🇩🇪 Study in Germany 2026 — Complete Guide
Complete guide to studying in Germany — tuition-free public universities, real living costs, the blocked account requirement, student visa rules, work rights, and the Job-Seeker visa to EU Blue Card pathway.
Why Study in Germany?
Germany is structurally different from every other country on this list: public university tuition has been free for international students since 2014 in 15 of 16 states, meaning your total cost is almost entirely living expenses — the lowest of any major study destination.
Top Universities
Technical University of Munich
Germany's #1 ranked university (QS #22-25), the one Bavarian exception with non-EU tuition
RWTH Aachen University
Zero tuition for every student, domestic or international — Germany's largest technical university
See the full Germany university tier breakdown →
Tuition Fees
€0 tuition at public universities in 15 of 16 states (semester fee €85-€400 only); Baden-Württemberg charges non-EU students €1,500/semester
See the full real-cost breakdown & savings strategies →
Living Cost
€800–€1,500/month depending on city — Munich is the most expensive, Leipzig/Dresden the most affordable
Scholarships
DAAD (Germany's national academic exchange service) offers funded scholarships across degree levels and home countries — check eligibility as your first step, since public tuition is already free and DAAD funding focuses on living costs and research funding.
Student Visa
Germany Student Visa: Requires university admission, proof of the blocked account (€11,904/year, released monthly), and health insurance. Bachelor's programs are mostly German-taught (C1 required); 2,000+ English-taught master's programs exist.
Full Germany student visa guide →
Work While Studying
120 full days or 240 half days per year — roughly equivalent to a part-time job alongside full-time study.
Post-Study Work Visa
18-month Job-Seeker visa — search for work at any salary level, no employer sponsorship needed to hold the visa itself. The most flexible post-study visa of any country in this guide.
PR / Permanent Residence Pathway
EU Blue Card (skilled work, salary threshold applies) or standard Skilled Worker visa, leading to permanent residence after 33 months (or just 21 months with B1 German proficiency).
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❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Is the blocked account a fee I lose, or my own money?
It's your own money — the €11,904/year blocked account is a financial-proof requirement, released to you monthly, not a tuition fee. Your real annual spend is typically €9,000-13,000 depending on city, not the full blocked account figure.
Do I need to speak German to study in Germany?
For bachelor's programs, usually yes — most are German-taught and require C1 proficiency, a real barrier that takes 12-18 months to reach. Master's programs are the opposite: 2,000+ English-taught options exist, making this route far more accessible if you're not yet fluent.
How does Germany's post-study visa compare to the UK or Australia?
Germany's 18-month Job-Seeker visa is more flexible than either — it lets you search for work at any salary level with no sponsorship needed to hold the visa, unlike the UK's Skilled Worker threshold or Australia's points-tested system.
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🌍 Study Abroad HubThis guide is for informational purposes only and does not constitute immigration or admissions advice. Rules change frequently — always verify current requirements with official government and university sources before making decisions.