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Fewer admission restrictions at universities in the North

If you want to study in Schleswig-Holstein, your chances are good. At least the admission restrictions to the degree courses are relatively low.

If you want to study in the north, you have a good chance thanks to low admission restrictions.
If you want to study in the north, you have a good chance thanks to low admission restrictions.

Numerus Clausus - Fewer admission restrictions at universities in the North

Due to a rather low quota of admission-restricted study programs, it is relatively likely in Schleswig-Holstein to obtain a desired study place in the upcoming winter semester. According to a study by the Center for Higher Education Development in Gütersloh, only 22.4% of the study place offers will be allocated via a Numerus Clausus (NC) or a qualification assessment procedure in Schleswig-Holstein in the upcoming winter semester. This is a decrease of 2.1 percentage points compared to the winter semester 2022/23.

Schleswig-Holstein has the fifth lowest NC quote in the federal comparison. Nationwide, 37.2% of all study places are admission-restricted.

The highest quote was determined to be 62.4% in Hamburg, the lowest 19.6% in Thuringia. Admission restrictions are a reaction of universities to applicant numbers that exceed the study place offer. A fixed number of study places is then allocated based on various criteria, such as the Abitur grade. The Center for Higher Education Development is a subsidiary of the Bertelsmann Foundation and the Rectors' Conference.

The distribution of admission restrictions at Schleswig-Holstein's universities varies depending on popularity and place offer: According to the study, 42.2% of the study offers in the fields of law, economics, social sciences and humanities are admission-restricted in the north, while only about one tenth (10.2%) are in language and cultural sciences. In mathematics and natural sciences, 18.5% of the offers are admission-restricted, in engineering sciences 28.1%.

The number of study offers with admission restrictions is decreasing

Nationwide, the proportion of admission-restricted study offers has been decreasing for years, as Study Director Cort-Denis Hachmeister states. "This can largely be attributed to the decline in first-semester numbers and the simultaneous expansion of study offers."

The prospects for study applicants for a study place in their preferred subject are currently as good as ever. Even in the federally admission-restricted fields such as, for example, medicine, the relationship between study places and applicants has significantly improved.

On average, there are 2.8 applicants for a study place in the fields of pharmacy, human, animal or dental medicine.

  1. In contrast to Schleswig-Holstein, universities in North Rhine-Westphalia and Hamburg have a higher percentage of study places with access restriction due to a Numerus Clausus or qualification assessment procedure.
  2. A study place in a highly sought-after study program, such as law or economics, is more likely to be subject to access restriction at universities in Gütersloh than in fields like language and cultural sciences.
  3. Despite the decrease in admission-restricted study places in Schleswig-Holstein, applicants still face access restrictions in fields like mathematics and natural sciences, engineering sciences, and even in some federally admission-restricted programs.
  4. To secure a study place in an admission-restricted program, applicants must often meet specific criteria, such as a high Abitur grade, which reflects the universities' reaction to an excess of applicants.
  5. Though the overall number of admission-restricted study offers is decreasing nationwide, applicants in popular programs, like medicine, still need to navigate these access restrictions to secure their desired study place.

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