Do You Really Need German to Work in Germany's Tech Industry?
We analysed thousands of job listings to find out how many German tech roles actually require German language skills, and which cities are most welcoming to English speakers.
· Jay Gajera
Data based on a snapshot of 5,636 active tech job listings from 1,066 companies across Germany, captured on 26 March 2026 via the Kariyan job discovery engine. Numbers reflect a point-in-time view and are updated regularly.
The Myth
Ask any international professional about working in Germany and the first concern is almost always language. "Do I need to speak German?" is the question that stops more qualified candidates from applying than any other single factor. The assumption is that without fluent German, you have no chance, and that assumption is wrong.
The myth persists because it contains a grain of truth. Germany is not the Netherlands or Scandinavia, where English is almost universally spoken in professional settings. Many German companies do conduct internal communication in German, and customer-facing roles often require it. But the tech industry operates differently, and the data proves it.
The Data
Our analysis of German tech job listings reveals a striking picture. 44.2% of all tech positions are explicitly English-friendly, meaning the listing is written in English, states that English is the working language, or does not mention German as a requirement. Only 6.5% of tech roles explicitly require German language skills.
The remaining listings fall into a grey area: they are written in German but do not explicitly state language requirements, or they list German as "nice to have" rather than mandatory. In practice, many of these roles are accessible to English speakers, especially at companies with international teams.
Best Cities for English Speakers
Not all German cities are equally welcoming to English-speaking professionals. Our city-by-city analysis reveals significant variation in how English-friendly the local tech market is.
| City | English-Friendly Listings |
|---|---|
| Darmstadt | 52.4% |
| Berlin | 45.5% |
| Aachen | 43.6% |
| Freiburg | 42.6% |
Darmstadt leads the pack with 52.4% of tech listings being English-friendly, likely driven by the concentration of international research institutions and companies like Merck's tech division. Berlin follows at 45.5%, which is no surprise given the city's reputation as Germany's most international hub. Aachen rounds out the top three at 43.6%, boosted by RWTH Aachen University's extensive international network and the startups it spawns. Freiburg also performs strongly at 42.6%.
These numbers matter for your job search strategy. If you are an English-speaking professional choosing where to base yourself in Germany, these cities offer the highest density of roles where language will not be a barrier to entry.
What This Means
Should you learn German? Absolutely, it will help your career, your social life, and your long-term integration. But should you wait until you are fluent before applying to German tech jobs? Absolutely not. The data shows that nearly half the market is ready for you right now.
The practical strategy is to start applying to English-friendly roles immediately while investing in German on the side. Most employers understand that language acquisition takes time, and many offer German courses as a company benefit. Getting your foot in the door is what matters first.
Kariyan automatically identifies English-friendly listings and tailors your application language to match what each employer expects, so you never send a German cover letter to an English-first company, or vice versa.