WORK. EARN. EXPERIENCE.

Work first.
Then stay, with a plan.

Seasonal work in Germany is legal, well regulated, and well paid. But it isn't a long-term route. We tell you honestly what is possible and what comes after.

Confidential & Secure No subscription Based in Germany
Based on official sourcesBundesagentur für ArbeitMake it in GermanyBAMFAs of 2026
Does this sound like you?

You want to work in Germany. And you don't know how yet.

“I just want to earn some money first and see how it goes.”

Seasonal work makes that possible. You work legally in Germany, you earn at least minimum wage, and you get to know the country. But to be clear: it isn't a long-term route.

Question about getting started
“How much will I actually earn?”

The statutory minimum wage is € 13.90 per hour (as of 2026). On January 1, 2027 it rises to € 14.60. Seasonal work often pays above minimum wage, and the hours are long. That means good income, but capped at a maximum of 8 months.

Question about pay
“Can I stay in Germany after the seasonal work?”

Not automatically. The seasonal work visa doesn't permit you to take up employment afterward. If you want to stay for good, you need a different route: an Ausbildung, or coming as a skilled worker.

Question about staying
What actually applies

Seasonal work in Germany: Legal, regulated, time-limited

Seasonal work in Germany is well regulated. You work under a contract, you get at least minimum wage, and you're insured through your employer. At the same time, it isn't a route to permanent immigration.

  • Duration: A maximum of 8 months per calendar year arbeitsagentur.de →
  • Minimum wage: € 13.90 per hour (as of 2026)
  • Industries: Agriculture, hospitality, hotels, fruit and vegetable harvesting
  • Requirement: A job offer from a German employer before you travel
  • Visa: A national visa for seasonal work, issued by the German embassy
  • Accommodation: Often provided by your employer, with the cost deducted from your pay

Legitimate employers: You find official openings through the Federal Employment Agency's job board. Be careful with any offer that charges you a fee or refuses to issue a written contract. Go to the job board →

Seasonal work in German agriculture
Bilateral agreements with Germany

If you're coming from a non-EU country, you can only legally enter Germany for seasonal work if a bilateral agreement exists with your home country. arbeitsagentur.de →

  • EU citizens: No work permit required. Full freedom of movement for workers.
  • Georgia & Moldova: A placement agreement with the Federal Employment Agency. A work permit without a visa is possible, up to 90 days within any 180-day period.
  • All other non-EU countries: A visa from the German embassy in your home country is required, plus a confirmed job offer before you travel.

You need to know this: When your visa expires, you have to leave Germany. Anyone who stays anyway is putting their future visa status at risk. If you want to stay long term, treat seasonal work as a first step and plan the next one in good time.

The honest truth

Seasonal work is not an immigration route.
But it can be a first step.

A lot of people who come for seasonal work actually want more. They want to live and work in Germany permanently. That's possible. But not through the seasonal work itself, only through a different route afterward. If you study German during the season, you often reach A2 within 8 months. That's the foundation for everything that follows.

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Felicia, coach, teacher and entrepreneur
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Felicia, coach, teacher and entrepreneur

I live in Germany, I know the system from the inside, and I've worked abroad myself.

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What fits next

What's possible for you after seasonal work

Coming to Germany as a skilled worker

You have a professional qualification and want to work in Germany permanently? The Skilled Immigration Act makes that possible, provided you take the right route there.

Go to the skilled worker page

Ausbildung in Germany

No professional qualification yet? An Ausbildung is the most direct route to permanent residence. You learn a trade and have real prospects afterward.

Go to the Ausbildung page

Volunteer service in Germany

Your German isn't yet good enough for an Ausbildung or a skilled worker position? A volunteer service with a recognized organization buys you time. You deepen the language in real daily life and then start from a far stronger position.

Go to volunteer service

Learn German: Start now

No German yet, or not enough? On the German language page we explain which courses and certificates matter for an Ausbildung, skilled work, and volunteer service, and how to get there fastest.

Go to Learn German
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