# Jobs in Germany without a German language requirement
The hard part is not finding a few English-speaking job ads. The hard part is knowing which jobs are realistic for you, which are only short-term options, and whether you should come through the study route or a job-search route like Chancenkarte. This article shows you where those jobs exist, what they usually pay, and how to choose the right route if you want to work in Germany without speaking German. 

## Is working in Germany for you?

The confusion usually starts when every influencer video or reddit post online states that “Germany needs workers,” but your real question is whether Germany needs **your** profile. 

You’re in the right place if…

- **You are an international student in Germany** and want a part-time or a full-time job in English.
- **You are a fresh graduate** abroad and want to know, which English-speaking jobs are realistic after graduation. 
- **You are applying from abroad** and want to know whether Germany is worth targeting without German. 
- **You want to build a career-track**, not just get any job, and need a realistic plan. 
- **You are deciding between Chancenkarte and the study route** and want to choose based on job reality, not hype. 

## Why Germany hires English speakers

Germany hires English speakers because parts of its labour market are global by design. International companies, startups, research teams, shared-service centers, tech giants, and some customer support teams often work in English first, especially in bigger cities and export-driven sectors.

At the same time, Germany still reports shortages in many skilled occupations, and its official labour-market institutions actively promote hiring from abroad. That does not mean every employer is open to English-only candidates, but it does explain why English-speaking roles exist and why they keep attracting international applicants. 

There is one more reason this matters for students. Germany retains a large share of international graduates after study, and official higher-education sources say many want to stay and work after graduation, especially in fields like engineering, economics, and computer science.

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[Average salary in Germany](/articles/work/average-salary-in-germany)
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## Top industries and job roles that don't require German

There are two market routes to choose from: **career-track English-speaking jobs** and **entry-level survival jobs**. Salary ranges below are directional and should be treated as market estimates, not guarantees. They can change a lot by city, company, and your previous experience. 

| Industry | Common Roles | Avg Salary | German Required? |
| ----------- | ----------- | ----------- | ----------- |
| IT / software | Software engineer, QA, DevOps, support engineer | €55k–€79k/year | Often **No** at entry in international firms |
| Data / analytics | Data analyst, BI analyst, junior data engineer | €50k–€69k/year | Often **No**, but German helps |
| Customer support / customer success | English support agent, multilingual support, customer success | €34k–€43k/year | Sometimes **No**, especially with extra languages |
| Digital marketing / content | Performance marketing, content ops, CRM, social media | €42k–€59k/year | Mixed; often **some German preferred** |
| Research / academia | Research assistant, PhD support, lab assistant | Varies widely | **German preferred** |
| Logistics / warehouse | Warehouse worker, picker, packer, sorter | €29k–€34k/month | Often **at least basic German needed** |
| Delivery / operations | Courier, rider, basic operations support | Varies by city and hours | Often **basic to mid level German needed** |
| Hospitality in tourist areas | Hotel back-office, housekeeping, kitchen support, waitstaff | Varies widely + potential for tips | Often **basic to mid  level German needed** |

The pattern from public forums is blunt but useful: English-speaking jobs are often either highly skilled or more operational and non customer facing. The middle of the market exists too, but it is smaller and more competitive. 

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[IT jobs in Germany](/articles/work/it-jobs-in-germany)
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## How to find these jobs? A step-by-step guide

Random applications usually waste your time. A simple, focused search plan works much better.  

1. **Week 1: Choose your target sector**
Pick one lane first: career-building jobs, student jobs, or short-term survival jobs. If you mix all three at once, your CV and search filters become weak.  
2. **Week 1: Update your profile**
Use a CV in English, but in the German format. Be sure it is simple and targeted. If you are a student, add projects, tools you are comfortable with, and part-time availability. If you are experienced, make your achievements measurable.  
3. **Weeks 2-4: Start your search**
Head over to digital platforms like Linkedin, StepStone or Indeed and use filters like “English,” “international,” “relocation,” “customer support,” “working student,” in combination with city names such as Berlin, Munich, Hamburg, or Frankfurt. Public job boards clearly show that English-speaking roles cluster more in large cities and international employers.  
4. **Weeks 2-4: Apply in batches, not randomly**
Send 10-20 strong applications per week instead of 100 weak ones. Track response rates so you know whether the problem is your profile, your role choice, or your target city.  
5. **Months 2-3: Decide your visa/residence permit route**
If you already have a strong profile and want direct market access, Chancenkarte may be a good fit. If you still need time, local experience, and a stronger network, the study route may be the smarter long-term move.  
6. **Months 2–3: Improve your German, even if the job is in English**
English may help you enter the market. German usually helps you stay, move up, and open more options later.  

## Top job platforms to use

The platform matters because different websites show different parts of the market. You should not depend on one job board only. 

- [Make it in Germany](https://www.make-it-in-germany.com/en/working-in-germany/job-listings) - Good for official job listings connected to the Federal Employment Agency.  
- [LinkedIn](https://www.linkedin.com/jobs/) - Best for international companies, startups, and white-collar roles. 
- [English Jobs Germany](http://EnglishJobs.de) -  Focused on English-speaking roles in Germany.  
- [Arbeitnow](https://www.arbeitnow.com/english-speaking-jobs) - Useful for startup, tech, and international-company jobs.  
- [Indeed Germany](https://de.indeed.com/?hl=en) -  Broad market coverage, including operational roles.  
- [StepStone](https://www.stepstone.de/jobs/english-speaking) - One of the biggest job boards in Germany for IT, engineering, business, and more.
- [Glassdoor](https://www.glassdoor.de/Job/germany-english-speaking-jobs-SRCH_IL.0,7_IN96_KO8,24.htm?countryRedirect=true) - in addition to job offers, you can research companies, salaries, and employee reviews 
- [Monster](https://www.monster.com/) - One of the oldest job portals in Germany
- [XING](https://www.xing.com/jobs/english-speaking?keywords=English%20Speaking) - Germany’s answer to LinkedIn. Less options in English, but still worth a check. 

## Mistakes to avoid

Many people do not fail because Germany has no job openings in English. They fail because they search in the wrong part of the market.  

- **Mistake 1:** Applying only to “easy English jobs” and ignoring your real strengths.
- **Mistake 2:** Ignoring German completely, even when you plan to stay long term.
- **Mistake 3:** Believing every city offers the same number of English-speaking jobs.
- **Mistake 4:** Using one generic CV for both warehouse jobs and career-track jobs.
- **Mistake 5:** Choosing a visa route to Germany before checking what kind of jobs are realistic for your profile.  

## Best practice tips

A small change in your strategy can save you months. The point is not to apply for more positions. The point is to apply smarter.

| Do this | Not that |
| ----------- | ----------- |
| Target one clear job family first | Apply for every English job you see | 
| Use English plus one more value point, like SQL, sales experience, customer care, or logistics flexibility | Depend on English skills alone | 
| Keep learning German while you apply | Wait until after you get a job to start learning German | 
| Treat warehouse or delivery work as a bridge if needed | Confuse it with your long-term career plan | 
| Choose your Germany route based on job reality | Choose a specific visa type only because other people are doing it | 

## What route should you choose for Germany: Chancenkarte or Study?

Join our next live session if you want a clearer answer before you spend time and money on the wrong path. The session is built for people who want English-speaking jobs but also want a realistic long-term plan. 

**What you’ll learn**

- How to judge whether your profile fits the English-speaking job market in Germany
- When Chancenkarte makes sense and when the study route is smarter
- What to do in your first 90 days if you want interviews faster

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Reserve your free spot
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## Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
The right question can save you weeks of confusion. These are the questions people actually search before deciding their next step.
{{< faq >}}
    {{< faq_item question="Can I get a job in Germany without speaking German?" >}}
Yes, but only if your profile fits the English-speaking part of the market. These roles are more common in IT, international companies, research teams, and some customer support or operational jobs. The stronger your profile, the easier it becomes to access these opportunities. 
    {{< /faq_item >}}
    {{< faq_item question="Which jobs in Germany do not require German?" >}}
The most common options include software and data roles, multilingual customer support, startup jobs, research roles, warehouse work, delivery jobs, and some hospitality support roles. Higher-skilled roles usually offer better long-term growth. 
    {{< /faq_item >}}
    {{< faq_item question="Can international students find part-time jobs in Germany without German?" >}}
Yes, but the options are more limited than many expect. Students often find roles in logistics, delivery, campus support, tech projects, or basic hospitality work. These jobs can help you start, but they are usually not long-term career roles.
    {{< /faq_item >}}
    {{< faq_item question="Do I need German for IT jobs in Germany?" >}}
Not always. English is enough in some international companies and tech teams, especially in bigger cities. However, knowing German still increases your chances and gives you access to more job opportunities. 
    {{< /faq_item >}}
    {{< faq_item question="Are warehouse or delivery jobs possible without German?" >}}
Yes, especially in large cities and logistics-heavy areas. These roles are often easier to enter without German, but they are usually better as a short-term income option rather than a long-term career path.
    {{< /faq_item >}}
    {{< faq_item question="Can I get a work visa for Germany without knowing German?" >}}
Sometimes yes. Some visa routes do not require German by law, especially for skilled workers in certain fields. However, other visa types may require either German or English depending on the category.
    {{< /faq_item >}}
    {{< faq_item question="Should I choose Chancenkarte or the study route for Germany?" >}}
Choose Chancenkarte if you already have a strong profile and want to enter the job market directly. Choose the study route if you need more time to build experience, improve your profile, and gain local exposure.
    {{< /faq_item >}}
    {{< faq_item question="How can I improve my chances of getting a job without German?" >}}
Focus on one job type, improve your CV, and build real proof of work through projects or experience. At the same time, keep improving your German, even if your first job is in English. 
    {{< /faq_item >}}
{{< /faq >}}

