The number of Chinese students heading overseas for education has dropped to the lowest level in a decade, reports Caixin. The drop signals a structural shift in a lucrative market that Western universities have long relied upon.
According to data released by China’s Ministry of Education, 570,600 Chinese students went abroad in 2025. The figure represents a decline of nearly 20% from the historical peak of 703,500 in 2019, bringing the scale of outbound students back to around 2016 levels. For Western universities that have banked on a steady stream of full-tuition-paying Chinese students, the shift points to a new era of adjustment following years of explosive growth.
Official data also showed a growing wave of returnees. In 2025, 535,600 students returned to China after completing their studies, an increase of 40,600 from 2024 and 120,000 from 2023. Between 1978 and 2025, a total of 9.46 million Chinese studied abroad; of the 8.01 million who completed their education, 6.98 million—or more than 87%—chose to return home to build their careers. The recent release marks the first time since 2020 that the government has resumed publishing official data on outbound students.