Nearby student discovery
The app should help you understand who is around you and why a conversation makes sense in your local context.
An Erasmus app is useful only if it helps with the real social bottlenecks of living abroad: discovering relevant people, finding the right events and making follow-up easy after the first meeting.
Most students abroad do not struggle because there are no people around them. They struggle because discovery is fragmented across chats, stories, event pages and random word of mouth, which makes social life harder to navigate than it should be.
A generic social app may help you browse profiles, but it rarely gives enough local context to understand where student life is happening or which people and events are worth your attention.
The best app for Erasmus students should reduce friction across the whole experience: discovery, context, conversation and continuity.
The app should help you understand who is around you and why a conversation makes sense in your local context.
It should surface plans that actually matter for student life instead of sending you through generic city listings.
Without continuity, even a good event or conversation loses value. Chat and next-step planning should be part of the same flow.
Starting with context reduces awkwardness and makes social plans feel less random.
Plans, places and student routines give conversations a stronger reason to continue.
The app is most useful when it helps you keep momentum after the first good meeting.
Unera focuses on the part of student life that is usually fragmented: understanding who is around you and where social momentum is happening.
You do not need separate tools for discovery and continuity when the same product supports both parts of the experience.
Even when local habits change, the same needs remain: relevant discovery, easier conversation and better follow-up.
Use Unera to discover students, find events and keep social momentum alive in a new city.