There are various funding schemes available to assist both domestic and international students pursuing research degrees. These options include living allowance stipends, tuition fee scholarships, conference funds, and equity support grants. Applications will open as these become available.
External sources of financial support may also be considered, such as external scholarships or sponsorship from relevant organisations.

UTS competitive scholarships
Applicants for UTS competitive scholarships must meet the selection criteria to be nominated. When you apply for a HDR Program (PhD or Masters by Research), you must indicate in the application that you want to be considered for a scholarship. Scholarships are assessed competitively against the selection criteria and against other applicants.
Please be aware of the scholarship application closing dates for the session you are applying.
The UTS competitive scholarships are:
- Australian Government Research Training Program Stipend
- Sir Gerard Brennan Scholarship
- Jumbunna Postgraduate Research Scholarship
- Quentin Bryce Law Doctoral Scholarship
- Ross Milbourne Research Scholarship in Economics
- International Research Training Program Scholarship (IRTP)
- International Research Scholarships (UTS IRS)
- UTS President's Scholarship.
UTS scholarships by application
For all other UTS scholarships, including faculty scholarships, you’ll need to apply using a separate application form.
Use the Find a Scholarship tool to see all UTS scholarships and their individual application processes, or visit individual faculty webpages for additional opportunities:
External scholarships by application
Each year several funding opportunities are made available to research students by organisations outside of UTS. All applications and enquiries related to these scholarships need to go through the organisation, not UTS.

Get sponsored
If your research interests affect an industry or sector, consider seeking sponsorship by an organisation in the space.
The Industry Doctorate Program is one way of doing this. It’s a collaborative research project between an industry partner, a PhD candidate, and UTS. The industry partner defines the research problem and pays you, the primary researcher, a salary to produce the research supported UTS’s experts and facilities.
The Australian Government’s National Industry PhD Program (opens external website) offers stipends for PhD candidates working on co-designed industry research projects.
Contact the Graduate Research School for more information.
Fund yourself
You can self-fund if you have the means to support yourself financially. If you are an international candidate who is self-funding, you will need to provide your means of supporting yourself to the Australian Government during your visa application process.
Conference, publication and hardship funds
We offer grants to help current research candidates to develop professionally and attend conferences.