Germany has no retirement visa. Here's the route retirees actually use.
Last verified: 8 July 2026Unlike Portugal or Spain, Germany never built a visa for retirees. What exists is a discretionary residence permit under §7 of the Residence Act — granted case by case, at the judgment of your local immigration office. It works for some people. This guide tells you what it takes, what it costs, and where it gets hard.
- No dedicated retirement visa — the route is a discretionary permit under §7(1) AufenthG
- No statutory income minimum. In practice, authorities look for roughly €1,200–1,500/month plus your housing costs — this is practice, not law
- Full health insurance is mandatory — and after 55, that usually means private cover at roughly €700–1,200+/month per person (market estimates)
- €75 national visa fee · €100 first residence permit · €93 per extension
- First permit typically 1 year, renewable
- 5 years to citizenship eligibility (dual citizenship allowed since June 2024) — but permanent settlement has a pension-contribution catch (below)
The legal basis, plainly
Germany's Residence Act (Aufenthaltsgesetz) lists specific residence purposes — work, study, family. Retirement isn't one of them. The catch-all is §7(1) sentence 3: "In justified cases, a residence permit may also be issued for a purpose... not covered by this Act." That's the retiree route. Note the word may. This is a discretionary decision by your local Ausländerbehörde (immigration office), not an entitlement. Two identical applications can get different answers in Munich and Magdeburg.
What you have to prove
- Secure livelihood without public funds. Pensions (including US Social Security, CPP, OAS), investment income, and substantial savings all count. There is no fixed statutory figure; immigration-law practitioners report authorities expecting roughly €1,200–1,500 per month plus your rent, more for couples. Durable income (a pension award letter) reads better than a brokerage balance.
- Health insurance at German statutory level. Travel insurance covers the visa trip only. For the permit you need substantive German cover — and if you're over 55, public insurance (GKV) is generally closed to you, so budget for private premiums. Full guide to the over-55 insurance problem →
- Accommodation. A lease or owned property with adequate space.
- A plausible reason to be in Germany. Because the permit is discretionary, ties help: children or grandchildren in Germany, German heritage, property, a documented long connection to the country. A blank-slate application from someone with no German ties is the weakest case.
- Basic German helps. Not a formal requirement for this permit, but officers weigh integration prospects in discretionary decisions.
Step by step, from the US or Canada
- Test your case before you commit. Because approval is discretionary, a consultation with a German immigration lawyer is worth more here than in any other country we cover.
- Gather evidence: pension/Social Security award letters, bank and investment statements, health insurance offer or policy, accommodation proof, passport, marriage certificate if applying as a couple.
- Apply for a national (D) visa (€75) at the German mission covering your state or province. State the purpose honestly: residence for retirement/financially independent living.
- Enter Germany on the D visa. Register your address (Anmeldung) at the Bürgeramt within 2 weeks — you'll need the landlord's confirmation form (Wohnungsgeberbestätigung).
- Convert to a residence permit (€100) at your Ausländerbehörde before the visa expires. First permits under §7 are typically issued for 1 year.
- Renew (€93) with livelihood and insurance re-proven each time. Longer permits often follow once you have a track record.
The permanent-residency catch nobody mentions
Permanent settlement (Niederlassungserlaubnis, §9 AufenthG) normally requires 5 years of residence plus 60 months of contributions to the German pension system — contributions a retiree who never worked in Germany won't have. There are exceptions and workarounds (comparable foreign provision can count, and practice varies by state), but do not assume permanent residency at year 5 is automatic on this route. Renewable temporary permits can carry you indefinitely; citizenship at 5 years has its own rules. See the citizenship guide → — and get legal advice on your specific pension picture.
The tax question you should ask before applying
Keep a home in Germany or stay more than six months and you're German tax resident, taxed on worldwide income at 2026 progressive rates of 14% to 45% above the €12,348 allowance. Under the US–Germany treaty, US Social Security paid to a German resident is taxable only in Germany. German treatment of IRAs, Roths and 401(k)s is genuinely unsettled — get cross-border advice before you trigger residency, not after. Tax & Finance guide →
Who this route realistically suits
Couples with solid pension income, private-health-insurance budgets of €1,500–2,400/month, and a real German connection — family, heritage, or years of prior stays. If the insurance line item makes you wince, look hard at Portugal or Spain first: their retirement visas are entitlements with published thresholds, and their healthcare costs for over-55 newcomers are a fraction of Germany's. We say this as a Germany guide: for a pure sunshine-and-budget retirement, Germany is the wrong tool. People choose it for family, culture, healthcare quality, and connection — and on those terms it delivers.
Sources
- Residence Act (AufenthG) §7, official English translation: gesetze-im-internet.de
- Residence Ordinance (AufenthV) §41 — visa-free application privilege: gesetze-im-internet.de
- Visa fees — German Missions in the United States: germany.info; residence-permit fees per Residence Ordinance fee schedule
- Income expectations (~€1,200–1,500/month plus housing): German immigration-law practitioner guidance (SE Legal, R&T Partner, 2025–26) — practice, not statute; no official figure exists
- Over-55 statutory-insurance bar: §6(1) No. 3a SGB V: gesetze-im-internet.de
- Settlement permit conditions (§9 AufenthG incl. 60-month pension contributions): gesetze-im-internet.de
- US–Germany tax treaty, Art. 18(5): IRS.gov · 2026 tax parameters: Bundesfinanzministerium