full amount in single application.
Canadian program considerations:
In Canada, loan proceeds typically cover tuition and other university-invoiced expenses. Living expenses often need separate funding source (family support, on-campus work, savings).
How Sri Lankan postgraduate students can apply for no-cosigner education loans
Understanding the application process helps you prepare properly and maximize approval chances.
Step 1: Research and identify reputable lenders
Not all “no-cosigner” lenders are equal. Some key factors distinguishing reputable lenders:
Specialization in international students:
Transparent terms and pricing:
Strong reputation and customer service:
Supporting services beyond lending:
Where to research lenders:
Step 2: Check eligibility requirements before applying
Most no-cosigner lenders have specific eligibility criteria:
Common eligibility requirements:
Why checking eligibility first matters:
Step 3: Gather required documentation
Documents typically required for no-cosigner loan application:
Identification:
Education:
Financial:
Enrollment verification:
Additional documents may include:
Organization tips:
Step 4: Complete online application carefully
Application typically includes:
Personal information:
Education information:
Financial information:
References:
Common application mistakes to avoid:
Step 5: Submit application and follow up
After submission:
If approved:
If additional information requested:
If denied:
Strategic comparison: Evaluating different loan offers
When you receive multiple loan offers (whether from different no-cosigner lenders or combination of international and Sri Lankan bank options), compare carefully:
Interest rates: The cost of borrowing
What to compare:
Example comparison:
Analysis:
For most Sri Lankan students: Fixed rates provide valuable predictability, especially important when repaying from potentially variable income sources.
Loan terms and repayment options
Repayment term length:
Example with US$50,000 loan at 11% APR:
|
Repayment term |
Monthly payment |
Total interest paid |
Total repayment |
|
5 years |
US$1,087 (LKR 334,796) |
US$15,220 (LKR 4.69M) |
US$65,220 (LKR 20.09M) |
|
10 years |
US$688 (LKR 211,904) |
US$32,560 (LKR 10.03M) |
US$82,560 (LKR 25.43M) |
|
15 years |
US$568 (LKR 174,944) |
US$52,240 (LKR 16.09M) |
US$102,240 (LKR 31.49M) |
Trade-offs:
When repayment begins:
Prepayment penalties:
Total loan amounts and limits
Minimum loan amounts:
Maximum loan amounts:
Multiple disbursements:
How MPOWER Financing provides comprehensive support for Sri Lankan postgraduate students
MPOWER Financing offers specialized no-cosigner loans plus extensive support services designed specifically for international students like you.
True no-cosigner, no-collateral access
Dual barrier removal:
Unlike traditional lenders requiring either U.S./Canadian cosigner OR Sri Lankan property collateral, MPOWER eliminates both barriers:
What MPOWER evaluates instead:
This merit-based evaluation creates access for talented Sri Lankan students from any family background.
Competitive fixed rates with transparent pricing
Interest rates:
Loan amounts:
Path2Success: Career and visa support program
Beyond funding, MPOWER provides:
Career support services:
Visa and immigration assistance:
Financial literacy resources:
Why comprehensive support matters: MPOWER recognizes that your ability to repay education loan depends directly on securing employment after graduation. By investing in your career success through Path2Success services, MPOWER increases likelihood you’ll find good job, earn strong salary and repay loan successfully—creating alignment between lender and borrower interests.
Scholarship opportunities reducing total borrowing needs
MPOWER scholarships available to Sri Lankan students:
Strategic benefit: Every US$1,000 won in scholarships reduces borrowing need by US$1,000, which saves US$500-800 in interest over 10-year loan term. Applying to MPOWER scholarships while applying for loan maximizes total financial assistance package.
Streamlined digital application process
30-second eligibility check:
Fast processing:
Responsive support:
“Knowing how I was going to pay for my studies allowed me to follow my dreams. It was a great opportunity to have a really important investment toward my MBA and my future.”
— Juan Ballen, Indiana University (MBA), Colombia
Currency conversions are approximate and based on an exchange rate of LKR 310 per US$1 as of January 2026. Actual rates may vary.
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Frequently Asked Questions
No — federal and government student loans in both countries are exclusively reserved for citizens and permanent residents, meaning Sri Lankan F-1 and study permit holders cannot apply through FAFSA or equivalent Canadian programs regardless of financial need. Your funding options are university scholarships and assistantships, external scholarships from foundations and corporations, on-campus employment (up to 20 hours/week at US$12–18/hour = LKR 3,696–5,544/hour), and private education loans from international or Sri Lankan lenders. Combining multiple sources strategically — for example, a US$10,000 scholarship plus US$8,000 in annual on-campus earnings plus a loan — meaningfully reduces total debt.
Research Assistantships (RA) and Teaching Assistantships (TA) typically provide a full or partial tuition waiver plus a monthly stipend of US$1,500–2,500 (LKR 462,000–770,000), in exchange for 15–20 hours of weekly work — a total annual value of US$35,000–70,000 (LKR 10.78–21.56 million). PhD programs almost always offer full funding through these positions, but professional master’s programs (MS, MBA) are more competitive, especially in the first semester. Sri Lankan students with strong GCE A-Level foundations and First Class undergraduate degrees should contact target professors directly before applying to express research interest — this significantly improves RA prospects.
High-value external scholarships include the Fulbright Foreign Student Program (full tuition plus living expenses, applied through U.S. Embassy Colombo), AAUW International Fellowships for women (US$18,000–30,000 = LKR 5.54–9.24 million), and the Aga Khan Foundation International Scholarship (50% scholarship, 50% loan for select developing countries). Corporate scholarships from Google, Microsoft, McKinsey, and BCG are worth pursuing for students targeting those industries. Critically, many external scholarship deadlines fall in August–October for programs beginning the following year — 10–12 months before classes start — so research must begin well before university application season.
Sri Lankan banks require property collateral valued at 1.5–2x the loan amount with clear title and no existing mortgages, meaning the family home or land is legally at risk if repayment fails. No-cosigner international loans evaluate only the student’s academic record, university quality, and program strength — the family’s property in Colombo, Kandy, or elsewhere remains completely unencumbered with no bank holding title and no entry in the Land Registry. This matters especially for families with multiple children: once property is pledged for an elder sibling’s education, younger siblings have no remaining collateral, but each child can independently qualify for a no-cosigner loan based on their own academic merits.
On a US$50,000 loan at 11% APR, a 5-year term costs US$1,087/month (LKR 334,796) but saves US$37,020 (LKR 11.4 million) in total interest compared to a 15-year term at US$568/month (LKR 174,944). For students planning 1–3 years of OPT work earning US$65,000–90,000 annually, choosing a longer term but making aggressive voluntary overpayments during OPT — with no prepayment penalty — combines manageable minimum payments with the ability to clear the loan early. Students returning directly to Sri Lanka earning LKR 200,000–400,000/month at a multinational generally need the lower monthly obligation of a 10–15 year term to keep payments within a comfortable 10–15% of gross income.
DISCLAIMER – All terms and conditions are subject to change at any time. Subject to credit approval, loans are made by Bank of Lake Mills or MPOWER Financing, PBC. Bank of Lake Mills does not have an ownership interest in MPOWER Financing. Neither MPOWER Financing nor Bank of Lake Mills is affiliated with the school you attended or are attending. Bank of Lake Mills is Member FDIC. None of the information contained in this website constitutes a recommendation, solicitation or offer by MPOWER Financing or its affiliates to buy or sell any securities or other financial instruments or other assets or provide any investment advice or service.
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