8 min read

Choosing where to study abroad is one of the most significant decisions you’ll make as a student. The destination you pick will shape your professional network, your daily wellbeing, and in many cases, the trajectory of your career. Which is why you need to approach the decision for structured, comparative framework.

This guide breaks down the key questions to ask before committing: how to prioritize what matters, how to compare costs honestly, what safety and wellbeing data to look at, how to evaluate career outcomes, and, critically, what parents should be asking throughout the process.

What should I prioritize when choosing a destination?

The first instinct is often to gravitate toward a city you’ve always wanted to visit. That’s a reasonable starting point, but it’s not a decision-making framework. The places that look best in a brochure aren’t always the places that serve you best across a full academic year.

1. Academic fit

Does the institution you’re considering have a strong program in your field? Rankings matter, but so does the specific curriculum. Look at specializations, faculty backgrounds, industry connections, and how the program is structured. The quality of your day-to-day learning environment will have a bigger long-term impact than the prestige of the city.

2. International community

Studying abroad is most transformative when you’re surrounded by people from genuinely different backgrounds. A city with a large, established international student community accelerates your professional network in ways that a more homogenous environment can’t replicate. Madrid, for instance, has over 130 nationalities represented across its universities. This figure directly shapes the quality of peer learning and career connections you’ll form.

3. Location as opportunity

Geography matters more than most students expect. A city that’s a natural hub for travel, business and culture gives you more exposure in a shorter time. Consider how well-connected the city is by air, rail and road. While that’s good for weekend trips, it’s even better for providing access to multiple markets and professional networks is a real career asset.

4. Institutional support

What happens when things go wrong? What services does the university offer for housing, language support, visa issues and personal wellbeing? The strength of student services infrastructure is easy to overlook when everything is going well and hard to ignore when you need it.

5. Long-term resonance

Finally, ask yourself what kind of person you want to be when you come back. There are professional, linguistic and cultural challenges unique to each location. The cities and programs that push you beyond your comfort zone tend to produce the most meaningful change. Choosing somewhere that simply feels comfortable can mean missing the point of the experience altogether.

How do I compare costs across cities?

Cost of living comparisons are often misleading because people focus on the wrong numbers. Take headline figures like rent, groceries and transport. They don’t tell you much unless you’re comparing cities at the same level of completeness. We believe a more accurate cost comparison covers the following five categories.

1. Accommodation

This is usually the largest variable. The choice between a private studio, a shared apartment, a university residence, or a homestay can produce a monthly range of hundreds of euros even within the same city. Decide what type of accommodation matches your priorities before comparing cities, so you’re comparing like with like.

2. Transport

A city with an integrated, affordable public transport system effectively reduces your monthly costs significantly. Madrid’s monthly transport card covers the metro, buses and regional rail. That makes it genuinely easy and inexpensive to move around. By contrast, cities that rely on taxis or private hire can cost considerably more on a day-to-day basis.

3. Utilities and connectivity

These are often excluded from student budget estimates but add up consistently. Gas, electricity, water and a mobile plan are monthly realities. Spain has a competitive range of mobile providers with data-inclusive plans, and international calls can be managed via apps at little or no extra cost.

4. Student discounts

Some cities are genuinely student-friendly at a structural level. In Madrid, for example, Spain’s three major national museums offer discounted or free entry to students for permanent exhibitions. The Teatro Real offers up to a 90% discount on Sunday tickets bought on the day. These perks are real and compound over time.

5. Quality-adjusted cost

The most important comparison isn’t the cheapest city, it’s the city that offers the best return on what you spend. Madrid consistently ranks as significantly more affordable than comparable European capitals like London, Amsterdam or Zurich. What’s more, it offers access to equivalent or superior academic and professional ecosystems. That gap represents real value, particularly over a full academic year.

What safety and wellbeing factors should I check?

Safety is a topic that tends to be underweighted by students and overweighted by parents. The most relevant safety data is rarely the dramatic kind. What matters for day-to-day student life is whether a city is reliably safe to navigate, whether public spaces feel accessible, and whether petty crime is likely to affect your routine.

1. Crime data by city

Comparative crime statistics across European cities show meaningful differences. Madrid’s overall crime rates remain well below the EU average, with violent crime rates particularly low. When compared directly to other popular study-abroad destinations in Spain, the differences are significant: Barcelona, for instance, recorded around 8,563 offenses per 100,000 residents in the first half of 2025, with theft levels approximately 50% higher than in Madrid.

2. Campus and neighborhood safety

Beyond city-level data, look at where you’ll actually be spending most of your time. Are the areas around your campus and accommodation well-connected and well-lit? Are there clear routes between key locations? The quality of public transport also feeds into safety. For example, a reliable metro system reduces your dependence on late-night private transport.

3. Mental health and wellbeing support

Safety isn’t only physical. A significant proportion of students studying abroad experience some form of adjustment difficulty, from mild culture shock to more persistent anxiety or isolation. Before committing to a program, ask what mental health resources are available. Does the institution have a counselling or wellbeing team? Is there a student services office that can connect you with appropriate support?

4. Healthcare access

Understand how your health insurance situation works in the destination country. In Spain, international students can access the public health system, but many opt for private insurance, which tends to offer faster access and broader coverage. This is something IE University’s Student Services team supports students in navigating. Know what you’re covered for before you arrive.

5. Community environment

A lesser-appreciated wellbeing factor is the quality of the community you’ll be joining. A city and an institution with a large, international, student-friendly culture makes adaptation significantly faster. Knowing that thousands of other students from around the world have arrived at the same point is itself a form of structural support.

How do I evaluate career outcomes?

Career outcomes should be one of the primary decision criteria when choosing a study abroad program, but they’re rarely discussed with enough specificity. Vague claims about employability aren’t enough. Look for evidence.

1. Employment rates and timelines

Ask each institution you’re considering what percentage of graduates find employment within three, six and twelve months of graduation. The best programs publish this data. IE University, for example, reports that the vast majority of graduates from programs like the Master in Finance secure roles within three months of graduation.

2. Employer partnerships

The strength of a university’s corporate network is a direct predictor of the opportunities available to you. IE University’s Talent & Careers team works with over 2,100 recruiting partners globally, posting more than 12,000 job opportunities exclusively to the IE Career Portal each year. Partners include firms across consulting, technology, financial services and consumer goods: BCG, McKinsey, Salesforce, Google, HSBC, Deloitte and others. These relationships produce internships, entry-level positions and early-career mentoring that students from less connected programs don’t access.

3. Industry concentration of the city

Where you study affects who you can meet. A city with a strong ecosystem of multinationals, startups and professional services firms gives you access to speakers, events, networking dinners and internship opportunities that exist independently of your program. Madrid functions as Spain’s primary business hub, concentrating many of the country’s largest companies alongside a growing startup and technology ecosystem. ICEX-Invest in Spain describes Madrid as Spain’s political, financial and business capital, noting that 72% of the country’s 2,000 largest companies are based in the region. That concentration matters when you’re trying to build professional relationships during your degree.

4. Alumni network

A strong alumni network is a practical career asset. IE University’s alumni community spans over 66,000 graduates from 165 nationalities, with graduates placed in leading companies across every major industry globally. You’ll also have access to a peer mentoring platform and a dedicated career portal which posts over 7,000 positions to alumni annually.

5. Post-graduation pathways

Study the specific roles that graduates from your target program actually take. Career reports, published annually by most reputable universities, break down employment by sector, function and seniority. For IE Business School’s Master in Management, for instance, recent graduates have moved into roles in technology, consulting and financial services. What’s more, they’re employed by industry leaders like Google, Meta, PwC, L’Oréal and UBS. That level of specificity tells you far more than a headline employability percentage.

What questions should parents ask before committing?

Parents play a significant and often under-acknowledged role in the study abroad decision. Their concerns are real, their instincts are often valid, and their questions help students make better decisions. Here are the questions that matter most.

1. What does the total cost look like, realistically?

Don’t just look at tuition. Build a full picture that includes accommodation, transport, insurance, daily expenses, travel during term and any program-related fees. Ask the institution for a realistic monthly budget estimate and validate it against published data. If you’re looking at Madrid, make sure to check our own cost of living guide.

2. What support structures exist for students who struggle?

This is the question parents ask least often and should ask first. What happens if your child gets sick, feels isolated, struggles academically or has a personal crisis? Is there a student services team? Mental health counseling? A 24/7 contact? The presence of these structures tells you a lot about how seriously the institution takes student wellbeing beyond the promotional materials.

3. How is the city itself rated for international student safety?

Ask for specific data, not general reassurances. Look at annual crime statistics for the city. Ask whether the areas students typically live and study in are consistent with the city’s overall profile. A city that is broadly safe but has specific high-risk areas – particularly for tourist-facing petty crime – is meaningfully different from one where safety is consistent across the student experience.

4. What are graduates actually doing?

Ask to see the most recent career report. Ask what percentage of students secure employment within six months, in which sectors, and at what level. Or ask whether the university has a dedicated careers team and what their services include both during and after the program. An institution that can answer these questions with data is one that takes career outcomes seriously.

5. What is the institutional reputation outside of rankings?

Rankings are useful but partial. Ask what the university is known for in your field specifically. Look at faculty research output, corporate partnerships and the professional profiles of recent alumni on LinkedIn. These indicators tell you whether the institution’s reputation translates into real professional currency.

6. Can we speak to current students or recent alumni?

Every reputable institution should be able to connect prospective families with people currently in or recently through the program. These genuine conversations are the most reliable signal of whether the experience matches the promise. At IE University, students like Gunel Azizova have been open about the value of speaking directly to current students before applying: “I was really happy that they were giving their honest opinion.”

7. What happens after graduation?

A study abroad program ends. A university relationship, if the institution invests in it, doesn’t have to. Ask what alumni support looks like. That could translate to career portals, lifelong learning opportunities, mentoring platforms, alumni events. The answer tells you whether the university sees students as a one-time transaction or a long-term community.

Making the decision

The right study abroad destination is the one that performs well across all five dimensions: academic quality, honest cost, verified safety, demonstrable career outcomes, and institutional support that extends beyond graduation.

It’s also worth trusting the parts of your instinct that go beyond data. The city where you can see yourself growing, the community where you feel genuinely welcomed, the program where the alumni stories sound like the professional you want to become… those are the signals that matter.

The best study abroad experiences don’t just take you somewhere new. They return you to yourself with sharper clarity about who you are, what you’re capable of, and where you’re headed. That’s a standard worth holding your decision to.