Hybrid Is King: What 5,600 German Tech Jobs Tell Us About Work Models
We analysed 5,636 tech job listings from 1,066 companies across Germany. The results challenge the remote-work narrative and reveal what employers actually offer in 2026.
· 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 Data
We scraped and categorised 5,636 tech job listings from 1,066 companies currently hiring in Germany. Every listing was tagged by work model: hybrid, remote, on-site, or unspecified. The results paint a clear picture of what German employers are actually offering in 2026, and it is not the fully-remote paradise that many candidates hope for.
Why Remote Is Rarer Than You Think
The global narrative around remote work, fuelled largely by US-based tech companies, does not translate directly to Germany. German labour law, works councils (Betriebsrat), and a deeply ingrained culture of in-person collaboration mean that most employers prefer to keep teams at least partially co-located.
There are practical reasons too. Many German tech companies serve regulated industries, automotive, finance, healthcare, where data handling requirements and compliance frameworks make fully remote setups more complex. A hybrid model gives employers the flexibility they need while still offering candidates some location independence.
The 20.9% of listings that leave work model unspecified are also worth noting. In our experience, these roles tend to default to on-site once you reach the interview stage. Candidates should ask about work model expectations early in the process to avoid surprises.
What This Means for Job Seekers
If you are targeting the German tech market, hybrid should be your baseline expectation. The good news is that hybrid arrangements in Germany are typically generous, two to three days from home per week is common, and some companies offer even more flexibility once you have established yourself in the role.
For international candidates, this has an important implication: you likely need to be in Germany, or willing to relocate there, to access the vast majority of opportunities. The 9.6% of fully remote roles do exist, but competition for them is fierce precisely because they attract applicants from across Europe and beyond.
Our advice: expand your search to include hybrid roles, focus on cities where your target companies are headquartered, and treat the office requirement as a networking opportunity rather than a burden. Kariyan lets you filter jobs by work model preference so you can focus on the arrangements that genuinely fit your situation.