International context
Participants come from national science competitions in many countries and present projects selected for further participation.
EUCYS is the European Union Contest for Young Scientists. It brings together students from many countries to present their research projects, meet peers with similar interests and take part in an international science community.
The European Union Contest for Young Scientists is an annual competition where young scientists present their projects to a jury, other participants and visitors. The competition gives participants an opportunity to receive feedback, build connections and see how young people in other countries approach scientific questions.
The video from EUCYS 2025 in Riga gives a good impression of how the international contest works, how projects are presented and how young scientists meet on a European stage.
This video is hosted on YouTube. When played, information may be shared with YouTube or Google.
Participants come from national science competitions in many countries and present projects selected for further participation.
Projects are presented to a jury and other participants. An important part of the competition is explaining the project and answering questions.
EUCYS is also an opportunity to meet young people with similar interests and discover research projects from many different places.
These links point to information about EUCYS, EUCYS 2026 and European initiatives connected to the competition.
Open EUCYS 2026 information from Science Comes to Town.
Explore the European science initiative connected to EUCYS 2026.
Read about EUCYS on the European Commission website.
EU and partner logos should only be displayed where applicable and according to official usage rules.
EUCYS 2026 will be held in Kiel from 22 to 27 September 2026. The competition will be hosted by Kiel University in partnership with Stiftung Jugend forscht as part of Science Comes to Town.
Location: Kiel, Germany
Dates: 22–27 September 2026
Event: European Union Contest for Young Scientists
Students begin by developing a project, presenting it in a national competition and receiving feedback. Selected projects may then have the opportunity to continue and represent Iceland.
A student or team works on research, an experiment, a prototype, analysis or another research-related idea.
The project is presented in Ungt vísindafólk and receives evaluation and feedback from a jury.
Projects that perform well may have the opportunity to continue into the international process.
Participants present their project on a European stage and meet young scientists from other countries.
The project should explain what question, problem or idea is being worked on.
Participants should be able to describe their method, data, testing, sources or design process.
The project should be presented so that the jury and visitors understand what was done and what the results mean.
Because Ungt vísindafólk is being relaunched, Icelandic information about registration, dates, age criteria, number of participants and selection process will be published separately when available.
EUCYS is based on national competitions. The Icelandic process needs to be clear before final information about Iceland’s participation is published.