International student mobility

Understanding the risks shared between the student and the institution.

Mis à jour le 22 June 2026

International mobility is a key issue for institutions: it enhances the value of degrees, boosts students’ employability, and increases the institution’s international visibility.
However, behind these benefits lie concrete risks that extend beyond the individual level: health incidents, cross-border disputes, repatriations, or reputational damage can result in significant financial and operational costs for the institution. These risks transform international outreach into an institutional responsibility that requires oversight and proof of compliance.
In this context, student mobility coverage ensures that every student receives appropriate protection while safeguarding your institution.
In this article, we will discuss legal obligations, the risks involved, the limitations of individual solutions, the coverage model, and the concrete benefits for an institution.

Table des matières

What the law requires of institutions regarding international mobility

When it comes to international mobility, institutions must do more than simply recommend a few options: they have a duty to inform, guide, and, when necessary, assist the students they send abroad. Specifically, institutions must document the risks associated with each destination, provide clear insurance policy summaries, and formally verify that the coverage includes appropriate benefits.

In the absence of these measures, the institution risks being held liable for failing to fulfill its duty of care.

The specific risks to the institution in the event of a disaster

A poorly managed incident often begins with urgent needs : unexpected hospitalization, medical repatriation, advance payment of expenses, or on-site assistance. If the response is not organized properly, problems arise : delays, lack of information, and coordination errors. These difficulties initially weigh on the student, but quickly result in additional costs and extra work for your teams.

 

If these issues aren’t addressed by clear procedures, the institution may face legal challenges, such as claims for compensation and liability.

 

Finally, a mishandled incident can quickly become public : inappropriate communication, excessively long response times, or dissatisfied families can fuel social media and the press. This damages your institution’s reputation, your partnerships, and the trust of prospective students. This situation demonstrates that failing to plan for incident management costs far more than implementing a structured, preventive system.

Why some individual solutions protect neither the student nor the school

 

Certain forms of individual coverage do not guarantee institutional security :

 

  • European Health Insurance Card (EHIC) : Useful in Europe for emergency care, the EHIC reimburses costs only based on the rates of the country of enrollment (usually France). If medical care costs more in the host country, the student’s reimbursement remains the same, meaning the out-of-pocket cost is higher. It does not cover repatriation or stays outside the European Union.
  • Credit cards and travel insurance : These options may seem convenient but often involve high deductibles, low coverage limits, and limited coverage periods, with frequent exclusions (high-risk activities, business trips, long-term stays) ; they create gaps in coverage for which the institution may be held liable if the information and guidance provided have not been formalized
  • Student health insurance plans : Coverage levels vary widely, international options are complex, and reimbursements can take a long time. With multiple policies to manage, verifying each one individually becomes cumbersome and prone to errors.

 

In summary, these solutions may seem sufficient, but they are often incomplete and difficult to monitor. In the event of a claim, your institution is responsible for managing the consequences. Without a group policy, the risk remains real and uncontrolled.

 

The inclusion model : how schools ensure safe mobility

 

The Inclusion plan is based on a group policy that covers all your exchange students: medical expenses abroad, repatriation, liability insurance, and legal assistance. It ensures uniform coverage and fills the gaps left by individual plans.

 

It formalizes the duty to inform : each student receives a clear coverage summary, instructions on what to do in case of an incident, and emergency contact information. These documents prove that you have informed and supported the student before their departure.

 

Incident management is centralized : a single point of contact handles on-site interventions, organizes medical care, and covers costs when applicable. The result : fewer manual interventions by institutions and faster processing of cases.

 

The system includes monitoring and compliance tools : dashboards and automatic certificates for each trip, which facilitate monitoring and audits.

 

In other words, this comprehensive coverage allows you to manage risk while transferring it.

The concrete benefits for the institution

 

Beyond compliance and protection, these are the benefits of inclusion for institutions :

 

1. A Controlled and Cost-Effective Solution

Thanks to a group insurance policy, individual rates can be up to five times lower than those of individual subscriptions. In return, student mobility is better secured, and institutions can avoid the significantly higher unexpected costs that may arise in the event of an incident.

 

2. Real Protection for Both Institutions and Students

For institutions, this approach reduces legal exposure, simplifies administrative processes, and provides clear documentation of their duty to inform students. For students, it ensures comprehensive, consistent, and immediately accessible coverage whenever needed. Student mobility becomes a secure and well-supported experience rather than an individual risk.

 

3. Long-Term Operational Efficiency

Administrative workloads are significantly reduced through :

  • Centralized management of insurance certificates
  • Standardized coverage and guarantees
  • Incident management handled by a single dedicated provider

 

Institutions no longer need to perform lengthy individual policy checks or coordinate with multiple stakeholders when claims arise. The time saved can instead be dedicated to international development and student support initiatives.

 

4. 24/7 Expert Support

With STUDCORP, a dedicated expert is available around the clock to manage emergencies, assist students, and support institutional teams. We help institutions formalize their duty of care, structure internal procedures, and provide students with clear and accessible information.

We also deliver preventive initiatives, including dedicated webinars designed to inform and prepare students before departure. At the same time, students have direct access to our team whenever they have questions or require assistance during their mobility experience.

 

In Summary, inclusion transforms what is often an unclear and potentially risky expense into a clear, controlled, and strategic asset for the institution.

Conclusion

International mobility is an opportunity for your students, but it also entails a responsibility for your institution.

The inclusion model offers a practical solution: consistent coverage, budget control, documented procedures, and 24/7 expert support.

If you are a dean, director of international relations, or a member of the administration, protect your students and secure your institution today.
Would you like a customized audit to help keep your students safe ? Contact us !

Adam de la team STUDCORP.