A first-week checklist for moving to Düsseldorf
The German system rewards doing things in the right order. Some forms unlock other forms; some appointments need documents you have not received yet. The checklist below puts the moves into a sensible sequence so that nothing blocks anything else for long.
Before you arrive
The work you do from your old country saves you the most time.
- Visa or entry route. Confirm whether you need a national visa, an EU Blue Card or visa-free entry. See visas.
- Temporary accommodation. Book the first 2–6 weeks somewhere with a real Düsseldorf address. A serviced apartment, a co-living slot, or a friend who will sign a Wohnungsgeberbestätigung. Hotels usually will not sign.
- Documents. Pack originals plus apostilles for: birth certificate, marriage/divorce certificate, university diploma, professional certificates, driving licence. Bring several biometric photos.
- Money. Have a working international card. A neobank (N26, Wise, Revolut) is the simplest bridge until you have a German account.
- Health insurance for the trip. A short-term travel policy covers you until German cover starts. The Ausländerbehörde will not accept it long-term.
- Translate documents that are not in German. Sworn translations from the country of origin are usually accepted in Germany.
Day one
- Get a working German SIM. A prepaid card from a supermarket, an electronics store or any phone shop. You will need a working number for almost every appointment.
- Buy a 24-hour transport ticket and learn one or two routes — from your accommodation to the Hauptbahnhof, and to the Bürgerbüro of your district.
- Sign up for an online bank that accepts foreign addresses (N26, Wise, Revolut). You can switch to a German bank later.
- Sleep. The bureaucracy waits for nobody, but it does wait for tomorrow.
Week one
- Book your Anmeldung appointment. Slots in central Bürgerbüros are usually a few weeks out; widen your search to all districts. See Anmeldung.
- Ask the landlord for a Wohnungsgeberbestätigung. Have it signed and stored as a PDF and on paper.
- Buy a Deutschlandticket if you will be commuting locally. It pays for itself within a week.
- Pick a public health insurance fund and start the application online. Approval can take a few days but is needed before your employer can finalise your contract.
- Start the apartment search if your accommodation is short-term. Düsseldorf rentals move fast.
Week two
The Anmeldung is the keystone. Once it is done, the rest of the paperwork chain opens up.
- Go to the Anmeldung appointment with passport, Wohnungsgeberbestätigung, the filled form and (for families) marriage and birth certificates with translations.
- Collect the Meldebescheinigung — keep the original safe.
- Open a real German bank account. Most banks need the Meldebescheinigung and a passport. See banking.
- Forward the Meldebescheinigung scan to your employer's HR. They start the social-insurance registration.
- Wait for two letters: your Steuer-Identifikationsnummer from the federal office, and your registration with the broadcasting fee (Beitragsservice). Both usually arrive within 2–4 weeks.
By the end of the first month
- Tax ID forwarded to HR. Without it your first payslips may be taxed at the highest bracket; once you provide it, refunds flow.
- Health insurance card arrives in the post. Carry it for doctor visits and pharmacy prescriptions.
- Pay the broadcasting fee by setting up a direct debit (cheapest option).
- Personal liability insurance (Privathaftpflicht) for €5–10 a month. Quick to take out, broadly recommended. See insurance.
- Replace temporary cards. A German Girocard makes everyday payments and ATM withdrawals smoother than a foreign card.
Within 90 days
- Residence permit appointment at the Ausländerbehörde for non-EU citizens. Send the email with your scanned documents as soon as you have the Meldebescheinigung; appointments are weeks out.
- Driving licence — if you intend to keep your foreign licence longer than six months, start the Umschreibung early. See driving licence.
- German class — book a course at the VHS or a private school. The longer you wait the harder it is to start. See learning German.
- Long-term apartment, signed contract, deposit transferred.
- Update your Anmeldung when you move into the new flat. Same form, same offices.
Things that can wait
- Contents insurance (Hausrat) once your furniture is worth more than a few thousand euros.
- Disability cover (Berufsunfähigkeit) for working-age employees. Worth getting before any health condition is on record.
- Vereine / clubs for sport, music or language exchanges. The fastest way to meet people once the paperwork settles.
- A Steuererklärung in the spring of the following year. Most employees get refunds.
Common pitfalls
- Hotels and short-term lets that will not sign the Wohnungsgeberbestätigung. Ask before you book.
- Booking the Anmeldung in only one Bürgerbüro. Widen the search across the city.
- Foreign health policies presented as long-term cover. The Ausländerbehörde wants German GKV or a recognised PKV policy.
- Letting the tax-ID letter sit in the post tray. It is the document HR is waiting for.
- Ignoring the broadcasting-fee letter. The fee is owed regardless; ignoring it does not make it go away.
Related reading: Anmeldung, visas, banking, health insurance.