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Study Medicine in Italy Without IMAT: The Guide to Private & Open-Access Medical Schools in Italy

  • December 5, 2025
Study Medicine in Italy Without IMAT: Guide to Private & Open Access - IMAT Starter Pack
2025–2026 Edition

Study Medicine in Italy Without IMAT: The Guide to Private & Open-Access Medical Schools in Italy

By LOCOMOTIVE
12 min read Updated: December 2025
Study Medicine in Italy without IMAT

Italy is one of the few European countries that offers multiple legitimate pathways into medical school—even for students who do not want to take the IMAT.

Depending on your language skills, financial situation, and preferred university type, you can enter Medicine through:

  • Private English-taught medical schools (no IMAT required)
  • The Filter-Semester pathway in Italian-taught public universities
  • Hybrid strategies combining private tests and IMAT backup

This guide provides an up-to-date breakdown of every real option for 2025–2026, including deadlines, admission tests, seat availability, visa requirements, and tuition fees.


1 General Q&A: No IMAT Options

Can you study medicine in Italy without taking the IMAT?
Yes. You can apply to private English-taught MD programs or enroll in the Filter-Semester system in Italian public universities.
Do private universities require IMAT?
No. They run their own admission tests such as HUMAT, UniSR Test, UCSC Test, and UniCamillus Entrance Test.
Is the Filter Semester taught in English?
No. It is only for Italian-taught Medicine, Dentistry, and Veterinary programs.

2 Private Universities (English)

Private Italian medical schools provide full English-taught MD degrees and offer the simplest path to studying in Italy without IMAT. Each university runs its own admission exam.

Milan Humanitas University

One of Europe’s most modern medical campuses, integrated with Humanitas Research Hospital.

Programs Medicine & Surgery MEDTEC (Med + BioEngineering)
Seats (Medicine) 150 EU / 50 Non-EU
2026 Test Dates (HUMAT)
Round 1: 5–6 March
Round 2: 18–20 March
Fees €10,156–€23,156 (Income based)
Visit Official Website
Rome UniCamillus

A global-health-focused private university with strong ties to Rome hospitals.

Tuition ~€21,000 /yr
Seats ~182 EU
Exam Period December–January
Visit Official Website
Milan UniSR San Raffaele

Located in San Raffaele Hospital — a top clinical and research center known for neuroscience and oncology.

Tuition ~€20,000 /yr
Exam March–April
Seats 86 EU / 64 Non-EU
Visit Official Website
Rome UniCatt (Gemelli)

Based at Gemelli Hospital, one of Italy’s highest-ranked medical centers.

Seats (2026) 40 EU / 70 Non-EU
Test Date 25 March 2026
Fees €18,000–€20,000 /yr
Visit Official Website

3 The "Filter Semester" (Italian)

The Filter Semester — known in Italy as “Semestre di Sbarramento” — allows students to begin studying Medicine in public universities without taking the IMAT. However, it applies ONLY to Italian-taught programs.

How it Works (Step by Step)

1

Open Enrollment (No Exam)

Students enroll directly into the Italian-taught Medicine program. No entrance exam is required.

2

Mandatory Core Subjects

You take three foundational courses: Chemistry & Biochemistry, Physics, and Biology.

3

Official Exams

To qualify for ranking, you must score ≥18/30 in each subject exam.

4

National Merit Ranking

Your ranking is based exclusively on your grades. No IMAT, no interviews.

5

Progression to Year 2

Top students progress. Those who don't pass aren't expelled but must repeat or switch degrees.

6

Retake Options

You can retake exams within the same session. Only your best score counts.

7

If You Don't Pass

You are not expelled. You can transfer credits to another degree or repeat the year.

Question Answer
Is an entrance exam required?No. Enrollment is open for the first semester.
What subjects determine acceptance?Chemistry/Biochemistry, Physics, Biology.
What grade do I need?Minimum 18/30 in each exam.
How is ranking calculated?Only by the three exam grades.
Can I retake exams?Yes — within the same session.
Do international students need Italian?Yes — B1/B2 level.
What happens if I fail?You can switch degrees or repeat. You are not expelled.
Is the program taught in English?No — Italian only.
Do all universities offer this?No — only selected public universities.

4. Requirements for Non-EU Students (2025–2026)

Non-EU applicants must follow the official procedure:

  • Apply on Universitaly by 25 July 2025 (17:00 Italy time).
  • Complete all pre-enrollment steps (mandatory for visa approval).
  • Provide valid Italian certification (B1 or B2) if choosing the Filter Semester.
  • Start visa processing early — filter-semester programs begin earlier than regular courses.
Failing the Universitaly process means you cannot receive a student visa.

5. Which Path Is Best for You?

Choose Private Universities if:

  • • You want to avoid IMAT
  • • You prefer studying in English
  • • You can afford €10k–€23k/year
  • • You want modern campuses & small classes

Choose Filter-Semester if:

  • • You speak Italian at B1/B2
  • • You want low tuition (€1k–€3k/year)
  • • You prefer exam-based progression
  • • You want a second chance after IMAT

Italy offers more flexibility than almost any other country in Europe. Whether you choose private English universities, the Italian filter semester, or the IMAT, you can build a pathway that fits your goals.

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