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Every city-specific link, form, and warning you need — centralized in one free directory.
Select cities available — more coming soon. Find direct links to your local Bürgeramt, immigration office, and Finanzamt.
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The traps nobody warns you about until it's too late.
Applies everywhere in Germany, no matter which city you land in.
A mandatory fee per household — check the official website for the current amount. You will receive a letter after your Anmeldung — ignoring it doesn't make it go away. Register directly here →
Your tax class determines monthly payroll deductions. Understanding this up front avoids nasty surprises on your first payslip.
| Class | Who | Note |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Single / Divorced / Widowed | Standard default |
| 2 | Single parent | Higher allowance |
| 3 | Married (higher earner) | Paired with class 5 |
| 4 | Married (equal earners) | Default for married couples |
| 5 | Married (lower earner) | Paired with class 3 |
| 6 | Second+ jobs | Highest deductions |
After Anmeldung, your new address is automatically assigned to the local Grundversorger (default basic provider) for electricity and gas — almost always at the highest tariff in the market. Switching is free and takes a few minutes online — check CHECK24 or Verivox for the current best rate in your postcode.
Strom (Electricity): Always active. Compare providers as soon as you have your address. Compare Strom tariffs →
Gas: Only relevant if your flat has gas heating or gas cooking. Many modern flats are electric-only. Compare Gas tariffs →
Internet/DSL: Typical contract is 24 months. Installation can take 2-6 weeks (Deutsche Telekom is fastest, fiber/Glasfaser is fastest if available). Keep a mobile hotspot as backup for the first weeks. Compare DSL/Fiber options →
Tip: You are legally entitled to switch providers any time — Grundversorger contracts have 2-week notice periods. Don't stay on the default tariff.
One of Germany's best-kept secrets: the MBE is a free government-funded counselling service for adults 28 and older. Counsellors help with everything on this roadmap — visa renewals, job and degree recognition, housing, health insurance, family, schooling, German courses — often in your native language.
Who qualifies: Any adult immigrant 28+, regardless of visa type or country of origin.
For under-28s: The equivalent service is the Jugendmigrationsdienst (JMD), also free.
Find your nearest MBE office (BAMF-NAvI) →
Tip: Go to an MBE in your own district rather than a central city office — they know local authorities and quirks best.
BundID is the central federal digital identity account for online interactions with German authorities. With one BundID you can access more than 75 online public services including digital Elterngeld, BAföG Digital, Jobcenter eServices, and — in a growing number of cities — even Anmeldung from your living room.
Who can register: Anyone aged 16+, regardless of citizenship. EU/non-EU residents, holders of an electronic residence permit (eAT), and people with an EU eID card are all eligible.
Three trust levels:
What you need for high trust: Physical ID card (Personalausweis, EU eID, or eAT) with online ID function activated, its 6-digit PIN, and the AusweisApp on an NFC-capable smartphone or computer with a card reader.
Why it matters for expats: Once set up, many processes that used to require Bürgeramt appointments can be done online. Pre-filled forms reduce errors. Official decisions (e.g. visa renewals, Kindergeld decisions) arrive in your BundID inbox instead of by Post — no missed letters.
Register at id.bund.de → | Bundesportal (find available services) →
Tip: activate the online ID function at your Ausländerbehörde when you first pick up your eAT — retrofitting later requires a separate appointment.
The Deutschlandticket is a cancel-anytime monthly subscription. It covers all local and regional public transport nationwide: U-Bahn, S-Bahn, trams, buses, Regionalbahn (RB), and Regionalexpress (RE) across all German states.
What it does NOT cover: Long-distance trains (ICE, IC, EC), FlixTrain, FlixBus, 1st class.
Cancellation rule: Cancel by the 10th of the month to end at month's end. Miss that cutoff and you pay for one more month.
Students: Many universities include a Semesterticket that already covers regional transport, sometimes at a reduced Deutschlandticket rate for students and trainees (rates vary by state — check your Hochschule or local transport authority).
Every family legally resident in Germany is entitled to Kindergeld — a monthly payment per child regardless of income. Apply via the Familienkasse of the Bundesagentur für Arbeit after Anmeldung.
Requirements: Parent has residence permit that allows employment, children live in Germany (or EU/EEA).
Additional benefit for low income: Kinderzuschlag supplements Kindergeld for families with modest incomes.
The Federal Ministry of the Interior publishes an official onboarding brochure covering work, housing, education, health, and daily life. Available as free PDF in 15+ languages including Arabic, English, French, Russian, Turkish, and Leichte Sprache.
If you bring a car to Germany or buy one locally, you must register it at the Zulassungsstelle (vehicle registration office) of your city within 2-4 weeks of moving. If you move within Germany, you also need to re-register to your new address.
What you need: Anmeldung, passport, car purchase contract or Fahrzeugbrief, proof of eVB (liability insurance number — your insurer gives this), TÜV (roadworthiness check) and current license plates.
Foreign vehicles: Must be imported and registered within 6 months. Customs clearance and TÜV-Vollabnahme may be required.
ADAC: Germany's largest automobile club. Membership includes breakdown assistance and legal protection — popular with newcomers. Visit ADAC →
The official federal government portal for skilled workers. Includes a Quick-Check that tells you within minutes which visa options you qualify for based on your profession, qualification, and language level.
Key features: Visa navigator, Opportunity Card eligibility checker, profession recognition finder, live chat with advisors in multiple languages.
Germany's parental allowance partially replaces your post-tax salary when you stop or reduce work after your child is born. Paid for up to 14 months (combined between both parents). Check the official sites below for current minimum, maximum, and replacement rates — they are adjusted periodically.
Eligibility: Any parent legally resident in Germany (with work-permit visa), living with the child, and working reduced hours. Income ceilings and exact hour limits change — verify on the official site before applying.
Variants: Basiselterngeld (standard), ElterngeldPlus (half amount, doubles duration — good for part-time work), Partnerschaftsbonus (extra months when both parents work reduced hours in parallel).
Apply within 3 months of birth — retroactive payment only covers 3 prior months.
Two separate housing benefits for lower-income households that many expats don't know exist:
Wohngeld (housing allowance): A monthly payment that helps cover rent or mortgage costs if your income is below a threshold. Apply at your city's Wohngeldstelle. Students on BAföG are NOT eligible.
Wohnberechtigungsschein (WBS): A certificate that allows you to rent Sozialwohnungen (subsidized public housing) at below-market rates. Income limits vary by state and household size. Apply at your Wohnungsamt.
You can hold both a WBS and receive Wohngeld simultaneously.
A free federal body that helps EU citizens working in Germany assert their rights and counter workplace or housing discrimination related to EU free movement.
Who it helps: EU/EEA citizens only (non-EU nationals are covered by other anti-discrimination services).
Topics covered: Equal pay, equal working conditions, access to social benefits, housing access, recognition of qualifications for EU workers.
Available in 11 EU languages including English, French, Italian, Polish, Romanian, Spanish.
Foreign degrees are not automatically valid in Germany. The process depends on whether your profession is regulated (doctor, engineer, teacher, nurse, lawyer) or non-regulated (most IT, business, creative roles).
Step 1 — Check your degree: Use the anabin database to see if your university and degree are already recognized in Germany. Look for an "H+" rating (recognized institution) and check your degree equivalence.
Step 2 — Zeugnisbewertung (for non-regulated professions): Apply for a formal Statement of Comparability from the KMK/ZAB (Central Office for Foreign Education). A fee applies — check the ZAB website for current costs. Processing takes 3–4 months. This is the national certificate that employers and public institutions accept.
Step 3 — Regulated professions only: You need full professional recognition (Berufsanerkennung) from your state's competent authority. Use the Recognition Finder to identify exactly which office handles your profession in your Bundesland.
Tip: Start the ZAB application before you arrive — the waiting time is the bottleneck, not the paperwork. Sworn translations of your transcripts are required.