# Requirements for the student visa for Germany
Studying in Germany is a life-changing opportunity. When you finally receive your admission letter from a German university, for a moment it feels like the hardest part is over. Then you open the visa checklist: blocked account, APS certificate, health insurance, language proof, academic documents, embassy appointment, country-specific requirements.

This step may easily become overwhelming and many students who don’t prepare well get delayed. A German university admission letter is important, but it is not enough by itself. Your student visa file must prove that you are admitted, financially prepared, properly insured, academically eligible, and ready to study in Germany.

The most important thing to know is that **German student visa requirements can differ by country and German mission**. A student applying from India, China, Nigeria, Brazil, Turkey, the UAE, or the United States may not need or follow the exact same checklist.

## Do you need a visa to study in Germany?

**EU/EEA/Swiss Citizens:** You do not need a visa to enter or study in Germany. You only need a valid ID/passport and must register your address (*Meldebescheinigung*) at the local citizens' office (*Bürgeramt*) once you arrive.

Students from so called “friendly states”, such as **Australia, Canada, Japan, South Korea, the United Kingdom, Israel, New Zealand, Northern Ireland and the United States**, may enter Germany without a visa and apply for a residence permit after arrival. If you enter Germany visa-free, you still need the correct residence permit within 90 days before your visa-free stay expires. Some German missions also warn that you may not be allowed to work until the residence permit has been issued.

**All other non-EU and non-EEA students** need a national visa (Category D). You **must** apply at the German Embassy or Consulate General in your home country before traveling.

Never enter Germany on a tourist visa if your real goal is to study. DAAD’s website clearly states that a tourist visa cannot be converted into a student visa later - you will need to leave Germany and reapply for the correct visa type in your country of residence. 

Still not sure if you need to apply for a study visa - use the [Federal Foreign Office Visa Navigator](https://digital.diplo.de/navigator/en/visa#/vib) or your German mission’s website to confirm if you need one before you travel.

## What are the main requirements for a Germany student visa?

The main requirements for a Germany student visa are a valid passport, completed visa application form, university admission, proof of funds, health insurance, academic documents, language proof, biometric photos, visa fee, and any country-specific documents requested by your German embassy.

The [Federal Foreign Office](https://www.auswaertiges-amt.de/en) explains that students must apply through the German mission abroad before travelling, and that the mission forwards the application to the foreigners authority in the German university town.

Use this simple checklist:

| Requirement | Specificities |
| ----------- | ----------- |
| Valid passport | Must be issued within the last 10 years, possess at least 2 blank pages, and remain valid for at least 3 to 12 months beyond your planned arrival date. In addition, you need two high-quality A4 copies of passport data page. |
| Visa application form | Fully completed and signed. You can fill this out electronically via the official [VIDEX Portal](https://videx.diplo.de/). | 
| Declaration of accuracy | A signed declaration confirming that all information provided is true and complete (in accordance with Section 54 of the German Residence Act). | 
| Biometric passport photos | Three identical, recent biometric photographs (35mm x 45mm) meeting exact ICAO standards (bright, neutral grey background, 70-80% face coverage). | 
| Up-to-date Curriculum Vitae (CV) | A chronological, tabular CV detailing your education, work experience, and language skills without any unexplained gaps. |  
| Letter of Motivation (Statement of Purpose) | A self-written, personally signed letter detailing exactly why you chose your specific major, why you want to study in Germany rather than your home country, and how this degree will benefit your future career goals. Avoid generic templates; visa officers look for personalized, authentic stories. | 
| University admission letter | An official letter of acceptance from a recognized German university, foundation course (*Studienkolleg*), or propaedeutic course. The letter must state the course name, expected start date, and language of instruction. If your admission is conditional on passing a language barrier, you must present the conditional admission letter alongside proof of enrollment and payment for an intensive language course (minimum 18 hours of instruction per week). | 
| Academic documents | Originals and certified copies of your high school diploma (*Abitur equivalent*), university degrees, transcripts, and mark sheets. | 
| APS certificate, if required | Mandatory for applicants from specific countries (e.g., India, China, Vietnam). The Academic Evaluation Centre (APS) verifies the authenticity of your educational documents before you can apply for a visa. | 
| Language proof for either German or English | For English-taught programs: A valid certificate with a minimum B2 level (CEFR). Accepted tests include TOEFL (iBT), IELTS (Academic), or Cambridge Assessment English.For German-taught programs: A valid certificate demonstrating at least B2 or C1 proficiency. Accepted tests include Goethe-Institut (Max Mueller Bhavan) certificates, TestDaF, DSH, or ÖSD. | 
| Proof of funds | The standard financial threshold is €992 per month, totaling €11,904 per year. You can offer this in the form of a blocked account, a formal obligation letter or a declaration of commitment, or a full scholarship. | 
| Travel health insurance | You must present a travel health insurance policy covering at least the first 90 days of your stay in Germany (with a minimum coverage of €30,000 across the entire Schengen area). Once you enroll at the university, you will transition to a statutory (*Gesetzliche Krankenkasse* like TK, AOK, or BARMER) or private German student health insurance provider. | 
| Proof of paid visa fee | The standard processing fee for a German National Student Visa is **€75**. This fee is non-refundable and usually payable in local currency or via credit card at your appointment. | 


{{< infobox title="Our insider tip" >}}
After reading this guide, open the website of the German embassy or consulate responsible for your country. Download the latest **student visa checklist** PDF and compare it line by line with your documents. Do not use a checklist from another country unless it is only for general understanding. 
{{< /infobox >}}

## Free Webinar: Germany Student visa requirements explained

Applying for a German student visa can feel stressful when every checklist looks slightly different. Join our session to get a step-by-step guidance and ask your questions live. 

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Save your spot
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## What type of admission letter do you need?

For a normal Germany student visa, you usually need admission from a recognised German university, university of applied sciences, Studienkolleg, or preparatory programme.

The problem is that students often confuse “application proof” with “admission” - the first being just a confirmation that you have submitted an application and not sufficient for the standard student visa. 

These documents are not the same:

| Document | What it actually means |
| ----------- | ----------- |
| Final admission letter | You are accepted into the programme; enough to use for the visa process | 
| Conditional admission | You are accepted if you complete certain additional conditions; enough to use for the visa process | 
| Studienkolleg admission | You are accepted into preparatory study; enough to use for the visa process | 
| Entrance exam invitation | You may need a student applicant route | 
| uni-assist VPD | Evaluation document, not always final admission | 
| Application confirmation | Usually not enough for a student visa | 

{{< infobox title="Our insider tip" >}}
Read your admission letter carefully. Check if it is final or conditional. If it says your admission depends on APS, language proof, tuition payment, final degree certificate, or Studienkolleg, prepare that explanation clearly for the visa file. 
{{< /infobox >}}

## How much money do you need for the Germany student visa?

For the German student visa, the current financial proof amount is **€992 per month for one year**. 

This proof is called **Finanzierungsnachweis** in German. Its purpose is to ensure that international students, job seekers, or visitors do not become a financial burden on the state soon after arrival and can afford their basic living expenses for the duration of their stay.

There are several accepted ways to prove your funds. The exact acceptance depends on your German mission, but these are common official options:

| Proof method | How it works |
| ----------- | ----------- |
| Blocked account | You deposit the required amount and receive monthly payouts in Germany. This is the most common and safest way. | 
| Declaration of commitment | A person in Germany officially promises to support you | 
| Recognised scholarship | A scholarship from a recognised German organisation covers your costs | 

{{< infobox title="Our insider tip" >}}
Choose your financial proof early. If you decide to use a blocked account, open it and transfer the money before your appointment. If you won a scholarship, make sure the scholarship letter clearly states the amount, duration, and funding body. 
{{< /infobox >}}

## What is a blocked account for the Germany student visa?

A blocked account, or **Sperrkonto**, is a special account used to prove that you have enough money for living costs in Germany.

The money is blocked because you cannot withdraw it until you arrive in Germany and it is also not paid to you at once, but in monthly installments. A blocked account is not the only possible proof of funds, but it is one of the most common options for international students, as it is always accepted by German authorities. 

| Item | Amount |
| ----------- | ----------- |
| Monthly requirement | {{< var "blockedAccount.monthlyBlockedAmount" >}} | 
| One-year proof | {{< var "blockedAccount.totalBlockedAmount" >}}  | 
| Purpose | Living cost proof | 
| Payout style | Monthly payouts in Germany | 

{{< infobox title="Our insider tip" >}}
After opening and funding the blocked account, download the official confirmation document called blocking confirmation. This is usually the document you need for the visa appointment. Do not wait until the last week before your appointment to transfer the money. International transfers, verification, and confirmation documents can between a few days to a few weeks. 
{{< /infobox >}}

## Do you need an APS certificate for the German student visa?

Students with academic qualifications from **India, China, and Vietnam** often need an APS certificate. APS stands for **Akademische Prüfstelle**, or Academic Evaluation Centre. It verifies whether your academic documents are genuine and whether your education background is suitable for study in Germany. After successful verification, applicants receive a certificate confirming that the documents are genuine and that their academic achievements are sufficient for studying at a German university.

The process usually includes:

| Step | What happens |
| ----------- | ----------- |
| Online registration | You create an APS application | 
| Document submission | You submit school and university records | 
| Fee payment | You pay the APS fee | 
| Verification | APS checks documents with institutions or databases | 
| Possible interview / call | Some applicants may be contacted | 
| Certificate issue | You receive the APS certificate if successful | 


{{< infobox title="Our insider tip" >}}
For Indian students in particular, APS is one of the most common delay points. Apply for APS early, especially if you are applying for the winter intake. Make sure your name, date of birth, university records, DigiLocker details, passport and certificates are consistent. 
{{< /infobox >}}

## What language proof do you need?

You may need proof of language proficiency in the language of instruction of your programme.

For German-taught courses, this may mean TestDaF, DSH, Goethe, telc, or another accepted German certificate. For English-taught courses, it may mean IELTS, TOEFL, Cambridge, or proof accepted by your university.

The confusing part is this: sometimes the university admission letter already confirms that the language requirement was checked. In other cases, the embassy may still ask for the language certificate separately.

Typical examples:

| Course type | Common language proof |
| ----------- | ----------- |
| German-taught Bachelor or Master | German certificate | 
| English-taught Master | IELTS, TOEFL or accepted proof | 
| Studienkolleg | German proof usually required | 
| Language course before study | Special visa and insurance planning may be needed | 
| Admission confirms language | May help, but confirm with your mission checklist | 


{{< infobox title="Our insider tip" >}}
Check your admission letter carefully. If it does not clearly mention the course language and accepted language proof, ask the university for a written confirmation before your visa appointment. Do not assume that an acceptance in an “English-taught programme” automatically removes every language proof requirement. 
{{< /infobox >}}

## What health insurance do you need for the German student visa?

You need health insurance for your visa and your stay in Germany. There are usually two practical stages to consider:

| Insurance type | When it matters |
| ----------- | ----------- |
| Incoming / travel health insurance | Covers the period from entry until your student insurance starts | 
| Statutory student health insurance | Usually starts with enrolment or semester start | 

Germany’s official health portal explains that all students who register at a state or state-recognised university must have health insurance. Students are generally required to have statutory health insurance, with options for a private one depending on age, income and previous insurance. 

Universities also require digital confirmation of health insurance status before enrolment. 

Practical timing example:

| Situation | What you may need |
| ----------- | ----------- |
| You enter Germany before semester starts | Incoming insurance for the gap period | 
| Your semester starts in October | Statutory student insurance may start around semester start |
| You are under 30 | Statutory student insurance is usually common |
| You are over 30 | Voluntary statutory or private insurance may apply |
| You do a language course first | You may need private insurance before switching to statutory insurance for your degree studies |


{{< infobox title="Our insider tip" >}}
Ask your insurance provider for two things: visa-suitable incoming insurance for the arrival gap and confirmation of student health insurance for university enrolment. Do not buy random travel insurance without checking whether it matches your visa checklist.
{{< /infobox >}}

## What academic documents are required?

Typical academic documents include:

| Document | Why it matters |
| ----------- | ----------- |
| School leaving certificate | Needed for Bachelor or Studienkolleg route | 
| Bachelor degree certificate | Needed for Master’s route | 
| Transcript of records | Shows grades and subjects | 
| Grading scale | Helps explain your marks | 
| APS certificate, if required | Verifies documents | 
| Admission letter | Proves study purpose | 
| Translations | Needed if documents are not in accepted languages | 

{{< infobox title="Our insider tip" >}}
Create one folder for originals, one folder for copies, and one digital folder. Name your files clearly, for example: “Passport”, “Admission Letter”, “Blocked Account Confirmation”, “Health Insurance”, “APS Certificate”. This makes your appointment less stressful and you can easily sort and use your documents for other purposes in the future.
{{< /infobox >}}

## How do you apply for the German student visa?

You normally apply through the German embassy, consulate, visa centre, or digital consular portal responsible for your country or region. The process usually looks like this:

| Step | What to do |
| ----------- | ----------- |
| 1 | Confirm the correct visa type | 
| 2 | Download the student visa checklist from your German mission | 
| 3 | Prepare admission, funds, insurance and academic documents | 
| 4 | Complete the national visa form | 
| 5 | Book appointment or submit through the required portal | 
| 6 | Attend appointment and give biometrics | 
| 7 | Wait for mission and foreigners authority processing | 
| 8 | Receive visa and prepare travel | 
| 9 | Register address in Germany upon arrival | 
| 10 | Apply for residence permit if required | 

{{< infobox title="Our insider tip" >}}
DAAD warns that visa processing can take from a few weeks to few months, so students should apply early. Do not wait for every document to be perfect before checking appointment availability. In many countries, appointments can be limited should should be booked months in advance. Start preparing as soon as you receive your first admission letter. 
{{< /infobox >}}

## Common mistakes that delay German student visa applications

Most visa delays happen because students prepare documents too late or submit unclear proof.

Here are the most common mistakes and how to avoid them:

| Mistake | How to avoid it |
| ----------- | ----------- |
| Applying for APS too late | Start APS early if you studied in India, China or Vietnam | 
| Using the wrong admission document | Check if your letter is final, conditional, or only an application confirmation |
| Funding the blocked account too late | Open and fund it before your visa appointment |
| Buying only basic travel insurance | Prepare incoming insurance plus student health insurance confirmation if needed |
| Assuming language proof is not needed | Check whether your admission letter clearly confirms language proof |
| Ignoring country-specific checklist items | Download the latest checklist from your own German mission |
| Mismatch of your names across documents | Fix or explain differences (e.g. name change after marriage) before submission |
| Missing translations or copies | Prepare originals, copies and translations as requested |
| Not proving tuition fees separately | Check if tuition fees must be shown in addition to living costs |
| Waiting too long to book a visa appointment | Track appointment availability early |

The best way to avoid delays is to prepare well and early. Your visa file should clearly show: you are admitted, funded, insured, academically eligible, and ready to study.

## Germany student visa requirements checklist

Use this checklist before your appointment.

| Requirement | Ready? |
| ----------- | ----------- |
| Valid passport | Yes / No |
| National visa application form | Yes / No | 
| Biometric photos | Yes / No | 
| University admission letter | Yes / No | 
| Conditional admission explanation, if applicable | Yes / No | 
| APS certificate, if applicable | Yes / No | 
| Proof of funds | Yes / No | 
| Blocked account confirmation or accepted alternative | Yes / No | 
| Health insurance proof | Yes / No | 
| Language proof or university confirmation | Yes / No | 
| Academic transcripts and certificates | Yes / No | 
| CV | Yes / No | 
| Motivation letter, if required | Yes / No |  
| Visa fee | Yes / No | 
| Copies and translations | Yes / No |   
| Country-specific checklist completed | Yes / No |   

Before submission, ask yourself:

“If I were the visa officer, would this file clearly prove that I am admitted, funded, insured and prepared?” If the answer is not clear, fix the file before the appointment.

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## Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
{{< faq >}}
    {{< faq_item question="What are the requirements for a German student visa?" >}}
You usually need a passport, visa application form, admission letter, proof of funds, health insurance, academic documents, language proof, photos, visa fee and country-specific documents.
    {{< /faq_item >}}
    {{< faq_item question="How much money do I need for a Germany student visa?" >}}
The current amount is €992 per month or €11,904 for one year. Always confirm the amount on your German mission’s latest checklist before applying.
    {{< /faq_item >}}
    {{< faq_item question="Is a blocked account mandatory for the German student visa?" >}}
A blocked account is not the only possible proof of funds, but it is one of the most common options. Other methods may include parental income, declaration of commitment, scholarship or bank guarantee.
    {{< /faq_item >}}
    {{< faq_item question="Do Indian students need APS for Germany?" >}}
Many Indian students need APS if they are applying to study in Germany with Indian academic qualifications. APS also applies to China and Vietnam.
    {{< /faq_item >}}
    {{< faq_item question="Do I need IELTS for a German student visa?" >}}
You may need IELTS, TOEFL or another proof if your course is English-taught and your admission letter does not clearly confirm that language proof was checked.
    {{< /faq_item >}}
    {{< faq_item question="What health insurance do I need for the German student visa?" >}}
You may need incoming insurance for the period after arrival and student health insurance for enrolment. The exact proof depends on your timeline and embassy checklist.
    {{< /faq_item >}}
    {{< faq_item question="Can I convert a tourist visa into a student visa in Germany?" >}}
No. DAAD warns that a tourist visa cannot be converted into a student visa later.
    {{< /faq_item >}}
{{< /faq >}}

