Resource article

EU Blue Card Germany 2026 — €48,300 vs €43,759 shortage threshold, BAMF process, fast-track & permanent residence

Germany is the largest EU Blue Card destination. We explain the 2026 thresholds (€48,300 standard, €43,759 for shortage occupations), the BAMF/Make-it-in-Germany process, the IT-experience-substitute-for-degree rule (new in 2024), Niederlassungserlaubnis after 21/27/33 months, and family reunification benefits.

Author: WorkDaten Editorial TeamPublished: 2026-04-28Last reviewed: 2026-04-28

What you will learn

  • The 2026 thresholds explained
  • The BAMF / Make-it-in-Germany process
  • The new IT-experience-substitute-for-degree rule
  • Family reunification & permanent residence

The 2026 thresholds explained

Germany operates two Blue Card thresholds: the regular threshold (€48,300/year gross in 2026) and the shortage-occupation threshold (€43,759/year). Both are recalculated annually by the Bundesagentur für Arbeit based on the previous year's average gross salary. The shortage threshold equals exactly 90.5% of the regular threshold — designed to make hard-to-fill roles more accessible.

The shortage list (Mangelberufe) for 2026 includes most STEM roles: IT specialists, engineers (mechanical, electrical, civil, mining, chemical), mathematicians, statisticians, natural-science professionals, and university-level academic professions. The list also includes medical doctors (separate process via approbation) and some nursing roles.

Important: the salary must be GUARANTEED in the contract. Variable bonuses, profit-sharing or commission don't count toward the Blue Card threshold — only the fixed annual gross salary stated in your employment contract.

The BAMF / Make-it-in-Germany process

Step 1: secure a job offer from a German employer with a salary at or above the threshold and a contract of at least 6 months. The employer typically helps with the paperwork.

Step 2: apply for the entry visa at the German embassy in your home country. Prepare: passport, employment contract, recognised university diploma (use anabin.kmk.org to verify recognition), CV, proof of accommodation in Germany. Embassy fee is €75; processing 4-12 weeks.

Step 3: arrive in Germany on the entry visa, register at the local Bürgeramt within 14 days (Anmeldung), then apply for the Blue Card itself at the local Ausländerbehörde. Bring the entry visa, registration certificate, biometric photo. The Blue Card is issued for the duration of the contract + 3 months, max 4 years.

Step 4: after 33 months of qualifying employment, apply for Niederlassungserlaubnis (permanent residence). Reduced to 21 months if you reach B1 German language level (a common reason to take a Volkshochschule course while on Blue Card).

The new IT-experience-substitute-for-degree rule

From November 2023, Germany implements EU directive 2021/1883 article 5(b): IT professionals (system analysts, software developers, web/multimedia developers, database designers, network engineers — codes ISCO 2511, 2512, 2513, 2514, 2521, 2522, 2523, 2529, 2356) can substitute 5+ years of relevant professional experience for a university degree.

Practical implication: a self-taught developer with 5 years at a serious tech company can apply for a Blue Card without any degree. The 5 years must be DEMONSTRABLE (employment contracts + tax records or social-security records from your home country) and in the SAME ISCO category as the German role you've been hired for.

If you have <5 years experience, alternative routes for non-degree IT workers: Chancenkarte (the new German skilled-workers' search visa) at lower thresholds; Fachkraft mit IT-Bezug under §18a AufenthG (no degree required for IT specialists with proven experience).

Family reunification & permanent residence

Spouse: receives an automatic residence permit with FULL labour-market access from day one. No language requirement, no minimum-salary requirement on the spouse. Apply via the local Ausländerbehörde with marriage certificate (apostilled and translated).

Children under 18: automatic residence with school enrolment rights. Children 16+ must have basic German language ability (A1-A2) UNLESS they enter together with a Blue-Card-holding parent.

Niederlassungserlaubnis path: 33 months of qualifying employment + 33 months of pension contributions = permanent residence. Reduced to 21 months with B1 German. After Niederlassungserlaubnis: full work rights, no need to renew the Blue Card. After 5 years total in Germany: eligible for German citizenship (with B1 + integration test).

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