Google PhD Fellowships directly support graduate students as they pursue their PhD.
Google PhD Fellowships directly support graduate students as they pursue their PhD.
Google PhD Fellowships directly support graduate students as they pursue their PhD, as well as connect them to a Google Research Mentor.
Nurturing and maintaining strong relations with the academic community is a top priority at Google. The Google PhD Fellowship Program was created to recognize outstanding graduate students doing exceptional and innovative research in areas relevant to computer science and related fields. Fellowships support promising PhD candidates of all backgrounds who seek to influence the future of technology. Google’s mission is to foster inclusive research communities and encourage people of diverse backgrounds to apply. We currently offer fellowships in Africa, Australia, Canada, East Asia, Europe, India, Latin America, New Zealand, Southeast Asia and the United States.
Applications are currently open for the 2026 cycle.
Apply by April 30, 2026 at 11:59:59pm UTC.
Google PhD Fellowship students are a select group recognized by Google researchers and their institutions as some of the most promising young academics in the world. The Fellowships are awarded to students who represent the future of research in the fields listed below.
Note that region-specific research areas will be listed in application forms during the application window.
Computer architecture is foundational for computer science generally, and Google in particular. Google's architecture research is diverse and deep, from processor design to understanding how AI can profoundly change the way we think about how we design circuits. We are interested in proposals in all areas of computer architecture that demonstrate creativity, deep understanding, and bold thinking.
Algorithms and optimization form the foundations of computer science, focusing on designing efficient methods to solve complex contemporary problems including problems with applications in machine learning, data science, and modern AI. The primary goals in this area are to create methods that improve resource efficiency and sometimes offer guarantees on the quality of the solution. This line of research is crucial since it studies the solvability of problems through a set of tools that nicely complement machine learning techniques. For this area, we call for proposals specifically in the areas of:
Subtopics: Population health, Complex medical data, Consumer health
Google’s Health research aims to advance AI and technology that helps people live healthier lives. Achieving this goal will require collaborative research with public officials, clinicians, and consumers. In partnership with public officials, we are creating tools to understand population level health. With clinicians, we are developing novel algorithms to better understand and make use of complex medical data such as images, text, lab tests, and genomics. With consumers, we are developing technology that helps people find high quality health information and better understand their own health status. By focusing on inclusive, transformative research we aim to improve the lives of billions of people. For this area, we call for proposals specifically in the areas of:
Subtopics: Human-AI Collaboration, AI for Accessibility, Responsible AI in HCI, Interactive Machine Learning, Extended Reality (XR).
The Human-Computer Interaction (HCI) research area aims to support academic research advancing innovative, human-centered interactive systems. We are particularly interested in proposals exploring foundational principles, guidelines, and theories shaping the future of HCI in the era of generative AI, including but not limited to:
While we welcome research across all HCI sub-areas, we are particularly excited about proposals aligned with Google's focus on predictive and intelligent UIs, mobile and ubiquitous computing, extended reality (XR), cross-device interaction, social computing, and interactive visualization.
Machine learning, a cornerstone of Google's research initiatives, encompasses a vast spectrum of exploration. This includes fundamental theoretical investigations into algorithms and their underlying principles, as well as the development of practical applications that address real-world challenges. Through these diverse research endeavors, Google aims to advance the state-of-the-art in machine learning and harness its potential to drive innovation across a wide range of domains. For this area, we call for proposals specifically in the areas of:
Subtopics: Audio / Image / Video Understanding, Action Recognition, Digital Media Processing, Neural and Classical Image/Video Compression, Object Detection and Recognition, Speech, Robotics
Machine perception researchers at Google develop algorithms and systems to tackle a wide range of tasks, including action recognition, object recognition and detection, hand-writing recognition, audio understanding, perceptual similarity measures, and image and video compression. A main focus is on generative methods for creating exciting and novel images and video.
Subtopics: Knowledge Retrieval & Use, Grounding & Factuality, Agentic Workflows and Tool Use, Conversational Agents, Translation & Multilinguality, Multimodality & Language Grounding to Vision, Evaluation & Data, Novel Applications of LLMs.
Google research in Natural Language Processing comprises multiple research groups working on a wide range of natural language understanding and generation projects. Our researchers are focused on advancing the state of the art in natural language technologies and accelerating adoption everywhere for the benefit of the user. Natural Language Processing and Understanding plays a major role in driving Google’s company-wide efforts as language understanding is the key to unlocking Google’s approach: “Build a more helpful Google for everyone that increases the world’s knowledge, success, health, and happiness.”
Google Privacy, Safety, and Security is committed to ensuring that the internet is safer for everyone. To meet this goal, we support and partner with academia to bring about state of the art advancements across a broad range of privacy, security, and safety areas. For this area, we call for proposals specifically on:
Topics outside of these areas will still be considered. However, we encourage applicants to align their proposals with one of the above topics.
Two primary goals of Google’s Quantum AI research are to develop a fault tolerant quantum computer that is capable of handling commercial, quantum-advantaged workloads and to identify novel applications that can be executed on quantum hardware. We actively collaborate with academic partners to advance these goals and we welcome the submission of proposals containing innovative ideas. For this area, we call for proposals specifically in the areas of:
Research on all aspects of software, including software engineering and programming languages. This includes software development methodologies and tools, debugging practices and tools, software testing strategies and tools, cooperation strategies for developers, interface and library design, programming language implementation, code optimization and verification techniques, etc.
Research for Systems, Networking and Cloud Computing focuses on exploration of future software and hardware for global distributed systems at unprecedented scale. We have interests ranging over the entire SW/HW stack: from firmware to operating system kernels to global storage to ML execution environments and cloud-scale orchestration; from novel networking hardware to communications protocols and network management, both for datacenters and global networks; and from custom processors to custom HW accelerators and their systems infrastructure.
Students receive named Fellowships which include a monetary award. The funds are given directly to the university to be distributed to cover the student’s expenses and stipend as appropriate. In addition, the student will be matched with a Google Research Mentor. There is no employee relationship between the student and Google as a result of receiving the fellowship. The award does not preclude future eligibility for internships or employment opportunities at Google, nor does it increase the chances of obtaining them. If students wish to apply for a job at Google, they are welcome to apply for jobs and go through the same hiring process as any other person.
Africa
Australia and New Zealand
Canada and the United States
East Asia
Europe
India
Early-stage PhD students
Late-stage PhD students
Latin America
Southeast Asia
Africa, Australia/New Zealand, Canada, East Asia, Europe and the United States: universities must be an accredited research institution that awards research degrees to PhD students in computer science (or an adjacent field).
India, Latin America and Southeast Asia: applications are open to universities/institutes in India, Latin America (excluding Cuba), and in eligible Southeast Asian countries/regions (Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Malaysia, Myanmar, Philippines, Singapore, Thailand, Vietnam).
Restrictions: All award payments and recipients will be reviewed for compliance with relevant US and international laws, regulations and policies. Google reserves the right to withhold funding that may violate laws, regulations or our policies.
All regions
Nominated students in Africa, Australia and New Zealand, Canada and the United States, East Asia and Europe.
Universities should only nominate students that meet the following requirements:
Direct applicant students in India, Latin America and Southeast Asia
All application materials should be submitted in English.
Africa
For each student nomination, the university will be asked to submit the following material in a single, flat (not portfolio) PDF file:
Australia and New Zealand
For each student nomination, the university will be asked to submit the following material in a single, flat (not portfolio) PDF file:
Canada, East Asia, the United States
For each student nomination, the university will be asked to submit the following material in a single, flat (not portfolio) PDF file:
Europe
For each student nomination, the university will be asked to submit the following material in a single, flat (not portfolio) PDF file:
India and Southeast Asia
Students will need the following documents in a single, flat (not portfolio) PDF file in order to complete an application (in English only):
Latin America
Students will need the following documents in a single, flat (not portfolio) PDF file in order to complete an application (in English only):
Check the eligibility and application requirements in your region before applying. Submission forms are available on this page when the application period begins.
India, Latin America and Southeast Asia: students may apply directly during the application period.
Africa, Australia, Canada, East Asia, Europe, New Zealand, and the United States: students cannot apply directly to the program; they must be nominated by an eligible university during the application period.
India, Latin America and Southeast Asia: applications are open directly to students with no limit to the number of students that can apply from a university.
Australia and New Zealand: universities may nominate up to two eligible students.
Canada and the United States: Universities may nominate up to four eligible students. We encourage nominating students with diverse backgrounds especially those from historically marginalized groups in the field of computing. If more than two students are nominated then we strongly encourage additional nominees who self-identify as a woman, Black / African descent, Hispanic / Latino / Latinx, Indigenous, and/or a person with a disability.
Africa, East Asia and Europe: Universities may nominate up to three eligible students. We encourage nominating students with diverse backgrounds especially those from historically marginalized groups in the field of computing. If more than two students are nominated then we strongly encourage the additional nominee who self-identifies as a woman.
*Applications are evaluated on merit. Please see FAQ for details on how applications are evaluated.
Applications are evaluated on the strength of the research proposal, research impact, student academic achievements, and leadership potential. Research proposals are evaluated for innovative concepts that are relevant to Google’s research areas, as well as aspects of robustness and potential impact to the field. Proposals should include the direction and any plans of where your work is going in addition to a comprehensive description of the research you are pursuing.
In Canada and the United State, East Asia and Latin America, essay responses are evaluated in addition to application materials to determine an overall recommendation.
A nominee's status as a member of a historically marginalized group is not considered in the selection of award recipients.
Research should align with Google AI Principles.
Incomplete proposals will not be considered.
Any monetary awards will be paid directly to the Fellow's university for distribution. No overhead should be assessed against them.
Fellowship recipients are not subject to intellectual property restrictions unless they complete an internship at Google. If that is the case, they are subject to the same intellectual property restrictions as any other Google intern.
No, Fellowship recipients do not become employees of Google due to receiving the award. The award does not preclude future eligibility for internships or employment opportunities at Google, nor does it increase the chances of obtaining them. If they are interested in working at Google, they are welcome to apply for jobs and go through the same hiring process as any other person.
Yes, Fellowship recipients are eligible for these scholarships.
After Google PhD Fellowship recipients are notified, the Fellowship is effective starting the following school year.
Applications for the 2024 program will open in March 2024 and close in May 2024 for all regions. Refer to the main Google PhD Fellowship Program page for each region’s application details.
A global awards announcement will be made in September on the Google Research Blog publicly announcing all award recipients.
Due to the volume of emails we receive, we may not be able to respond to questions where the answer is available on the website. If your question has not been answered by a FAQ, email:
Africa: research-africa@google.com
Australia and New Zealand: research-programs-aunz@google.com
Canada and the United States: phdfellowship@google.com
East Asia: eastasia-ur@google.com
Europe: europe-phdfellowship@google.com
India: research-programs-in@google.com
Latin America: research-programs-latam@google.com
Southeast Asia: research-programs-sea@google.com
See past PhD Fellowship recipients.