If you have spent any time around immigrants in Sweden, you have heard the acronym constantly: SFI. It stands for Svenska för invandrar, Swedish for Immigrants, and it is the single most important educational program most newcomers will go through. It is free. It is run by your municipality. And as of 2026, it carries more legal weight than it ever has before.
- What SFI is and who can enroll
- How the course is structured
- How grading actually works
- The 2026 reform: a strict three-year clock
- Why finishing SFI now matters more than it used to
- Financial support while studying
- Registering: what it actually looks like (Gothenburg example)
- Practical advice for getting through SFI efficiently
This guide explains what SFI actually is, who can enroll, how the course structure works, what changed under the new rules introduced this year, and what you need to do to make the most of it. If you have not yet registered, see our moving to Sweden checklist for where SFI fits into your first few months, and our guide on learning Swedish while living in Sweden for ways to supplement it.
What SFI is and who can enroll
SFI is governed by the Swedish Education Act (Skollagen) and delivered entirely by municipalities, Sweden’s 290 kommuner, through their adult education departments (Komvux). It is completely free, including course materials, which are loaned to students.
The basic eligibility rule is simple: you must be at least 16 years old, resident in Sweden, and lack the level of Swedish the course is designed to teach. In most municipalities, however, 16 to 19-year-olds are redirected into Språkintroduktion (Language Introduction) within upper secondary school instead of standard adult SFI — this applies in cities including Gothenburg.
There are a few important exceptions worth knowing. Danish and Norwegian native speakers are not eligible for free SFI, since their existing linguistic skills are considered sufficient. Finnish citizens who live near the border but work in Sweden have a specific legal exception allowing SFI access even without Swedish residential registration. Asylum seekers and undocumented people are excluded from SFI under Swedish law, their access is limited to child and youth education, and they typically rely on civil society language courses or folkhögskolor while their case is processed. Ukrainians under the EU’s temporary protection directive are explicitly granted full SFI eligibility.
Once you register, the municipality is legally required to offer you a place within one month.
Registering without a personnummer
You do not need to have your personnummer to start SFI. Under Skollagen (Chapter 22, Section 13 and Chapter 29, Section 2), EU/EEA and Swiss citizens exercising their right of residence in Sweden can enroll using a coordination number (samordningsnummer) or even a manual municipal file — no personnummer required. You will need to register in person with a valid passport or national ID, plus proof of local residence such as an employment contract, lease agreement, or university enrollment letter. For the fuller picture of life without a personnummer, see our post on renting an apartment in Sweden without a personnummer, which covers the same underlying bureaucratic gap.
How the course is structured
SFI divides students into three study paths (studievägar) based on educational background, not language level — this is one of the most misunderstood aspects of the system.
Study Path 1 (Courses A–D) is for people with very limited or interrupted formal schooling, including those who are not literate in any language. It starts with basic literacy and Latin script familiarity.
Study Path 2 (Courses B–D) is for people with primary or basic secondary education who can already read and write, but may be unfamiliar with the Latin alphabet.
Study Path 3 (Courses C–D) is for people with upper-secondary or university-level education. It moves fast, covering complex grammar, formal writing, and analytical reading from the start.
Within these paths, there are four sequential courses: A, B, C, D. Course D is the final, most advanced level, roughly equivalent to CEFR B1. One important nuance: starting directly in Course C under Study Path 3 does not mean you already have A2-level skills — it means the course is paced to get you there quickly given your educational background.
After SFI, the next step is Svenska som andraspråk (SVA) at Komvux, which continues from roughly B2 up through C1, for anyone wanting professional or university-level fluency.
Study formats
Municipalities offer SFI as day courses (around 20 hours/week, mostly in-person), evening courses (around 10 hours/week, scheduled after 17:30 for working students), distance courses (self-paced, online, generally suited to Study Path 3 students who are comfortable working independently), and hybrid formats combining classroom and online study. There is also SFI with work placement (sfi med praktik), which combines classroom time with a workplace internship — useful both for language practice and for building local job market connections.
SFI runs year-round with no fixed summer break; if you want time off, you apply for it directly with your school provider.
Advanced tracks for skilled professionals
If standard SFI feels too slow for your background, two specialized tracks exist. SFX (Svenska för yrkesutbildade) targets people with an existing professional or university degree — examples include SFx-medicin for healthcare professionals and SIFA in Stockholm for economists, engineers, lawyers, and teachers, focused on field-specific vocabulary. Talangutbildning (Talent Education) is a fast, 15-to-18-week full-time program combining SFI Course D with vocational training and a workplace internship, aimed at sectors with high labor demand — cleaning, hotel services, elderly care.
How grading actually works
A common point of confusion: SFI does not use the A–F scale that the rest of the Swedish school system uses. Since January 2022, SFI and basic-level Komvux use a simplified two-tier system: Godkänt (G — Pass) or Icke godkänt (IG — Fail).
To pass a course, you are assessed across five skills: listening comprehension, reading comprehension, oral interaction, oral production, and written production. Courses B, C, and D end with a mandatory national exam (nationellt prov), a four-to-five-hour test covering reading, listening, writing (one essay for B/C, two for D), and speaking (a monologue plus paired discussion for C and D). The national test is one input into your grade — your teacher’s overall assessment across the term also counts.
The 2026 reform: a strict three-year clock
This is the single most important update for anyone starting or currently doing SFI. As of January 1, 2026, a hard three-year time limit applies to SFI studies, counted continuously from the day your municipality admits you. If you were already enrolled before that date, your three-year clock started on January 1, 2026.
The clock does not pause for illness, part-time study, or working alongside your course. Extensions exist but are not automatic — they require documented “special circumstances” (parental leave, serious illness, employment, or enrollment in an approved vocational program), are granted in increments of up to six months, and are capped at a total of three additional years. The absolute maximum anyone can spend in SFI is six years.
Two practical consequences to know: if you are absent for three consecutive weeks without approval, you are automatically classified as a dropout and removed from the program — re-admission is not guaranteed. And under the new rules, your municipality can terminate your enrollment for insufficient progress, though you can appeal this decision to the national Board of Appeal for Education (Överklagandenämnden för skola och vuxenutbildning).
Why finishing SFI now matters more than it used to
Sweden’s migration framework changed substantially in 2026, and SFI sits at the center of it.
On June 9, 2026, the Riksdag passed legislation abolishing permanent residence permits for refugees and long-term residents, replacing them entirely with renewable temporary permits, effective July 12, 2026. This removed the traditional middle step of the immigration ladder — temporary permit → permanent residency → citizenship — leaving a more direct, higher-stakes path: temporary permit straight to citizenship.
At the same time, the updated Swedish Citizenship Act took effect on June 6, 2026. Residency requirements rose from five to eight years (seven for refugees and stateless persons, two for Nordic citizens). For the first time, applicants aged 16 to 66 must demonstrate Swedish language proficiency as part of citizenship eligibility. The formal citizenship language test is scheduled to take effect on October 1, 2027 — but in the interim, and as a standing pathway, a passing grade in SFI Course D already counts as proof of language proficiency, exempting you from the future test.
Put plainly: completing SFI Course D within your three-year window is no longer just a milestone toward better job prospects — it is now directly linked to your ability to naturalize. Falling behind on SFI, or being dropped from the program for insufficient progress, has consequences that reach well beyond the classroom.
For the broader picture of how the 2026 citizenship reform works, including the income and residency requirements, see our post on Sweden’s citizenship reform 2026.
Financial support while studying
SFI itself does not qualify for standard CSN student loans or grants (studiemedel) — it is free, so the state does not fund it the way it funds other education. The Study Start Support (studiestartsstöd) grant, designed for unemployed adults with limited education, explicitly excludes pure SFI studies.
There are, however, real funding paths available depending on your situation:
SFI-Combo (Kombinationsutbildning) — combining SFI with vocational or basic-level courses at a minimum 50% study pace — does qualify for standard CSN grants and loans, worth up to roughly 13,500 SEK per four-week period.
Etableringsersättning (introduction benefit) — for newly arrived refugees and protected persons in the official establishment program, run jointly by Arbetsförmedlingen and Försäkringskassan, currently around 308 SEK/day, with possible child and housing supplements.
Aktivitetsstöd (activity support) — for long-term unemployed people directed to study SFI by Arbetsförmedlingen, roughly 365 SEK/day for full-time study, scaled down for part-time.
A-kassa — if you are receiving unemployment benefits, you can study SFI alongside it, but only with explicit prior authorization from both Arbetsförmedlingen and your A-kassa fund. For background on how A-kassa itself works, see our post on unemployment insurance in Sweden.
Registering: what it actually looks like (Gothenburg example)
Registration processes vary by municipality, but Gothenburg’s system illustrates the general logic well.
If you are a registered resident with BankID, you book an “SFI Information and Application Meeting” through the municipal porta, or apply directly if you have studied SFI in Gothenburg before. If you are an EU/EEA citizen without a personnummer, you cannot apply online; you go in person to the Arbetsmarknad och vuxenutbildning office at Brogatan 4 with your passport and proof of residence. Ukrainian refugees under temporary protection book an information meeting online using their coordination number if they have one, or contact the department directly if they do not.
Once registered, Gothenburg offers several contracted providers to choose from: Folkuniversitetet, strong for Study Paths 2 and 3 with an academic track for university-bound students; Alma Folkhögskola, covering all three study paths with strong support in multiple native languages; ABF Vux, with flexible formats including internship combinations; and Hermods, known for its Omniway distance-learning platform for working students. Your assigned municipality will have its own equivalent list — check your local kommun website.
Practical advice for getting through SFI efficiently
A few things genuinely make a difference, based on how the system works in practice.
Confirm your official start date at your placement interview — this is the date your three-year clock starts, and it should be recorded accurately.
Choose full-time daytime study if you possibly can. It moves faster, gets more direct teacher contact, and tends to have shorter waiting times than evening or distance options.
Look into SFI-Combo if you need financial support — it is the cleanest legal route into CSN funding while studying.
Never let an absence reach three weeks without formal approval from your school. If something serious comes up, get a leave of absence or a medical certificate in writing immediately — this protects your place in the program from automatic termination.
Keep your own records — test results, written feedback, attendance. If your municipality ever moves to end your studies for “insufficient progress,” these are what you need for an appeal.
Supplement SFI with real exposure outside class. SFI gets you to a functional baseline, not fluency. Library language cafés (språkcafé), conversation exchange programs like Kompisbyrån, and easy-Swedish news sources like 8 Sidor all help close the gap between finishing Course D and actually feeling comfortable in Swedish.
SFI is free, but it is no longer low-stakes. The three-year limit and its new link to citizenship mean it pays to treat it as a structured, time-bound project rather than something to get to eventually. Register early, pick the format that fits your life, and protect your place in the system.
If you have questions about your specific situation — samordningsnummer registration, which study path fits your background, or how the citizenship language requirement applies to you — leave a comment below. The LikeSweden newsletter is also the best way to stay current as these rules continue to evolve through 2026 and 2027.


