DĂŠcret Paysage: The 60 Credits in 2 Years Rule Explained
by Student.be
7 mins
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Youâre starting a bachelorâs degree in Belgium and you keep hearing about a new 60 credits in 2 years rule?
âIn the Wallonia-Brussels Federation , the reform of the DĂŠcret Paysage, voted at the end of 2021 and adjusted by Parliament on 25 April 2024, effectively requires bachelorâs students to earn the 60 credits of Block 1 within two years, with some flexibility and transitional arrangements depending on the studentâs pathway. This rule is now integrated into the consolidated text of the decree and applies from 2025.â.
The talk about the DĂŠcret Paysage today, itâs mainly because of the reform. This isnât just about âhow it works,â but about âokay, now there are stricter boundaries.â In short: you are âfundableâ if the government finances your enrollment through your institution. If you no longer meet certain conditions (linked to your pathway and results), you can become non-fundable and that can affect your re-enrollment (possible refusal in some cases) or cost more.
Why the stricter approach? Officially, the idea is to avoid âendlessâ pathways where students drag their first year (Block 1) over 4 years and to push students to validate the basics earlier. Thatâs why the focus is on the first Block : itâs seen as the foundation, and if you donât secure it, your pathway can get complicated (more constraints on your PAE, limited progression, etc.).
Why does the DĂŠcret Paysage exist? (the logic behind it) đ¤
The goal of the DĂŠcret Paysage (and its reform) is to provide a common framework to:
- organize studies into blocks and ECTS credits
- clarify pathway rules (success, PAE, progression)
- avoid âinfinite modeâ pathways without validating the basics
- ensure consistent public funding (funding eligibility)
What is the â60 credits in 2 yearsâ rule?
Basically, the reform puts a strong spotlight on Block 1 (BA1):
- Block 1 = 60 credits (one full-time year).
- You have a maximum of 2 years to obtain these 60 Block 1 credits.
- If you donât reach the 60 credits within the timeframe, you may become non-fundable in that bachelorâs program: re-enrollment becomes complicated, reorientation may be recommended, or fees may be higher depending on the situation.
Simple example: âAm I still fundable or not?â
You start in 2025â2026 :
- Year 1: you pass 40 credits
- Year 2: you pass the remaining 20 credits
âĄď¸ You reach 60 credits in 2 years,: you remain fundable and continue your bachelorâs normally.
What is a credit, really?
An ECTS credit is a unit representing the workload of a course (lectures, assignments, labs, studying).
đ 60 credits = one full-time academic year.
Why has Block 1 (BA1) become a âcheckpointâ?
Because thatâs where the DĂŠcret Paysage puts pressure: you have 2 years to validate this block (the full 60 credits).
If you let Block 1 teaching units drag on too long, it can block your pathway (PAE, jury decisions, re-enrollment, etc.).
How to maximize your chances within 2 years?
How to build a realistic action plan?
- Year 1: aim for as many credits as possible, but keep a manageable workload.
- Year 2: prioritize failed Block 1 units â goal: 60 Block 1 credits within the timefram*.
Why partial failure shouldnât be taken lightly
Because an incomplete Block 1 can affect your program: refocus, limited access to certain courses, jury decisions⌠in short: it needs active management.
How to manage your PAE smartly
Your PAE must match your reality (pace, student job, health, etc.). Avoid an overly heavy PAE just to âgo faster.â
When should I ask for help if Iâm failing courses?
As soon as you see early warning signs:
- academic support / tutoring
- methodology workshops
- psychological support
- social service / guidance
Because waiting âuntil after the second sessionâ often means losing timeâŚ
What if I can see I wonât reach 60 credits in time?
The worst move: going silent.
- check your situation (administration / jury / guidance)
- adjust your PAE
- consider reorientation if the program isnât a match
Real-life cases: mini storytelling (to recognize yourself fast)
1) âI thought I had it⌠until the first exam periodâ
LĂŠa starts her bachelor strongly. First week: âthis is easy.â Then the first assignments, readings, and piling lectures hit. In January, she realizes a simple thing: 60 credits is a full year .
She ends Year 1 with 42 credits. Not perfect, but not dramatic. In summer, she makes a plan: in Year 2, she retakes the failed Block 1 units immediately without overloading. Result: she completes the missing 18 credits and reaches 60 credits in 2 years. She stays fundable and continues.
âĄď¸ Takeaway: the DĂŠcret Paysage doesnât require âeverything passed on the first try,â but it requires validating Block 1 on time.
2) âThe trap: âIâll take 70 credits so I advance fasterââ
Yanis wants to âsave time.â He adds higher-block courses while still in Block 1. On paper, ambitious. In real life: too many subjects, weak foundations, and he ends exhausted with 28 credits.
In Year 2, he canât âtestâ anymore: he must rebuild a PAE focused on what he truly needs to reach the **60 Block 1 credits**.
âĄď¸ Takeaway: under the DĂŠcret Paysage, the most profitable strategy is often the simplest: secure Block 1, donât stack.
3) âThe âfinal bossâ courseâ
Sarah loves her program⌠except one unit that blocks her (math/stats/anatomy/law â pick your boss). She fails it in June, then again in September. She starts panicking: âif I drag this, Iâll never validate Block 1.â
This time she changes strategy: tutoring, weekly exercises, remediation, and she puts that unit as a top priority in her Year 2 PAE. She passes it in the second semester.
âĄď¸ Takeaway: a Block 1 blockage must be treated like an urgent issue (not âIâll deal with it laterâ).
4) âI work on the side, so I have to be strategicâ
Mehdi has a student job 2â3 evenings a week. He knows his weeks arenât the same as someone who doesnât work.
Year 1: he chooses a sustainable pace and ends with **36 credits**.
In Year 2, he makes a smart choice: he keeps his job, but builds a PAE that lets him earn the missing credits without burning out. He validates Block 1 within two years.
âĄď¸ Takeaway: working doesnât doom you â but it forces you to play smart because the decree timeline is real.
Also read: How do I know if Iâm still âfundableâ? Calculate your eligibility!
5) âWhen life gets in the wayâ
Inès has a difficult start: stress, fatigue, personal issues. She starts missing classes and disconnecting. She tells herself: âIâll fix it after the session.â But weeks go fast.
One day she breaks down and goes to the academic support service. They offer a plan, method workshops, andâmost importantlyâthey help her adjust her PAE to stay on a realistic track.
âĄď¸ Takeaway: asking early isnât âweak.â Itâs the most strategic move if you want to stay within the rules.
6) âThe moment you think: I might be non-fundableâŚâ
Thomas finishes his second year and realizes he wonât reach the 60 Block 1 credits. Panic. He imagines the worst: âtheyâll kick me out,â âIâll have to pay too much,â âitâs over.â
The first real step is not staying alone: administration, jury, guidance. They explain what ânon-fundableâ means in his case and what options exist (reorientation, conditions, alternative pathwayâŚ).
âĄď¸ Takeaway: itâs serious, but itâs managed with information, not assumptions.
Organization tips (without burning out) â
1) Make a â2-year planâ in September (even if you aim to pass everything in 1 year)
* Year 1 objective: maximize credits⌠while staying stable (pace + mental health).
* Year 2 objective: prioritize failed Block 1 units to secure the 60 credits.
đ Keep in mind: under the DĂŠcret Paysage, Block 1 isnât âjust a year,â itâs a checkpoint.
2) Your best hack: study âa little but oftenâ
30â45 min a day > 6 hours the night before an exam.
One course summary sheet every week (even small) = less stress during exam period.
3) Prioritize âblockingâ courses
The units that take 80% of your time (stats, law, anatomyâŚ).
âĄď¸ Put them first in your schedule, and ask for help early (tutoring, remediation).
4) PAE = your GPS, not a TikTok challenge
A too-heavy PAE âto go fasterâ can slow you down.
âĄď¸ If you feel you canât keep up: adjust your PAE with your institution.
Funding eligibility help: how to know where you stand? đ
Quick checklist (do this now)
- How many Block 1 credits have you already passed?
- Are you in your 1st or 2nd enrollment in this bachelorâs program?
- Is your PAE focused on the missing Block 1 units?
- Have you already spoken to: administration / jury / guidance?
đ For a practical guide:
What if Iâm non-fundable? (5-step action plan) đ§
1) Stop overthinking â you need your exact case
Non-fundability depends on your pathway (enrollments, credits, situation).
âĄď¸ Get the official info: administration + guidance service.
2) Ask for a âno jargonâ explanation
Ask these questions:
- âWhat makes me non-fundable in my case?â
- âWhat are my options: re-enrollment, conditions, reorientation, higher feesâŚ?â
- *âWhat is possible right now?â
3) Explore reorientation (if needed) without shame
Reorienting isnât âfailure.â Sometimes itâs just correcting your trajectory.
đ Student.be â reorient yourself
4) Check financial impact before signing anything
Some situations may involve higher enrollment fees.
âĄď¸ Ask for a clear written confirmation by email + check your institutionâs info page
5) Think âback to being fundableâ
A commonly cited rule: becoming fundable again after 5 academic years without enrollment in higher education (to be confirmed depending on your situation).
FAQ
When can you become fundable again in Belgium?
In FWB, you can become fundable again if you have not enrolled in higher education for **5 academic years** (starting from the year after non-fundability).
đ Verify your case with your institution.
What are the key changes of the DĂŠcret Paysage reform in higher education?
More focus on Block 1 success, funding eligibility, and stricter pathway boundaries (including the â60 Block 1 credits within a set timeframeâ logic).
What is the DĂŠcret Paysage in Belgium?
The legal framework for higher education in FWB (blocks, credits, pathway rules), recently reformed.
Does the â60 credits in 2 yearsâ rule apply if I work (student job)?
Yes: a student job does not change the rule. If youâre enrolled in a bachelorâs program (FWB), you still must validate the 60 Block 1 credits within the required timeframe. However, your job impacts your strategy: a realistic PAE, prioritizing Block 1 units, and requesting an adjustment through your administration/jury if you see you canât keep up.
I am (or will be) non-fundable: what do I do concretely right now?
Express plan in 3 steps:
- verify your exact status with administration (donât rely on rumors)
- ask for official options: re-enrollment possible or not, conditions, cost, and whether reorientation is recommended
- book an appointment with guidance/social services to build a plan (adjusted PAE, program switch, bridges)
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