Skipeadh gu prìomh shusbaint
Back to All Destinations
GermanyBerlinMunichEurope

The Complete Germany Expat Teacher Guide

Everything you need to know before accepting an international teaching position in Germany — from salary expectations and Blue Card visas to cost of living, life in Berlin, Munich and Frankfurt, and teaching in Europe's largest economy.

Spill.org Insights
Global Expat Intelligence
February 22, 2026
12 min survival guide

Why Germany Offers Stability and Quality

Germany hosts over 170 international schools — the largest international school market in continental Europe. Berlin, Munich, Frankfurt, Hamburg, and Düsseldorf each have thriving international education communities. The country's strong economy, excellent infrastructure, and central European location make it a compelling base.

Salaries are competitive by European standards, and Germany's social security system provides excellent healthcare, pension contributions, and job protection. For teachers wanting a solid, long-term European base with career stability, Germany delivers.

Key Insight: Germany's international schools often pay 20-30% more than equivalent Spanish or Portuguese positions, and the social safety net (healthcare, pension, unemployment insurance) is among the world's strongest.


Salary & Compensation Packages

RoleAnnual Gross (EUR)Annual Net (GBP equiv.)
NQT / Early Career€35,000 – €42,000£22,000 – £27,000
Established Teacher€42,000 – €55,000£27,000 – £35,000
Senior Teacher / TLR€50,000 – €65,000£32,000 – £42,000
Head of Department€58,000 – €75,000£37,000 – £48,000
SLT / Deputy Head€68,000 – €90,000£44,000 – £58,000
Principal€85,000 – €130,000+£55,000 – £84,000+

Germany has high income tax (14-45%) plus social security (~20% employee share), but the benefits are substantial: world-class public healthcare, generous pension, and unemployment protection.

Top Schools

  • Berlin British School — Premium British curriculum in the capital.
  • Munich International School (MIS) — IB school, exceptional campus.
  • Frankfurt International School (FIS) — One of Europe's largest international schools.
  • International School of Düsseldorf — Strong IB programme.
  • Leipzig International School — Growing institution in eastern Germany.

Cost of Living

Monthly Budget (Single Teacher)

CategoryMonthly (EUR)Monthly (GBP)
Rent (1-bed, Berlin)800 – 1,300£568 – £923
Rent (1-bed, Munich)1,100 – 1,700£781 – £1,207
Groceries (Aldi/Lidl/Rewe)250 – 400£177 – £284
Transport (monthly pass)49 – 60£35 – £43
Mobile & Internet30 – 50£21 – £35
Entertainment150 – 350£106 – £249
Total (Berlin)1,279 – 2,160£907 – £1,534

Monthly Budget (Couple)

CategoryMonthly (EUR)Monthly (GBP)
Rent (2-bed)1,000 – 1,800£710 – £1,278
Groceries400 – 650£284 – £461
Transport (2 passes)98 – 120£70 – £85
Entertainment250 – 550£177 – £390
Total1,748 – 3,120£1,241 – £2,214

Monthly Budget (Couple + 1 Child)

CategoryMonthly (EUR)Monthly (GBP)
Rent (3-bed)1,200 – 2,100£852 – £1,491
Groceries (family)500 – 800£355 – £568
Transport98 – 120£70 – £85
Childcare (Kita — subsidised)0 – 400£0 – £284
School fees (if not covered)0* – 1,2000* – £852
Activities100 – 300£71 – £213
Entertainment200 – 450£142 – £319
Total (fees covered)2,098 – 4,170£1,490 – £2,960

Monthly Budget (Couple + 2 Children)

CategoryMonthly (EUR)Monthly (GBP)
Rent (3-4 bed)1,400 – 2,400£994 – £1,703
Groceries (family of 4)600 – 950£426 – £674
Transport98 – 120£70 – £85
School fees (2 children, if not covered)0* – 2,4000* – £1,703
Activities (2 children)200 – 600£142 – £426
Entertainment250 – 500£177 – £355
Total (fees covered)2,548 – 4,570£1,809 – £3,243

Family reality: Germany's Kita (nursery) system is heavily subsidised — free in Berlin, minimal cost elsewhere. The Kindergeld (child benefit) of €250/child/month helps too. Combined with excellent public transport and free university education, Germany is exceptionally family-friendly long-term.


Visa

UK teachers need an employer-sponsored work visa or EU Blue Card:

  • Blue Card requires a minimum salary of ~€45,300 (reduced for shortage occupations)
  • Processing: 4-8 weeks at the German Embassy
  • After 21 months with B1 German, you can apply for permanent residence

Life in Germany

  • Transport: The €49/month Deutschlandticket covers ALL regional public transport nationwide.
  • Culture: World-class museums, opera, and music scenes. Berlin's cultural offerings rival London's.
  • Beer: Obviously. Plus Christmas markets, Biergärten, and a strong café culture.
  • Travel: Central position means weekend trips to Prague, Amsterdam, Vienna, Copenhagen.
  • Language: You don't need German for work (international schools are English-medium), but basic German dramatically improves daily life.

Next Steps

  1. Browse live Germany roles on Spill.org
  2. Check Blue Card eligibility at make-it-in-germany.com