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Citizenship in Germany

Path to German Citizenship: International Student Guide

Complete guide to German citizenship for international students: 5-year residency, work visa transition, dual citizenship, naturalization test & requirements.

How Citizenship in Germany Works (Basic Overview)

German nationality law doesn’t give citizenship just for being a student. Citizenship is typically acquired through:

  • By descent (parents are German)
  • By birth in Germany (with conditions)
  • By naturalisation (after legal residence and integration)

Student visas and study time do count toward long‑term residence, but you cannot apply for citizenship directly while you are a student under a student residence permit (§ 16b Residence Act).

What International Students Must Know

Student Visa → Citizenship: The Roadmap

Stage

What It Is

Count Toward Citizenship?

Student visa (study residence permit, § 16b)

Temporary stay to study

Yes, counted toward required residence duration

After graduation, job searching

Job search permit (up to 18 months)

Yes

Work visa (e.g., § 18b for skilled workers)

Work and live in Germany

Yes, and essential for long‑term residence

Permanent residence

Long‑term status after work

Yes, and usually required before naturalisation

Here’s the key thing: you must first transition from a student permit to a long‑term residence permit (typically for skilled work). Only then can you apply for citizenship.

Citizenship (Naturalisation) Requirements in Detail

The standard process for becoming a German citizen is through naturalisation (Einbürgerung). This is regulated under the German Nationality Act (Staatsangehörigkeitsgesetz).

Core Criteria

Requirement

What It Means

Source

Residence duration

Legally lived in Germany for 5 years or more with valid permits

Government rule

Residence type

Must hold a permanent residence permit (or long‑term permit leading to one)

A student permit alone is not sufficient

Financial independence

You must support yourself without social welfare

Standard requirement

German language skills

At least B1 level (reading, writing, speaking)

Integration requirement

Civic knowledge

Pass the naturalisation test on the legal/social system

Rule for naturalisation

Lawful conduct

No serious crimes

Standard criterion

Loyalty Declaration

Must declare commitment to the German constitution and democratic order

Government requirement

Residence Duration and Counting Study Time

The law recently changed: naturalisation now requires five years of legal residence, down from eight.

Important details:

  • Time on a student visa does count toward the five‑year requirement as long as your residence is legal.
  • You just can’t apply immediately while on a student permit; you must switch to a work/long‑term permit.

So a typical timeline might look like:

  1. Bachelor’s (3–4 years)
  2. Post‑study job search permit (up to 18 months)
  3. Work permit (e.g., skilled worker § 18b)
  4. Accumulate a total of 5 years
  5. Apply for citizenship

Timeline Overview of Citizenship

Standard Citizenship Rule

Most foreigners can apply for German citizenship after 5 years of legal residence (new law since 2024).

Requirements usually include:

  • Legal residence in Germany for 5 years
  • German language B1 level
  • Stable income (no reliance on social welfare)
  • Pass the citizenship test
  • No serious criminal record

The citizenship test is organised by the Federal Office for Migration and Refugees.

Fast Citizenship (3 Years)

You may apply after 3 years if you show special integration, such as:

  • German language C1 level
  • Strong academic or professional achievements
  • Active community involvement

Citizenship by Work Route (Common Path)

Typical path for international students:

  1. Study in Germany
  2. Get a job visa or an EU Blue Card
  3. Work and live legally
  4. Apply for permanent residency
  5. After 5 years of total residence → citizenship

Dual Citizenship

Good news !!!
Germany now allows dual citizenship in many cases, meaning:

  • You may keep your original passport while getting a German passport.

Benefits of German Citizenship

With German citizenship, you get:

  • One of the strongest passports in the world
  • Free movement and work across the European Union
  • Right to vote in German elections
  • No visa restrictions for most countries

Citizenship applications can take several months once submitted, depending on the local authority workload.

Costs and Formal Requirements

From government and legal sources:

Item

Typical Cost / Requirement

Naturalisation Test

~€25

Language certificate

Varies (exam fees depend on the provider)

Application processing

Varies by region

Paperwork

Proof of residence, finances, and identity documents

There is no fixed federal fee for citizenship itself – some local authorities may charge administrative fees.

No Points‑Based System

Germany does not use a points‑based citizenship system like Canada or Australia. Citizenship is based on meeting conditions (residence, language skills, integration), not accumulating points.

That said, having strong integration factors – degree, job, language skills, and financial stability – practically strengthens eligibility.

Practical Steps for Students

  1. Start with a student visa (§ 16b)
  2. Complete your degree
  3. Move to a work permit
    Popular options include:
    • Skilled worker permit (§ 18b)
    • EU Blue Card (higher salary threshold)
  4. Accumulate 5 years of total legal residence
  5. Learn German to B1+
  6. Take the naturalisation test
  7. Submit an application at your local Naturalisation Office
  8. Provide all documents and wait for approval

 

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