Greek universities begin their 2026–27 admissions cycle this September carrying a burden that has been building since at least 2010. The number of young Greeks studying abroad has risen to roughly 35,000 — a figure the Ministry of Education quietly confirmed in a June briefing to parliamentary committee members — while domestic enrollment at public institutions has plateaued for the third consecutive year. The convergence of those two facts is not coincidental.
The timing matters for a specific reason. The Mitsotakis government pushed through Law 5094/2023, which created the legal framework for non-state, non-profit universities to operate on Greek soil for the first time in the modern republic's history. Three years on, that law is still tangled in implementation disputes, with the Council of State having accepted a fresh challenge to its constitutionality as recently as May. The academic year that starts in October will be the first in which any licensed foreign university branch — the American College of Greece's Deree campus in Aghia Paraskevi has been among the institutions navigating the new rules — could theoretically offer degrees fully recognised by the Greek state. Whether that machinery actually functions on schedule is another question entirely.
A Decade of Cuts That Changed the Campus Map
To understand the current impasse, go back to 2011. Under the first memorandum with the troika, Greece's higher education budget was slashed by 40 percent over four years. The National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, the country's oldest and largest, saw its annual operational grant fall from approximately €180 million to under €110 million by 2014. Laboratories at the Zografou Polytechnic campus went without basic reagents. The law faculty on Solonos Street in Exarchia ran heating only on alternate days during the 2013–14 winter. Faculty hiring froze entirely between 2011 and 2019, creating what demographers of higher education call a "missing generation" of academic staff now in their forties who simply left.
The Athens University of Economics and Business in Patission Street, one of the few institutions that maintained competitive research output through those years largely by chasing EU Horizon funding, became an outlier rather than a model. Most regional institutions — the University of Ioannina, the Democritus University of Thrace in Komotini — hemorrhaged staff to Germany and the Netherlands, where Greek-born academics now constitute a measurable share of several STEM departments.
What the Private University Fight Is Really About
The constitutional argument over private universities has obscured a more practical problem. Greece currently has 24 public universities and 14 public Technological Educational Institutes absorbed into the university system under the Athanasios Dimopoulos reform of 2019. Roughly 120,000 students sit the Panhellenic Examinations each year, competing for approximately 65,000 state-funded places. The gap — students who pass but cannot secure a state place in their preferred field — has historically driven both private tutoring spending, estimated at €500 million annually across the country, and outward migration to institutions in the UK, Germany, and Cyprus.
Legalising private universities was sold as a solution to that gap. Critics, including the main opposition SYRIZA and the teaching unions grouped under DOE and OLME, argue it is instead the first step toward dismantling public education's funding base by allowing governments to point at private provision as an alternative justification for continued underinvestment. The argument is not new — it echoes debates that played out in Portugal in the 1990s and in the Czech Republic after EU accession — but it has particular sharpness in a country where the public university was explicitly protected by Article 16 of the constitution, the clause the 2023 law was specifically drafted to circumvent.
This October's intake will serve as the first real stress test. Students who receive their Panhellenic results in late August will, for the first time, face a formal private university option domestically. The Ministry of Education has said it will publish a registry of approved institutions by August 15. Parents in Kifissia and Glyfada who have been paying upward of €12,000 per year to send children to universities in Nicosia or Maastricht will be watching that list closely. So will the public university rectors, who have been lobbying for a supplementary budget allocation before the academic year opens. They have not yet received one.