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How to Obtain a German Work Permit for a Foreign Employee Already Based in the EU

By Aykut Elseven
– posted 1 hour ago

Employers expanding operations into Germany, or transferring talent from a subsidiary in another EU member state, face a deceptively complex question: does a foreign employee who already holds a valid residence title in France, the Netherlands or Poland actually need a separate German work permit? The answer depends on the employee’s nationality, the type of residence title they hold, and the nature and duration of the intended work in Germany. At Schlun & Elseven Rechtsanwälte, I regularly advise multinational employers who need to obtain a German work permit for a foreign employee, and the single most common mistake I see is assuming that an existing EU residence card automatically authorises employment across borders.

This guide sets out the legal tests, the step-by-step procedure, the employer obligations and the key timelines that HR teams and in-house counsel need to follow in 2026.

Last updated: 7 July 2026

Quick Answer, Does an EU‑Based Employee Need a German Work Permit?

The short answer is: it depends on nationality and permit type. EU/EEA and Swiss citizens enjoy full freedom of movement and never need a German work permit, they may live and work in Germany without any residence title, under the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union. Third-country nationals, however, generally require a German residence title that explicitly authorises employment, even if they already hold a valid residence permit issued by another EU member state. The German Residence Act (Aufenthaltsgesetz, AufenthG) governs which titles permit employment and under what conditions.

  • When you do not need a German work permit: The employee is an EU/EEA/Swiss national, or the assignment qualifies as a short-term posting under the A1 certificate framework and does not exceed the applicable time limits.
  • When you do need a German work permit: The employee is a third-country national who will take up regular employment in Germany, regardless of whether they already hold a residence title in another EU country.

Key Definitions and Permit Types

Before diving into the procedure, employers should understand the three main residence titles that authorise employment in Germany. Each has different eligibility criteria, salary thresholds and procedural requirements. Selecting the wrong permit type is one of the most common, and costly, errors I see in practice.

Permit type Who it is for Primary requirement
EU Blue Card (§ 18g AufenthG) University-educated professionals in roles matching their qualification Recognised degree, concrete job offer, salary at or above the statutory threshold
Residence permit for skilled workers (§ 18a / § 18b AufenthG) Qualified professionals with vocational training or a university degree Recognised qualification, job offer in a related field, possible Federal Employment Agency approval
Residence permit for employment (general, § 18 AufenthG) Other employees (including those with no formal qualification in specific shortage sectors) Concrete job offer, Federal Employment Agency approval, no priority-worker objection

A Germany work visa issued by a diplomatic mission abroad is technically a national visa (category D) that functions as a temporary residence title until the employee collects the residence permit card from the local foreigners authority (Ausländerbehörde). Employers should treat the visa and the residence permit as two stages of the same process.

Step-by-Step Process for Employers to Obtain a German Work Permit for a Foreign Employee

The procedure for employers transferring a third-country national from another EU state into Germany follows a structured sequence. Missing or misordering any step can delay the start date by weeks, or expose the company to penalties. Below is the practical checklist I walk clients through at Schlun & Elseven Rechtsanwälte.

Step 1, Pre-Transfer Checks (Eligibility and Qualification Recognition)

Before filing any application, determine:

  1. Nationality and current status. Confirm whether the employee is an EU/EEA/Swiss citizen (no permit needed) or a third-country national. If the latter, note the type and duration of their existing residence title in the other EU state.
  2. Qualification assessment. Check whether the employee’s foreign degree or vocational qualification is already recognised in Germany. For regulated professions, medicine, engineering, teaching, nursing, recognition of qualifications in Germany is mandatory before a residence title can be issued. Use the ANABIN database or the official recognition portal (Anerkennung in Deutschland) to verify equivalency.
  3. Permit type selection. Based on the employee’s qualifications, salary level and the role offered, determine which residence title applies (EU Blue Card, skilled worker permit or general employment permit).
  4. Salary threshold check. For the EU Blue Card, confirm that the agreed gross annual salary meets the statutory minimum. Shortage-occupation roles may qualify for a reduced threshold.

Step 2, Labour Market Approval and the Federal Employment Agency

For many permit categories, the local Ausländerbehörde must obtain approval from the Federal Employment Agency (Bundesagentur für Arbeit, BA) before issuing the residence title. The BA checks two things: that the employment conditions, salary, working hours, social insurance, are comparable to those offered to German employees; and, in some cases, that no priority worker (German or EU citizen) is available for the role. Under the Skilled Immigration Act, labour market approval is not required for EU Blue Card holders or for certain recognised skilled workers, but it remains a requirement for general employment permits under § 18 AufenthG. Employers should factor in additional processing time when BA approval is needed.

Step 3, Drafting the Employer Letter and Contract Clauses

The employer must prepare several supporting documents for the application. At minimum, these should include:

  • Formal employer declaration (Arbeitgeberbestätigung), a letter on company letterhead confirming the job title, duties, start date, salary, working hours and contract duration.
  • Employment contract, signed by both parties, specifying salary in euros, workplace location in Germany, applicable collective agreement (if any) and social insurance obligations.
  • Job description, a clear outline of responsibilities, qualifications required and reporting line.
  • Proof of the company’s legal presence in Germany, commercial register extract (Handelsregisterauszug), trade licence or branch registration.

In my experience, a well-drafted employer letter that directly addresses the BA’s labour-market criteria can significantly reduce follow-up queries and processing time.

Step 4, Submitting the Application and Municipal Registration

The application route depends on where the employee is located:

  • If the employee is still outside Germany: They apply for a national visa (category D) at the German embassy or consulate in the EU country where they reside. The Auswärtiges Amt confirms that third-country nationals must generally apply at a German mission before entering Germany to take up employment.
  • If the employee can enter Germany visa-free (nationals of certain countries listed in § 41 of the Residence Ordinance): They may enter Germany and apply for the residence permit directly at the local Ausländerbehörde, but they must not begin working until the permit is issued or an interim work authorisation (Fiktionsbescheinigung) is granted.

Once in Germany, the employee must register their address at the local residents’ registration office (Einwohnermeldeamt) within 14 days. This registration is a prerequisite for the Ausländerbehörde appointment. Processing requirements and wait times vary considerably between municipalities, Berlin, Munich and Frankfurt each have different booking systems and document requirements.

Special Cases and Fast Tracks

EU Blue Card Transfer

Under EU Directive 2021/1883 (the revised EU Blue Card Directive, which replaced Directive 2009/50/EC), a third-country national who has held an EU Blue Card in another member state for at least 12 months may apply for a German EU Blue Card with certain procedural advantages, including the right to enter Germany and begin working while the application is processed, provided that the application is submitted promptly after arrival. This is one of the most efficient pathways for employers transferring highly qualified staff from another EU subsidiary. The employee’s family members also benefit from facilitated entry and residence rights during the transfer.

In practice, I advise employers to begin the qualification-recognition check and salary-threshold verification before the 12-month mark, so that the German application can be filed as soon as the transfer window opens.

Intra-EU Posting (A1 Certificate)

If the employer is not transferring the employee permanently but rather posting them to Germany temporarily, for example, to deliver a service contract or supervise a project, the situation may fall under the EU posting of workers framework rather than the German work permit system. A posted worker retains social insurance coverage in the sending state (evidenced by an A1 certificate) and does not need a German residence title, provided the posting is genuine, time-limited and the employee returns to the sending state afterwards. However, the employer must comply with German minimum-wage and working-condition rules during the posting period.

The 140-Day Rule

The so-called 140 day rule is frequently misunderstood. Under certain provisions of the German Residence Ordinance and bilateral agreements, employees may perform short-term work in Germany for up to 90 days within a 180-day period (the standard Schengen rule for visa-exempt nationals) without a work permit, but only for specific activities such as business meetings, conferences, training and certain installation or repair work. This is not a general 140-day work authorisation. The “140 days” figure sometimes cited in industry guidance refers to a now-narrowed provision for specific categories of short-term employment that required approval from the Federal Employment Agency. Employers should not rely on informal references to a 140-day allowance without confirming the specific legal basis.

When in doubt, applying for the correct residence title is always the safer course.

Recognition of Foreign Qualifications, What Employers Must Do

Recognition of qualifications in Germany is a prerequisite for most work-permit categories under the Skilled Immigration Act. The procedure differs depending on whether the profession is regulated or non-regulated.

  • Non-regulated professions (e.g., IT specialist, marketing manager, many engineering roles in the private sector): The employer or employee requests a comparability statement from the Central Office for Foreign Education (Zentralstelle für ausländisches Bildungswesen, ZAB) via the ANABIN database. A “comparable” or “equivalent” assessment is usually sufficient.
  • Regulated professions (e.g., physician, nurse, pharmacist, architect, teacher, lawyer): Full professional recognition from the competent German authority is mandatory. The employee cannot practise, and the residence title cannot be issued, until recognition is granted or at least provisionally confirmed.

Healthcare and Regulated Professions

Healthcare remains one of the most complex recognition areas. A physician trained in a non-EU country typically needs to pass the Kenntnisprüfung (knowledge examination) or demonstrate equivalency through the Gleichwertigkeitsprüfung before receiving a full licence (Approbation). In my experience, this process can take six months to over a year. Employers in the healthcare sector should begin the recognition application well in advance and consider whether a temporary practice permit (Berufserlaubnis) can bridge the gap. The official portal Anerkennung in Deutschland provides a step-by-step recognition finder for each profession and federal state.

Timeline, Fees and Processing Times

Processing times for a German work permit vary significantly depending on the permit type, the issuing authority and whether Federal Employment Agency approval is required. The table below provides indicative ranges based on current practice.

Permit type Typical processing time Who grants / key condition
EU Blue Card (first issue or transfer) 4–12 weeks (varies by mission and Ausländerbehörde); 12 months’ residence in another EU state for transfer benefits German diplomatic mission (visa stage), then local Ausländerbehörde; requires recognised qualification and salary at or above threshold
Skilled worker permit (§ 18a / § 18b AufenthG) 4–12 weeks (municipal average) Local Ausländerbehörde, with or without BA approval depending on category
General employment permit (§ 18 AufenthG) 6–16 weeks (if BA approval required) Local Ausländerbehörde with BA approval; employer must demonstrate comparable working conditions
Job-seeker visa 1–3 months German mission abroad; no immediate work rights, must convert to employment permit after finding a job

Fees: The national visa application fee is typically €75. The residence permit card fee charged by the Ausländerbehörde is generally €100 for a first issuance, though fees vary by municipality. Expedited or fast-track services, where available, may carry additional charges. Employers should budget for qualification-recognition fees separately, which range from €100 to €600 depending on the profession and the assessing authority.

After Approval, Onboarding, Registrations and Tax/Social Rules

Once the German work permit is approved, the employer and employee must complete several onboarding steps before the first day of work:

  1. Municipal registration (Anmeldung): The employee must register their German address at the local Einwohnermeldeamt within 14 days of moving in. This registration generates the confirmation of address (Meldebescheinigung) needed for virtually every subsequent step.
  2. Tax identification number: The Federal Central Tax Office (Bundeszentralamt für Steuern) issues a tax ID automatically after municipal registration, but delivery can take several weeks. Employers can use a temporary tax class to begin payroll processing.
  3. Social insurance registration: The employer must register the employee for health insurance, pension insurance, unemployment insurance and long-term care insurance before employment begins. The employee selects a statutory health insurer (gesetzliche Krankenkasse), which then coordinates contributions.
  4. Work start date: The employee may begin working only once they hold the issued residence title (permit card or Fiktionsbescheinigung). Starting work without valid authorisation exposes both the employer and employee to sanctions.
  5. Notification to the Federal Employment Agency: Where the permit was issued with BA approval, some conditions may require the employer to notify the BA if the employment relationship changes materially, for example, if the role, salary or working hours change significantly.

Risks, Compliance and Employer Penalties

German authorities take work-permit compliance seriously. The most common employer mistakes, and their consequences, include:

  • Allowing work before the permit is issued. Employing a foreign national without a valid residence title authorising employment is an administrative offence under § 404 of the Third Book of the Social Code (SGB III). Fines can reach €500,000 per violation, and the employer may face criminal prosecution in cases of wilful or repeated non-compliance.
  • Using the wrong permit type. A residence title that does not cover the specific employment (e.g., a student visa without a work endorsement) does not authorise full-time employment. If discovered, the employee risks deportation and the employer risks fines and reputational damage.
  • Failing to verify qualification recognition. Employing a professional in a regulated field without confirmed recognition can trigger professional-liability and regulatory issues, particularly in healthcare, education and engineering.
  • Missing the municipal registration deadline. While the fine for late Anmeldung is relatively modest, the absence of a registered address can cascade into delays for the tax ID, social insurance and residence permit issuance.

In my view, the best mitigation strategy is to appoint a single internal point of contact, ideally within global mobility or HR, who tracks every step from qualification recognition through to the first day of work. A missed deadline or overlooked document is far easier to prevent than to cure.

Checklist for Internal Stakeholders, At a Glance

Below is a condensed checklist that HR managers and in-house legal teams can use when planning to obtain a German work permit for a foreign employee transferring from another EU country:

  • ☐ Confirm nationality, EU/EEA/Swiss citizen (no permit needed) or third-country national (proceed with permit).
  • ☐ Check existing residence title, note type, issuing country and expiry date.
  • ☐ Assess qualification recognition, use ANABIN / ZAB or Anerkennung in Deutschland portal; begin early for regulated professions.
  • ☐ Select correct permit type, EU Blue Card, skilled worker permit or general employment permit.
  • ☐ Verify salary threshold, confirm gross annual salary meets EU Blue Card or skilled worker minimum.
  • ☐ Prepare employer documentation, employer declaration, employment contract, job description, company registration extract.
  • ☐ Determine whether BA approval is needed, check if the category requires Federal Employment Agency consent.
  • ☐ Apply at German mission or Ausländerbehörde, route depends on employee’s visa-free entry rights and current location.
  • ☐ Complete municipal registration, within 14 days of arrival in Germany.
  • ☐ Register for social insurance, select statutory health insurer and register before first working day.
  • ☐ Confirm permit in hand before work starts, residence title card or Fiktionsbescheinigung must be issued.

Conclusion

For employers seeking to obtain a German work permit for a foreign employee already based in the EU, the process is manageable, but only if each step is followed in the correct sequence and with the right documentation. The distinction between EU citizens and third-country nationals is the critical starting point, and the choice of permit type shapes every subsequent decision, from qualification recognition to Federal Employment Agency involvement. From what I am seeing in practice, employers who begin the recognition and documentation process early, select the correct permit pathway from the outset, and coordinate closely with the receiving Ausländerbehörde consistently achieve faster outcomes and avoid the compliance risks that can derail a transfer.

Need Legal Advice?

For specialist advice on this topic, contact Aykut Elseven at Schlun & Elseven Rechtsanwälte.

Sources

  1. Auswärtiges Amt, Visa & Work Visa FAQs
  2. Make‑it‑in‑Germany, Work and Residence for Qualified Professionals
  3. Federal Employment Agency (Bundesagentur für Arbeit)
  4. German Residence Act (Aufenthaltsgesetz), Consolidated Text
  5. EUR‑Lex, Council Directive 2009/50/EC (EU Blue Card)
  6. Anerkennung in Deutschland, Recognition of Foreign Qualifications
  7. ServicePortal Berlin, Residence Permit for Employment

FAQs

Do I need a German work permit if my employee already lives in another EU country?
If the employee is an EU/EEA or Swiss citizen, no work permit is required, they may work freely in Germany. If the employee is a third-country national, they generally need a German residence title authorising employment, even if they hold a valid residence permit in another EU member state.
The term “140 day rule” is often used informally to describe provisions in the German Residence Ordinance that allowed short-term employment of up to 90 days in a 180-day period without a residence title for specific activities. The scope of this rule is narrower than many employers assume, and it should not be treated as a blanket work authorisation.
Under the revised EU Blue Card Directive, an employee who has held an EU Blue Card in another member state for at least 12 months may enter Germany and begin working while their German EU Blue Card application is processed, provided the application is submitted promptly after arrival. If the employee has held their Blue Card for fewer than 12 months, they must wait for the German permit to be issued before starting work.
Processing times range from 4 to 12 weeks for an EU Blue Card or skilled worker permit, and potentially 6 to 16 weeks where Federal Employment Agency approval is required. Times vary significantly between German missions abroad and between municipal Ausländerbehörden.
Generally, no. Working without a valid residence title authorising employment is an offence for both the employee and the employer. Limited exceptions apply for EU Blue Card transfers (after 12 months) and for EU/EEA/Swiss citizens, who do not need a permit. Employers should ensure the permit, or at minimum a Fiktionsbescheinigung with work authorisation, is issued before the employee’s first working day.
At minimum: an employer declaration confirming the role and terms, a signed employment contract, a job description, and proof of the company’s legal registration in Germany (such as a commercial register extract). Depending on the permit type, additional documents such as a qualification-recognition certificate or proof of salary may be required.
The Federal Employment Agency (Bundesagentur für Arbeit) is responsible for assessing whether employment conditions are comparable to those of German workers and, in certain cases, whether a priority worker is available. The Ausländerbehörde requests this assessment as part of the residence title application process. Labour market approval is not required for all permit types, EU Blue Card holders and certain skilled workers are exempt.

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How to Obtain a German Work Permit for a Foreign Employee Already Based in the EU

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