Fees & Total Cost

NEOMA Business School MiM Fees 2026

Master in Management – Programme Grande École · Reims, France · FT #30

NEOMA publishes a single Master in Management tuition of €36,000 for the full Grande École programme — the same for all nationalities — plus a roughly €500 annual administrative fee and a €100 application fee. There is no separate EU or non-EU price. Merit scholarships covering part of the fee are available to strong candidates, so the all-in cost for a triple-crown, FT-top-30 Grande École sits in the mid-range for French business schools.

Tuition for the NEOMA Business School Master in Management is €36,000 total tuition, full-time (plus ~€500/year administrative fee and a €100 application fee) for the 24 months program.

Total tuition€36,000 total tuition, full-time (plus ~€500/year administrative fee and a €100 application fee)
Tuition (numeric)€36,000
Program length24 months

Tuition figures are the published rate for the 2026–27 cycle and exclude living costs, travel, and optional exchange fees. Scholarships and need-based aid can materially reduce the net cost — see the FAQs below.

Frequently asked questions

Where does NEOMA rank for the Master in Management?
NEOMA placed 30th worldwide in the Financial Times Masters in Management 2025, up from 34th the year before. The FT records a 100% employment rate at three months and a weighted three-year salary of about US$80,910.
How much does NEOMA's Master in Management cost?
Tuition is €36,000 for the full Grande École programme — the same for all nationalities — plus a roughly €500 annual administrative fee and a €100 application fee. Merit scholarships can reduce the cost for strong candidates.

Sources

  • Master in Management — official programme page — NEOMA Business School
  • NEOMA in the FT Masters in Management 2025 — world top 30 — NEOMA Business School
  • Master in Management — admissions and fees — NEOMA Business School
  • NEOMA key figures and accreditations — NEOMA Business School
  • Financial Times — Masters in Management 2025 — Financial Times