Skip to main content

Study visits to Uzbekistan rise 54% in 2025

According to Uzbekistan’s National Statistics Committee, 37,200 foreign citizens visited the country for educational purposes between January and November 2025, marking a 54.3% increase compared with the same period last year.

India accounted for the largest share of visitors (16,300 visitors), followed by Turkmenistan (8,900) and Tajikistan (2,700). A further 1,700 visitors came from Pakistan, and 1,400 from China, completing the top five sending countries.

In addition to recording 37,200 foreign education-related visits in during this time, Uzbekistan’s higher education sector is also seeing growth in enrolled international student numbers.

Some 12,500 foreign students were enrolled in Uzbek universities and colleges at the start of the 2024/2025 academic year, a figure that has surged nearly 18-fold over the past decade. The largest cohorts of enrolled students come from India, Turkmenistan and Pakistan.

Over 10,000 Indian students, mostly studying medicine, are now enrolled in the Central Asian country’s universities – a sharp rise on the 3,500 enrolled last year.

The PIE News spoke to Akmal Allakuliev, rector of Kimyo International University in Tashkent (KIUT) about the rise of Uzbekistan’s educational offering on the world stage, as well as the university’s own significant internationalisation efforts.

“For decades, discussions of Uzbekistan’s integration into the global system focused primarily on energy resources, security concerns, and regional geopolitics,” said Allakuliev.

“Today, however, one of the country’s most significant transformations is taking place within its higher education system. Universities are increasingly viewed as strategic instruments for national modernisation, international engagement, and long-term economic resilience.”

With higher education reform at the core of the government’s Uzbekistan 2030 development strategy, Allakuliev said the sector is beginning to attract growing international interest.

During its first four years, KIUT operated as Yeoju Technical Institute in Tashkent in partnership with Republic of Korea’s Yeoju Institute of Technology. In 2017, the institution adopted its current name to reflect its broader, multidisciplinary, and global orientation, as international engagement expanded.

“Today, KIUT maintains academic partnerships with more than 70 universities across Europe, Southeast Asia, Central Asia, and North America. This expansion parallels national efforts to move from an inward-looking education system toward international accreditation, joint degree programs, and cross-border research collaboration.”

The university, with its 38 undergraduate and 24 graduate programs across medicine, engineering, economics, and the social sciences, also has campuses in Samarkand and Namangan, in a bid to “extend access to internationally oriented higher education beyond the capital”.

“This approach supports national priorities related to regional development and social mobility, ensuring that the benefits of globalisation are not limited to metropolitan centres,” said Allakuliev.

“Internationalisation at KIUT extends beyond formal agreements or symbolic partnerships. The university currently delivers twelve joint-degree programs at undergraduate and graduate levels, allowing students to pursue part of their studies in Europe and Asia while remaining academically grounded in Uzbekistan.”

Meanwhile, more than 60 international faculty members are actively engaged in teaching and research, and students from the US, Korea, and across Central Asia study alongside local students.

Looking ahead, Allakuliev said that Uzbekistan’s higher education reforms are entering a “more ambitious stage”.

“Priority is increasingly placed on deep cooperation with top-ranked global universities through double-degree arrangements, franchise models, and joint governance structures. KIUT is positioning itself as a platform for such partnerships by providing institutional capacity in curriculum alignment, accreditation processes, faculty mobility, and infrastructure development.”

In a region often viewed primarily through the lenses of security and geopolitics, education may prove to be the most enduring source of stability and progress
Akmal Allakuliev, Kimyo International University in Tashkent (KIUT)

For international observers, Uzbekistan’s higher education reforms merit “close attention”, said the university rector.

“In a region often viewed primarily through the lenses of security and geopolitics, education may prove to be the most enduring source of stability and progress.”

“As global challenges such as climate change and artificial intelligence increasingly cross national borders, countries with open and internationally connected education systems will play a decisive role. Uzbekistan is making a strategic investment in this direction. Institutions such as KIUT demonstrate that even relatively young universities, when guided by coherent policy and strategic vision, can become credible actors in the global knowledge economy.”

The post Study visits to Uzbekistan rise 54% in 2025 appeared first on The PIE News.