Business computingfull time

Degree
Master of Science
Master
Standard period of study (amount)
4 semesters
Location
Stuttgart
Deadlines
July 2025 (Germans and inhabitants)
July 2025 (EU)
expired (Non-EU)
Please enquire

Overview and admission

Study Type

graduate

Admission semester

Summer and Winter Semester

Area of study
  • Applied Computer Science
  • Information Systems and Management
  • Business Administration
Target group

The degree course Business Information Systems is aimed at students with a Bachelor's degree of at least six semesters (or equivalent degree) in Business Information Systems or in a degree course with closely related content.

Admission modus

Local admission restriction

More information regarding admission requirements

Lecture period
  • 07.04.2025 - 19.07.2025
  • 13.10.2025 - 07.02.2026

Application deadlines

Summer semester (2025)
  • Deadlines for International Students from the European Union

    Expired

  • Deadlines for international students from countries that are not members of the European Union

    Expired

    For all information for international students, visit www.uni-stuttgart.de/studium/bewerbung/international-degree/

  • Application deadline for Germans and inhabitants

    Expired

Winter semester (2025/2026)
  • Deadlines for international students from countries that are not members of the European Union

    For all information for international students, visit www.uni-stuttgart.de/studium/bewerbung/international-degree/

  • Deadlines for International Students from the European Union

    15.05.2025 - 15.07.2025

  • Application deadline for Germans and inhabitants

    15.05.2025 - 15.07.2025

Tuition fees

The state of Baden-Württemberg charges tuition fees for a second degree (EUR 650/semester) and for students from non-European countries (EUR 1,500/semester). For information about tuition fees, please refer to our website.

Languages of instruction

Main language

German

DAAD - Deutscher Akademischer Austauschdienst - German Academic Exchange Service