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How to apply for German immigration?

# German Immigration # Introduction More and more people choose to immigrate to Germany, so what advantages does Germany have to choose? How can I immigrate to Germany? Let's take a look!

1. How to apply for German immigration?

Coupled with Germany's current social welfare, Germany has undoubtedly become a country that many people yearn for. Unfortunately, Germany is not a completely open immigrant country, and the requirements for immigrants are also very strict, and there are few projects. Then, let's look at friends who want to immigrate!

1. Investment immigration: set up a company and apply for a legal person visa.

Their evaluation criteria are whether the applicant has many years of business experience in China, whether he has a company, and whether the company has done business with Germany or the European Union.

If you don't look at the above problems, the success rate of corporate visas is relatively low.

If you have obtained a legal person visa for three years after approval, you can get a German green card.

2. Work visa

It smells like skilled immigrants and employer guarantees.

Find a German employer

Prepare work contract, job description, job evaluation, resume, work certificate and other documents.

Audit of labor bureau

The German consulate submits the visa application and signs it.

Get a visa

3. German blue card

Also known as the EU Blue Card, it is a customized immigration channel for high-tech and professional talents, which requires higher technical level, ability level and salary level.

Germany revised and introduced the German EU Blue Card Immigration Act, aiming at attracting high-end talents to work in Germany on a global scale. 19a of the Law on Residence of Foreigners, which came into effect in August/February, clearly stipulates that those who hold blue cards and live in Germany will obtain permanent residence in Germany within 2 1 month at the earliest.

Application conditions

1) Bachelor degree or above.

2) Applicant 18 years old and under 60 years old.

3) No criminal record

4) There is no language requirement

Remarks: The blue card is applied for and obtained by the main applicant. Accompanying spouses and children under the age of 18 can follow the main applicant and submit an application to obtain a residence card for family reunion, with the same benefits as the blue card.

2. What are the conditions for the German blue card to become a permanent residence?

1. The main applicant turned to permanent residence.

▼ German level B 1, hold a valid blue card 2 1 month, and pay a pension 2 1 month;

▼ If there is no moral score, hold a valid blue card for 33 months and pay a pension for 33 months;

▼ Apply for permanent residence to maintain employment relationship;

▼ During his stay in Germany, he did not endanger the safety of the public;

▼ He/she and his/her family members have enough living space (the specific requirements are that the per capita is not less than 65,438+05 square meters, children aged 65,438+04 and above must have separate rooms, and couples can rent houses).

2. Spouses and children become permanent residents

▼ German B 1 level (children who have studied in Germany for 4 years can replace German B 1 level).

▼ Hold a reunion residence card for 5 years.

Re-naturalization

Apply for permanent residence

1) Principal applicant

● If the German score is B 1, he will be employed for 2 1 month and pay the pension for 2 1 month; No German grades, 33 months of employment, 33 months of pension;

● Maintain the employment relationship during the application for permanent residence;

● During his stay in Germany, he did not endanger public safety;

● I and my family members have enough living space (the specific requirements are that the per capita is not less than 65,438+05 square meters, children aged 65,438+04 and above must have separate rooms, and couples can rent separate rooms).

2) Spouses and children

German B 1 level (children who have been in Germany for 4 years can replace German B 1 level).

3. What are the advantages of living in Germany?

Germany has a very extensive social welfare system, including medical care, unemployment, pension and other forms of social welfare. All foreigners working in Germany must participate in national or private health insurance plans, but those who sign temporary contracts with non-German companies can choose to keep their national insurance plans. Wages are paid directly by the social insurance system and shared equally by employers and employees. Fees paid include contributions to public pension plans, unemployment insurance plans and health and care insurance plans, unless employees choose private health insurance. Generally speaking, the contribution is about 20% of the total monthly salary.

The monetary unit in Germany is the euro, which consists of 100 minutes. In February 2005, 1 Euro was equivalent to 0.66 and 1. 18 USD.

It is reported that the cost of living in Germany is high, but there are differences between different regions and urban and rural areas. Although the cost of living here is rapidly catching up with the western region, the cost of living in East Germany is still very cheap.

It is estimated that an ordinary person needs at least 1000 euros a month to live a well-off life, including housing expenses, bills, food and entertainment. A bottle of water is usually 1 USD, a small beer is 1 USD, and three-course wine ranges from1USD to $40 per person.

House prices are very high, especially in cities. Compared with their British or American counterparts, the proportion of Germans owning houses is relatively small.