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France ‘Technologies d’Avenir’ Mobility Scholarships 2026 for Researchers Open

The French Embassy in Germany has officially launched its 2026 edition of the Technologies d’Avenir scholarship programme, opening a competitive funding window for young researchers based in Germany who want to spend one to three months at a French laboratory.

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A Franco-German Bet on the Technologies of the Future

Anchored in the Aachen Treaty, the Technologies d’Avenir mobility grants are the French Embassy’s most direct attempt to thicken the research corridor between the two countries. The programme is jointly run by the Embassy’s Office for Science and Technology and its Office for Cooperation and Cultural Action, and it deliberately avoids narrow disciplinary gatekeeping.

Instead, it casts the net across seven priority fields: ecological transition, energy transition, digital transition, geopolitics, ethics and rights in new technologies, health, and the cultural and creative industries. Quantum, hydrogen, neuroscience, AI, marine biodiversity and even video-game technologies all sit comfortably inside the eligible perimeter.

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Who the Technologies d’Avenir Scholarship 2026 Is Really For?

Eligibility is tighter than the broad thematic scope suggests. Applicants must be affiliated with a German university or research institution and fall into one of four categories: research-oriented master’s students, doctoral candidates, postdoctoral researchers, or early-career researchers who defended their thesis no more than five years ago, with parental and sick leave taken into account.

One restriction is unambiguous: French citizens, including dual nationals, cannot apply. The programme is engineered to pull talent from Germany into France, not to recycle French researchers through their own system.

Funding: Modest Monthly Stipends, Strategic Intent

The Technologies d’Avenir 2026 mobility grant pays a monthly lump sum of €2,100 for postdoctoral researchers, €1,850 for doctoral students and €1,200 for master’s candidates. The money is meant to cover transport and living costs, and the Embassy explicitly nudges recipients toward low-carbon travel. Three-month grants exist but are rationed; most awardees should expect a one- or two-month stay. Researchers heading to French overseas territories may request a supplementary transport allowance, though it is not guaranteed.

How Applications Will Be Judged?

The selection committee will weigh academic quality, the added value of the French stay for the wider research project, the contribution to Franco-German cooperation, and the prospects for social, economic or technological exploitation. In tiebreak situations, the Embassy has signaled clear preferences: projects aligned with the France 2030 industrial strategy, applications involving institutions in the eastern federal states such as Saxony or Thuringia, partnerships within the same European university alliance, and research topics that have historically received less funding.

Application Process and Deadline

Candidates must submit a single PDF through the LYYTI platform containing the official project outline template, a two-page CV, proof of enrolment or affiliation, a recommendation letter from their supervisor and an invitation letter from the French host laboratory. The host institution’s commitment to facilitating the stay is treated as a serious signal, not a formality. The hard deadline is 20 May 2026 at 23:59 CET, with results notified in July and an information webinar scheduled for 15 April 2026.

The Verdict

The Technologies d’Avenir 2026 programme will not single-handedly fund a research career, but that is not its purpose. It is a precision instrument designed to seed durable laboratory-to-laboratory ties in fields where France wants strategic depth. For Germany-based researchers with a credible French collaborator and a project that speaks to ecological, digital or geopolitical transitions, it remains one of the more accessible and intellectually serious short-mobility schemes in Europe.

Philip Morgan

Dr. Philip Morgan is a postdoctoral research fellow and senior editor at daadscholarship.com. He completed both his Master’s and Ph.D. at Stanford University and later continued advanced research in the United States as a Hubert H. Humphrey Fellow. Drawing on his rich academic and international experience, Dr. Morgan writes insightful articles on scholarships, internships, and fellowships for global students. His work aims to guide and inspire aspiring scholars to unlock international education opportunities and achieve their academic dreams. With years of dedication to youth development across Asia, Africa, and beyond, Philips Morgan has helped thousands of students secure admissions, scholarships, and fellowships through accurate, experience-based guidance. All opportunities he shares are thoroughly researched and verified before publication.

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