Moving from United States to Germany
A complete relocation guide for United States citizens looking to move to Germany — visa pathways, taxes, salary purchasing power, rent, healthcare, safety, and the local nomad community.
Visa pathways
- EU Blue Card (Skilled) — PR after 21 months with B1 German. · min income $4900/mo · path to PR
- Freiberufler (Freelance) Visa (Talent) — Berlin-friendly; needs German clients/letters of intent. · path to PR
- Opportunity Card (Skilled) — Points-based job seeker visa launched 2024.
Tax implications
Germany taxes residents on worldwide income with a top marginal personal income tax rate of 45%.
Brackets are quoted in EUR. Social-security / payroll contribution: 20%.
See full tax comparison →Salary purchasing power
A salary earned in United States stretches roughly 1.3× further in Germany on a like-for-like basket.
Cost-of-living index: United States 100 → Germany 76.
Compare full purchasing power →Savings forecast
Holding the same lifestyle as in United States, you'd save approximately 24% of your monthly spend by relocating to Germany. On a $4,000/mo budget that's about $960/mo, or $11,520/year.
Rent comparison
Healthcare
Private consult: ~$0-30 USD (with GKV coverage)
Excellent — all residents must have health insurance (statutory or private). Statutory (GKV) covers most treatments comprehensively.
Safety
NoodlePants safety score: Germany 82/100 vs United States 68/100.
Nomad community
Active NoodlePants members are checked in across Germany. Browse cities, neighbourhoods, and meetups on the Germany country page.
Explore Germany →Discord groups
Join the NoodlePants Discord — region-specific channels for Germany and other top destinations.