Before you trust a school with your money, your visa plan, or your future, you need to confirm that it is officially recognized and that the exact program supports your goals. This guide shows international students and parents how to verify schools in the USA, UK, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, and Ireland using official sources.
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If a school is legitimate, you should be able to confirm three separate things on official websites: the institution is officially recognized, it is allowed to enroll international students, and the exact program still supports the post-study work route you care about. Those are not always the same check. In Canada, for example, a school can be a Designated Learning Institution without every program being PGWP-eligible. In the UK, the place teaching you may not be the body actually awarding your degree. In Australia, higher education registration and CRICOS registration are separate layers.
How do you know whether a school is real before you pay an application fee, a tuition deposit, or trust it with your student visa plan?
The short answer is this: do not rely on the school's website alone. Use the exact legal school name, then verify it in the relevant official register for that country, confirm that it can enroll international students, and check whether your exact campus and program still qualify for post-study work after graduation.
Source: IRCC — About the PGWP | CICIC — Identifying Institution Status
A school can look polished online and still be the wrong choice. The risk is not only "fake versus real." A more common problem is that a school is technically operating, but the credential is weak, the degree-awarding body is different from the teaching site, the school cannot sponsor international students, or the program you want does not qualify for the post-study work route you were counting on. Official agencies in several countries make that distinction very clear. The U.S. Department of Education says any institution can claim to be accredited, and Canada's IRCC says graduating from a designated learning institution does not automatically make you eligible for a post-graduation work permit.
For parents, this is one of the highest-value checks you can do before money leaves your account. It protects tuition, visa plans, transfer-credit options, and professional licensing later on. For students, it can prevent the worst kind of disappointment: finishing a course and only then discovering that the credential is not respected, the school could not legally support your visa plan, or the post-study work route never applied to your program in the first place.
Source: U.S. Department of Education — Diploma Mills and Accreditation | IRCC — PGWP Overview
Start with the exact legal name of the institution, not the marketing name in an ad. Then search the country's official recognition system. In the United States, that means checking whether the school appears in DAPIP and whether its accrediting agency is recognized by the U.S. Department of Education. In the UK, it means checking whether the degree is officially recognized and, if necessary, identifying the body that actually awards the degree. In Canada, the safest first stop is CICIC's directory of currently recognized, authorized, registered, or licensed institutions. In Australia, higher education providers should appear on TEQSA's National Register, while VET providers should be checked through the national training register. In New Zealand, NZQA says recognized education organizations can be checked through its public search tool, while university quality assurance is handled through Universities New Zealand. In Ireland, QQI's Irish Register of Qualifications is the most reliable source for qualifications and quality-assured providers.
If you cannot find the school in the official recognition system, stop there and investigate before paying anything. That does not prove fraud on its own in every country, but it does mean you do not yet have enough evidence to treat the school as a safe option. CICIC's own assessment guidance recommends using competent authorities and primary sources whenever possible to confirm whether an institution is recognized, legitimate but unrecognized, or a diploma mill.
Source: U.S. DOE — Overview of Accreditation | CICIC — Identifying Institution Status | TEQSA — Check Provider Registration | NZQA — Find Education Organisations | QQI — Irish Register of Qualifications

Recognition alone is not enough. International students need the visa-facing approval system as well. In the U.S., only SEVP-certified schools can enroll F-1 and M-1 students. In the UK, the provider must be on the student sponsor register, and the Graduate visa rules also depend on your provider being a licensed sponsor with a track record of compliance. In Canada, you need a letter of acceptance from a DLI to apply for a study permit. In Australia, higher education providers can only deliver courses to international students if they are registered on CRICOS. In Ireland, non-EEA students studying more than 90 days must choose a course on the ILEP or TrustEd Ireland eligible list. In New Zealand, the provider and qualification still need to fit the official approved system, and NZQA's public guidance tells students to check whether the provider is registered and the program is approved.
This is where many families get misled. A school may be real as a local training provider but still not be approved for the international student route you need. If the recruiter or school representative dodges direct questions about SEVP, sponsor status, DLI number, CRICOS registration, ILEP, or NZQA registration, treat that as a serious warning sign and verify independently. That is a practical consumer-protection step based on how these official systems work.
Source: ICE — SEVP School Search | UKVI — Student Sponsor Register | TEQSA — CRICOS | ILEP — Ireland
This is the step families skip most often, because they assume school approval automatically means work rights after graduation. It does not. Canada is the clearest example: IRCC states that graduating from a DLI does not automatically make you eligible for a PGWP, and not all programs offered by a DLI are PGWP-eligible. The UK's Graduate visa depends not only on the course type but also on the provider's sponsor status and the Home Office being told that you successfully completed the course. Australia's post-study route is usually the Temporary Graduate visa subclass 485, and applicants need to check the current study requirement and stream rules. New Zealand ties post-study work to qualification level, duration, and, for some lower-level qualifications, whether the qualification is on the eligible list. Ireland's Third Level Graduate Programme is for non-EEA graduates with level 8 or level 9 awards from a recognized Irish awarding body. In the U.S., the post-study route is generally OPT for F-1 students, with a separate STEM extension for eligible degrees.
The safest habit is to verify post-study work eligibility at the program level, not the school level. Ask the school to confirm it in writing, then compare that answer against the official policy page for the country and, where relevant, the school's listing in the public register.
Source: IRCC — About the PGWP | IRCC — PGWP Field-of-Study Requirement | GOV.UK — Graduate Visa | Australia — Temporary Graduate Visa 485 | Immigration NZ — Post Study Work Visa
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Official Legitimacy Check: Search DAPIP and confirm the accrediting agency is recognized by the U.S. Department of Education. The Department recognizes accreditors; it does not accredit schools directly.
International Student Approval: Use ICE's SEVP School Search to confirm the school can enroll F-1 or M-1 students.
Post-Study Work Check: Review USCIS OPT and STEM OPT rules.
Official Legitimacy Check: Use GOV.UK's official recognition check; confirm who awards the degree if the teaching provider and awarding body differ. In England, also check the OfS Register.
International Student Approval: Check the UKVI student sponsor register.
Post-Study Work Check: Review the Graduate visa rules and confirm your provider has a track record of compliance.
Official Legitimacy Check: Use CICIC's directory of currently recognized, authorized, registered, or licensed institutions, then confirm DLI status through IRCC.
International Student Approval: Use the DLI list for study permit purposes.
Post-Study Work Check: Check PGWP eligibility for the exact DLI and exact program, including current field-of-study rules where relevant.
Official Legitimacy Check: For higher education, use TEQSA's National Register. For VET, use the national training register.
International Student Approval: For international students, confirm CRICOS registration.
Post-Study Work Check: Review the Temporary Graduate visa subclass 485 and the Australian study requirement.
Official Legitimacy Check: Use NZQA's Find Education Organisations search and confirm the qualification sits within the approved quality-assurance system. NZQA oversees non-university tertiary providers; Universities New Zealand handles university quality assurance.
International Student Approval: Confirm provider registration and program approval.
Post-Study Work Check: Review the Post Study Work Visa and qualification eligibility rules.
Official Legitimacy Check: Use QQI's Irish Register of Qualifications and TrustEd Ireland to confirm quality-assured providers and eligible programs.
International Student Approval: For study longer than 90 days, confirm the course appears on the ILEP or the TrustEd Ireland eligible list.
Post-Study Work Check: Review the Third Level Graduate Programme and confirm the final award is from a recognized Irish awarding body.
United States: DAPIP | Institutional Accrediting Agencies | SEVP School Search | USCIS OPT
United Kingdom: Check Degree Recognition | Office for Students Register | UKVI Student Sponsor Register | Graduate Visa
Canada: CICIC Directory | IRCC DLI List | PGWP Overview | PGWP Field-of-Study Requirement
Australia: TEQSA — Check Provider | CRICOS | National VET Register | Temporary Graduate Visa 485
New Zealand: NZQA — Find Education Organisations | NZQA Quality Assurance | Universities New Zealand | Post Study Work Visa | Qualification Rules
Ireland: QQI Irish Register of Qualifications | TrustEd Ireland | ILEP | Third Level Graduate Programme
The most common fake-school play is not a rough-looking website anymore. It is a school that sounds plausible, uses a familiar-sounding name, and wraps itself in language that feels official enough to stop most families from asking harder questions. The FTC warns that fake degree programs often use polished websites, familiar-sounding names, fast-degree promises, and pushy sales tactics. The U.S. Department of Education adds an even more important warning: any institution can claim to be accredited, so students have to do the verification themselves.
Source: FTC — College Degree Scams | U.S. DOE — Diploma Mills and Accreditation
One tactic is the "degree for life experience" promise. Real institutions may award some prior-learning credit, but the FTC says no legitimate provider should hand out an entire degree based only on experience. Another tactic is the "finish in days or weeks" pitch. Accelerated study can be real, but "earn a degree almost instantly" is classic scam language. A third tactic is fake or vague accreditation, where the school says it is "internationally accredited" but cannot point you to a recognized accrediting or quality-assurance body that you can verify yourself.
A fourth red flag is avoidance. In practice, if a recruiter will not give you the school's exact legal name, awarding body, DLI number, SEVP listing, sponsor status, CRICOS number, or recognizing authority, you should pause immediately. Public regulators in the countries above all provide systems that are designed to make legitimate providers findable. If the provider is not transparent enough for you to use those systems, that is reason enough to stop and verify before paying.
Source: FTC — College Degree Scams | ICE — SEVP School Search
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If the student plans to work in a licensed field such as nursing, teaching, psychology, social work, engineering, pharmacy, or law, institutional legitimacy is only the first layer. You also need to confirm that the exact program is recognized by the relevant professional or licensing body. U.S. Department of Education guidance distinguishes between institutional and programmatic accreditors, and CICIC specifically tells assessors to identify competent authorities for programs that lead to entry-to-practice credentials in regulated occupations.
Source: U.S. DOE — Programmatic Accrediting Agencies | CICIC — Identifying Institution Status
Use this order every time, even if the school looks famous.
Source: GOV.UK — Check University Degree Award | CICIC Directory | ICE — SEVP School Search | NZQA — Provider and Course Closure
Use this as a simple yes-or-no checklist. If you cannot tick every box, the verification work is incomplete — and families lose money when they confuse "probably fine" with "documented and confirmed."
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If the school passes the legitimacy check, the next step is not to rush. The next step is to compare fit.
Ask four final questions.
First, is this credential respected in the country where the student eventually wants to work?
Second, does the program actually match the career direction, or is the family choosing it only because it looks like a migration shortcut?
Third, does the post-study work route still look strong when you check the current official rules, not an old blog post or an agent's summary?
Fourth, if this school disappeared from the shortlist, would you still pursue the same country and field, or would your whole plan change? That tells you whether you chose a strategy or just a brand name.
The best school decision is rarely based on one label alone. It is a combination of official legitimacy, international-student approval, career fit, and realistic visa or work-rights planning. When those four line up, you are making a decision on evidence instead of hope.
Source: IRCC — About the PGWP | CICIC — Identifying Institution Status
If a school offer looks good on paper but something still feels unclear, EduviXor can help you verify the institution, compare the program, and understand how the choice may affect visas, work rights, and long-term planning.
For families, this is often the difference between feeling reassured and feeling rushed. A school can be real and still be the wrong fit. It can also be popular and still be a poor option for the exact career or immigration outcome you want. Our EduviXor AI Advisor and team of advisors are available to walk through the full picture with you — no pressure, just clarity.