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Study AbroadIrelandCorkUniversity College Cork

University College Cork

Travel guide for Indian students — Cork, Ireland. Nearest international gateway: DUB (Dublin (India gateway; local Cork airport not in DB / minimal India service)).

From (India)
To (nearest gateway)
Dublin (India gateway; local Cork airport not in DB / minimal India service) (DUB)
 
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🕒 Last fare search: 7 Jul 2026 (today), for departures about 45 days out.
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University College Cork (UCC) is a popular choice for Indian students in Cork.

Getting around Cork

Cork is compact and walkable, with city buses on the Leap Card (student rate) and TFI Bikes (EUR 10/year). Its leafy campus is a short walk/bus from the city centre.

From the airport to campus

Most students fly into Dublin (DUB) and take a direct train or coach to Cork (~2.5-3 hr); Cork has its own airport (ORK, ~15 min from the city) with European connections. A taxi from ORK to the centre is roughly EUR 20-30.

When to book flights

Most Irish programs start in September; book 6-10 weeks ahead from your nearest Indian metro - Dublin (DUB) has good one-stop connections via Gulf and European hubs - and compare live carriers above.

Visiting your child at University College Cork (UCC) means flying into Dublin (DUB) then a train/coach to Cork (~2.5-3 hr), or via Europe into Cork Airport (ORK). Plan the Irish Short Stay 'C' visit visa well ahead - remember Ireland is not in Schengen.

Getting from DUB to campus

Visitor visa for parents

Ireland is NOT in the Schengen Area and runs its own visa system - a Schengen visa does NOT grant entry to Ireland. Indian parents need an Irish Short Stay 'C' Visit (Family/Friend) visa, applied for online via the AVATS portal with documents submitted to the VFS Visa Application Centre in India. It allows a stay of up to 90 days (no work), and you can apply up to 90 days before travel.

Single-journey visa EUR 60 (~Rs.5,500)
Multiple-journey visa EUR 100 (granted in limited cases)
VFS service fee ~EUR 20-40 extra per applicant
Processing ~4-8 weeks (apply early, esp. May-Aug)
Stay up to 90 days (no work)
  • Apply online via AVATS, then submit documents and biometrics at the VFS Visa Application Centre in India.
  • Ireland is separate from Schengen - if parents also want to visit Schengen Europe, they need a separate Schengen visa.
  • Build a strong file: bank statements (6 months), proof of funds (~EUR 50-100/day), confirmed travel, and a letter of invitation from your child.
  • From 1 June 2026 short-stay refusals can no longer be appealed - a fresh AVATS application is needed, so prepare documents carefully.

Just admitted to University College Cork (UCC)? Here's your arrival checklist.

Arrival checklist

  • Book your flight into Dublin (DUB) or, via Europe, Cork (ORK).
  • From DUB, a direct train/coach reaches Cork in ~2.5-3 hr; from ORK it is ~15 min to the centre.
  • Cork is cheaper than Dublin - line up housing early via Daft.ie; get the student Leap Card.
  • After arrival, register for your Irish Residence Permit (IRP), apply for a PPS number so you can work, and arrange private health insurance (~EUR 50-80/month).

Cork, Ireland's vibrant second city in the south, is noticeably more affordable than Dublin - about EUR 1,000-1,400 a month all-in sharing and cooking. It has a strong pharma and tech job market (Apple's European base is here), a compact walkable centre, friendly feel and good bus links on the Leap Card, plus TFI Bikes.

Monthly cost of living in Cork (a student estimate)

Rent - room in a shared flat €450-850
Rent - on-campus housing €600-1,100
Food & groceries €230-330
Leap Card (bus, student rate) + TFI Bikes €65
Utilities + internet €65-140
Mobile phone €25
Realistic monthly total (sharing, cooking) €1,000-1,400

That's roughly €11,500-16,500 a year for living costs, on top of tuition.

Finding accommodation

Ireland's rental market is very competitive, especially in Dublin - start your search early via Daft.ie and Rent.ie, and look at university and purpose-built student accommodation (PBSA) first. For student-specific accommodation, landlords cannot demand more than one month's deposit plus one month's rent up front.

  • Start the housing hunt the moment you are accepted - Dublin in particular is very competitive.
  • Never pay a deposit before a signed contract and a viewing; for student accommodation the deposit is capped at one month.
  • Cork is walkable; the student Leap Card and TFI Bikes (EUR 10/year) keep transport cheap.

Working part-time

On a Stamp 2 student permission you can work up to 20 hours per week during term and up to 40 hours per week in the standardised holiday periods (June to September, and 15 December to 15 January). You will need a PPS number to work, and you register for an Irish Residence Permit (IRP) after arrival; the minimum wage is about EUR 13-14/hour in 2026. After graduating you can apply for the Third Level Graduate Programme (Stamp 1G): a level 8 honours bachelor degree earns a 12-month stay-back, and a level 9 or 10 master's or PhD earns 24 months (issued as 12 + 12). On Stamp 1G you can work full-time (40 hours/week) in any field while you look for an employer to sponsor a General or Critical Skills Employment Permit. Total time on student permission is capped at about 7 years (8 with the graduate scheme).

Safety & student support

Cork's universities is in a safe, friendly Irish city; Ireland is welcoming and English-speaking, with normal city awareness needed at night.

  • Cork's universities has campus security and student services - save the campus number.
  • Irish cities are generally safe and walkable; use normal awareness in nightlife areas late at night.
  • A friendly, walkable city; normal awareness in nightlife areas at night.

Indian community & food

Cork has a growing Indian community (boosted by the pharma/tech sector) with some desi grocers.

Indian grocery stores

  • A few Indian/South Asian grocers in the city stock spices, lentils and staples.
  • Mainstream Tesco, Dunnes, Aldi and Lidl carry world-food aisles.
  • Selection is more limited than Dublin; students stock up on staples.

Student community

  • Cork's universities have active Indian and South Asian societies with Diwali and Holi events.
  • The pharma/tech sector draws a sizeable and growing Indian community.
  • A modest but growing set of Indian restaurants in the city.

Cost & living figures for Cork last verified Jun 2026. Figures are estimates and change over time.

Flights to Cork

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Quick Facts
CityCork
RegionCork
Nearest airportDUB (Dublin (India gateway; local Cork airport not in DB / minimal India service))
TypeUniversity
Est. monthly cost€1,000-1,400
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