
Who can take TR-YÖS? (Eligibility Guide for 2025)
Planning to apply to a university in Türkiye as an international candidate, but stuck on one question: Who can take TR-YÖS? That question matters more than most students expect, because eligibility decides whether you should register, pay the exam fee, and start preparing now, or use a different admission route.
TR-YÖS rules aren’t based on guesswork or social media posts. They come from ÖSYM’s official guide for that exam session, and details can change from year to year. Before you apply, always compare your situation with the newest ÖSYM guide, starting with the official page for the 2025 guide and application info: https://www.osym.gov.tr/TR,33020/2025-tr-yos1-kilavuz-ve-basvuru-bilgileri.html.
This article focuses only on who can take TR-YÖS, not how to study or what topics are tested.
What is TR-YÖS, and why do universities ask for it?
TR-YÖS is a centralized exam organized by ÖSYM for students who want to apply to undergraduate programs in Türkiye through international student quotas. Many public and foundation universities use TR-YÖS scores as part of their admissions process, then add their own rules, such as minimum scores, program limits, or extra documents.
Think of TR-YÖS as the common “entry ticket” that lets universities compare students from different school systems. After that, each university still decides who gets in, and what score is “enough” for a specific program.
TR-YÖS is offered at test centers in Türkiye and in many other countries, and it can be administered in multiple languages. Where you take the exam is a logistics choice, but eligibility is about your citizenship status and your high school pathway, not your current address.
If you want a quick, official overview of TR-YÖS as an exam for international candidates, you can also check the national Study in Türkiye portal: https://www.studyinturkiye.gov.tr/StudyinTurkey/StudyinTurkeyTRYOS.
TR-YÖS vs older YÖS exams (what changed for students)
For years, many universities ran their own YÖS exams, which meant different formats, different dates, and lots of separate applications. TR-YÖS is the centralized version run by ÖSYM, so students can use one exam result across many universities that accept it.
That said, admissions policies are still not identical. One university may accept TR-YÖS only, while another may accept TR-YÖS plus other qualifications. Before you commit to one plan, check your target university’s international admissions page to confirm what they accept and how they rank candidates. For a real example of how a university describes TR-YÖS based applications and registration steps, see Marmara University’s guide: https://muyos.marmara.edu.tr/basvuru/tr-yos-sonucu-ile-basvuru-ve-kayit-kilavuzu.
Who can take TR-YÖS? Eligible student groups explained simply
In most cases, you can take TR-YÖS if you are in the final year of high school or you have already graduated, and you match one of the eligibility categories described in the current ÖSYM TR-YÖS Guide.
The main eligible groups are usually described like this:
- Foreign nationals (non-Turkish citizens), including those who finished high school in Türkiye
- Blue Card holders (former Turkish citizens who officially renounced citizenship)
- Some Turkish citizens who completed high school abroad (often all of high school, or a defined portion, depending on the guide)
- Some special cases tied to dual citizenship or specific high school credentials, which must match the guide wording exactly
A common misunderstanding is thinking eligibility is about where you live now. In reality, ÖSYM looks at citizenship and education history, so your passport status and your high school years matter more than your current city.
Foreign nationals (including those who finished high school in Türkiye)
If you are not a Turkish citizen, you are generally in the core group TR-YÖS is designed for. Even if you completed high school in Türkiye, that does not automatically block you, because your nationality is still “foreign national” for admissions.
A simple example helps: a German citizen who graduated from a high school in Istanbul may still be eligible to sit TR-YÖS, as long as the current guide conditions are met and the student can prove identity and graduation status.
If you are a foreign national studying in Türkiye, pay close attention to guide details about when you started high school and what type of school you attended, because some sessions include specific restrictions and exceptions.
Blue Card holders (former Turkish citizens)
Blue Card status usually refers to people who were Turkish citizens by birth and later lost Turkish citizenship by permission, then received a Blue Card. This group is commonly listed among eligible candidates in TR-YÖS rules, because they apply through the “international student” pathway rather than the standard domestic exam route.
In practical terms, you should be ready to prove your status during application, which usually means having your Blue Card documentation available and consistent with the identity information you use in the ÖSYM system.
Turkish citizens who studied high school abroad (common eligibility path)
Some Turkish citizens can be eligible if they completed high school abroad, under conditions described in the guide. The logic is straightforward: TR-YÖS is meant for international admissions routes, so the guide often recognizes Turkish citizens who were educated outside Türkiye as fitting that pathway.
This is where details matter most. Your eligibility can depend on the country, the years you studied abroad, and sometimes whether the education was fully outside Türkiye (and sometimes outside TRNC as well). If your case is close to the line, match your transcript years to the guide text before you pay anything.
Who usually cannot take TR-YÖS? Common ineligible cases and misunderstandings
TR-YÖS is not a general university entrance exam for everyone. It is mainly tied to international admissions, so many applicants are screened out because they belong to the standard domestic pathway.
Two situations create the most confusion:
- Turkish citizens who completed high school in Türkiye and assume TR-YÖS is an “easier” option
- Applicants with dual citizenship or TRNC-related schooling who don’t realize the guide can treat them differently
If you want to see current exam timing and application windows, ÖSYM posts session announcements, including 2025 TR-YÖS/2 details here: https://www.osym.gov.tr/TR,33380/2025-turkiye-yurt-disindan-ogrenci-kabul-sinavi-2025-tr-yos2-basvurularinin-alinmasiapplications-for-2025-exam-for-foreign-students-for-higher-education-in-turkiye-2025-tr-yos2-07082025.html.
If you are a Turkish citizen and finished high school in Türkiye (why this matters)
If you hold only Turkish citizenship and you completed high school in Türkiye, you usually apply through the standard national routes rather than TR-YÖS. This is not a judgment about your ability, it is just how admissions categories are separated.
If you are unsure which path fits your program, ask the university’s international office and admissions unit before registration, because choosing the wrong exam can cost time and money.
Dual citizenship and special cases (what to check before you register)
Dual citizenship cases can be tricky because eligibility may depend on how the person is classified for admissions purposes, and the guide wording can be strict. Before you register, do a quick self-audit and confirm each point against the newest guide:
Citizenship status: Which citizenships do you currently hold, and which one appears in your official identity records?
How citizenship was obtained: Were you Turkish by birth, or did you gain Turkish citizenship later?
High school location: Where did you complete high school, and where were the final years completed?
Guide match: Does your case match an eligible category word for word, without assumptions?
If any answer feels unclear, don’t “try your luck” with payment first. Clarify your category, then apply.
Practical eligibility checklist before you apply (fast self check)
Before you start registration, this short checklist keeps you from paying for an exam you can’t use:
- Confirm you are a high school graduate or currently in the final year.
- Confirm your citizenship category (foreign national, Blue Card holder, Turkish educated abroad, or special case).
- Confirm where you studied high school, including the exact years and countries.
- Confirm you can present identity and education proof that matches your application data.
- Confirm your target universities accept TR-YÖS and check their minimum score rules.
Many students also worry about age. In practice, the key requirement is usually education status (final year or graduate), not age, but you should still rely on the current guide text. Also note that Turkish language level is often checked later by universities, so it usually doesn’t decide whether you can sit the exam.
Documents and timing basics (what you will likely need)
Most candidates should expect to prepare a valid passport or identity document, a recent photo, and proof of graduation or final-year status. Registration is done through ÖSYM’s TR-YÖS system, and deadlines matter because late registration is not always offered for every session.
If you are preparing academically and want structured support for the math and reasoning skills that overlap with TR-YÖS style questions, an organized program can help you stay consistent, for example: https://testprepistanbul.com/yos-exam-preparation-course/.
Conclusion
TR-YÖS eligibility is mainly built for foreign nationals, plus certain defined groups such as Blue Card holders and some Turkish citizens educated abroad, while many Turkish citizens educated in Türkiye usually follow other admission routes. When the rules feel confusing, the safest approach is simple: match your citizenship and high school history to the newest ÖSYM guide, then confirm your target university’s requirements and minimum scores.
If you verify eligibility first, your TR-YÖS plan becomes clearer, and your prep time becomes much easier to organize around one goal: earning a score that meets your program’s expectations.