Registration (Anmeldung) in Germany — Address Registration Step-by-Step

A practical guide to registering your address in Germany — the 14-day rule, what to bring, and what happens next.

Last updated: June 2026

Registration (literally "registration") is the legally required process of registering your residential address with the local registration authority. Every person living in Germany — citizens, residents, students, expats — must do it within 14 days of moving in. It triggers your tax ID, broadcasting fee account, and (for non-EU citizens) is a prerequisite for your residence permit.

What is Anmeldung?

Anmeldung is the formal registration of your address (Wohnsitz) with the Bürgeramt (citizens' office), Bürgerbüro, or KVR (in Munich) of your local municipality. The legal basis is the Bundesmeldegesetz (BMG) — the Federal Act on Registration.

Every person living in Germany is required to be registered. This applies regardless of citizenship: Germans, EU citizens, and non-EU residents alike. There is no minimum stay requirement — if you have a residence in Germany, you must register.

The 14-day rule and fines

You must register within 14 days (two weeks) of moving in per § 17 Abs. 1 BMG. Failure to register on time can result in a fine of up to €1,000 per § 54 Abs. 2 Nr. 1 BMG.

In practice, fines are rare for first-time offenders who eventually register, especially if you can show a valid reason (couldn't get an appointment, illness, etc.). However, your bigger problem is downstream: without an Anmeldebestätigung you can't open a German bank account, get a residence permit appointment, or sign most rental contracts.

The 14-day clock starts on your Einzugsdatum (move-in date), not your arrival in Germany. If you stayed in a hotel for 3 weeks before moving into your flat, the clock starts when you actually moved in.

Wohnungsgeberbestätigung (WGB)

The Wohnungsgeberbestätigung (literally "housing-provider confirmation," sometimes called Wohnungsgeberbescheinigung) is the most important document for Anmeldung. Without it, you cannot register.

It is a signed form from your Wohnungsgeber (the person providing the dwelling — your landlord, the main tenant if you sublet, or the owner if you own the property) confirming that you have moved in.

The WGB must contain:

The Wohnungsgeber is legally required to provide the WGB within 2 weeks of your move-in (§ 19 BMG). Refusal is itself an administrative offense.

Documents you need for Anmeldung

Bring all of the following in original to your appointment. Photocopies and scans are typically rejected.

1

Valid ID

Passport or national ID card (EU citizens). Children need their own passport or ID. Non-EU citizens may also be asked to present their visa/residence permit.

2

Wohnungsgeberbestätigung

Original signed form from your landlord (see section above).

3

Anmeldeformular

The registration form itself. Most cities provide a downloadable PDF on their Bürgeramt website — fill it out before your appointment to save time. Some cities also have it available at the office.

4

Family certificates (if applicable)

If registering with a spouse or children: marriage certificate, birth certificates. Documents not in German must usually have an official German translation (or international form Apostille). Check with your specific Bürgeramt.

5

Religious affiliation (optional but consequential)

You will be asked your religion. If you declare a religion (Catholic, Protestant, Jewish), you become liable for Kirchensteuer (church tax, ~8-9% of your income tax). Many expats declare "konfessionslos" (no denomination) to avoid this. You can change it later.

Booking the appointment

Most German cities require you to book online through the local Bürgeramt or Bürgerservice portal. Walk-ins are increasingly rare, especially in major cities.

Wait times by city (approximate)

Tips for finding appointments

For your specific city, see the linked Bürgeramt URL on each city roadmap page — the directory has direct booking links for 128+ German cities.

What happens after Anmeldung

Within 30 minutes you walk out with an Anmeldebestätigung (registration certificate). Keep this safe — you'll need it for almost every next step. Several things happen automatically over the next few weeks:

1. Steuer-ID arrives by post (2-4 weeks)

The Steuer-ID (steuerliche Identifikationsnummer / tax ID) is an 11-digit number assigned automatically by the Bundeszentralamt für Steuern. You will receive it by post within 2-4 weeks. Your employer needs it to set up your salary and tax withholding correctly. If you don't receive it in time, request a copy via the BZSt online form.

2. Rundfunkbeitrag letter (broadcasting fee)

Within 4-6 weeks you'll receive a letter requiring you to register for the Rundfunkbeitrag: €18.36/month in 2026 (€55.08/quarter, €220.32/year). This is per-household, not per-person. Ignoring the letter does not make it go away — just register. Exemptions exist for Bürgergeld/BAföG recipients and certain disabilities.

3. Ausländerbehörde (ABH) appointment for non-EU citizens

If you're non-EU and entered on a national visa, you must convert your visa to a residence permit at the Ausländerbehörde (foreigners' office). Book this appointment immediately after Anmeldung — wait times in major cities can be 3-6 months, sometimes longer than your visa is valid.

4. Bank account

With your Anmeldebestätigung you can open a German Girokonto. Most expats use N26, DKB, ING, or a Sparkasse. A German account is needed for SEPA direct debits (rent, Rundfunkbeitrag, utilities, gym memberships).

Abmeldung — when you leave

Most expats get this wrong because the rule depends on where you're going.

Moving within Germany: No separate Abmeldung needed. Just register your new address (Anmeldung) at the new municipality within 14 days — this automatically overwrites your old registration.
Moving abroad permanently (no other German residence): You must deregister at your current Bürgeramt. Window: from 7 days before to 14 days after your move-out date (§ 17 Abs. 2 BMG).

Why Abmeldung matters

Without Abmeldung when leaving Germany:

Many cities offer Abmeldung by post or via the federal BundID portal — useful if you've already left the country.

Vehicle registration (Umkennzeichnung)

If you own a car and move to a different German registration area (different city), you may need to update your vehicle registration at the local Zulassungsstelle. Since 2015, you can often keep your existing license plate when moving (under the "Mitnahme des Wunschkennzeichens" reform), saving a registration fee. The Halterabfrage (owner data) still gets updated to your new address.

Check with your new city's Zulassungsstelle for the specific procedure and required documents (vehicle registration certificate, eVB number for insurance, ID).

Frequently asked questions

How long do I have to register my address in Germany?

14 days (two weeks) of moving in, per § 17 Abs. 1 BMG. Fine up to €1,000 under § 54 Abs. 2 Nr. 1 BMG.

What is a Wohnungsgeberbestätigung (WGB)?

A signed form from your landlord confirming you've moved in. Mandatory for Anmeldung. The landlord must provide it within 2 weeks of your move-in (§ 19 BMG).

What documents do I need for Anmeldung?

(1) Valid passport or ID, (2) Wohnungsgeberbestätigung, (3) Anmeldeformular, (4) marriage/birth certificates if registering family. Originals only.

What happens after I complete Anmeldung?

Steuer-ID by post in 2-4 weeks. Rundfunkbeitrag letter in 4-6 weeks (€18.36/month in 2026). Non-EU residents need an ABH appointment for the residence permit.

Do I need to deregister (Abmeldung) when I move?

Within Germany: no — new Anmeldung overwrites the old. Abroad: yes, mandatory if no other German residence. Window: 7 days before to 14 days after move-out (§ 17 Abs. 2 BMG).

How do I book an Anmeldung appointment?

Through your local Bürgeramt website. In big cities, wait times are 4-12 weeks — book ASAP and refresh for cancellations.

City-specific Anmeldung links

This guide covers the federal rules. For your specific city's Bürgeramt booking link, address, and quirks, see the city directory with 128+ German cities.

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