There should be a link to their application form in their website. However, if you cannot afford to attend, why would you want to waste money on the application fee? In the statistically unlikely event that you are admitted, the US Consulate of Consulate General in your country will need to see a bank account or similar proof that you have about US$200,000 to pay for four years of tuition fees and living expenses before it issues a student visa in the event that you are admitted.
It would be much better to earn your undergraduate degree with top grades in your own country and apply to MIT for graduate school for which MIT will probably give you financial aid if you are accepted. A graduate degree from MIT is usually much more valuable than an undergraduate degree.
Undergraduate study is really out of the cards if you can't afford it. American universities are exorbitantly expensive, and competitive schools like MIT really don't have much incentive to bend over backwards on price. They do have financial aid, but they will expect some significant contribution most likely, and you won't be eligible for many scholarships or loans that are geared to locals.
Agreed, waiting to grad school is a better idea - PhD students get funding packages that cover tuition and basic living expenses.
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There should be a link to their application form in their website. However, if you cannot afford to attend, why would you want to waste money on the application fee? In the statistically unlikely event that you are admitted, the US Consulate of Consulate General in your country will need to see a bank account or similar proof that you have about US$200,000 to pay for four years of tuition fees and living expenses before it issues a student visa in the event that you are admitted.
It would be much better to earn your undergraduate degree with top grades in your own country and apply to MIT for graduate school for which MIT will probably give you financial aid if you are accepted. A graduate degree from MIT is usually much more valuable than an undergraduate degree.
Undergraduate study is really out of the cards if you can't afford it. American universities are exorbitantly expensive, and competitive schools like MIT really don't have much incentive to bend over backwards on price. They do have financial aid, but they will expect some significant contribution most likely, and you won't be eligible for many scholarships or loans that are geared to locals.
Agreed, waiting to grad school is a better idea - PhD students get funding packages that cover tuition and basic living expenses.