Most students shortlist the same countries: the UK, Australia, Canada, maybe the US. Ireland rarely makes the first draft. Here is how it actually compares. No spin, just the numbers.
Tuition fees (per year, master's)
| Country | Typical range |
|---|---|
| Ireland | €10,000–€30,000 |
| UK | £20,000–£40,000 |
| Australia | AUD $20,000–$45,000 |
| Canada | CAD $15,000–$35,000 |
| US | $30,000–$70,000 |
Ireland sits at the lower end of the English-speaking options. Private colleges start around €10,000. Public universities and specialist programmes run higher, rarely above €30,000. The US is in a different bracket entirely.
Post-study work visas
This is where the differences get serious. A degree is one year. What you can do after it determines whether the investment pays off.
Ireland
Up to 24 months on the Stamp 1G Graduate visa. Stable and predictable, and it hasn't been cut.
UK
The Graduate Route was 2 years and is dropping to 18 months, effective for anyone starting a programme from autumn 2026. If you apply now for a 2026 start, you'll be affected.
Australia
2 to 4 years depending on qualification level and where you study. The rules have changed multiple times since 2023, so check the current version.
Canada
Up to 3 years on paper, but immigration targets have been cut and PR pathways tightened since 2024. The Post-Graduation Work Permit is still available, but the route to permanent residency is no longer straightforward.
US
1 year on OPT, then the H-1B visa, which is a lottery (roughly 25% of applicants selected). STEM graduates get a 3-year OPT extension, but the H-1B bottleneck remains.
Takeaway: Ireland's is the most predictable and stable of the five. The UK is shortening, Canada is tightening, the US is a lottery, and Australia changes often. Ireland has stayed consistent.
Living costs (per month, student budget)
| Country | Typical range | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Ireland | €800–€1,200 | Dublin higher; Cork, Galway, Limerick lower |
| UK | £1,200–£1,800 | London significantly more |
| Australia | AUD $1,500–$2,500 | Sydney and Melbourne most expensive |
| Canada | CAD $1,500–$2,500 | Toronto and Vancouver push the upper end |
| US | $1,500–$3,000 | Varies enormously by city |
Ireland isn't the cheapest, and Dublin has an expensive rental market, but the figures include accommodation. In most Irish cities a student sharing can live on €800–€1,000 per month. The offset: you can work 20 hours per week while studying, roughly €1,120 per month at the €14 minimum wage, which covers living costs in most cities.
Starting salaries after graduation
| Country | Typical master's graduate salary |
|---|---|
| Ireland | €40,000–€60,000 |
| UK | £28,000–£40,000 |
| Australia | AUD $60,000–$80,000 |
| Canada | CAD $50,000–$70,000 |
| US | $55,000–$85,000 |
At €45,000, a realistic mid-point, you recover the full cost of a one-year programme within your first year of working. The US has higher absolute salaries, but visa uncertainty means many graduates can't stay to earn them.
The factor nobody else has
Ireland is the only English-speaking country inside the European Union. Study here and you get access to the European job market. Google, Meta, Apple, Amazon, and Microsoft run their European operations out of Dublin. Pfizer, Johnson & Johnson, and Medtronic have major European sites in Ireland. No other country on this list gives you that combination. The UK left the EU, and the US, Canada, and Australia were never in it.
So which should you pick?
There is no universal answer. It depends on your field, budget, risk tolerance, and where you want to end up. But if you want an English-language degree, a predictable post-study work visa, access to the European job market, tuition that doesn't require a second mortgage, and living costs you can cover from part-time work, Ireland is the only country that gives you all five.
