Where to start with German banking
German banking has a reputation for being conservative, paperwork-heavy, and sometimes impenetrable without knowing the language. That reputation is partly earned – but the market has opened up considerably over the past decade. Today, several fully digital banks serve their entire customer base in English, and opening an account can take under ten minutes from your smartphone.
The five sections below cover what you actually need, roughly in the order you will encounter these topics after arriving in Germany.
Accounts & Cards
A German current account (Girokonto) is the foundation of your financial life here. You need it to receive your salary, pay rent by SEPA transfer, set up direct debits, and access your money via card. Most landlords and employers expect you to have a German IBAN.
The good news: Germany has one of the most competitive free-account markets in Europe. You do not have to pay a monthly fee. The deciding factors are whether the bank offers English onboarding, whether it accepts newcomers without a Schufa record, and which features matter most to you (cash withdrawals, a physical branch, investment options).
- Girokonto – current account (for everyday spending)
- Girocard / EC-Karte – German debit card, accepted everywhere in Germany
- SEPA-Überweisung – standard bank transfer within the eurozone
- Lastschrift – direct debit authorisation
- Dauerauftrag – standing order (e.g., for rent)
- Dispokredit – overdraft facility on your current account
Which banks accept newcomers in English?
The table below shows the four most relevant providers for expats and newcomers. All four accept customers who have just registered their address in Germany and have no Schufa history yet.
| Bank | Monthly fee | English app | Physical card | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| N26 | 0 € | Yes | Yes | Digital-first expats |
| C24 Bank | 0 € | German | Yes | Best overall features |
| Tomorrow | 3 € – 15 € | Yes | Yes | Sustainable banking |
| Bunq | from 3,99 € | Yes | Yes | Multi-currency, travel |
Schufa & Credit
If you have been in Germany for more than a week, you have probably heard the word Schufa. It comes up when you try to rent a flat, sign a phone contract, or apply for a credit card. Understanding what it is – and what it means for you specifically as a newcomer – saves a lot of confusion.
The Schufa (Schutzgemeinschaft für allgemeine Kreditsicherung) is a private credit bureau that collects financial data on around 68 million people in Germany. Banks, landlords, and service providers use its data to assess how likely someone is to meet their financial obligations. It is similar in concept to Experian in the UK, CIBIL in India, or the three-bureau system in the USA – but the data it collects and shares works differently.
The most important thing for newcomers
Having no Schufa record is not the same as having a bad Schufa score. When you first arrive, the Schufa simply has no data on you. Most digital banks and an increasing number of landlords handle this situation routinely. What matters is that you start building a clean record from day one – pay on time, do not overextend credit lines, and check your free annual report once a year.
What the Schufa stores – and what it does not
The Schufa records the existence of financial contracts and how you honour them. It stores data about bank accounts, loans, credit cards, and mobile phone contracts. Crucially, it does not store your salary, your employer, your nationality, your religion, or your address history. A landlord who receives your Schufa report sees a creditworthiness score and a list of any negative events (missed payments, debt collection proceedings) – not your income.
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Savings & Investing
Once your current account is set up, the next step is putting spare money to work. Germany has a well-regulated savings market with two main products designed for private savers: Tagesgeld and Festgeld. Both are protected by German deposit guarantee schemes up to 100,000 EUR per bank and customer.
Variable-rate savings account. You can deposit and withdraw at any time. Interest rate changes with the market. Best for your emergency fund or short-term savings. English translation: overnight money or instant-access savings.
Fixed-term deposit. You lock in a rate for a fixed period (1 month to 5+ years). The money is not accessible until the term ends. Best for savings you will not need soon and want to protect from rate cuts. English translation: fixed-term deposit.
Investing: ETF savings plans (Sparplan)
Germany has a growing culture of retail investing through ETF savings plans, and Trade Republic has become the dominant provider for straightforward, low-cost monthly investing. For as little as 1 EUR per month, you can set up automatic purchases of a global index ETF.
Daily Banking
Day-to-day banking in Germany follows patterns that may differ from what you are used to. Cash still plays a larger role here than in most comparable countries – many smaller restaurants, markets, and local shops do not accept card payments at all. At the same time, contactless payments via NFC, Apple Pay, and Google Pay are widely accepted in supermarkets and chain retailers.
Transfers and payments
Bank transfers within Germany and the eurozone use the SEPA system. Most transfers arrive the same working day or the next day. There are no fees for SEPA transfers between German accounts. Sending money internationally (outside the eurozone) can incur fees; Wise or Revolut are typically cheaper than traditional banks for those transactions.
Cash withdrawals
With most free accounts, you can withdraw cash for free at the bank's own ATMs or partner networks. N26 allows a limited number of free withdrawals per month at any Mastercard ATM. C24 Bank has an extensive free ATM network. Always check whether the ATM is within your bank's free network before withdrawing.
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Special Situations
Some banking situations require specific knowledge depending on your status in Germany. International students, freelancers and the self-employed, and people who have just arrived with a residence permit or Blue Card each face slightly different requirements and have access to different products.
You need a bank account to receive scholarship payments, set up a rental contract, and pay tuition fees. Most universities accept German or eurozone IBANs. N26 and C24 Bank are the fastest to open without a German credit history. A blocked account (Sperrkonto) for visa purposes requires a different product – usually from Deutsche Bank, Fintiba, or Coracle.
Using a personal account for business is legally possible for freelancers (Freiberufler) in Germany, but keeping accounts separate makes tax reporting and VAT (Umsatzsteuer) much simpler. Business accounts tailored for freelancers are available from Qonto, Kontist, and FYRST. A separate section on Geschäftskonto options is available in German on this site.
Germany's Chancenkarte and EU Blue Card holders have the same banking rights as any other legal resident. Register your address first (Anmeldung), then use your passport, residence permit, and Anmeldebestätigung to open an account. Digital banks are fastest; some traditional banks may ask for additional documents.
People with temporary protection status (Aufenthaltsgestattung or Duldung) have a legal right to a basic payment account (Basiskonto) under German law. Every bank with a retail licence in Germany is required to offer one. The Basiskonto cannot be refused based on low income or lack of Schufa history.
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Frequently asked questions
Ringo Dühmke
Trained commercial specialist · Finance editor with 25+ years of experience · Licensed financial advisor under § 34f GewO
All English guides on Bankdaten.de are researched and written by Ringo Dühmke. Product data is verified directly against official bank sources. Bankdaten.de earns revenue through clearly disclosed affiliate links; this does not influence editorial assessments or rankings.
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