The EU Blue Card is Germany's premier route for highly skilled non-EU professionals. Applicants need a recognized university degree, a concrete job offer, and a minimum annual salary of €45,300 (2026 threshold). For shortage occupations — including IT specialists, engineers, and doctors — the threshold is lower at approximately €41,000. Hong Kong finance and tech professionals frequently qualify, especially those targeting Frankfurt's financial district or Berlin's tech scene.
Apply at the German embassy in Hong Kong before arrival, or from within Germany if already on another valid status
Blue Card issued for job duration + 3 months, up to 4 years
Fast-track to settlement: 21 months with B1 German, 33 months without
Family members get immediate work rights with no separate permit
Job Seeker Visa
The Job Seeker Visa allows qualified professionals to enter Germany for up to 6 months to find employment. Applicants must hold a recognized degree, demonstrate financial self-sufficiency (approx. €1,027/month), and have sufficient German or English language skills. This is particularly useful for HK professionals who want to explore the market before committing.
Cannot work during the job seeker stay — for interviews and networking only
Once a job offer is secured, switch to a work permit or Blue Card in-country
Apply at the German Consulate in Hong Kong; processing 4–8 weeks
Chancenkarte (Opportunity Card)
Germany introduced the Chancenkarte in 2024, a points-based visa allowing professionals to move to Germany and seek work for up to 1 year. Points are awarded for qualifications, work experience, language skills, age, and prior Germany connections. HK professionals with English-medium degrees and relevant experience can score qualifying points without a job offer in hand.
Part-time trial work (max 20 hrs/week) permitted during the Chancenkarte period
Minimum 6 points required across the criteria
Converts to standard work permit upon finding employment
Studying in Germany from Hong Kong
Quick Facts
Public University Tuition
€150–350/semester (admin fee)
Language Requirement
German B2 or English programs
Blocked Account Requirement
€11,208/yr (2026)
Difficulty
Moderate
Public University Fees — Nearly Free
Germany's public universities charge no tuition fees for international students — only a semester administration fee of €150–350. This is one of the most cost-effective destinations globally for HK students. However, English-taught programs at the master's level are more common than at the bachelor's level, where most programs require German B2 proficiency. Living costs in major cities run €900–1,200/month.
RWTH Aachen, TU Munich, and KIT offer world-class engineering in German
English-taught master's programs at TU Berlin, LMU Munich, and Heidelberg University
DAAD scholarships available for HK students — covering living stipends of €861/month
Student Visa Requirements
HK residents need a German student visa (National Visa Type D) to study for longer than 90 days. Requirements include a university admission letter, proof of blocked account (€11,208 for 2026), health insurance, and language proficiency evidence. Apply at the German Consulate in Hong Kong — allow 8–12 weeks.
Blocked account at Deutsche Bank or Fintiba — funds released monthly at €934/month
Study permit allows 120 days/yr of full employment and 240 days of half-day work
Post-study job seeker visa: 18 months to find relevant employment after graduation
Private Universities and English Programs
Private universities such as ESMT Berlin, Frankfurt School of Finance, and Mannheim Business School charge €15,000–40,000/yr but offer MBA and master's programs entirely in English. These attract HK finance professionals seeking European credentials while avoiding the German-language barrier.
Frankfurt School MiF (Master in Finance): strong pipeline into European banking
Many HK alumni networks active in Frankfurt's financial sector
Application typically requires GMAT 600+, 2–3 years work experience for MBA
Immigrating to Germany from Hong Kong
Quick Facts
Settlement (Blue Card fast-track)
21 months (B1 German)
Standard Settlement
5 years residence
Citizenship Requirement
5 yrs residence + B1 German
Difficulty
Hard (language)
Settlement Permit (Niederlassungserlaubnis)
Germany's permanent settlement permit can be obtained after 5 years of legal residence with continuous employment, adequate language skills (B1 German), and sufficient pension contributions. EU Blue Card holders can fast-track to settlement in just 21 months with B1 German, or 33 months without. The settlement permit is indefinite and allows work for any employer.
Pension contributions must be verified for the entire residence period
Secure housing of adequate size required
No criminal convictions; integration course completion may be required
German Citizenship
Germany reformed its citizenship law in 2024, reducing the residency requirement from 8 to 5 years for most applicants, and allowing dual citizenship. This is a significant change for HK residents — previously, obtaining German citizenship required giving up HKSAR status. Now HK residents can become German (and thus EU) citizens while retaining their Hong Kong travel document.
B1 German language certificate required (e.g., Goethe-Institut exam)
Financial self-sufficiency — no reliance on social welfare
Dual citizenship now permitted — no renunciation of HKSAR passport needed
Fast-track citizenship available in 3 years for special integration achievements
Family Reunification
Spouses and children of Blue Card or settlement permit holders can join in Germany under family reunification rules. Spouses of Blue Card holders need to demonstrate basic German skills (A1) before arrival, though exceptions apply for shortage-occupation holders. Children under 16 join without language requirements.
Family members receive work permits immediately upon arrival
Spouse's A1 German exemption applies to STEM and medical Blue Card holders
Children admitted to German public schools at no cost
Traveling to Germany from Hong Kong
Quick Facts
HKSAR Entry
Schengen visa required (€80)
BN(O) Entry
Visa-free 90 days
Flight Time (HKG–FRA)
~12.5 hours direct
Difficulty
Easy (BN(O))Moderate (HKSAR)
CRITICAL — HKSAR vs BN(O) Passport for Schengen Travel: HKSAR (Hong Kong SAR) passport holders are NOT visa-free for Schengen countries including Germany. They must apply for a Schengen visa (Category C short-stay) at the German Consulate in Hong Kong, costing €80, with processing of 15–30 days. BN(O) (British National Overseas) passport holders, travelling on their UK travel document, ARE visa-free for the Schengen Area for up to 90 days in any 180-day period. If you hold both passports, travel on your BN(O) to avoid the visa requirement.
Schengen Visa for HKSAR Holders
HKSAR passport holders must apply for a Schengen short-stay visa (Type C) at the German Consulate General in Hong Kong before travel. The visa costs €80, requires biometrics, a hotel booking, return flight evidence, travel insurance (min €30,000 coverage), and bank statements. For tourism, a single-entry or multiple-entry visa valid 90 days per 180 days is issued.
Apply at: German Consulate General, 21/F United Centre, Admiralty, Hong Kong
Processing: 15 calendar days standard; up to 30 days in complex cases
A German Schengen visa is valid for all 29 Schengen countries
Direct Flights and Connectivity
Cathay Pacific and Lufthansa operate direct flights from Hong Kong International Airport (HKG) to Frankfurt (FRA) and Munich (MUC). Frankfurt is Germany's main hub and offers onward connections to Berlin, Hamburg, and other cities. Direct flight time is approximately 12–13 hours.
HKG–FRA: ~12.5 hours (Cathay Pacific, Lufthansa)
HKG–MUC: ~12 hours (Lufthansa)
€1 ≈ HKD 8.5 (June 2026)
Practical Travel Information
Germany uses the Euro. Public transport in major cities (Berlin, Munich, Frankfurt) is excellent. Cantonese-speaking communities are smaller than in English-speaking countries, but Frankfurt and Berlin have growing Chinese-background populations. Germany's healthcare is world-class; short-term visitors should carry travel insurance.
Tap water drinkable everywhere; no food safety concerns for HK visitors
English widely spoken in hotels, airports, and tourist areas; less so in rural areas
Public transport: DB (rail), U-Bahn/S-Bahn (urban metro) — reliable and punctual
About this guide — Data researched against official government sources. Last reviewed June 2026. LeaveThisCountry provides general information only — not legal or immigration advice. See our disclaimer.