You're learning German. Good. But do you actually know which level your goal requires? Sometimes less is enough than you think. We sort that out with you.
Plenty of people learn German without knowing where they're taking it. B1 for an Ausbildung? B2 for nursing? C1 for a degree? Or actually just A2, because the program is taught in English? That makes an enormous difference.
For most Ausbildung occupations, yes. For nursing and healthcare, usually not. For a German-taught degree: no. Which certificate counts where, and what your next step is: that's what we sort out.
For German-taught programs, yes. But here is the genuine surprise: for English-taught master's programs at German universities, A2 is sometimes enough. Almost nobody knows that.
The good news: every level is reachable. You just have to know which one your goal requires, and then take the fastest route there.
Not sure which level you need? We sort it out together in 15 minutes →
For the visa for recognition of foreign qualifications, A2 is generally enough. make-it-in-germany.com →
The standard for the vocational training visa. Goethe or telc B1 are both accepted. make-it-in-germany.com →
Healthcare occupations require B2 plus a technical language exam. This varies by federal state.
Some universities only require A2 German for English-taught programs. Almost nobody knows that.
For admission to a Studienkolleg. The target by the end of the Kolleg is C1.
TestDaF, DSH, or telc C1 Hochschule. The standard at almost every German university. daad.de →
Recognized certificates: Goethe-Institut and telc for an Ausbildung and for government offices. TestDaF, DSH, and telc C1 Hochschule for university. Exam locations worldwide →
Not sure which certificate you need or which course fits you? We sort that out in 15 free minutes.
You want to learn German by immersing yourself in Germany rather than studying from home? The language course visa makes that possible. There are two versions: the standard language course visa for private or professional purposes, and the study-preparatory language course visa for anyone who wants to start a degree afterward.
Important: The language course visa suits anyone who wants to learn German inside Germany. If you then want to study or start an Ausbildung, you have to apply for a new visa from your home country. Choosing the wrong visa can delay your entire plan. If in doubt, we work it out together. Book a free call →
Depending on your purpose of stay, German residence law prescribes different language requirements, ranging from “not legally required” to B2. This gives you a single view of what you're working toward.
Note: These figures come from what the Residence Act requires by law. The level your university demands for admission is a separate matter. In a recognition procedure, or when the responsible German mission abroad reviews your case, different language requirements may apply in individual cases. All information without warranty. As of 2026.
More info: Make it in Germany: Do I need German?
With B1 you can apply for most Ausbildung positions. With B2, almost all of them are open to you. We show you which occupation fits you.
Go to the Ausbildung pageFor German-taught programs you need C1 or TestDaF. For English-taught ones, sometimes just A2. We work out what applies to the program you want.
Go to the study pageYou have a professional qualification and want to work in Germany permanently? Depending on your occupation, you need B1 or B2. We work out which level applies to your occupation and what your next step is.
Go to the skilled worker pageYour German isn't where you want it yet? A volunteer service buys you time. You deepen the language in real daily life and then start your Ausbildung or your degree.
Go to volunteer service