A prestigious, 9-week summer Research Fellowship for talented undergraduate students across the U.S. — offering full funding, hands-on research, mentorship, and an opportunity to work inside world-class labs at one of the top universities in the world.
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The MIT Summer Research Program (MSRP) 2026 is a fully funded summer research opportunity designed to help undergraduate students explore advanced research, prepare for graduate school, and gain real experience inside MIT laboratories.
Over nine intensive weeks (June 8 – August 8, 2026), students join research groups in engineering, computer science, physical sciences, social sciences, or interdisciplinary fields. They work under the guidance of faculty mentors and graduate researchers, attend seminars, participate in professional development workshops, and present their work at a final research symposium.
The program is committed to supporting students from diverse, underrepresented, and non-traditional backgrounds, helping them build the confidence and skills needed to pursue advanced education and competitive research careers.
You are eligible if you:
A Prestigious Opportunity Designed for Your Future
Your event registration price covers full entry to the program, learning sessions, networking activities, and participant support. Make your payment now to reserve your spot before capacity is reached.
Discover the powerful gatherings, workshops, and leadership initiatives coming your way. Each event is carefully crafted to equip young changemakers with skills, networks, and opportunities to lead impactful change in their communities and beyond.
Everything you need to know about attending, applying, partnering, and getting involved with Global Youth Conference 2026.
Yes, it covers housing, weekly stipend, round-trip travel, and access to campus resources.
Undergraduates enrolled at U.S. institutions who meet GPA and academic standing requirements.
Engineering, computer science, physics, social sciences, biology, math, political science, and more.
No, but interest in research and academic growth is important.
Yes — if they attend a U.S. college or university.
CV, transcripts, personal statement, recommendation letters, and research preferences.