Planning to join your partner in Germany in 2025? This walkthrough covers eligibility, A1 German rules and exemptions, the exact documents to collect, fees, timelines, and a clear application plan—from embassy appointment to residence permit and work rights.
What the Germany Spouse Visa Is
The spouse visa (national visa, Category D) lets non-EU spouses/registered partners of people lawfully living in Germany enter for long stay and then convert to a residence permit (Aufenthaltstitel). It applies if your sponsor is:
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A German citizen living in Germany
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An EU/EEA/Swiss citizen living in Germany (free movement rules apply)
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A non-EU resident holding a valid German residence permit (e.g., Skilled Worker, EU Blue Card, Researcher)
On arrival, you finalize a residence permit—usually with immediate or quick work authorization.
Who Is Eligible (Sponsor & Applicant)
Sponsor must show
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Lawful residence in Germany (citizen or valid residence title)
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Sufficient income to support the household without social assistance
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Adequate housing (typical rule of thumb: ~12 m² per adult, local offices may vary)
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Health insurance coverage that will include the spouse upon arrival
Applicant must show
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Valid, legally recognized marriage/registered partnership (certificate legalized/apostilled as required)
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Passport valid for the entire process
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Basic German (A1) certificate where required
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Clean background (police cert) and no public security risks
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Minimum age 18 for both spouses
A1 German Requirement (and When It’s Waived)
A1 German is typically required before visa issuance. Accepted tests include Goethe, telc, or ÖSD. Common exemptions:
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Joining an EU/EEA (non-German) citizen exercising free movement in Germany
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Joining holders of certain high-skilled permits (e.g., EU Blue Card, ICT, Researcher), where pre-entry A1 can be waived
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Proven medical reasons or disproportional hardship
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Shortage of accessible language courses in the country of residence (must be evidenced)
Tip: Even if exempt, start A1–B1 early; it speeds job access and can shorten time to permanent residence in some cases.
Money, Housing, Insurance (What Officers Check)
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Income benchmark: The sponsor’s net income must cover rent + living costs per local standards (as guidance, many couples clear ~€2,000+ net/month, but your local Ausländerbehörde sets the bar based on rent, family size, and benefits).
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Housing: Rental agreement or deed listing size and occupancy; landlords can provide a Wohnungsgeberbestätigung.
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Insurance: Proof spouse can be insured on statutory (family insurance) or private plan after arrival; travel insurance is needed until registration.
Step-by-Step: How to Apply in 2025
1) Gather and legalize documents
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Applicant: passport, A1 certificate (if required), two biometric photos, CV (sometimes requested), travel insurance
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Sponsor in Germany: copy of passport/ID, residence permit (if non-EU), recent payslips (3–6 months), employment contract, latest tax assessment (if available), rental agreement + proof of address (Meldebescheinigung), health insurance confirmation
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Joint: legalized/apostilled marriage/partnership certificate + sworn German translations as required
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Extras often requested: police clearance, relationship proof (photos, call logs—only if asked), name change documents, divorce decrees/death certificates for prior marriages
2) Fill the national visa form (VIDEX) and book your embassy/consulate slot
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Appointments can take weeks; book early and keep your documents ready in the mission’s exact order.
3) Attend the interview
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Submit the file, provide biometrics, pay the fee, and answer simple relationship/plan questions. Be brief, consistent, and honest.
4) Processing (8–12+ weeks typical)
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The embassy consults your local Ausländerbehörde. Delays happen if documents are incomplete or require verification/legalization.
5) Get your D-visa, travel to Germany
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Visa validity is usually 90–180 days; it’s for entry and initial stay.
6) Post-arrival formalities
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Anmeldung (address registration): Do this within 1–2 weeks.
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Health insurance switch: Move from travel insurance to statutory/private plan.
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Residence permit: Apply at the Ausländerbehörde with all originals; many permits include full work rights for spouses.
Fees and Timelines (Typical)
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National visa fee: commonly €75 for adults (often waived for family of EU/EEA sponsors; check your mission’s schedule of fees)
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Translations/legalization: varies by country
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Processing: plan for 8–12 weeks (can be shorter/longer by country and season)
What You Can Do After Arrival
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Work rights: Spouse permits typically allow unrestricted employment.
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Integration course: Strongly recommended (sometimes mandatory) to reach B1 and learn civic basics—helps with long-term residence.
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Path to permanence: After qualifying residence years and language/integration conditions, you can apply for permanent residence; timelines differ by permit and integration level.
Common Pitfalls (and How to Avoid Them)
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Unrecognized marriage certificate: Get legalization/apostille and sworn translations that match embassy rules.
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Income just at the margin: Add savings proofs, a permanent contract, or a letter from HR confirming ongoing hours/salary.
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Housing too small: Provide a larger lease or letter proving the flat meets local standards.
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Expired A1 or wrong test provider: Use Goethe/telc/ÖSD and ensure the certificate is recent per your mission’s rules.
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Name mismatches: Align all identifiers (passport, certificate, translations) or add official name-change proof.
Document Checklist (Print This)
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Passport (valid + copies)
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Two biometric photos (Germany format)
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Completed VIDEX form + appointment confirmation
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Legalized/apostilled marriage/partnership certificate + sworn German translation
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A1 certificate (Goethe/telc/ÖSD) or exemption basis
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Sponsor’s documents: ID/residence permit copy, 3–6 payslips, contract, tax notice, Meldebescheinigung
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Rental contract/space proof
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Health insurance proof (travel + plan for Germany)
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Police clearance (if required), any divorce/death certificates with translations
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Fee payment proof
Simple Application Timeline (You Can Copy)
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Week 0–2: Legalize + translate certificates, take A1 exam (if required)
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Week 2–3: Book appointment; finalize VIDEX form and document set
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Week 4–6: Interview + biometrics; pay fee
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Week 8–12+: Decision; collect visa and fly
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Week 13–14: Anmeldung + health insurance switch
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Week 14–18: Residence permit appointment and card issuance
Short Email Templates
To the Embassy (missing document update)
Subject: Visa Application – Spouse (Name, DoB) – Additional Document
Hello, I submitted my family reunification application on [date]. Attached is [document]. Please add it to my file. Thank you, [full name], [passport number], [contact].
To the Ausländerbehörde (post-arrival permit)
Subject: Residence Permit Appointment – Family Reunification
Hello, I arrived on [date] with a D-visa for family reunification. I’m requesting an appointment to apply for my residence permit. My address is [address], sponsor is [name, permit type]. Attached: Anmeldung, insurance, passports. Thank you.
FAQs
Do I need A1 if my spouse has an EU Blue Card?
Often no; pre-entry A1 is commonly waived for spouses of certain high-skilled permit holders. Still, learning German early is strongly advised.
Can we apply if we don’t yet have a large flat?
You’ll need to show adequate space; short leases or interim housing may be accepted if it meets local standards. Ask your Ausländerbehörde.
How long can I stay outside Germany once I have my permit?
Extended absences can jeopardize residence. If you must leave for months, consult the Ausländerbehörde first.
Can same-sex spouses apply?
Yes—registered partnerships/marriages recognized in Germany are generally eligible (submit legalized proof).
Can I bring children too?
Yes—minor children can apply for family reunification; check vaccination, school entry, and birth certificate legalization.
Clear Next Steps
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Confirm which A1 rule applies to you (required vs. exemption) and book any needed test.
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Get your marriage certificate legalized/apostilled and translated by a sworn translator.
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Ask your sponsor to collect payslips, contract, tax notice, rental contract, and insurance confirmation.
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Book the embassy appointment, complete VIDEX, and organize your file exactly as listed on your mission’s website.
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After arrival: register your address, switch to German health insurance, and file for your residence permit—then start an integration course to B1.