Hospitality & Tourism · Ausbildung in Germany
Pathway: § 16a AufenthG — available to non-EU international students from Nigeria, India, Philippines, Ghana, Kenya, Pakistan, Indonesia & more.
Unlike university degrees, Ausbildung combines paid on-the-job training at a company with theoretical instruction at a state Berufsschule (vocational school). This dual system means you earn a salary from Day 1 — starting at approximately €620/month — while gaining the exact practical skills that German employers demand.
For international applicants from non-EU countries including Nigeria, Philippines, India, Kenya, Indonesia, Ghana and Pakistan, the Restaurant & Service Professional Ausbildung is accessible through the § 16a Vocational Training Visa (Visum zur Berufsausbildung) under the German Residence Act (Aufenthaltsgesetz). Germany introduced this visa category specifically to address its growing skilled worker shortage.
Demand for qualified Restaurant & Service Professionals in Germany is classified as High by the Federal Employment Agency (Bundesagentur für Arbeit). The BA publishes quarterly shortage occupation reports (Engpassanalyse) which consistently list this trade as having more open positions than qualified candidates — a structural gap that directly benefits international applicants.
The training lasts 3 years and upon passing the final examination (Abschlussprüfung), you receive a state-recognised qualification. Within the Hospitality & Tourism sector, this opens pathways to senior positions, further specialisation, and the Meister (master craftsperson) qualification — the highest professional distinction in German vocational training.
| Official German name | Restaurantfachmann / Restaurantfachfrau |
| Training duration | 3 years |
| Min. German level | B2 (official exam required) |
| Year 1 training salary | €620/month |
| Year 3 training salary | €780/month |
| Post-qualification salary | €1482+ /month (average) |
| Demand classification | High |
| Visa pathway | § 16a AufenthG |
| Regulated by | BBiG / German Federal Gov. |
| Recognition body | IHK |
| Top hiring states | Bayern, Berlin, Hamburg, NRW |
One of the most important facts for international applicants: Ausbildung is NOT unpaid. Every apprentice in Germany receives a legally mandated training allowance (Ausbildungsvergütung). For Restaurant & Service Professional Ausbildung, this allowance increases each year.
| Bayern +8% | Highest training allowances in Germany |
| Baden-Württemberg +6% | Strong manufacturing and healthcare sector rates |
| Hessen +5% | Financial sector premium in Frankfurt area |
| NRW +2% | Large market, competitive rates |
| Sachsen / Thüringen -5% | Slightly lower but lower cost of living |
• Net salary is approximately 18–28% lower than gross due to social security contributions (health insurance, pension, unemployment). International employees in Germany are fully covered by the public health insurance (Krankenversicherung) from Day 1.
• Training allowances shown are based on the most recent collective bargaining agreements (Tarifvertrag) for the Restaurant & Service Professional sector. Actual rates vary slightly by employer and region — Bavaria and Baden-Württemberg typically offer 5–10% above the federal minimum.
• After completing the Abschlussprüfung and entering full employment, salary typically reaches €1482–€1950/month within the first 2 years. Senior or supervisory roles can exceed this significantly.
• Germany's Mindestausbildungsvergütung (minimum training allowance) law, in force since 2020, guarantees all Ausbildung apprentices a minimum monthly payment. For Restaurant & Service Professional, this minimum is well above the legal floor due to sector-specific collective agreements.
Understanding the daily reality of Restaurant & Service Professional work in Germany is essential before applying. German employers expect high standards and clear work ethic — knowing what the job involves helps you write a stronger motivation letter and perform better in interviews.
The majority of your Ausbildung time is spent at your training company. On these days you:
On Berufsschule days you attend a state vocational school for theoretical instruction. Classes cover:
Your German certificate is your passport to everything that follows. Without a B2 certificate from an approved examination body, no German employer will consider your application and no embassy will grant you a visa. Start immediately.
Germany's qualification recognition system can be confusing. Your secondary school certificate must be at least equivalent to a German Hauptschulabschluss (10th grade). Use these official tools to check before spending time on applications.
This is where most international applicants struggle — not because positions don't exist, but because they don't know where to look or how to write a German-format application. The German application process has specific conventions that differ significantly from UK/US or African/Asian formats.
German employer interviews for Ausbildung positions focus on motivation, language ability, and cultural fit rather than technical skills (which you'll learn during the training). Your ability to communicate in German in the interview is the primary deciding factor for most employers.
With a signed Ausbildungsvertrag in hand, you can apply for the vocational training visa at the German embassy or consulate in your country. This visa is specifically designed for Ausbildung and is separate from the standard work visa.
Your first two weeks in Germany involve several mandatory administrative tasks. Missing any of these creates legal problems that can affect your visa status and training contract.
The 3-year Ausbildung consists of regular assessments. There is typically an intermediate examination (Zwischenprüfung) halfway through and the final examination (Abschlussprüfung) at the end. Both have written and practical components.
Completing Ausbildung opens two parallel tracks: career advancement in Germany and the path to permanent legal residence.
German language proficiency is not just a visa requirement — it determines your success during training. Your Berufsschule classes are in German. Your colleagues speak German. Your technical manuals are in German. Arriving with exactly the minimum required level will make your first months extremely challenging. Reaching B2 before departure is strongly recommended.
| A1 Prerequisite | You can introduce yourself and use simple phrases for familiar situations. — 0–3 months Exams: Goethe-Zertifikat A1, telc Deutsch A1, ÖSD Zertifikat A1 |
| A2 Prerequisite | You can communicate in simple, routine tasks and describe your background. — 3–6 months Exams: Goethe-Zertifikat A2, telc Deutsch A2, ÖSD Zertifikat A2 |
| B1 Prerequisite | You can handle most travel situations and talk about familiar topics with some fluency. — 6–12 months Exams: Goethe-Zertifikat B1, telc Deutsch B1, ÖSD Zertifikat B1, DTZ |
| B2 Required | You can understand complex texts and interact with native speakers without strain. — 12–18 months Exams: Goethe-Zertifikat B2, telc Deutsch B2, ÖSD Zertifikat B2 |
| C1 Bonus | You can use German flexibly and effectively in professional and academic contexts. — 18–24 months Exams: Goethe-Zertifikat C1, telc Deutsch C1, TestDaF (equivalent), DSH |
25–30 hours/week · 9–12 months to reach B2
Cost: €800–€3,000 at a private language school
Best for: Dedicated candidates who can study full-time
15–20 hours/week · 12–18 months to reach B2
Cost: €400–€1,500 for group classes
Best for: Working candidates studying alongside employment
10–15 hours/week · 18–24 months to reach B2
Cost: €100–€400 for materials and exam fees
Best for: Budget-conscious candidates with strong self-discipline
The § 16a Aufenthaltsgesetz (Residence Act) visa is Germany's dedicated visa for non-EU nationals who have been accepted into a recognised vocational training programme. It is completely separate from the tourist visa, student visa, or general work visa.
| Valid national passport | Must be valid for at least 6 months beyond intended stay |
| Completed visa application form | Available at the German embassy website for your country |
| Biometric passport photos | 2 recent photos, 35x45mm, white background |
| Signed Ausbildungsvertrag (training contract) | Original + copy; must be registered with IHK/HWK |
| Valid B2 language certificate | Goethe, telc, or ÖSD — must be original, not photocopy |
| Secondary school certificate | Original + certified translation into German |
| University degree (if applicable) | Original + certified translation |
| CV in German (Lebenslauf) | German format with Lichtbild (photo) |
| Proof of accommodation in Germany | Letter from employer, Wohnheim, or rental contract |
| Proof of health insurance coverage | Confirmation from German Krankenkasse or travel insurance for initial entry |
| Proof of financial means | Bank statement showing ~€1,000–€1,500 minimum, or employer confirmation of advance payment |
| Police clearance certificate | From your home country, not older than 3 months, apostilled |
| Visa fee payment receipt | €75 standard; paid at embassy |
| Nigeria — 8–16 weeks | Abuja + Lagos Consulate. Appointment availability is limited — book 3–4 months before intended travel |
| Ghana — 6–12 weeks | Accra. Relatively efficient processing; document completeness critical |
| Kenya — 4–8 weeks | Nairobi. One of the faster processing times in Sub-Saharan Africa |
| India — 6–10 weeks | New Delhi, Mumbai, Chennai, Kolkata. High volume — ensure appointment is booked well in advance |
| Philippines — 6–10 weeks | Manila. Germany-Philippines bilateral agreements facilitate processing |
| Pakistan — 8–14 weeks | Islamabad + Karachi. Additional security checks may extend processing |
| Indonesia — 6–10 weeks | Jakarta. Growing demand — embassy expanding capacity |
| Ethiopia — 6–12 weeks | Addis Ababa. Document translation requirements strictly enforced |
| Egypt — 6–12 weeks | Cairo. Arabic documents require certified German translation |
| Morocco — 4–8 weeks | Rabat + Casablanca. EU-Morocco proximity facilitates some flexibility |
Germany's education recognition system (Anerkennungsberatung) evaluates whether your home country qualifications are equivalent to German standards. This is separate from language requirements and must be resolved before you can apply for an Ausbildungsvertrag.
| H++ | Fully equivalent to German qualification — no further action needed |
| H+ | Recognised with possible conditions — usually accepted by employers |
| H- | Partially recognised — ZAB evaluation recommended |
| Not listed | Apply to ZAB for Statement of Comparability (Zeugnisbewertung) |
| Nigeria (WAEC/NECO SSCE) H+ | Generally well recognised; WAEC recognised by most German employers |
| Ghana (WASSCE) H+ | Strong recognition; similar to Nigerian WAEC |
| Kenya (KCSE) H+ | British-influenced system well regarded in Germany |
| India (CBSE/ICSE Class 12) H++ | Strong recognition; Class 12 equivalent to German Abitur/Fachabitur |
| Philippines (SHS Diploma (Grade 12)) H+ | K-12 reform improved recognition; Grade 12 well regarded |
| Pakistan (FSc/HSSC) H+ | Generally recognised; apostille required |
| Indonesia (SMA/SMK Ijazah) H- | May require ZAB evaluation; SMK vocational diploma particularly relevant |
| Ethiopia (ESSLCE) H- | ZAB evaluation recommended; strong regional variation |
| Egypt (Thanaweya Amma) H+ | Generally recognised; Arabic documents need certified translation |
| Morocco (Baccalauréat) H++ | French-influenced baccalaureate system strongly recognised |
For Restaurant & Service Professional, the awarding body after completing Ausbildung is the IHK. Your final qualification (Restaurantfachmann / Restaurantfachfrau certificate) is nationally recognised across all 16 German federal states and internationally through bilateral recognition agreements.
The process of applying for Restaurant & Service Professional Ausbildung varies depending on your home country — embassy locations, document requirements, language school availability, and community support all differ. Here is specific information for the most common source countries.
| Major cities | Lagos, Abuja, Port Harcourt, Kano |
| Language centres | Goethe Institut Lagos, DeutschAkademie Lagos, Franco-German Institute |
| German embassy/consulate | German Embassy Abuja, German Consulate General Lagos |
| Equivalent starting salary | ₦1,116,000/month (approx. at ₦1,800/€) |
There is a growing Nigerian community in major German cities including Frankfurt, Berlin, and Hamburg — a support network many Nigerian Ausbildung graduates rely on during their first year.
Germany has specifically targeted Nigerian healthcare and technical workers. Over 2,000 Nigerians began Ausbildung programmes in Germany in 2023 alone.
| Major cities | Manila, Cebu, Davao, Quezon City |
| Language centres | Goethe Institut Manila, DAAD Information Centre Manila |
| German embassy/consulate | German Embassy Manila |
| Equivalent starting salary | ₱38,440/month (approx. at ₱62/€) |
The Philippines has a bilateral labour agreement with Germany. Filipino healthcare workers are particularly in demand, and many German hospitals actively recruit from the Philippines.
The Philippines-Germany Healthcare Agreement facilitates recognition of nursing and medical qualifications — significantly accelerating the Ausbildung pathway for Filipino applicants.
| Major cities | Nairobi, Mombasa, Kisumu, Eldoret |
| Language centres | Goethe Institut Nairobi, Deutsche Schule Nairobi |
| German embassy/consulate | German Embassy Nairobi |
| Equivalent starting salary | KSh 89,900/month (approx. at KSh145/€) |
Kenya's strong English education base means many Kenyans adapt quickly to German language learning. The Kenyan community in Germany is concentrated in Frankfurt, Munich, and Hamburg.
Kenya and Germany have strengthened bilateral ties on skilled worker migration. German companies increasingly partner with Kenyan TVET institutions for pre-selection of Ausbildung candidates.
| Major cities | Mumbai, New Delhi, Bangalore, Chennai, Hyderabad |
| Language centres | Goethe Institut Mumbai, Delhi, Bangalore, Chennai, Kolkata, Pune |
| German embassy/consulate | German Embassy New Delhi, Consulates in Mumbai, Kolkata, Chennai, Bangalore |
| Equivalent starting salary | ₹57,660/month (approx. at ₹93/€) |
India sends the largest number of Ausbildung applicants to Germany. The Indo-German community is well-established across all major German cities with active support networks.
Germany\'s Migration Opportunities Act (Chancen-Aufenthaltsrecht) specifically mentions India as a priority partner country. IT and engineering Ausbildung positions receive particular attention.
| Major cities | Accra, Kumasi, Tema |
| Language centres | Goethe Institut Accra, DAAD Ghana |
| German embassy/consulate | German Embassy Accra |
| Equivalent starting salary | GH₵9,920/month (approx. at GH₵16/€) |
Ghana's Anglophone education system and cultural ties to Germany make Ghanaian applicants well-regarded by German employers. Growing Ghanaian communities in Düsseldorf and Frankfurt.
Ghana-Germany bilateral discussions on skilled migration have intensified since 2022, with focus on healthcare and technical trades including Restaurant & Service Professional.
After passing the Abschlussprüfung, you work as a qualified Restaurant & Service Professional in Germany. Most graduates are offered permanent contracts (Übernahme) by their training company.
→ Consolidate skills, take on more responsibility, consider specialist courses (Zusatzqualifikationen)
With experience, you advance to senior roles with supervisory responsibilities. Many qualified Restaurant & Service Professionals also pursue part-time further education during this stage.
→ Consider Techniker (state-certified technician) qualification or Meister preparation
The Meister (or Techniker for engineering trades) is the highest vocational qualification in Germany — equivalent in professional standing to a Bachelor's degree. It allows you to run your own business and train apprentices.
→ Open your own business, manage teams, train the next generation of Restaurant & Service Professional apprentices
After 5 years of legal residence (recently reduced to 3 years for exceptional integration) and meeting all criteria, you become eligible for German citizenship — including an EU passport and the right to live and work across all 27 EU countries.
→ Apply for Einbürgerung (naturalisation), maintain dual citizenship depending on your home country
| Factor | Ausbildung Germany | University in Germany | Direct Work Abroad |
|---|---|---|---|
| Duration | 3 years | 3–5 years | Immediate |
| Income during training | €620+/month | None (student loans) | Variable |
| Qualification outcome | Nationally recognised vocational cert | Degree | Work experience only |
| Visa available | § 16a AufenthG — YES | § 16 AufenthG — YES | Depends on country |
| Pathway to permanent residence | Yes — § 18a after 2 yrs work | Yes — after degree + job | Uncertain |
| German required | B2 | B2–C1 | Depends on employer |
| Cost to applicant | €0 (you are paid) | Possible tuition fees | €0 but no path |
| Job security after | Very High (High demand) | Depends on field | Variable |
| EU freedom of movement | After citizenship: YES | After citizenship: YES | No |
While TVETMap cannot individually verify personal testimonials, the following experiences are representative of patterns consistently reported by international Ausbildung graduates in Germany across official BA reports, embassy briefings, and community forums.
Nearly all international trainees report that the first 3 months are the most challenging linguistically. Technical German terms, regional dialects, and the pace of Berufsschule classes are consistently mentioned as initial shocks. However, immersion accelerates language acquisition significantly — most trainees report becoming functionally fluent in their trade language within 6 months of arrival.
International trainees consistently report that the attitude of their Ausbildungsbetrieb (training company) is the single biggest factor in their experience. Companies that have hosted international apprentices before tend to be far more supportive. When searching for positions, explicitly look for companies with experience hosting international Azubis.
The training salary (around €620/month gross) is sufficient for basic living costs in smaller German cities but tight in Munich or Frankfurt. Many international trainees report that employer-provided accommodation (Wohnheim) is essential in the early months. Costs reduce significantly once you are settled and familiar with the German cost-of-living landscape.
International Ausbildung graduates consistently report that the German qualification is highly regarded not just in Germany but in GCC countries, UK, Australia, Canada, and increasingly in African markets that recognise German vocational standards. The Gesellenbrief or IHK certificate is a globally portable credential.
This is one of the most common questions from international applicants. The honest answer depends significantly on the city you train in. Here is a realistic breakdown.
| City Tier | Rent | Food | Transport | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Small to medium cities (Dortmund, Dresden, Leipzig, Nuremberg) Most manageable on Ausbildung salary — recommended for first-time arrivals |
€350–€600 (shared flat / WG) | €150–€250 | €29–€49 (Deutschlandticket) | €629–€1,049 |
| Mid-size cities (Hamburg, Cologne, Frankfurt, Stuttgart) Tight on Year 1 salary — employer-provided accommodation highly beneficial |
€500–€800 (shared flat) | €180–€280 | €49–€89 | €849–€1,349 |
| Munich and surrounding area Very challenging on Year 1 salary alone — only viable with employer accommodation or subsidies |
€700–€1,100 (shared flat) | €200–€300 | €57–€95 | €1,107–€1,695 |
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