Living in Berlin: The Complete Expat Guide

Berlin is Germany's capital and largest city, home to nearly 3.9 million people from over 190 countries. This guide covers everything an expat needs to know before and after arriving: from neighbourhoods and rent ranges to healthcare, transport, and the Anmeldung.

Last updated: 8 June 2026

Key takeaways

  • Berlin is Germany's capital and largest city, with nearly 3.9 million residents and a foreign national share of 24.9% (Amt für Statistik Berlin-Brandenburg, 2025).
  • Average rent for a one-bedroom apartment in popular expat districts ranges from around 1,100 EUR to 1,500 EUR per month: higher in Mitte, lower in Neukölln and Lichtenberg.
  • A comfortable single-person budget sits between 2,200 EUR and 2,850 EUR per month, including rent, utilities, transport, food, and leisure.
  • The Deutschlandticket at 58 EUR per month covers all BVG metro, tram, and bus services and is the best-value transport option for most residents.
  • Health insurance is compulsory from day one. Employees earning below 73,800 EUR gross (2025) must use GKV statutory insurance.
  • You must complete your Anmeldung (address registration) within 14 days of moving in. Book your Bürgeramt appointment before you arrive.

Overview

Berlin is not a city that eases you in gently. It is a place that asks something of you: curiosity, adaptability, a willingness to navigate complexity. In return, it offers an urban experience that is genuinely unlike anywhere else in Europe: a capital shaped by division and reunification, by destruction and reinvention, by waves of immigration and waves of creativity. Nearly four million people live here, drawn from over 190 countries, and the city has developed a culture of radical openness that still surprises new arrivals.

The city became the capital of a unified Germany in 1990, following 28 years of division between the communist East and the democratic West. That history is still visible: in the East Side Gallery, where 1.3 km of the original Berlin Wall has been preserved as an open-air gallery; in the contrasting architectural styles of districts like Mitte and Marzahn; in the differing pace and character of eastern and western neighbourhoods. Far from being a liability, this layered history gives Berlin its distinctive texture.

Today Berlin is Germany's political and cultural centre, and one of Europe's most important technology hubs. The city hosts over 40,000 new business registrations each year, has produced 23 unicorn startups, and anchors a tech ecosystem that stretches from fintech and e-commerce to artificial intelligence and deep tech. It is also a city of museums: with 170 across the city: of world-class electronic music, of street art, markets, and parks. For expats, this combination of professional opportunity and cultural richness makes Berlin one of the most compelling destinations on the continent.

The practical picture is equally compelling. Berlin remains meaningfully more affordable than London, Paris, or Amsterdam. Rents are rising but still offer value by major European capital standards. The public transport network is comprehensive, the cycling infrastructure is excellent, and the city's international character means English is genuinely useful in daily life. The challenges are real: a notoriously complex bureaucracy, a tight rental market, and occasional friction for non-German speakers at government offices. But the community of people who have navigated those challenges before you is large, supportive, and well-documented online.

"Berlin asks something of you. In return, it offers an urban experience that is genuinely unlike anywhere else in Europe."

Key facts

The table below captures Berlin's essential statistics at a glance.

Category Detail
Population 3,913,644 (31 December 2025; Amt für Statistik Berlin-Brandenburg)
Area 891.8 km²
Administrative structure 12 Bezirke (boroughs), each subdivided into Ortsteile (localities)
Official language German
Foreign nationals approx. 975,000 (24.9% of population)
Climate Moderately continental: cold winters (avg. 0.5°C in January), warm summers (avg. 19.5°C in July), 677 mm annual rainfall
Transport system BVG network: U-Bahn (metro), S-Bahn (suburban rail), tram, and bus. Fare zones AB (city) and ABC (incl. airport and Potsdam)
Cost of living rank More affordable than London, Paris, Amsterdam; comparable to Hamburg and Munich
Key industries Technology and startups, media and creative industries, tourism, healthcare and life sciences, public administration, logistics

Neighbourhoods

Berlin's 12 boroughs contain dozens of distinct Kieze (neighbourhoods), each with its own character. For most expats, the choice narrows quickly to a handful of central and inner-city areas. Rents below are for a 1-bedroom apartment (approx. 40–55 m²) based on current market listings as of early 2026.

Mitte

Berlin's geographic and administrative centre. Home to the Reichstag, the Brandenburg Gate, Museum Island, and the main government quarter. Mitte is the most international part of the city: dense, walkable, and expensive by Berlin standards. The Hackescher Markt area attracts young professionals and international visitors. Commute times are minimal. Vacancy below 1%.

Typical 1-bedroom rent: 1,400 EUR to 1,800 EUR/month. Average asking price: 18 to 22 EUR/m².

Transport: U2, U5, U6, S-Bahn Mitte, multiple tram and bus lines.

Prenzlauer Berg

The go-to district for families and young professionals in the former East. Well-preserved Gründerzeit (late 19th-century) architecture, a dense café and restaurant scene, strong school provision, and Mauerpark for weekend flea markets. Among the most sought-after addresses in the city, vacancy is extremely tight.

Typical 1-bedroom rent: 1,200 EUR to 1,600 EUR/month. Average asking price: 17 to 21 EUR/m².

Transport: U2 (Eberswalder Str.), M10 tram, multiple buses.

Friedrichshain

Young, energetic, and diverse, Friedrichshain centres on the Boxhagener Platz area and the East Side Gallery. Strong nightlife scene and a large community of digital nomads and creative professionals. Warschauer Strasse is a major transport hub. Very cycle-friendly.

Typical 1-bedroom rent: 1,100 EUR to 1,450 EUR/month. Average asking price: 16 to 20 EUR/m².

Transport: U1, U3, U5, S-Bahn Warschauer Str., multiple trams.

Kreuzberg

Berlin's most culturally diverse neighbourhood: historically a working-class district with large Turkish and Kurdish communities, now also home to tech workers, artists, and students. Bergmannkiez offers a calmer, more residential feel; Graefekiez around the canal is popular with young professionals. Tempelhofer Feld: the world's largest inner-city park in a former airport: is a ten-minute walk from most of the district.

Typical 1-bedroom rent: 1,100 EUR to 1,500 EUR/month. Average asking price: 16 to 22 EUR/m².

Transport: U1, U6, U7, U8, multiple buses.

Charlottenburg-Wilmersdorf

The traditional western city centre. Kurfürstendamm, the Kaufhaus des Westens (KaDeWe), and the Charlottenburg Palace are here. A more established, quieter character than the eastern districts: popular with families, older expats, and those who prefer wider streets and a less hectic pace. Strong international school options nearby.

Typical 1-bedroom rent: 1,300 EUR to 1,700 EUR/month. Average asking price: 16 to 20 EUR/m².

Transport: U1, U2, U3, U7, S-Bahn Zoologischer Garten, multiple buses.

Neukölln

North Neukölln: particularly the Reuterkiez around Reuterplatz: has become one of Berlin's most creative and internationally mixed neighbourhoods over the past decade. Strong community of freelancers, artists, and startup workers. More affordable than the districts above, with a genuine local character. South Neukölln is quieter and more residential.

Typical 1-bedroom rent: 950 EUR to 1,300 EUR/month. Average asking price: 14 to 17 EUR/m².

Transport: U7, U8, multiple buses and S-Bahn connections.

Pankow and Weißensee

Increasingly popular with families priced out of Prenzlauer Berg. Quieter, greener, with excellent schools and growing café culture. Slightly longer commutes to the city centre but good S-Bahn and tram connections.

Typical 1-bedroom rent: 900 EUR to 1,200 EUR/month.

Tip: use a furnished rental first

Central districts have vacancy rates below 1%. A furnished monthly rental gives you a legal address for the Anmeldung, time to explore neighbourhoods without pressure, and flexibility if your first choice does not feel right after a few weeks.

Average monthly rent by neighbourhood (1-bedroom, approx. 50 m²)

Mitte
1,600 EUR
Charlottenburg
1,500 EUR
Prenzlauer Berg
1,400 EUR
Kreuzberg
1,300 EUR
Friedrichshain
1,250 EUR
Neukölln
1,100 EUR
Pankow / Weißensee
1,000 EUR

Midpoint estimates based on current asking rents. Sources: Guthmann Estate Berlin Market Report 2025; Investropa Berlin Rents 2026; Mono Estate 2025.

Transport

Berlin has one of the best urban transport networks in Europe. The BVG (Berliner Verkehrsbetriebe) runs the U-Bahn, tram, and bus network; Deutsche Bahn operates the S-Bahn. Together they cover the whole city comprehensively, with most inner-city journeys taking under 30 minutes. Trams operate exclusively in former East Berlin districts.

Tickets and fares (from 1 January 2025)

Ticket type Zone Price Notes
Single ticket AB 3.80 EUR Valid 2 hours, all modes
Single ticket ABC (incl. airport) 4.40 EUR Covers BER airport and Potsdam
Day ticket AB 9.90 EUR Unlimited travel until end of service day
7-day ticket AB 36.00 EUR Useful for short stays
Deutschlandticket Nationwide 58.00 EUR/month Best value for regular users. Covers all BVG modes in zones AB+ABC. Subscription required.
Deutschlandticket Job Nationwide from 34.30 EUR/month Subsidised via employer
Deutschlandticket Semester Nationwide 29.40 EUR/month For enrolled students only

Cycling

Berlin is one of Germany's most cycle-friendly cities, with over 1,700 km of dedicated cycling lanes and a flat topography that makes it easy for all fitness levels. A second-hand bike (150 to 300 EUR) is one of the best investments a new arrival can make. The BVG's Leihrad scheme and Nextbike/Tier scooters provide alternatives if you prefer not to own.

Car

Driving in Berlin is possible but rarely the most efficient choice in central districts. Parking is difficult and expensive in most inner-city areas. A Umweltzone (environmental zone) sticker is required for vehicles driven in central Berlin. Car-sharing services (ShareNow, Miles, Sixt Share) are widely available for occasional use. If you are moving from outside the EU, German traffic rules and a German driving licence may be required within 6 months.

Zone AB versus zone ABC

Zone AB covers the entire city of Berlin, including all inner-city districts. Zone ABC adds BER International Airport, Schönefeld, and Potsdam. If you do not commute to these destinations regularly, the Deutschlandticket (nationwide, 58 EUR/month) makes the zone distinction largely irrelevant.

Cost of living

Berlin is significantly more affordable than London, Paris, or Amsterdam, but costs have risen meaningfully over the past five years. A single person living comfortably in a central district should budget between 2,200 EUR and 2,850 EUR per month. The table below shows typical ranges for each main category.

Category Monthly range (single person) Notes
Rent (1-bed, furnished) 1,100 EUR to 1,800 EUR Depends on district and size
Utilities (electricity, gas, water) 80 EUR to 160 EUR Often included in furnished rental; higher in winter
Internet (home broadband) 25 EUR to 45 EUR Deutsche Telekom, Vodafone, 1&1
Mobile phone plan 10 EUR to 30 EUR Prepaid SIM available without Anmeldung
Public transport 58 EUR Deutschlandticket (monthly subscription)
Groceries 200 EUR to 400 EUR Lower at Aldi/Lidl/Netto; higher at Rewe/Edeka
Dining out (mid-range) 150 EUR to 350 EUR Berlin has a strong affordable food scene
Health insurance (GKV, employee) approx. 10% of gross salary (employee share) Employer matches \~10%; total \~20% incl. long-term care
Total (central district, median) 2,200 EUR to 2,850 EUR Excluding health insurance (typically via salary deduction)

Salary benchmark

A net monthly salary of around 3,500 EUR is sufficient for a single person to live comfortably in a central district. For a couple, 5,000 EUR net covers a two-bedroom apartment, utilities, and a reasonable quality of life. For families, budget upward from 5,500 EUR net to account for Kita fees and additional living space.

Healthcare

Germany runs a dual health insurance system that is among the most comprehensive in Europe. Understanding which system applies to you is the first thing to sort before you arrive.

GKV: statutory health insurance

Most employed expats are automatically enrolled in the gesetzliche Krankenversicherung (GKV). If your gross annual salary is below 73,800 EUR (2025 threshold), membership is compulsory. Contributions are approximately 14.6% of gross salary plus a provider-specific surcharge of around 1.5 to 2.0%, split equally between you and your employer. Long-term care insurance adds a further 3.4%. The largest GKV providers in Berlin include TK (Techniker Krankenkasse), AOK Berlin-Brandenburg, and Barmer. GKV coverage is comprehensive: it includes GP visits, specialist referrals, hospital treatment, prescription medication (with a 10 EUR co-payment per prescription), dental check-ups, and mental health support.

PKV: private health insurance

Employees earning above the 73,800 EUR threshold, the self-employed, and civil servants may choose private insurance (PKV). Premiums are based on your age at entry, health status, and the tariff you select. PKV typically gives faster access to specialists and private hospital rooms but can become expensive as you age. Switching back to GKV after opting into PKV is difficult: take professional advice before choosing.

Registering with a GP (Hausarzt)

Germany does not operate a formal GP registration system as in the UK: you are free to attend any practice. In practice, finding a practice that is accepting new patients can take time in Berlin. The fastest approach is to use Doctolib (available in English), which shows real-time availability and allows you to filter by language. Book your first appointment with a GP before you need one urgently. Under the GKV Hausarztmodell, signing up with a named GP gives you a 10% premium discount and commits you to always seeing them first (outside emergencies).

Arrange health insurance before you arrive

There is no grace period for health insurance in Germany. You are liable for contributions from the first day you live or work in the country. Late enrolment can result in back-payments covering the entire uninsured period.

Physicians per 1,000 inhabitants: Berlin vs other German cities

Berlin has above-average physician density, with approximately 6.7 doctors per 1,000 residents. The national average is approximately 5.1 per 1,000. Despite this overall density, GP access can be constrained in specific districts due to uneven distribution.

Berlin
6.7 / 1,000
Hamburg
7.9 / 1,000
Munich / Bavaria
5.2 / 1,000
Germany (avg.)
5.1 / 1,000

Sources: Bundesärztekammer (German Medical Association) 2023 statistics; The Local DE (2024); CEIC Germany physicians per 1,000 people. Munich figure reflects Bavaria state average.

Working life

Key industries and employers

Berlin's economy is driven by technology, media, creative industries, and public administration. The city is Germany's unrivalled startup capital, with around 40,000 new business registrations per year and a tech ecosystem that has produced 23 unicorn companies. Major homegrown successes include Zalando (e-commerce), HelloFresh (food delivery), Delivery Hero (food tech), N26 (fintech), and SoundCloud (audio streaming). International companies including SAP, Siemens, and Klarna have major Berlin presences.

Beyond tech, Berlin is home to the federal government and associated agencies employing hundreds of thousands of civil servants. Healthcare is a major employer: the Charité, one of Europe's largest university hospitals, employs over 20,000 staff. The creative industries: film, music, fashion, architecture: are deeply embedded in the city's economy. Tourism generates around 14 billion EUR annually and supports a large hospitality sector.

Job market

Berlin's unemployment rate of 10.6% (April 2026, Bundesagentur für Arbeit) is above the German national average of 6.3%, reflecting a structural gap between the city's large service and public sector workforce and demand for tech and professional skills. For qualified expats in technology, engineering, data, and management, the job market is active. English-only job hunting is realistic in tech and international firms. Outside these sectors, German language skills at B2 level or higher are increasingly a requirement.

Salaries

Salaries in Berlin's tech sector have risen sharply. The median annual gross salary for full-time tech employees reached 80,000 EUR in 2025 (up from 76,500 EUR the prior year), with engineering leadership roles reaching a median of 115,000 EUR. In sectors like media, culture, and education, median salaries are considerably lower: in the range of 57,000 to 62,000 EUR gross. Germany's national minimum wage is 12.82 EUR per hour (2025).

Work culture

German work culture values punctuality, preparation, and clear communication. Meetings start on time and have agendas. Feedback is direct: criticism is constructive rather than personal. The 40-hour working week is the norm for salaried employees, and overtime is generally compensated. Annual leave entitlement is legally 20 working days (five weeks) as a minimum, with most full-time roles offering 25 to 30 days. Berlin's startup culture introduces a somewhat more informal layer: remote and hybrid working is common in tech, dress codes are relaxed, and English is often the working language in international teams.

Working visa: the Opportunity Card (Chancenkarte)

Non-EU nationals with a recognised qualification can apply for Germany's Chancenkarte (Opportunity Card), a points-based job-seeker visa introduced in 2024. It allows you to live in Germany for up to one year while searching for work. Relevant portals include the Make it in Germany website and the German Embassy in your home country.

Culture and leisure

Berlin has 170 museums, three UNESCO World Heritage Sites, nine symphony orchestras, and a nightlife scene that has no direct equivalent anywhere in the world. It is a city where cultural density and accessibility combine: many major museums are free for children, public parks cover a third of the city's area, and the street art scene is arguably the richest in Europe.

Parks and outdoor spaces

Tempelhofer Feld is the most distinctive: a converted airport runway covering 380 hectares in the centre of the city, used for cycling, barbecuing, kite flying, and urban farming. Tiergarten, the city's central park, stretches 210 hectares from the Brandenburg Gate westward. Treptower Park by the Spree offers quiet green space and the Soviet War Memorial. Grunewald forest on the western edge provides genuine woodland with lakes for swimming.

Museums and cultural institutions

Museum Island in central Berlin is a UNESCO World Heritage Site housing five major museums: the Pergamon Museum (currently undergoing partial renovation), the Alte Nationalgalerie, the Altes Museum, the Neues Museum, and the Bode Museum. The Jewish Museum Berlin, the German Historical Museum (Deutsches Historisches Museum), and the DDR Museum offer essential historical context. The East Side Gallery: 1.3 km of the original Berlin Wall: remains the most powerful outdoor site.

Music and nightlife

Berlin's electronic music scene is internationally recognised as the world's most significant. Berghain, operating since 2004 in a converted thermal power station between Friedrichshain and Kreuzberg, is the city's most famous club: a 1,500-capacity venue with an uncompromising door policy, no photography rule, and 18-metre ceilings. The Berliner Philharmoniker, directed by Kirill Petrenko, performs at the Hans-Scharoun-designed Philharmonie in Tiergarten. Venues like the Staatsoper, the Volksbühne, and the Komische Oper offer world-class opera and theatre at prices considerably below those of comparable cities.

Markets and food

Mauerpark flea market on Sunday mornings in Prenzlauer Berg is one of the best in Europe. The Markthalle Neun in Kreuzberg hosts a Thursday street food market and regular specialist food events. Turkish Market on the Maybachufer canal in Neukölln: Tuesdays and Fridays: is a genuine neighbourhood market rather than a tourist attraction. Berlin's food scene is unusually affordable for a capital city: döner kebab in its current form was essentially invented here, and the city has a strong tradition of accessible, international dining.

Annual events

The Berlin International Film Festival (Berlinale) takes place every February. Berlin Art Week brings contemporary galleries and fair together every September. The Festival of Lights in October transforms landmarks across the city. The Berlin Marathon in late September is one of the world's six Abbott World Marathon Majors. The Christmas market season from late November runs across dozens of Kieze, with the markets at Charlottenburg Palace and Gendarmenmarkt among the most visited.

Crime and safety

Berlin is broadly safe for residents and daily life. The crime figures below reflect the structural reality that city-states like Berlin, Hamburg, and Bremen record higher rates than flächenländer (territorial states like Bavaria) because urban areas generate more reported crime per resident: the comparison is not directly equivalent to a city within a larger state.

Pickpocketing is the most relevant risk for new arrivals, concentrated on S-Bahn and U-Bahn lines serving tourist areas, around Alexanderplatz, and at large outdoor events. Standard precautions: secure bag, no phone visible in crowded spaces: are sufficient for most situations. Most residential neighbourhoods are safe to walk at night.

Recorded crimes per 100,000 inhabitants (PKS 2024)

Data source: BKA Polizeiliche Kriminalstatistik 2024. Lower figures indicate fewer recorded crimes. The German national figure covers the whole country including rural areas.

Berlin
14,252 / 100k
Hamburg
12,380 / 100k
Munich / Bavaria
4,218 / 100k
Germany (national avg.)
6,995 / 100k

Note: lower = safer. City-state figures (Berlin, Hamburg) are not directly comparable to Bavaria, which includes large rural areas. Sources: BKA PKS 2024; Statista Regional Crime Rate Germany 2024; Bayerisches Staatsministerium des Innern PKS Bayern 2024.

Why city-state comparisons need context

Berlin, Hamburg, and Bremen are simultaneously cities and federal states. Their crime frequency rates are measured against their entire resident population, which is urban. Bavaria's figure includes low-crime rural areas and small towns, which pulls the average down. Munich itself: Bavaria's largest city: would show a higher rate than the state figure. Munich has been the safest large German city (200,000+) for multiple consecutive years per Bayerische Polizei data.

Practical tips

Before you arrive

  • Arrange health insurance: contact a GKV provider (TK, AOK, Barmer) or a PKV broker and confirm coverage starts on your arrival date.
  • Secure accommodation with a formal rental agreement: you need it for the Anmeldung. A Wunderflats furnished rental provides the Wohnungsgeberbestätigung on signing.
  • Book your Bürgeramt appointment online at service.berlin.de as soon as you have a confirmed address. Slots fill four to six weeks ahead.
  • Check visa requirements: EU/EEA nationals can move freely; non-EU nationals need to verify whether a job visa, blue card, or Chancenkarte applies to their situation.
  • Download the BVG app and familiarise yourself with the ticket system. Buy a Deutschlandticket subscription on arrival for immediate transport access.
  • Learn basic German greetings and administrative vocabulary: Bürgeramt appointments, landlord communication, and GP visits all go smoother with even minimal German.

On arrival (first two weeks)

  • Complete your Anmeldung at the Bürgeramt. Bring: passport, Wohnungsgeberbestätigung, and completed registration form. You will receive the Meldebescheinigung on the day.
  • Open a bank account: N26, Commerzbank, and Deutsche Bank all offer English-language onboarding. N26 requires only passport and video ID. Traditional banks require the Meldebescheinigung.
  • Register with your GKV provider: present your Meldebescheinigung, employment contract, and passport. You will receive your Versichertenkarte (insurance card) by post.
  • Buy a SIM card: Prepaid SIMs (Aldi Talk, Congstar, O2) are available at supermarkets and electronics stores without requiring an Anmeldung.
  • Notify your employer of your address and tax ID as soon as they arrive by post (typically four to six weeks after Anmeldung).

Once settled (first three months)

  • Book a GP appointment via Doctolib before you need one urgently.
  • Register your vehicle if you are bringing one: contact the Kfz-Zulassungsstelle. Apply for a German driving licence conversion if applicable (EU licences are valid; non-EU licences must be exchanged within six months).
  • Apply for a Kita place if you have children under three: waiting lists are long and applications are accepted from birth.
  • Set up a Rundfunkbeitrag (public broadcasting contribution) payment: 18.36 EUR/month per household, mandatory for all residents.
  • File a German tax return (Steuererklärung) in the year following your first year of residence: use ELSTER (the official free tool) or a Steuerberater (tax adviser) for English-language support. Deadlines are typically 31 July for self-filers.
  • Explore your neighbourhood: each Kiez has its own weekly market, local Stammcafé, and community rhythm. Berlin rewards those who engage with it at street level.

FAQs

Do I need to speak German to live in Berlin?

Berlin is one of the most English-friendly cities in continental Europe. Tech, media, and startup environments often operate entirely in English. Day-to-day life: dealing with landlords, visiting the Bürgeramt, and seeing a doctor: all runs more smoothly with basic German. For roles outside the international tech bubble, German is increasingly required. Learning the basics before you arrive will open significantly more doors.

How do I register my address in Berlin (Anmeldung)?

You must register at a Berlin Bürgeramt within 14 days of moving into any address. Bring your passport, the Wohnungsgeberbestätigung (a landlord confirmation form), and a completed Anmeldung form. Book your appointment at service.berlin.de as soon as you have a confirmed address: slots are often booked four to six weeks in advance. You will receive a Meldebescheinigung on the day, which you need to open a bank account, obtain a tax ID, and access most public services.

What health insurance do I need in Berlin?

Health insurance is compulsory in Germany from your first day of residence. Most employees earning under 73,800 EUR gross per year (2025 threshold) must join the statutory system (GKV). Higher earners and the self-employed may choose private insurance (PKV). Arrange your cover before you arrive. GKV contributions are shared equally between employee and employer and amount to roughly 20% of gross salary including long-term care insurance.

How long does it take to find a flat in Berlin?

The Berlin rental market is competitive. Vacancy rates in central districts are well below 1%. A realistic search for an unfurnished long-term flat takes two to three months. A furnished monthly rental is a practical first step: it requires less paperwork, is available on short notice, and gives you time to explore neighbourhoods before committing to a long-term lease.

Is Berlin good for families?

Yes, particularly in Prenzlauer Berg, Pankow, Zehlendorf, and Steglitz, which offer strong schools, green spaces, and a calm residential character. Kita (nursery) places are in short supply citywide: apply as early as possible, ideally before the child turns one. International schools include the Berlin Brandenburg International School and the John F. Kennedy School (a German-American bilingual school in Zehlendorf).

What is the Deutschlandticket and can I use it in Berlin?

The Deutschlandticket is a monthly subscription for 58 EUR (from January 2025) that covers unlimited travel on almost all local and regional public transport across Germany. In Berlin, it covers the entire BVG network (U-Bahn, S-Bahn, tram, bus) within zones AB and ABC, including BER airport and Potsdam. It is the most cost-effective option for regular commuters and is available via the BVG app or website.

Sources

  • Amt für Statistik Berlin-Brandenburg: Berlin population data 2025. The Grounds RE, February 2026
  • Guthmann Estate: Berlin Real Estate Market Report 2025. guthmann.estate
  • Investropa: Updated Rents in Berlin 2026. investropa.com
  • Mono Estate: How Much Does an Apartment in Berlin Cost in 2025? monoestate.com
  • Wunderflats Hub: Cost of Living in Berlin: Average Monthly Expenses in 2025. hub.wunderflats.com
  • Kummuni: Cost of Living in Berlin 2025. kummuni.com
  • BVG: All BVG tickets at a glance (2025 fares). bvg.de
  • iamexpat.de: Price hike announced for public transport tickets in Berlin (January 2025). iamexpat.de
  • BKA: Police Crime Statistics 2024. bka.de
  • Statista: Regional crime rate in Germany 2024. statista.com
  • Bayerisches Staatsministerium des Innern: Polizeiliche Kriminalstatistik Bayern 2024. stmi.bayern.de
  • Polizei Hamburg: Vorstellung der PKS 2024. polizei.hamburg
  • Bundesärztekammer / The Local DE: The German states struggling most with a doctor shortage (2024). thelocal.de
  • CEIC Data: Germany physicians per 1,000 people. ceicdata.com
  • iamexpat.de: GKV vs PKV 2025: Health insurance for expats in Germany. iamexpat.de
  • Handpicked Berlin: Salary Trends 2025 Report. handpickedberlin.com
  • Bundesagentur für Arbeit: Monthly unemployment rate Berlin, April 2026. Statista / BA data
  • businesslocationcenter.de: Berlin as startup capital. businesslocationcenter.de
  • allaboutberlin.com: The Anmeldung: how to register your address in Berlin. allaboutberlin.com
  • climate-data.org: Berlin climate: weather and temperature by month. climate-data.org
  • visitBerlin.de: Clubs as cultural spaces in Berlin. visitberlin.de
WH

Editorial team

WunderHub editors

Our editorial team writes practical, evidence-based guides for renting and letting in Europe. Every piece is fact-checked and refreshed quarterly.

Find your next home

Ready to start your search?

Browse 50,000 verified furnished apartments. All-inclusive pricing. Move in with a suitcase.