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Study abroad in Germany

Visa, costs, healthcare and the best cities for exchange students in Germany.

Capital

Berlin

Languages

German

Academic Year

Winter semester usually begins in October and runs into February or March. Summer semester usually begins in April and runs into July or August, but faculty calendars can differ slightly.

Population

83.5 million

Typical Budget

EUR 900 - 1,600/month

Overview

A strong exchange choice for students who want respected universities, reliable public transport, and a semester that feels independent, practical, and well connected across Europe.

Country Overview

What student life feels like in Germany.

Germany works especially well for exchange students who want a serious academic environment without giving up social life or weekend travel. The core advantage is structural: universities are respected, student services are usually clear, and the semester contribution often unlocks transport, canteens, and campus systems that make daily life easier once you are set up.

The tradeoff is that Germany rewards preparation. Housing searches can be competitive, admin is document-heavy, and cities like Berlin and Munich punish last-minute decisions.

If you arrive organized and use the local buddy or Erasmus ecosystem early, Germany can feel safer, more efficient, and more affordable than many students expect.

Country Framework

What shapes student life in Germany.

Use this page to understand the legal context, budget baseline, safety feel, and everyday rhythm before comparing cities or universities.

Safety Snapshot

Germany is generally very manageable for exchange students. Daily risks are more likely to be room scams, bike theft, and late-night station-area mistakes than violent crime on or near campus.

Editorial view of Germany

Before You Land

A few practical setup details students usually sort before arrival

Connectivity, insurance, and secure public WiFi are the boring things you only notice when you need them. Keep them on your checklist, but keep the guide itself front and centre.

Arrival Connectivity

Sort an eSIM before you land

Maps, ride apps, 2FA codes, and WhatsApp are usually the first things students need from the airport.

Partner picks coming soon

Coverage Check

Confirm your travel insurance

Even when the university gives guidance, students usually need to double-check what is covered before departure.

Partner picks coming soon

Public WiFi

Have a backup for shared networks

Campus halls, airports, and cafés are convenient, but many students prefer an extra privacy layer when they first arrive.

Partner picks coming soon

Safety & Cost Indices

Source: Numbeo crowdsourced data. Lower crime = safer. Higher safety = safer.

38

Crime Index

Low

World avg: 44.7

62

Safety Index

Moderate

World avg: 55.3

69

Cost of Living

Expensive

EUR 900 - 1,600/month

Crime factors measured

General perception of crime levels Perceived safety during daylight and nighttime Concerns about specific crimes (mugging, robbery, car theft, physical attacks, harassment, bias-motivated incidents) Property crime severity (burglary, theft, vandalism) Violent crime severity (assault, homicide, sexual offenses)

Big Cities vs Small Towns

Big Cities

  • Berlin, Munich, and Hamburg are the three dominant student cities — each with strong universities, excellent transit, and distinct personalities.
  • Berlin is cheap by capital standards, multicultural, and culturally electric — the best city in Germany for arts, nightlife, and startup networking.
  • Munich is Germany's most expensive city but compensates with top engineering schools (TU Munich), proximity to the Alps, and the highest graduate salaries.
  • Hamburg has a strong international business and media scene and one of Europe's best music cultures.

Small Towns

  • Heidelberg, Freiburg, Tübingen, and Münster are classic German student cities — beautiful, safe, affordable, and almost entirely oriented around university life.
  • These cities have very high quality of life: compact, bikeable, surrounded by nature, and with strong civic culture.
  • Less English infrastructure pushes German language learning — essential for deeper integration.
  • Heidelberg and Freiburg are tourist magnets in summer but genuinely peaceful during term time.

Culture

Social Norms

  • Punctuality matters far more than in many Erasmus destinations, especially for appointments and classes.
  • Direct communication is normal and is usually meant as clarity rather than rudeness.
  • Students are expected to manage their own admin, planning, and course logistics without much hand-holding.
  • Quiet hours in residences or shared flats are taken more seriously than some exchange students expect.

Daily Rhythm

Local pace

07:00–09:00

Morning

Germans start early and punctually. Breakfast (Frühstück) is substantial: bread, cold cuts, cheese, boiled eggs. Bäckerei opens at 06:30. Many lectures start at 08:00.

12:00–13:30

Midday

Mittagessen is the hot meal. University Mensas offer cheap lunch menus (€3–5 for students). Germans eat lunch at fixed hours — going after 14:00 is late.

13:30–17:00

Afternoon

Afternoon work block. Kaffee und Kuchen (coffee and cake) around 15:00 is a real tradition, especially on weekends and in offices. Shops close at 20:00 weekdays, 18:00 Saturday.

18:00–20:00

Evening

Dinner (Abendessen) is often cold — bread, cheese, cold cuts (Abendbrot). Germans eat dinner earlier and lighter than southern Europeans.

21:00–06:00

Night

Berlin's club scene is world-famous and has no closing time. Outside Berlin, nightlife winds down by 02:00. Student bars (Kneipen) are lively Thursday–Saturday.

Food Culture

Mensa lunch

Mensa lunch

EUR 2.80-5.80

University canteens are one of the best-value parts of German student life.

Student hack:

Use the Mensa first before assuming eating on campus will be expensive.

Bakery breakfast or snack

Bakery breakfast or snack

EUR 2-6

Cheap, fast, and part of everyday routines before class or during transfers.

Student hack:

Bakeries near stations are easy, but neighborhood bakeries usually feel less rushed and cost slightly less.

Doener or takeaway plate

Doener or takeaway plate

EUR 6-9

A practical student default in most cities, especially after evening plans.

Student hack:

Use it as a backup meal, not your full budget strategy.

Bratwurst

Bratwurst

EUR 2–5

Grilled pork sausage sold at street stalls, markets, and beer gardens across Germany. Every region has its own variety — Nuremberg, Thuringian, and Frankfurt are the most famous.

Student hack:

Christmas market Bratwurst stands are the cheapest hot meal in winter; outside of that, supermarket sausages grilled at home beat any snack bar price.

Pretzels (Brezeln)

Pretzels (Brezeln)

EUR 1–3

Soft, glossy, and salted — German pretzels are a staple at bakeries and beer gardens. Larger than the American snack variety and made fresh daily.

Student hack:

Grab a freshly baked Brezel at any bakery for under EUR 2 — it is one of the most filling and cheapest snacks in Germany.

Schnitzel

Schnitzel

EUR 8–16

Breaded and pan-fried veal or pork cutlet — one of the most recognisable main dishes in Germany and Austria. Served with fries, salad, or Kartoffelsalat.

Student hack:

Weekday Mensa schnitzel is usually the cheapest cooked version; restaurant schnitzel is much better on a Friday student night out.

Dos and Don'ts

Do

  • Arrive early for visa, registration, or university appointments.

  • Keep digital and printed copies of housing, insurance, and admission documents.

  • Use your semester transport benefits properly before buying extra tickets.

  • Join one buddy, ESN, or newcomer community in the first week so the semester starts with momentum.

  • Choose housing with commute and registration reality in mind, not only the rent headline.

  • Complete your Anmeldung (address registration) at the Einwohnermeldeamt within 2 weeks of moving in — it unlocks banking, admin, and residence-permit steps.

  • Register your health insurance with AOK, Techniker Krankenkasse (TK), or Barmer before your first day at the university — they issue the Versicherungsnachweis needed for enrolment.

  • Get a Mensa card from the Studierendenwerk in your first week — EUR 2.80-5.80 lunches are one of the best budget tools in Germany.

  • Check whether your semester ticket covers regional trains or only city transport — Deutschlandticket add-ons or upgrades vary by university.

Don't

  • Do not assume everything can be solved once you land.

  • Do not confuse directness with hostility.

  • Do not send deposits for rooms you cannot verify properly.

  • Do not delay health-insurance confirmation if your enrolment depends on it.

  • Do not choose the cheapest room if the commute makes daily life miserable.

  • Do not cycle on pedestrian paths (Fußgängerzone) — police issue fines and it genuinely irritates locals.

  • Do not miss Ruhezeit (quiet hours, typically 22:00–06:00 and Sunday all day) — noise complaints in shared buildings are taken seriously.

  • Do not wait on Rundfunkbeitrag (GEZ broadcasting fee) — check if your residence already has a shared contribution before paying again.

  • Do not underestimate how document-heavy German admin is — every step (bank, insurance, residence permit) needs printed originals or certified copies.

Lifestyle & Travel

Oktoberfest (Munich)

Oktoberfest (Munich)

Theresienwiese, Munich Late Sep - early Oct

Entry to Oktoberfest grounds is free — only pay for beer and food inside tents. Book tent reservations early or arrive before noon on weekdays for unreserved seats.

Learn more
Berlin clubbing and nightlife

Berlin clubbing and nightlife

Berghain, Tresor, Watergate, Sisyphos — Berlin Year-round (peak Oct-Apr)

Berlin has the most respected club scene in the world. Entry EUR 10-20. Clubs run 24-72h continuously on weekends. Berghain is the benchmark experience.

Learn more
Rhine Valley cycling

Rhine Valley cycling

Bingen to Koblenz, Rhineland-Palatinate May-Oct

UNESCO Rhine Valley: 65km flat riverside cycle path past medieval castles and vineyards. Rent bikes in Bingen (EUR 15/day). Return by train to start point.

Learn more
Neuschwanstein Castle day trip

Neuschwanstein Castle day trip

Fussen, Bavaria (2h from Munich by train) May-Sep (avoid August peak)

The inspiration for Disney castle. Student entry EUR 13. Train from Munich EUR 30 return. Book online to avoid queues. Alpine scenery is spectacular.

Learn more
Dresden and Saxon Switzerland

Dresden and Saxon Switzerland

Dresden + Bastei Bridge, Saxony Apr-Oct

Dresden baroque city centre (rebuilt after WWII) is stunning. Saxon Switzerland National Park with Bastei sandstone bridge is 45min away. Student museum pass EUR 7.

Learn more
Hamburg harbour and Reeperbahn

Hamburg harbour and Reeperbahn

HafenCity, Speicherstadt, St. Pauli — Hamburg Year-round

Hamburg is Germany nightlife capital and has Europe busiest port. Miniatur Wunderland (EUR 18 student) is the world largest model railway. Free harbour walks.

Learn more
Black Forest hiking

Black Forest hiking

Freiburg im Breisgau and surrounding Black Forest May-Oct

Westweg trail and day hikes around Feldberg (1,493m). Freiburg has one of Germany best student nightlife scenes. Train from Frankfurt 2h. Student hostel from EUR 20.

Learn more
Berlin Wall and museum quarter

Berlin Wall and museum quarter

East Side Gallery, Checkpoint Charlie, Museumsinsel — Berlin Year-round

East Side Gallery (1.3km of original Wall with murals) is free. Pergamon Museum student entry EUR 8. Berlin has more museums than rainy days per year.

Learn more

Festival Calendar

Christmas markets
hype

November to December

Christmas markets

Nationwide

students nightlife iconic

The easiest winter social format for students in almost every city.

Oktoberfest season
medium

September

Oktoberfest season

Munich

music culture students

High-energy and expensive, but still a huge cultural draw even if you only do it once.

Carnival
hype

February

Carnival

Cologne and the Rhineland

culture students free

A much bigger social and cultural event than many incoming students realize.

Weihnachtsmarkt (Christmas Markets)
chill

Late November - December 24

Weihnachtsmarkt (Christmas Markets)

Cologne, Nuremberg, Hamburg, Berlin, Munich

culture winter students

Germany Christmas markets are among Europe finest. Nuremberg Christkindlmarkt is the most famous. Free entry, Gluhwein EUR 3-5.

Lollapalooza Berlin
hype

September

Lollapalooza Berlin

Olympic Stadium, Berlin

music students nightlife

Two-day international music festival on the grounds of the Olympic Stadium. Student tickets from EUR 100/weekend. Huge international lineup.

Travel Tips

  • Book major train trips early if you are paying standard fares.
  • Winter is more about darkness and wet cold than campus shutdowns, so plan energy and routines accordingly.
  • Spring and early summer are the easiest months for city-hopping and low-stress social plans.
  • If you are arriving in a big city, solve housing before planning fun weekend trips.

Benefits & Scholarships

Personalize this layer

Add where you currently study in your profile to separate incoming support from outgoing scholarships.

Support is clearer once we separate incoming help from outgoing mobility money.

Useful either way

Support and discounts that still matter even if you are not in a strict incoming or outgoing case.

Deutschlandticket compatibility

Many students use their semester mobility setup together with the Deutschlandticket logic or local transport discounts to keep travel simple.

Deutschlandticket / local transit operators

Official source

Mensa and student-canteen pricing

Subsidized canteens are one of the biggest everyday savings layers in Germany.

Local Studierendenwerk

Official source

Campus support and welcome programmes

Buddy programmes, orientation weeks, and international offices are often more useful than students expect during the first month.

Host universities

Visa Requirements

Difficulty: Easy
EU / EEA / Switzerland Exchange duration
Official source

National ID card or passport

EU, EEA, and Swiss students do not need a student visa to study in Germany.

Fee: EUR 0 No visa required Exchange duration
Non-EU students Over 90 days
Official source

Student visa and residence permit steps after arrival

Many non-EU students need a visa before arrival and then need to complete local residence formalities after moving in. Financial proof such as a blocked account is a common requirement.

Fee: EUR 75 6–12 weeks 1 year (renewable)

Application Checklist

5 steps
  1. 1
    Check early whether your nationality requires a visa before arrival or can complete the process after entering Germany.
  2. 2
    Keep your host-university acceptance or nomination documents, insurance proof, and accommodation details in one folder.
  3. 3
    If you need a visa, confirm the financial-proof route early because blocked-account timing can slow everything down.
  4. 4
    After arrival, complete your address registration as soon as you have a valid housing contract or registration-ready room.
  5. 5
    Do not assume German admin can be fixed in one afternoon; book appointments and keep printed copies.

Regional Variations

Large-city housing markets

Berlin and Munich often force faster housing decisions and longer waits for registration appointments than smaller student cities.

Landlords and residences may ask for passport copies, proof of enrolment, or payment documents earlier than students expect.

Official source

Health & Healthcare

Emergency: 112
Avg GP visit: €0 (Krankenkasse)
Student insurance: ~€120/mo (public)
Coverage: Mandatory for enrollment

How It Works

Germany operates a dual statutory/private health insurance system. All students under 30 enrolled at a German university must be covered by either a statutory insurer (gesetzliche Krankenversicherung, GKV) or an accepted private or foreign policy. EU/EEA students can use their EHIC for medically necessary care, but most universities require an official Versicherungsnachweis (insurance confirmation letter) from a German GKV insurer — AOK, Techniker Krankenkasse (TK), and Barmer are the most commonly used by students. Non-EU students on a residence permit must hold insurance that meets both enrolment and immigration requirements. GKV monthly contributions for students are approximately EUR 80–110/month depending on the insurer and status. Healthcare quality in Germany is very high: major university hospitals (Charité Berlin, LMU Klinikum Munich) are among Europe's best.

Student Needs

EU students: bring EHIC for immediate access to medically necessary care, but contact AOK or TK before arrival to obtain a free coverage confirmation letter (Bescheinigung) for university enrolment — this is often required even if you are not paying into the GKV. Non-EU students: arrange a compliant policy before applying for your student visa; many use private international policies approved by German immigration, but check with your host university's international office for the exact accepted insurer list. All students: register with a Hausarzt (GP) after Anmeldung is complete — specialist access in Germany normally requires a GP referral. Pharmacies (Apotheken) are available in every district and handle minor illness advice.

Emergency vs Clinic

Call 112 for all life-threatening emergencies — ambulance, fire, police. For urgent medical advice outside GP hours, call the ärztlicher Bereitschaftsdienst on 116 117 (nationwide, 24/7) — they triage by phone and direct you to the nearest on-call clinic (Bereitschaftspraxis). Hospital Notaufnahme (A&E) departments treat all patients regardless of insurance status. For non-urgent issues, book a GP (Hausarzt) appointment first — walk-in specialist access without referral is possible but more expensive and usually slower.

Public Coverage Notes

  • EU students: EHIC covers medically necessary treatment at German public health facilities. However, most universities require a Versicherungsnachweis from a German statutory insurer — contact AOK or TK before arrival; the free confirmation letter takes 1–2 weeks.

  • Non-EU students: must hold insurance accepted by both the university and the Ausländerbehörde (immigration authority) — confirm exact requirements with your host university international office.

  • GKV student contribution: approximately EUR 80–110/month for students under 30 enrolled full-time; reduces after age 25 with income proof in some cases.

University Plans

  • AOK student insurance confirmation

  • Techniker Krankenkasse (TK) student insurance confirmation

  • Barmer student insurance confirmation

Private Coverage

  • Private insurance can work for exchange students but must be confirmed as accepted by the university enrolment office before finalising.

  • Check emergency treatment, hospitalisation, prescription coverage, and repatriation. Many private policies used by non-EU students are valid but require a separate GKV exemption letter.

Non-urgent

GP, specialist practice, or a recommendation from the international office

Book ahead when possible; wait times vary by city and specialty.

Urgent

Emergency department or call 112

Use emergency care for serious symptoms, accidents, or situations that cannot wait for a normal appointment.

Emergency

112

Cities to Explore

Berlin

Berlin

A huge, creative, internationally magnetic student city where meeting people is easy but finding the right room is the real first test.

Open City Guide
Munich

Munich

Organized, polished, expensive, and academically strong: Munich suits exchange students who want quality of life and are ready to plan carefully around…

Open City Guide
Cologne

Cologne

A friendlier-feeling German student city with a strong university base, easier social warmth than Munich, and a daily rhythm that feels more…

Open City Guide