Study Engineering & Technology in Iceland from Peru
Reference institution: Instituto Superior de Arte / University of the Arts of Cuba (ISA) (Havana, Cuba)
Engineering & Technology is a popular reason students from Peru look to Iceland. Whichever university and town you aim for, one thing shapes how smoothly you settle in and follow an Icelandic-taught programme: your Icelandic.
Instituto Superior de Arte / University of the Arts of Cuba (ISA) — based in Havana, Cuba — is in our directory, but its public listing doesn't specifically show engineering & technology. For a verified overview see the Engineering & Technology in Iceland guide; here we focus on the Icelandic-language pathway, which applies wherever you study.
The Icelandic-language requirement
Iceland offers a number of English-taught programmes, especially at master's level — those may not require Icelandic for admission. Icelandic-taught programmes typically ask for roughly B1–B2, which maps to Icelandic B1 or Icelandic B2, and the University of Iceland runs its own Icelandic entrance assessment for such programmes. Either way you'll need Icelandic for paperwork, part-time work and everyday life. Confirm the exact requirement with the specific university and programme.
For engineering and applied technology, a solid B1–B2 lets you follow an Icelandic-taught programme, write assignments and integrate — aim a level above the minimum if you can.
Using an Icelandic degree back in Peru
If you plan to use your studies back in Peru, confirm how an Icelandic qualification is recognised with the relevant authority there before relying on it.
A common concern for students from Peru — "how an Icelandic qualification is recognised back in Peru" — is worth planning early, alongside the language requirement.
Practise for Icelandic B1 — honestly
AlmiIcelandic lets you practise the four skills — Reading (Lestur), Listening (Hlustun), Writing (Ritun) and Speaking (Tal) — at Icelandic B1 and the surrounding levels. AlmiIcelandic gives you an honest readiness estimate — a per-skill band (Clear or Borderline) against each exam's real criteria — never an invented official Directorate of Education or Ministry result.
Reading and Listening practice is free; AI feedback on Writing and Speaking and the full timed mock unlock with a 7-day free trial ($12/month after, cancel anytime).
Thinking about staying after your studies?
If you plan to remain in Iceland after graduating, the language also matters for residency and, later, citizenship. Passing Ríkisborgarapróf, the Icelandic-language test at A2, is the language requirement for Icelandic citizenship — it is overseen by the Ministry of Justice and delivered by the Directorate of Education and School Services (Miðstöð menntunar og skólaþjónustu). There are also residency and other conditions for naturalisation, and the rules change, so we don't state a fixed number of years or a fixed step — always confirm the current requirement with Útlendingastofnun (the Directorate of Immigration). We help you prepare fairly; we never claim to help anyone shortcut or beat the process.
Practise Icelandic with honest readiness.
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Questions
- Do I need Icelandic to study Engineering & Technology in Iceland?
- For Icelandic-taught programmes, usually around B1–B2. Many English-taught master's waive it for admission, but you'll still need Icelandic day-to-day. Confirm with the university.
- Will an Icelandic degree be recognised in Peru?
- If you plan to use your studies back in Peru, confirm how an Icelandic qualification is recognised with the relevant authority there before relying on it.
- Which level should I aim for?
- Most Icelandic-taught higher education sits around Icelandic B1 to Icelandic B2, and the University of Iceland has its own entrance assessment. Regulated fields and professional practice may need more. AlmiIcelandic shows an honest per-skill readiness band, not an official score.
- Is the readiness estimate my real result?
- No. It's a practice estimate against the real criteria to guide your prep. Only the official assessment issues a real result.