EXPATTOOLS EST. 2017
DOSSIER BER · BERLIN · GERMANY · REVIEWED JUN 2026
RELOCATION DOSSIER · BER

Berlin

Europe's cheapest big creative capital — by German standards, not yours. The Anmeldung appointment is the city's true entrance exam; pass it and the museums, lakes and clubs are yours.

DE · Germany 52.5°N 13.4°E
8.0 OUT OF 10 BER · ENTRY FILED 2026
Reviewed by the ExpatTools team · CNB-registered financial advisers, Prague · Last reviewed 9 June 2026 · Germany country file

Snapshot

FORM BER-01
Comfortable monthly$2,170/mo
Field score8.0/10
Time zoneCET (UTC+1)
Best forTech workers · Creatives
Typical daytime highs
Monthly costs, single person (USD)
Rent 1BR
$1,190
Food
$270
Transport
$93
All-in
$2,170

Cost of living

FORM BER-02
Budget
  • Housing (1BR apartment)$833
  • Food & Dining$162
  • Transportation$93
  • Utilities + Internet$130
  • Entertainment & Social$109
  • Health Insurance$109
  • Total$1,436
Comfortable
  • Housing (1BR apartment)$1,190
  • Food & Dining$270
  • Transportation$140
  • Utilities + Internet$174
  • Entertainment & Social$260
  • Health Insurance$174
  • Total$2,208
Premium
  • Housing (1BR apartment)$1,904
  • Food & Dining$540
  • Transportation$372
  • Utilities + Internet$217
  • Entertainment & Social$543
  • Health Insurance$260
  • Total$3,836

Figures are planning estimates for one person, reviewed June 2026. Run your own numbers in the cost calculator.

Banking

FORM BER-03

N26 (neobank, fully English, easy sign-up) is the most popular choice for expats. Commerzbank and Deutsche Bank offer English-speaking service at select branches. DKB offers free current accounts with good online banking. Traditional banks typically require an appointment (Termin) and German language ability. Commerzbank is the most English-friendly traditional bank. Account opening requires: passport/ID, Anmeldung (address registration — critical first step), and sometimes proof of income. SCHUFA credit score begins building immediately. Wise and Revolut are widely used as supplementary accounts.

Partner

Moving money across borders? Wise converts at the mid-market rate with fees of roughly 0.3–1% — the tool we set our own clients up with before anything else.

Open Wise

Taxes

FORM BER-04
Read first General information, not tax advice. Rates and rules change; confirm with a qualified adviser for your situation.

Errors in tax filing can result in significant penalties. Progressive income tax rates from 14% to 45%. Solidarity surcharge of 5.5% on income tax (now only applies to higher incomes since 2021 reform). Church tax of 8-9% of income tax if registered with a church (opt out during Anmeldung if not applicable). Freelancers must register with their local Finanzamt and may need to charge and remit VAT (Umsatzsteuer) at 19%. The Kleinunternehmerregelung exempts small businesses earning under €22,000/year from VAT. Social contributions include pension (18.6%), health insurance (14.6%), unemployment (2.4%), and nursing care (3.05%), typically split between employer and employee. Self-employed pay the full amount but can opt for private insurance under certain conditions.

Full expat tax guide →

Visas & residency

FORM BER-05

Important: Visa regulations change frequently. Always verify current requirements with the official embassy or consulate before making plans. This guide provides general information as of 2026. Germany offers several visa types for expats. The Job Seeker Visa allows 6 months to find employment. The EU Blue Card targets skilled workers earning €45,300+/year (€41,041.80 for shortage occupations). The Freelance Visa (Freiberufler) is available for self-employed professionals in recognized liberal professions (writers, artists, consultants, IT professionals). The Residence Permit for Self-Employment covers other business activities and requires a business plan showing economic benefit to Germany. EU/EEA citizens have full freedom of movement. Work visas typically lead to permanent residence (Niederlassungserlaubnis) after 5 years and citizenship eligibility after 8 years (6 with integration course).

Compare visa options → · Nomad visa guide →

Healthcare

FORM BER-06

Understanding the healthcare system is crucial for any expat — it affects your daily peace of mind, your budget, and your visa eligibility. Here's a comprehensive guide based on real advisory experience. Health insurance is mandatory for all residents — you must choose between public (gesetzliche Krankenversicherung, GKV) or private (private Krankenversicherung, PKV). Public insurance costs approximately 14.6% of gross salary, split between employer and employee, and covers family members at no extra cost. Private insurance starts cheaper for young, healthy individuals but premiums increase with age. Major public insurers include TK (Techniker Krankenkasse — most popular with expats), AOK, and Barmer. Healthcare quality is excellent with no significant waiting times for most services. Hospital care includes Charité (Berlin), University Hospital Munich, and Heidelberg University Hospital.

Partner

Not yet covered locally? SafetyWing insures remote workers in 180+ countries from about $45/month — a sensible bridge until you enter a national system.

Check SafetyWing

The case for Berlin

FORM BER-07
  • Incredibly diverse — 20%+ foreign-born, 170+ nationalities represented
  • Europe's strongest startup ecosystem after London — N26, HelloFresh, Zalando all started here
  • Affordable for a major European capital — significantly cheaper than London, Paris, Amsterdam
  • World-class cultural scene — 180+ museums, legendary nightlife, thriving art galleries

Compare Berlin with another city