There is no German retirement visa — but there is a legal route for retirees. Citizenship takes 5 years and you keep your US or Canadian passport. Health insurance after 55 is the real hurdle. Here's the whole picture — from official sources, checked and dated.
The retiree route (§7), freelance and skilled-worker permits, the Blue Card — 2026 requirements and the honest 5-year citizenship path.
4 guides → Guide hub2026 brackets (14%–45%, tax-free to €12,348), how US Social Security and pensions are taxed, and why IRAs need an adviser.
Read → Guide hubThe over-55 rule that locks newcomers out of public insurance, what private cover really costs, and how to plan around it.
Read → Guide hubRenting German-style (Kaltmiete, Kaution, Mietspiegel), buying with no foreign-buyer restrictions, and 3.5%–6.5% transfer tax.
Read → Guide hubReal Destatis and GREIX data: rents, 39.6 ct/kWh electricity, the €18.36 broadcast fee — and the health-insurance line item.
Read → Guide hubBlue Card thresholds, the freelance permit (and its over-45 pension rule), remote work reality, totalization agreements.
Read → Guide hubSwapping your US or Canadian driving licence (it depends on your state), bringing pets, Anmeldung, and utilities.
Read → Guide hubBerlin, Munich, Hamburg, Frankfurt, the value cities in the east — real rent data and honest trade-offs.
Read →No retirement visa exists. Here's the discretionary §7 permit route — income expectations, insurance, and the honest odds.
Read the guide → HealthcareWhy public insurance is usually closed to you, what private cover costs at 60, and the decisions to make before you move.
Read the guide → Visas & ResidencyThe 5-year path after the 2024 reform: permanent residency, the B1 hurdle, the test, dual citizenship — and the retiree catch.
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