Turkish applicants · Federal Republic of Germany
Skilled Worker residence permit (§18a/§18b AufenthG) for Turkish citizens
Sponsored work and residence permit for qualified non-EU workers from any country worldwide who have a German job offer and a recognised qualification.
This page covers the Skilled Worker residence permit (§18a/§18b AufenthG) specifically for Turkish applicants — including document requirements, consular procedures, and common issues specific to Türkiye. The general eligibility criteria apply to everyone.
- Processing time
- 4 weeks – 3 months
- Government fees
- Visa €75; residence permit €100.
- Typical duration
- Usually up to 4 years or contract length plus 3 months.
- Sponsorship required
- Yes
- Leads to permanent residency
- Yes
Bilateral context
- Schengen Area
Consular processing: Istanbul / Ankara / Izmir
Tourist entry vs. this route
Turkish nationals require a visa for any entry into Federal Republic of Germany. The Skilled Worker residence permit (§18a/§18b AufenthG) is one of the routes available; tourist entry is a separate application.
Key figures for Turkish applicants
Computed from our continuously re-verified, primary-sourced data. Indicative, not legal advice.
How long it takes
4 weeks – 3 months
Consular decisions on Germany’s skilled-worker visa (§ 18a/18b AufenthG) typically take 1–3 months once you have an appointment. For most applicants the larger variable is everything that happens beforehand: securing a German employment contract and, in regulated professions, having your foreign qualification formally recognised.
Verified 1 June 2026 · Make-it-in-Germany — Skilled Worker visa →
Time to permanent residence
Arrival → Niederlassungserlaubnis (21-60 months depending on route and German level) → citizenship (5 years).
Leads to Niederlassungserlaubnis (Settlement Permit), then German citizenship.
Visa overview
The German Skilled Worker permit (§18a and §18b AufenthG) is the standard work visa for qualified professionals moving to Germany with a job offer. §18a covers people with vocational training (such as IT specialists, tradespeople, and healthcare workers), while §18b covers those with a university degree. Unlike the EU Blue Card, there is no salary floor — the focus is on whether your qualification matches your intended role. The 2023–24 Skilled Immigration Act significantly broadened which qualifications are recognised and which roles qualify, making the permit accessible to a much wider range of skilled workers than before. Germany does not operate a sponsor licence system: any German employer can hire you by signing a contract, with no separate accreditation required on their side.
Eligibility
Typical criteria
- ✓Recognised qualification (vocational for §18a, academic for §18b) or equivalent professional experience.
- ✓Qualifying German job offer.
- ✓For some professions, prior recognition of foreign qualification via Anerkennung process.
Common blockers
- !Regulated occupation without completed Anerkennung.
- !Role genuinely unrelated to qualification (narrower barrier post-reform but still possible).
Typical evidence
- ·Recognised qualification documentation.
- ·Employment contract or binding offer.
- ·Proof of language if required for role.
Application pathway
Check qualification recognition (Anerkennung)
For regulated professions (doctor, nurse, teacher, engineer in some Länder), complete Anerkennung. For non-regulated, confirm the qualification is comparable.
Secure qualifying job offer
Employer sponsorship is via signed contract rather than a separate sponsor licence.
Apply for entry visa
Submit to German consulate with contract, qualification evidence, passport.
Enter Germany and register
Anmeldung within 14 days.
Obtain residence permit
Book Ausländerbehörde appointment to convert visa into residence permit card.
Recent policy changes affecting this route
What changed most recently on this route — each linked to its primary government source.
- 1 June 2024In force 1 June 2024
Germany launches the Chancenkarte (Opportunity Card)
Germany launched a new points-based residence permit for job seekers under the Skilled Immigration Act reforms.
German Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs and Climate Action →
Other Federal Republic of Germany routes covered for Turkish applicants
EU Blue Card (Germany)
Work and residence permit for highly qualified non-EU professionals with a qualifying German job offer.
Chancenkarte (Germany Opportunity Card)
Points-based 1-year residence permit that lets non-EU skilled workers from any country move to Germany without a job offer to search for qualifying work. Six points or full qualification recognition required.
Freelance / Self-employment residence permit (§21 AufenthG)
Residence permit for self-employed workers and liberal professionals establishing a business in Germany.
Family reunion residence permit
Residence permit for spouses and children of German residents or citizens.
Not sure Federal Republic of Germany is right for you? Compare similar routes
Other countries offer work sponsored routes that Turkish nationals also apply to. See how they compare.
Frequently asked questions
Are Turkish citizens eligible for the Skilled Worker residence permit (§18a/§18b AufenthG)?+
Eligibility for the Skilled Worker residence permit (§18a/§18b AufenthG) is set by BMWK / Federal Government and is not nationality-restricted beyond the general criteria, though Turkish applicants may also have access to the following bilateral or treaty frameworks: Schengen Area. See the criteria below for the published requirements.
Where do Turkish applicants typically file the Skilled Worker residence permit (§18a/§18b AufenthG)?+
Istanbul / Ankara / Izmir. Specific intake (online portal, biometrics centre, or in-country lodgement) is determined by BMWK / Federal Government — confirm the current intake channel on the primary source linked above before filing.
Do Turkish applicants need a tourist visa for Federal Republic of Germany as well?+
Turkish nationals require a visa for any entry into Federal Republic of Germany. The Skilled Worker residence permit (§18a/§18b AufenthG) is one of the routes available; tourist entry is a separate application.
How long does the Skilled Worker residence permit (§18a/§18b AufenthG) take to process from Türkiye?+
The typical published decision window is 4 weeks – 3 months. Turkish applicants usually file via Istanbul / Ankara / Izmir, and consular-post backlogs can add to the wait. Source: Make-it-in-Germany — Skilled Worker visa, verified 1 June 2026.
How long until permanent residence in Federal Republic of Germany?+
Arrival → Niederlassungserlaubnis (21-60 months depending on route and German level) → citizenship (5 years). The route leads to Niederlassungserlaubnis (Settlement Permit), then German citizenship. See BMI — German citizenship law for the qualifying-residence rules.
Do I need to speak German?+
Not universally. For non-regulated occupations, German is often not required for visa approval but is frequently needed for everyday work life. Regulated professions — especially healthcare — typically require at least B1 or B2 German. Many tech and engineering roles at international companies operate fully in English.
Do I need a job offer before I can apply?+
Yes. The Skilled Worker permit requires a signed employment contract or binding job offer from a German employer. If you do not yet have an offer, the Chancenkarte (Opportunity Card) lets you move to Germany first and job-search on the ground for up to 12 months.
How long does the process take from receiving a job offer to starting work?+
A realistic timeline is 8–16 weeks from signed contract to first working day. This covers the Anerkennung (qualification recognition) step if needed (4–12 weeks), the consular visa decision (4–12 weeks, running in parallel if possible), and the Ausländerbehörde appointment to convert the visa into a residence permit after arrival (2–4 weeks). Many applicants are working in Germany within 3 months for non-regulated roles in IT and engineering; regulated professions such as medicine and nursing take longer.
What if my qualification is not recognised in Germany?+
If your qualification is not yet recognised, you have two alternatives. First, the Recognition Partnership (Anerkennungspartnerschaft) lets you enter Germany and complete the recognition process while working under the supervision of a German employer — ideal for healthcare workers. Second, the Chancenkarte is available if you can score 6 points on the points grid without full recognition. The Anerkennung-in-Deutschland.de portal is the starting point for understanding how your qualification is assessed.
Can EU citizens apply for the Skilled Worker permit?+
No. EU and EEA citizens have the right to work in Germany freely under EU law and do not need any residence or work permit. The Skilled Worker permit is specifically for non-EU, non-EEA nationals — that means people from countries like India, Nigeria, Pakistan, Brazil, the Philippines, the US, Canada, Australia, and all other non-EU countries.