Law School in Europe: LLM Programs in Netherlands, France & Switzerland

When Indian lawyers think "LLM abroad," they almost always default to the UK, US, or Canada. But continental Europe — particularly the Netherlands, France, and Switzerland — offers some of the most specialized, internationally respected law programs in the world. The Hague is the international law capital. Paris is the seat of the International Chamber of Commerce and a global arbitration hub. Geneva hosts the WTO, WIPO, and dozens of UN agencies. If your career ambitions involve international law, arbitration, trade law, or human rights, these countries deserve serious consideration.
I have been placing students in European LLM programs for years, and the outcomes consistently surprise people who assumed only Anglo-American degrees matter. Here is the complete picture.
The Netherlands: International Law Capital
The Netherlands punches well above its weight in legal education. Leiden University is home to the oldest law faculty in the Netherlands (founded 1575) and is arguably the world's premier institution for public international law. The Hague — just 15 minutes from Leiden — hosts the International Court of Justice, the International Criminal Court, the Permanent Court of Arbitration, and dozens of international tribunals and organizations.
Top Dutch LLM Programs
| University | Program | Tuition (Non-EU) | Duration | Specialization |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Leiden University | LLM Advanced Studies in International Law | €18,500 | 1 year | Public international law, international criminal law, air and space law |
| University of Amsterdam | LLM International and European Law | €16,950 | 1 year | International trade law, European competition, human rights |
| Utrecht University | LLM Legal Research | €17,800 | 1 year | Comparative law, human rights, corporate law |
| Tilburg University | LLM International Business Law | €15,600 | 1 year | Corporate, financial regulation, data protection |
| Erasmus University Rotterdam | LLM Commercial and Company Law | €14,500 | 1 year | Commercial law, maritime, financial |
| Maastricht University | LLM European Law | €13,750 | 1 year | EU law, human rights, globalization |
Cost of Living in the Netherlands
| Expense | Annual Cost |
|---|---|
| Accommodation (student housing) | €5,000–€9,000 |
| Food and groceries | €3,000–€4,500 |
| Transport (OV-chipkaart) | €500–€1,200 |
| Insurance and personal | €2,500–€4,000 |
| Total living | €11,000–€18,700 |
| Total with tuition | €24,750–€37,200 (₹23–34 lakh) |
The post-study orientation visa allows non-EU graduates to stay for one year to find employment. The Dutch government also offers the Highly Skilled Migrant scheme (Kennismigrant) for positions paying above approximately €38,961 per year (reduced threshold for graduates of Dutch universities for 3 years after graduation). This is a structured pathway to work and stay in the Netherlands.
France: Arbitration and Business Law Hub
Paris is the world's busiest international arbitration seat. The ICC International Court of Arbitration, based in Paris, administered 871 new cases in 2023. For Indian lawyers interested in international commercial arbitration, French legal education is a powerful credential. Additionally, France offers some of the most affordable LLM options in Western Europe.
Top French LLM Programs
| Institution | Program | Tuition | Duration | Language | Focus |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sciences Po Paris | LLM in Transnational Arbitration and Dispute Settlement | €24,400 | 1 year | English | International arbitration, investment law |
| Pantheon-Sorbonne (Paris 1) | LLM in International Business Law | €4,500 | 1 year | English/French | Corporate, commercial, EU law |
| Pantheon-Assas (Paris 2) | LLM in International Business Law | €5,000 | 1 year | English/French | Business, competition, IP law |
| Paris-Saclay University | LLM in International Trade and Investment Law | €3,770 | 1 year | English | Trade, investment, WTO law |
| University of Strasbourg | LLM in International and European Law | €3,770 | 1 year | English/French | European Court of Human Rights, EU law |
French public universities have remarkably low tuition — €3,770 per year for non-EU master's students (set by the government). Sciences Po is the exception as a private grande ecole. Living costs in Paris are high (€12,000–€16,000 per year), but cities like Strasbourg and Lyon are considerably cheaper (€8,000–€11,000).
Total Cost for LLM in France
| Location | Tuition Range | Living Costs | Total | INR Equivalent |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Paris (public university) | €3,770–€5,000 | €12,000–€16,000 | €15,770–€21,000 | ₹14–19 lakh |
| Paris (Sciences Po) | €24,400 | €14,000–€16,000 | €38,400–€40,400 | ₹35–37 lakh |
| Outside Paris | €3,770 | €8,000–€11,000 | €11,770–€14,770 | ₹11–14 lakh |
France offers a post-study APS (Autorisation Provisoire de Sejour) visa allowing one year to find employment. Graduates who find jobs paying above €38,000 can switch to a Passeport Talent visa for up to four years.
Switzerland: International Organizations and Finance Law
Switzerland is home to more international organizations per capita than any other country. Geneva hosts the WTO, WIPO, UNHCR, ILO, WHO, and the European headquarters of the UN. For Indian lawyers aiming for careers in international organizations, trade law, or intellectual property governance, Geneva is the place to be.
Top Swiss LLM Programs
| University | Program | Tuition (Non-Swiss) | Duration | Focus |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Graduate Institute Geneva (IHEID) | LLM in International Law | CHF 8,000 | 1 year | International humanitarian law, trade, human rights |
| University of Geneva | LLM in International Dispute Settlement (joint with IHEID) | CHF 12,000 | 1 year | Arbitration, investment disputes, WTO |
| University of Zurich | LLM International Business Law | CHF 2,780 | 2 semesters | Corporate, banking, securities law |
| University of Bern | LLM in International Trade and Investment Law | CHF 1,800 | 1 year | WTO law, bilateral investment treaties |
| University of Lausanne | Master in Law (with international options) | CHF 1,660 | 1.5 years | Comparative law, European law |
Swiss tuition at public universities is extraordinarily low — CHF 1,660–2,780 per year. However, Swiss living costs are the highest in Europe: Geneva and Zurich require CHF 24,000–30,000 per year for basic expenses. Total investment for a Swiss LLM ranges from ₹22–32 lakh at public universities to ₹28–38 lakh at IHEID/Geneva MIDS.
Admission Requirements Across Europe
- Netherlands: Bachelor's in law with B+ or equivalent (60%+ from Indian universities). IELTS 7.0 or TOEFL 100. Two references. Motivation letter. No work experience required but preferred.
- France: Law degree with at least 4 years of study. IELTS 6.5–7.0 or DELF B2/C1 for French-taught programs. Motivation letter. CV. Sciences Po requires two recommendation letters and a writing sample.
- Switzerland: Law degree with above-average grades. IELTS 7.0 or equivalent. Two references. Statement of purpose. IHEID Geneva is highly competitive — approximately 15% acceptance rate.
Career Paths for Indian Lawyers from European LLM Programs
| Career Path | Salary Range | Best Programs |
|---|---|---|
| International arbitration (Paris/The Hague) | €50,000–€90,000 | Sciences Po, Leiden, Geneva MIDS |
| International organizations (Geneva/The Hague) | $55,000–$95,000 (UN scale) | IHEID Geneva, Leiden, Strasbourg |
| EU institutional careers (Brussels) | €50,000–€75,000 | Maastricht, Amsterdam, Leiden |
| In-house counsel at European MNCs | €45,000–€70,000 | Tilburg, Zurich, Rotterdam |
| Trade law and policy | €55,000–€80,000 | Bern, Geneva, Paris-Saclay |
| Return to India (international law specialization) | ₹15–40 lakh | Any top European program |
Living in Continental Europe: Practical Considerations
A few practical realities about studying law in continental Europe that most guides overlook:
- Housing is the biggest challenge. In the Netherlands, Amsterdam and Leiden have severe housing shortages. Start looking for accommodation 3–4 months before arrival. University housing is limited and fills quickly. Budget €600–900/month for a room in Amsterdam, €400–600 in Leiden or Maastricht. In Paris, student housing through CROUS is affordable (€300–500/month) but extremely competitive. Geneva is the most expensive — expect CHF 800–1,200/month for a basic room.
- Health insurance is mandatory everywhere. The Netherlands requires a basic health insurance policy (approximately €130/month). France provides student social security coverage. Switzerland requires private health insurance (CHF 300–400/month — this significantly impacts your budget).
- Food costs vary dramatically. Eating out in Switzerland can cost CHF 25–40 per meal. In the Netherlands, a decent meal costs €12–18. France has affordable university restaurants (CROUS) serving meals for €3.30 for students. Cook at home to save significantly — Indian grocery stores are available in Amsterdam, Paris, and Geneva.
- Part-time work rights differ. In the Netherlands, non-EU students can work up to 16 hours per week with a work permit (TWV), or full-time during June–August without a permit. In France, students can work up to 964 hours per year (approximately 20 hours/week). Switzerland allows up to 15 hours per week during term time, with restrictions in the first 6 months.
- Travel opportunities. One of the underrated advantages of studying in continental Europe is travel access. Weekend trips to neighbouring countries are cheap and easy via trains (Eurostar, Thalys, TGV). A Leiden student can visit The Hague (15 min), Amsterdam (30 min), Brussels (2 hours), Paris (3 hours), and London (4 hours) by train. This exposure to multiple legal systems and cultures is valuable and unique to continental European study.
Scholarships for European LLM Programs
Continental Europe offers several scholarship options specifically for international law students:
- Netherlands: Holland Scholarship (€5,000 one-time), Leiden Excellence Scholarship (€10,000–15,000 tuition waiver), Amsterdam Merit Scholarship (up to €25,000), Orange Knowledge Programme (full funding for development-focused study).
- France: Eiffel Excellence Scholarship (€1,181/month, nominated by universities), Emile Boutmy Scholarship at Sciences Po (partial to full tuition waiver), French government scholarships through Campus France India.
- Switzerland: Swiss Government Excellence Scholarship (CHF 1,920/month + tuition waiver), IHEID financial aid (income-based, generous — approximately 60% of IHEID students receive some aid), Geneva University Excellence Masters Fellowship.
- Pan-European: Erasmus Mundus Joint Master Degrees (full funding including travel and living), European Commission-funded programs in specific legal specializations.
For more funding options, check our scholarships and financial aid guide.
Continental Europe vs UK: When to Choose Europe
Choose continental Europe over the UK when:
- You want to work in international organizations (Geneva and The Hague are the hubs, not London)
- You are interested in international arbitration (Paris is the busiest seat globally)
- Budget is a primary concern (France and Switzerland public universities are significantly cheaper than UK)
- You want EU law expertise (study where EU law is made and applied)
- You are open to learning a second European language (French, German, or Dutch) which dramatically improves career options
Choose the UK when: you want common law training, aim for City of London firms, or plan to return to India where UK LLM brand recognition is stronger.
My Recommendation
Continental Europe is the right choice for Indian lawyers with specific career goals in international law, arbitration, trade law, or international organizations. The costs are lower than the UK (₹11–37 lakh vs ₹40–63 lakh), and the career outcomes in specialized fields are often stronger. Leiden for public international law, Sciences Po for arbitration, and IHEID Geneva for international organizations are world-leading programs that rival or exceed anything in the UK or US for their specific domains.
For Indian students specifically, the Netherlands has an additional advantage: the Indian community is well-established, particularly in The Hague and Amsterdam. The India-Netherlands legal professional network is active, and several Indian law firms have established correspondent relationships with Dutch firms handling arbitration and trade matters. Sciences Po's location in Paris gives you access to the world's busiest arbitration seat — ICC administered 871 new arbitration cases in 2023 alone. For those interested in investment treaty arbitration, The Hague-based Permanent Court of Arbitration handles a growing number of India-related BIT disputes, making proximity to these institutions strategically valuable. The trade-off is that continental European LLMs do not carry the same general brand recognition as Oxbridge or Harvard in India. If you plan to return to Indian corporate law, a UK or US LLM is typically a safer bet. But if you know your niche — and it is international in nature — Europe might be your smartest investment.
Book a consultation with our team to discuss whether a European LLM fits your career goals.
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Dr. Karan Gupta
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Harvard Business School alumnus and India's leading career counsellor with 27+ years guiding 160,000+ students to top universities worldwide. Licensed MBTI® practitioner. Managing Director of IE University (India & South Asia).






