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Germany’s aggressive offshore wind expansion is creating an unprecedented demand for specialist engineers, turbine technicians and cable‑laying crews, and a significant share of that talent pool holds third‑country nationality. Understanding the Germany offshore wind immigration rules for third‑country workers is now a front‑line compliance priority for every project developer, EPC contractor and staffing agency operating in the North Sea and Baltic Sea. The legal answer to the deceptively simple question “does my worker need a German work permit? ” depends on the precise maritime zone in which the work takes place, the duration of the assignment, and the contractual structure underpinning it.
At Schlun & Elseven Rechtsanwälte, we advise employers daily on navigating the interplay between the Offshore Wind Energy Act (WindSeeG), the Residence Act (AufenthG) §19c, and the Employment Regulation (BeschV) §24b, a framework that, when misunderstood, can expose companies to enforcement action, Schengen‑day violations and costly project delays.
Four interlocking legal instruments govern how third‑country nationals may lawfully work on German offshore wind projects. Each serves a distinct function, and employers need to understand all four to build a compliant deployment plan.
The Offshore Wind Energy Act (Windenergie‑auf‑See‑Gesetz, WindSeeG), administered by the Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs and Climate Action (BMWK), establishes the regulatory regime for planning, tendering and constructing offshore wind energy installations in Germany’s EEZ and territorial sea. It is supplemented by the Third Ordinance on Implementation (WindSeeV), which is administered by the Federal Maritime and Hydrographic Agency (BSH) and governs site investigation, construction permits and technical safety standards. While neither WindSeeG nor WindSeeV directly regulates immigration, they define the geographic and functional scope of offshore activities, and that scope determines which immigration rules apply.
Section 19c of the Residence Act is the primary gateway through which third‑country nationals obtain residence titles for employment in Germany that falls outside the standard skilled‑worker pathway. It operates as a bridge provision, permitting stays where a corresponding regulation in the BeschV authorises the employment without requiring a separate labour‑market test. For offshore wind projects within the territorial sea, §19c provides the residence‑title basis when combined with the sector‑specific derogation in BeschV §24b.
BeschV §24b is the provision that matters most in practice. It permits third‑country nationals to work on the construction, maintenance and operation of offshore wind turbines and their grid‑connection infrastructure within the territorial sea for a period of up to 24 months, without requiring prior approval from the Federal Employment Agency (BA). This removes the single most time‑consuming step in the standard work‑permit process and reflects the legislator’s recognition that Germany cannot meet its offshore wind targets without rapid access to international specialist labour. The derogation is, however, tightly scoped: it applies to defined activities, within a defined zone, for a defined period.
The compliance question for every offshore wind deployment starts with a GPS coordinate. Germany’s maritime jurisdiction is divided into three distinct zones, each carrying different legal consequences for immigration.
| Zone | Legal Rule (Immigration) | Employer Action / Practical Step |
|---|---|---|
| Coastline to baseline (internal waters / harbour approaches) | German law applies fully; standard residence/work permits required | Obtain residence title and work permit; secure clearance from the local foreigners’ authority (Ausländerbehörde) |
| Territorial sea (baseline → 12 nm) | Residence Act §19c + BeschV §24b may allow offshore wind work (turbines/connection lines) for up to 24 months without BA approval; 90‑day non‑employment windows may apply for certain activities | Map vessel and transfer‑zone coordinates; secure appropriate contracts; document all time spent in the zone; consider national visa or residence title where activity falls outside §24b scope |
| Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ, beyond 12 nm) | WindSeeG governs offshore energy regulation; immigration law may not automatically apply, but every onshore transit creates Schengen entry/exit obligations | Maintain precise voyage logs; compute Schengen days for each worker; plan crew rotations and visa categories to avoid short‑stay breaches |
Knowing which zone your workers are in is only the first step. The next question is which authorisation pathway applies, and the answer varies depending on zone, activity type and assignment duration.
This is where the BeschV §24b derogation delivers its greatest practical value. A third‑country national deployed to construct, commission, maintain or operate a wind turbine or its grid‑connection line within the territorial sea can work for up to 24 months without the employer needing prior approval from the BA. The worker still requires a residence title, typically granted under Residence Act §19c, but the application process is significantly faster because the BA approval step is removed.
In my experience, the key planning consideration is ensuring that the worker’s activities genuinely fall within the scope of §24b. Turbine assembly, blade installation, subsea cable‑laying and substation work are clearly covered. Support activities, catering, vessel operation, environmental monitoring, may not be. Where scope is uncertain, I advise employers to seek a formal legal opinion before mobilisation and, where necessary, apply for BA approval as a precaution.
Any third‑country national performing work in internal waters, for example, at a marshalling port, a quayside fabrication yard or an inner harbour, is fully subject to German immigration law. The BeschV §24b derogation does not apply here. A standard offshore wind Germany work permit or residence title is required, and the employer must go through the regular application process, which typically includes BA approval unless another BeschV exception applies.
The legal position in the EEZ is the most nuanced, and the one I see employers get wrong most often. Because Germany does not exercise full sovereignty over the EEZ, the prevailing administrative view is that the Residence Act does not automatically apply to work performed entirely within that zone. A third‑country technician who helicopters from a non‑Schengen base directly to an offshore platform in the EEZ and returns without touching German soil may, in principle, fall outside the scope of German immigration law for the duration of the offshore deployment.
However, this theoretical position is riddled with practical traps. The moment that technician transits through a German port, even briefly, for a crew‑change vessel transfer, they enter the Schengen area. Their time on German soil counts toward Schengen short‑stay limits. If they accumulate more than 90 days within any rolling 180‑day period without a national visa or residence title, they are in breach. In my view, treating EEZ work as “immigration‑free” without rigorous Schengen‑day tracking and transit planning is one of the highest‑risk compliance failures in the offshore wind sector.
Certain offshore activities lasting no more than 90 days may be classified as non‑employment under German administrative practice, for example, short‑term commissioning support, equipment inspections or warranty visits where the worker is not integrated into the German employer’s organisational structure and is paid entirely by a foreign employer. The classification depends on the substance of the arrangement, not merely its label. Documentary evidence, including the contract, payment structure, reporting lines and task description, must support the non‑employment characterisation.
Third‑country nationals entering the Schengen area on a short‑stay (Type C) visa or under a visa waiver are subject to the 90/180‑day rule: a maximum of 90 days of physical presence within any rolling 180‑day window across all Schengen states. For offshore workers, the trap is cumulative presence. A technician who spends 30 days onshore in Germany for training, then 45 days transiting through Cuxhaven for crew changes, and then 20 days on leave in the Netherlands has used 95 Schengen days, even if much of the offshore work was technically in the EEZ. Every day on Schengen territory counts, and there is no “offshore exemption” from the Schengen Borders Code.
Compliance in offshore wind immigration is not just about having the right visa, it is about being able to prove it. From what I see in practice, enforcement authorities and port‑state inspectors increasingly expect employers to produce comprehensive documentation at short notice. The following checklist reflects the standards I recommend to clients.
I recommend retaining all deployment records for a minimum of five years after the end of the assignment, this covers the typical limitation period for administrative offences under the Residence Act.
Even where immigration formalities are simplified by BeschV §24b, payroll and social security obligations may still arise. If a third‑country worker is employed by a German entity or is deemed to be working “in Germany” for social insurance purposes, German employer contributions apply. Cross‑border workers rotating between German and non‑German waters may trigger posting rules, split payroll obligations or double‑taxation issues. In every case, the employer compliance logbook should capture sufficient data for the payroll team to make accurate determinations.
BSH construction and operating permits for offshore wind installations frequently include conditions relating to personnel qualifications, safety training and crew documentation. Non‑compliance with immigration requirements can create knock‑on effects for BSH permit compliance, particularly if an inspection reveals unauthorised workers on a regulated installation. Employers should ensure that their immigration compliance processes are integrated with their HSE (health, safety and environment) management systems.
Based on the deployment‑planning timelines I work through with clients, the following step‑by‑step framework covers the critical milestones for mobilising third‑country offshore workers to German projects.
The most common enforcement risks I encounter in practice are:
Where a compliance gap is identified mid‑deployment, the immediate priority should be to suspend the worker’s activities, seek emergency legal advice and, where possible, apply for a corrective residence title or BA approval before the situation escalates.
Germany’s offshore wind sector cannot deliver on its expansion targets without international talent, and the legal framework recognises this through targeted provisions like BeschV §24b. But that framework is zone‑specific, time‑limited and documentation‑heavy. In my experience, the employers who avoid enforcement issues are those who treat immigration as a project‑planning input from day one, not an afterthought. I encourage every project developer and contractor operating in German waters to map zones, forecast Schengen days, assemble robust documentation and engage specialist business immigration counsel well before mobilisation begins.
For specialist advice on this topic, contact Aykut Elseven at Schlun & Elseven Rechtsanwälte.
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