🇩🇪 Europe
Germany Visa Guide
Europe's largest economy is a magnet for students and skilled workers, offering the EU Blue Card, the Opportunity Card and a well-trodden national student-visa route alongside short-stay Schengen access.
Choose your Germany visa
studentGermany Student VisaA visa allowing you to study at an accredited institution. Approval hinges on a genuine course of study, proof of funds for tuition and living costs, and credible ties to your home country.workGermany Work VisaA visa permitting employment, usually requiring a job offer and sponsorship from an approved employer. Skilled-worker routes often use points systems or labour-market tests.touristGermany Tourist VisaA short-stay visa for tourism, visiting family or friends, and other non-business leisure travel. The single biggest factor in approval is convincing the officer you will return home.digital nomadGermany Digital Nomad VisaA residence permit for remote workers and freelancers earning income from foreign clients or employers. Most require a minimum monthly income, health insurance and a clean record.
Key things to know
- Students often must open a blocked account proving roughly one year of living costs.
- The EU Blue Card targets graduates with a qualifying salaried job offer.
- The Opportunity Card uses a points system to let job-seekers enter and search.
- Long-stay national (D) visas are converted to a residence permit after arrival.
Official source:https://www.make-it-in-germany.com
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