Germany vs Italy
Germany has the clearer permanent-residency pathway; Italy has more routes that need no job offer (4). Which is right depends on your nationality, profession, savings, and whether you have a job offer. The free quiz scores your profile against every route in both countries.
Germany vs Italy: how do they compare for immigration?
Aggregated from every Germany and Italy visa Transita tracks. Fees are official government amounts in USD and exclude legal, translation, and relocation costs.
Official sources: §18d · make-it-in-germany.com·§20 AufenthG · auswaertiges-amt.de·ISV · italiastartupvisa.mise.gov.it·Carta Blu UE · home-affairs.ec.europa.eu
Common questions
- Is it easier to get a visa for Germany or Italy?
- Italy is generally easier to start on your own profile: 4 of its 6 routes need no job offer, versus 3 of 6 for Germany. "Easier" still depends on your nationality, profession, and points. It is not automatically easier for everyone.
- Which country gives a faster visa, Germany or Italy?
- They are closely matched: the quickest Germany route is the §18d (1–3 months) and the quickest Italy route is the ISV (1–2 months). Neither has a decisive speed edge. File completeness matters more.
- Which has easier permanent residency, Germany or Italy?
- Germany's quickest PR route takes about 2 years (5 PR routes), while Italy's quickest PR route takes about 5 years (5 PR routes). On paper Germany offers the clearer route to permanent residency, but eligibility for the underlying visa decides your real odds. Not every applicant qualifies for the fastest path.
- Is it cheaper to immigrate to Germany or Italy?
- Italy has the cheaper entry point: its Carta Blu UE costs about $54 in official fees, versus $100 for Germany's cheapest route (the §20 AufenthG). Both are government fees only. Legal, translation, and relocation costs usually dwarf them.
- Which country is better to settle in, Germany or Italy?
- For long-term settlement, permanent residency is the deciding factor: Germany's quickest PR route takes about 2 years (5 PR routes), and Italy's quickest PR route takes about 5 years (5 PR routes). Germany has the clearer permanent-residency pathway on paper, but the "better" country to settle in depends on your job prospects, family, language, and where you'd actually want to live. The free quiz scores your specific profile against every route in both.
Explore each country
Germany or Italy, which fits you?
Take the free quiz. We'll score your specific profile against every Germany and Italy route (and 60+ others) and tell you which is the best fit, with the why.
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