Medical Engineeringdual system, international course, including practical semester, full time

  • Bachelor of Engineering

    Bachelor
    Degree

  • 7 semesters

    Standard period of study (amount)

  • Weiden

    Location

  • August 2025 (Germans and inhabitants)

    August 2025 (EU), July 2025 (Non-EU)
    Please enquire

Overview and admission

Study Type

undergraduate

Admission semester

Winter Semester only

Area of study

Medical Engineering

Annotation

You are passionate about technology that helps people live a better life. You want a varied job in an international environment. You want to learn something new every day and enjoy interdisciplinary cooperation. Then you have come to the right place! Study Medical Engineering at OTH Amberg-Weiden! With us, you will learn everything you need to work at the interface between people and technology, medicine and engineering. The degree programme includes technical and medical modules as well as interdisciplinary components. This will qualify you to become a sought-after engineering talent in the life sciences industry. In the technical environment, you will learn the basics of mathematics and physics as well as advanced topics such as medical device technology and product development. Medical principles are taught in anatomy & physiology and biophysics. Interdisciplinary modules include language courses as well as computer science, project management & agile methods and intercultural communication.

Admission modus

Without admission restriction

Admission requirements (Link)

Admission requirements

German A2 certificate & English B2 certificate at the start of the course.

Lecture period
  • 01.10.2024 - 17.01.2025
  • 15.03.2025 - 08.07.2025

Application deadlines

Winter semester (2024/2025)

Tuition fee

Fees

For students from non-EU countries, the university charges a tuition fee of EUR 500.

Languages of instruction

Main language

English

Further languages

German

DAAD - Deutscher Akademischer Austauschdienst - German Academic Exchange Service