Moving to Berlin: Apartment Search, Anmeldung, Jobs and Cost of Living
A first-30-days map for newcomers choosing Berlin: housing friction, address registration, tax ID, health insurance, LEA and work setup. Use it to plan the first 30 days before arrival.
Short answer
Berlin is attractive for international workers and students, but housing and appointments are the main friction points. Before choosing Berlin, check salary versus current rent, your residence route and whether your housing allows Anmeldung.
This page is an official handoff guide: use it to decide the next check, then verify the current rule on the linked official source before acting.
Moving to Berlin first decisions.
| Decision | Good signal | Risk signal | Next page |
|---|---|---|---|
| Housing | Budget covers current asking rent and deposit | Only short stays without Anmeldung | Finding an apartment |
| Anmeldung | Landlord can issue Wohnungsgeberbestaetigung | No registration-friendly address | Anmeldung Berlin |
| Residence permit | Route and deadline are clear | Waiting until permit expiry | LEA residence permit |
| Work | Salary supports rent and insurance | English-only search in a narrow sector | Jobs in Berlin |
First 30 days checklist
- Secure temporary housing that can bridge the apartment search.
- Prioritise permanent or WG housing that allows Anmeldung.
- Book or monitor Buergeramt appointments for address registration.
- Complete Anmeldung and keep the registration certificate.
- Wait for tax ID or request it if timing matters for payroll.
- Open a bank account and activate health insurance coverage.
- Start LEA/residence permit workflow before visa or permit expiry.
- For families, contact Kita, school and child benefit channels early.
Timeline
- Temporary housing
- Permanent/WG room
- Anmeldung
- Tax ID
- Bank and health insurance
- LEA/residence permit
- School/Kita if relevant
Fontes oficiais
FAQ
Is Berlin a good city for newcomers?
It can be, especially for international work and study, but housing and appointment friction should be checked before arrival.
Can I live in Berlin without German?
Some sectors and daily situations work in English, but housing, offices, schools and many services become easier with German.