What hosting looks like in Montana
The Montana area gives exchange students the wide-open Western experience many dream about, from the outdoors to distinctive local culture. Host families here range from busy metros to smaller mountain and desert communities, each with its own rhythm. Montana is more rural, with exchange-student hosting concentrated around the towns and school districts that partner with programs. Placements do happen here every year; starting early helps, since options can be more limited than in big metros. Your exchange student attends a local high school, lives as part of your family for a semester or a full academic year, and brings a whole new culture into your home. You provide a bed (sometimes shared with a same-age, same-gender child), meals, and a warm, supportive place to belong. The program handles the rest.
The landscape is a genuine draw, and students often arrive hoping to explore the parks, coast, or mountains nearby. There's a local flavor to hosting in Montana too: mountains, ranch country, and big-sky scenery make it a bucket-list placement for many students. Students who are curious about that side of American life often settle in quickly, which can make the match feel natural from day one.
Most Montana host families are ordinary households: couples, families with kids, single parents, empty-nesters, and retirees all host successfully. You don't need to own your home, be wealthy, or speak another language. What matters is a safe, welcoming home and genuine interest in another young person's life.
School-year timing in Montana
In Montana, hosting timelines are set by the school year. Academic-year students are usually matched over the spring and summer so they can arrive before classes start in the fall, and semester students are placed for either the fall or the spring term. The practical takeaway for Montana families: start exploring a few months ahead of when you'd want a student to arrive. Starting early gives you the widest choice of students and the smoothest approval, since the home visit and background checks take a few weeks.
Which programs place students in Montana
All of the major exchange programs work with families in Montana. Rather than researching and applying to each one separately, you can compare them in one step. The programs we work with include:
EF Exchange Year · APEX (AIEP) · CETUSA · ISE (International Student Exchange) · ICES (International Cultural Exchange Services) · Greenheart Exchange
They differ in program type (full year vs. semester), how they match students to families, the strength of their local coordinator support, and whether hosts receive a small stipend or a tax benefit. We check those details for the programs active in Montana so you don't have to. See the full program comparison for a side-by-side look.
Who can host in Montana
You may be surprised how open the requirements are for Montana families. Across virtually every reputable program, you'll need:
- A bed for the student, their own room or a shared room with a same-gender child of similar age.
- Three meals a day and a safe, supportive home where the student is treated as family.
- All adults in the household to pass a background check, a standard safety step.
- Enough stable household income to care for your own family. The student brings their own spending money.
You do not need to own your home, be married, have children, or speak the student's language. See the full host family requirements for the details.
How to get matched in Montana
Tell us a little about your family and where in Montana you live. We compare the programs serving your area, recommend the one that fits best, and connect you with them directly. There's no cost, no obligation, and no pressure. Hosting stays a personal choice you make with the program.