Immigration · Germany

Germany's Opportunity Card (Chancenkarte): The Points-Based Route to Find Work

BRBy Brisamo editorial·Updated June 2026·7 min read

Germany's Opportunity Card (in German, the Chancenkarte) is a job-seeker route that lets qualified foreigners move to Germany and look for work while they are already in the country. Instead of needing a job offer before you arrive, you earn your place through a points system that rewards skills, experience, language ability and other practical factors.

The idea behind the points system

The Opportunity Card was introduced as part of Germany's effort to attract skilled workers from outside the European Union. The core idea is simple: rather than requiring an employment contract up front, Germany lets you demonstrate your potential through a scorecard.

You collect points across several categories. The more boxes you tick, the stronger your application. Typical factors that earn points include:

  • Qualifications — a recognised university degree or vocational training.
  • Work experience — relevant years in your field.
  • Language skills — German ability tends to count most, but English can also help.
  • Age — younger applicants often receive more points.
  • Connection to Germany — for example, previous stays or study in the country.

There is a minimum points threshold you must reach to qualify. The number of points awarded per category, and the overall threshold, are set by law and can be adjusted over time. Rules change — confirm the current figures and the latest scoring with a qualified lawyer or the responsible German authority before relying on them.

Who qualifies

There are generally two ways to be eligible. The first is a fast track for people who already hold full recognition of their foreign qualification in Germany — if your degree or vocational training is officially recognised as equivalent, you may qualify without needing to score points at all.

The second is the points route, for those who do not yet have full recognition but still bring strong credentials. To enter this route you typically need a recognised foreign higher-education degree or vocational qualification, plus a baseline level of German or English, and then enough points overall.

You will also need to show that you can support yourself financially during your stay, usually by proving access to a certain amount of money or a part-time job arrangement. The financial proof required is fixed by regulation and updated from time to time, so treat any figure you read as approximate and verify the current requirement before you apply.

What the Opportunity Card allows

The card is issued for a limited period — often around a year — during which your main purpose is to look for qualified employment. Importantly, it does not leave you idle while you search.

  • You may take on part-time work up to a weekly limit to help cover your living costs.
  • You may do trial employment with a potential employer for a short period, so both sides can test the fit.
  • You can attend interviews, build your network, and have your qualifications further assessed while inside Germany.

These working allowances are capped, and the caps are set by law. If you are unsure how many hours you may work or what counts as a trial, check the current limits rather than guessing — getting this wrong can affect your status.

How it leads to work and longer stays

The Opportunity Card is a bridge, not a destination. Once you find a suitable position, the goal is to switch from the job-seeker card to a proper work residence permit.

Switching to a work permit

When you receive a qualifying job offer, you generally apply to change your status to a work-based residence title — for example, an EU Blue Card if you meet the salary and qualification conditions, or another skilled-worker permit. The Opportunity Card itself is temporary, so making this transition before it expires is what secures your next step in Germany.

Towards settlement

Once you are working under a stable permit, time spent in Germany can eventually count towards permanent residence (settlement). The qualifying periods and conditions vary depending on the permit you hold and your circumstances, and they too can change, so it is worth checking what applies in your case.

Practical points to keep in mind

A few realities are worth planning for. The card is not a guarantee of a job — it is an opportunity to find one, and the search takes effort. You should aim to arrive with enough savings, a translated and well-prepared set of documents, and a realistic understanding of demand in your field in Germany.

Document recognition can be the slowest part of the process. Whether your foreign qualification is treated as recognised or merely comparable can change which route you fall into and how many points you score. It is often wise to begin the recognition assessment early.

Finally, remember that immigration rules in Germany evolve, and individual cases differ widely by nationality, profession and family situation. Figures for points, finances, working hours and validity periods can all be revised — always confirm the current rules before making decisions.

A final word

The Opportunity Card can be a genuinely welcoming path into the German labour market for skilled foreigners, but the details decide everything — your points, your recognition status, and the timing of your switch to a work permit. Because these rules change and each situation is unique, this guide is general information only and not legal advice. Before you apply or commit to a move, it is well worth speaking to a qualified immigration lawyer in Germany who can review your specific circumstances and confirm the figures that apply to you.

BR
Brisamo editorial
General information, not legal advice

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