Last Updated: April 20, 2026
Table of Contents
- Understanding Work Rules for Indian Students in Germany
- Work Limits: The 120/240-Day Rule Explained
- Types of Student Jobs in Germany
- Werkstudent: The Best Job Option for Indian Students
- Tax Rules for Working Students in Germany
- Monthly Budget: Working Student in Germany
- Time Management Tips for Working Students
- Common Mistakes Indian Students Make (And How to Avoid Them)
- Where to Find Part-Time Jobs in Germany
- Frequently Asked Questions
🕑 9 min read
Last Updated: February 2026 | Author: Saumitra Rajput, Kadamb Overseas | Fact-Checked: Against official BMAS & Ausländerbehörde sources
- 120 full days or 240 half days per year — legal work limit for international students on a student visa
- Minimum wage: €12.82/hour (₹1,192/hour) in 2026 — guaranteed for all part-time jobs
- Werkstudent jobs: €13–€22/hour, max 20 hrs/week during semester — the best option for students
- Tax-free income: Up to €11,604/year (₹10,79,172) — no income tax below this threshold
- HiWi (research assistant): €12–€15/hour at university — most flexible schedule
- Mandatory internships (Pflichtpraktikum) do NOT count toward the 120/240-day work limit
Understanding Work Rules for Indian Students in Germany
One of the biggest advantages of studying in Germany is the ability to work part-time legally while pursuing your degree. Unlike many countries that severely restrict student employment, Germany’s work regulations are designed to help international students gain experience, earn income, and integrate into the job market.
With 14+ years of experience guiding 500+ Indian students to Germany, Kadamb Overseas has helped students navigate these rules successfully. The key to balancing work and study is understanding the legal framework, choosing the right type of employment, and managing your time effectively.
Work Limits: The 120/240-Day Rule Explained
The most important rule for Indian students on a German student visa (§16b AufenthG):
| Work Type | Limit | Explanation | Example |
|---|---|---|---|
| Full-day work | 120 days/year | Working more than 4 hours counts as a full day | 120 × 8 hrs = 960 hours/year |
| Half-day work | 240 days/year | Working up to 4 hours counts as a half day | 240 × 4 hrs = 960 hours/year |
| Werkstudent | 20 hrs/week during semester | Counts toward 240 half-days if ≤4 hrs, or 120 full-days if >4 hrs | ~46 weeks × 20 hrs = 920 hrs/year |
| Semester break (vorlesungsfreie Zeit) | Full-time allowed | During official semester breaks, you can work full-time | ~10 weeks × 40 hrs = 400 hrs additional |
| Pflichtpraktikum | NO LIMIT | Mandatory internships don’t count at all | 6 months full-time = 0 days used |
| HiWi / Research Assistant | Counts toward 120/240 | University employment follows the same rules | 10 hrs/week = half-day counting |
Critical clarification: The 120/240 limit is per calendar year (January to December), not per academic year. If you start working in October, you have about 60 full days (or 120 half days) remaining for that calendar year. Plan accordingly.
Types of Student Jobs in Germany
| Job Type | Hourly Pay (€) | Monthly Income (₹) | Schedule | Career Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Werkstudent (Working Student) | €13–€22 | ₹96,720–₹1,63,680 | Max 20 hrs/week during semester | ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Highest — in your field |
| HiWi (Research Assistant) | €12–€15 | ₹71,280–₹1,11,600 | Flexible, 8–20 hrs/week | ⭐⭐⭐⭐ Great for academic career |
| Minijob | €12.82+ (minimum wage) | Up to ₹46,500 | Max €520/month (tax-free) | ⭐⭐ Basic income, limited career value |
| Freelancing | €20–€60+ | ₹1,48,800–₹4,46,400+ | Flexible, project-based | ⭐⭐⭐⭐ High if in your field |
| Tutoring | €15–€25 | ₹55,800–₹1,86,000 | Flexible, 5–15 hrs/week | ⭐⭐⭐ Good for teaching/language |
| Restaurant/Retail | €12.82–€14 | ₹47,700–₹1,04,160 | Shifts, evenings/weekends | ⭐ Income only, no career link |
| Delivery (Lieferando, Wolt) | €12.82–€15 + tips | ₹50,000–₹80,000 | Flexible app-based | ⭐ Income only |
Werkstudent: The Best Job Option for Indian Students
The Werkstudent (working student) position is unique to Germany and is by far the most valuable employment option for students:
Why Werkstudent is Superior
- Work in your field: Software development, engineering, data science, marketing — directly relevant to your degree
- Higher pay: €13–€22/hour vs €12.82 minimum wage for generic jobs
- Reduced social security: You only pay pension insurance (~9.35%), NOT health or unemployment insurance — saving ~€200/month vs regular employment
- CV builder: 1-2 years of Werkstudent experience at BMW or SAP is worth more than a 4.0 GPA alone
- Job conversion: ~50% of Werkstudenten get full-time offers after graduation
- Flexible hours: 20 hrs/week during lectures, up to 40 hrs during semester breaks
Werkstudent Salary by Industry
| Industry | Hourly Rate | Monthly (20 hrs/week) ₹ | Example Companies |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tech / Software | €16–€22 | ₹1,19,040–₹1,63,680 | SAP, Celonis, Personio, N26 |
| Consulting | €16–€25 | ₹1,19,040–₹1,86,000 | McKinsey, BCG, Roland Berger |
| Automotive | €14–€18 | ₹1,04,160–₹1,33,920 | BMW, Audi, Continental, ZF |
| Finance | €15–€20 | ₹1,11,600–₹1,48,800 | Deutsche Bank, Allianz, DZ Bank |
| Engineering | €14–€18 | ₹1,04,160–₹1,33,920 | Siemens, Bosch, ThyssenKrupp |
| Startups | €13–€18 | ₹96,720–₹1,33,920 | Berlin/Munich startups |
Tax Rules for Working Students in Germany
Understanding German taxes saves Indian students hundreds of euros per year:
| Tax Category | Details | Impact on Indian Students |
|---|---|---|
| Income Tax (Einkommensteuer) | Tax-free up to €11,604/year (Grundfreibetrag 2026) | Most part-time students earn below this — pay ZERO income tax |
| Solidarity Surcharge | 5.5% of income tax (only if earning >€18,130/year) | Rarely applies to students |
| Church Tax | 8-9% of income tax | Only if registered with a German church — most Indians are not, so ₹0 |
| Pension Insurance | 9.35% of gross salary (Werkstudent) | Mandatory for Werkstudent — can be reclaimed when leaving Germany permanently |
| Health Insurance | Exempt for Werkstudenten! | Your student health insurance covers you — no additional employer deductions |
| Unemployment Insurance | Exempt for Werkstudenten! | Another saving vs regular employment |
| Minijob (€520/month) | Completely tax-free for the employee | Employer pays flat-rate social security — you get full €520 |
Pro tip: File a Steuererklärung (tax return) every year even if you earned below the tax-free threshold. If your employer withheld taxes during the year, you’ll get them back as a refund. Average student tax refund: €200–€800. Use free software like ELSTER or affordable apps like Taxfix (€40).
Monthly Budget: Working Student in Germany
Here’s a realistic monthly budget for an Indian student working part-time in Germany:
| Category | Monthly (€) | Monthly (₹) | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| INCOME | |||
| Werkstudent (16 hrs/week × €15/hr) | +€1,040 | +₹96,720 | Before pension deduction |
| Pension deduction (-9.35%) | -€97 | -₹9,022 | Reclaimable when leaving Germany |
| Net Income | €943 | ₹87,700 | |
| EXPENSES | |||
| Rent (shared apartment) | -€400 | -₹37,200 | WG room in mid-size city |
| Health Insurance | -€120 | -₹11,160 | Student rate (TK/AOK) |
| Food & Groceries | -€200 | -₹18,600 | Cooking at home, Mensa meals |
| Transport | -€0 to -€29 | ₹0–₹2,697 | Semesterticket or Deutschlandticket |
| Phone & Internet | -€15 | -₹1,395 | Aldi Talk/O2 prepaid |
| Study Materials | -€30 | -₹2,790 | Books, printing, supplies |
| Entertainment | -€80 | -₹7,440 | Social activities, outings |
| Total Expenses | €845–€874 | ₹78,585–₹81,282 | |
| Monthly Savings | €69–€98 | ₹6,418–₹9,115 | Can increase with more hours in semester breaks |
During semester breaks: You can work full-time (40 hrs/week), potentially earning €2,400+/month (₹2,23,200) for 2-3 months — allowing you to save ₹1,00,000+ for the semester ahead.
Time Management Tips for Working Students
Balancing 20+ hours of work with a full academic load requires discipline. Here are proven strategies from Indian students who’ve done it successfully:
Weekly Schedule Template
| Day | Morning (8-12) | Afternoon (12-6) | Evening (6-10) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Monday | University lectures | Work (4 hrs) | Self-study |
| Tuesday | University lectures | University tutorials/labs | Work (4 hrs) |
| Wednesday | Work (4 hrs) | University lectures | Self-study / group projects |
| Thursday | University lectures | Work (4 hrs) | Self-study |
| Friday | Work (4 hrs) | University / self-study | Free / social |
| Saturday | Self-study / exam prep | Free | Social / hobbies |
| Sunday | Rest / meal prep | Self-study (if needed) | Week planning |
Total: ~20 hrs work + ~20 hrs university + ~15 hrs self-study = 55 hrs/week (manageable)
Top 8 Time Management Tips
- Block your work days — Try to concentrate work on 2-3 days rather than spreading thin across 5 days
- Use university tools — Record lectures (if allowed), use Moodle/ILIAS course materials, form study groups
- Cook in bulk — Meal prep on Sundays saves 5-7 hours/week of daily cooking
- Commute productively — Listen to lecture recordings or podcasts during travel
- Prioritize exams — Reduce work hours 2-3 weeks before exams. Most Werkstudent contracts allow flexibility
- Use semester breaks wisely — Work full-time during breaks, save money for the semester
- Don’t overcommit — 20 hrs/week is the maximum for a reason. 12-16 hrs is more sustainable long-term
- Communicate with your employer — German employers understand student schedules. Most Werkstudent managers are flexible about exam periods
📚 Planning to Study & Work in Germany?
Kadamb Overseas helps Indian students from admission to career. Get university shortlisting, visa filing, and pre-departure guidance — including work rules and job search tips.
💡 Expert Insight — Saumitra Rajput, Kadamb Overseas
“The number one question Indian parents ask me is: ‘Can my child support themselves in Germany?’ The answer is a definite yes — but with the right approach. A Werkstudent position in tech or engineering at €15-18/hour covers 80-90% of monthly expenses. The key is to get a relevant Werkstudent job, not a restaurant or delivery gig. Spend your first semester settling in academically, then from semester 2, aggressively search for a Werkstudent position in your field on LinkedIn and Stepstone. The income, experience, and networking from a good Werkstudent job is worth more than any scholarship.”
Common Mistakes Indian Students Make (And How to Avoid Them)
| Mistake | Why It’s a Problem | What to Do Instead |
|---|---|---|
| Working more than 120/240 days | Visa violation — can lead to deportation | Track your work days carefully in a spreadsheet. Employers should also track. |
| Not distinguishing Pflicht vs voluntary | Miscounting days — thinking mandatory internship days count | Get written Pflichtpraktikum confirmation from university BEFORE starting |
| Taking only restaurant/delivery jobs | Uses work days but adds zero career value | Invest time in finding a Werkstudent job in your field — even if it takes 2-3 months |
| Working during exam period | Grades suffer, extending study duration | Reduce hours 3 weeks before exams. Most employers understand. |
| Not filing tax returns | Missing out on €200-€800 refunds | File annually using ELSTER (free) or Taxfix (€40) |
| Schwarzarbeit (working without contract) | Illegal, no insurance, no rights | ALWAYS have a written contract. Report cash-only employers. |
| Ignoring blocked account disbursement | €992/month from Sperrkonto sits unused | Factor blocked account income into your budget — it covers basics |
Where to Find Part-Time Jobs in Germany
| Platform | Best For | Language |
|---|---|---|
| LinkedIn Jobs | Werkstudent positions at corporates & startups | English/German |
| Indeed.de | All types of student jobs | German/English |
| StepStone.de | Werkstudent at large companies | German |
| WerkstudentJob.com | Dedicated Werkstudent portal | German |
| University Career Service | Exclusive campus job postings | German/English |
| Department notice boards | HiWi (research assistant) positions | German/English |
| Studentenwerk job board | General student jobs (cafe, tutoring) | German |
| Jobmensa.de | Short-term student jobs, events | German |
🎓 Student Success Story
“When I arrived at RWTH Aachen for my MSc in Mechanical Engineering, I was worried about finances. In my first semester, I focused on academics and found a HiWi position at my department (€13/hour, 10 hrs/week = ₹48,000/month). By semester 2, I upgraded to a Werkstudent job at Continental (€16/hour, 16 hrs/week = ₹95,000/month). Between my Sperrkonto disbursement (₹92,000/month) and Werkstudent salary, I was earning ₹1,87,000/month total — enough to live comfortably in Aachen AND save ₹40,000/month. During semester breaks, I worked full-time at Continental earning €2,560/month (₹2,38,000). After graduation, Continental offered me a full-time position. Kadamb Overseas helped me plan all of this before I even left India.”
— Rohit M., MSc Mechanical Engineering, RWTH Aachen → Engineer at Continental (Kadamb Overseas alumnus, 2024 batch)
Frequently Asked Questions
Can Indian students work full-time in Germany during semester breaks?
Yes! During official vorlesungsfreie Zeit (lecture-free period), you can work full-time (40+ hours/week). Each full-time day counts as 1 of your 120 full days. Semester breaks are typically 2-3 months in summer (mid-July to mid-October) and 1 month in winter (mid-February to mid-March). Many students save significantly by working full-time during these periods — earning €2,000-€3,000/month (₹1.86-2.79 lakh).
How much can an Indian student earn in Germany per month?
Typical earnings for a working student: ₹75,000–₹1,65,000/month depending on job type, hours, and industry. A Werkstudent in tech at €18/hour working 20 hrs/week earns ~₹1,34,000/month. A HiWi at €13/hour working 10 hrs/week earns ~₹48,000/month. A Minijob earns up to ₹48,360/month (€520, tax-free). Combined with your blocked account disbursement (~₹92,000/month), total monthly income ranges from ₹1,40,000–₹2,57,000.
What happens if I work more than 120 days on a student visa?
Exceeding the 120/240-day limit is a visa violation and can result in: (1) Warning from Ausländerbehörde, (2) Fine for you and your employer, (3) Visa revocation in severe cases, (4) Difficulty getting future German visas. Always track your work days carefully. If you’re approaching the limit, stop working and focus on academics. Pflichtpraktikum days don’t count — so maximize mandatory internship time to preserve your 120 days for Werkstudent work.
Do I need to inform the Ausländerbehörde before starting a job?
In most German cities, you do NOT need prior permission for jobs within the 120/240-day limit (regular employment, not self-employment). However, some Ausländerbehörde offices require notification. Always check your Aufenthaltserlaubnis (residence permit) — it specifies your work conditions. For self-employment or freelancing, you typically need explicit Ausländerbehörde permission. When in doubt, send a brief email to your local office before starting.
Can I do freelance work as a student in Germany?
Yes, but with conditions. Freelancing counts toward your 120/240-day work limit AND may require Ausländerbehörde approval. You need to register at the Finanzamt (tax office) as a Freiberufler and get a Steuernummer. Popular freelance work for Indian students: web development, app development, data analysis, graphic design, tutoring, and translation. Freelancing often pays more (€20-€60/hour) but requires finding your own clients and handling taxes.
Is it possible to cover all living expenses through part-time work?
In affordable cities (Dresden, Leipzig, Chemnitz, Aachen), yes — a Werkstudent earning €15-18/hour at 20 hrs/week can cover nearly all expenses. In expensive cities (Munich, Frankfurt), part-time work covers 70-85% of expenses. With the blocked account disbursement (€992/month) + part-time income (€800-€1,500/month), most Indian students can be financially self-sufficient without needing family support beyond the initial blocked account deposit.
Should I work in my first semester or focus on academics?
We recommend focusing primarily on academics in semester 1, with possibly a light HiWi or Minijob (8-10 hrs/week). Your first semester sets the academic foundation — understanding the German university system, exam styles, and lecture formats. From semester 2, actively pursue a Werkstudent position. Exception: if you’re facing financial pressure, a Minijob (€520/month, tax-free) is low-commitment enough to manage alongside first-semester studies.
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Saumitra Rajput
Saumitra Rajput is the founder and lead counsellor at Kadamb Overseas, India's trusted Europe education consultancy based in Ahmedabad. With 14+ years of hands-on experience, he has personally guided 500+ students to universities across Germany, Switzerland, France, Italy, Austria, and Spain. Saumitra has visited partner universities across Europe, holds deep expertise in European visa processes, scholarships, and student life, and has achieved a 97% visa success rate for his clients. He is the host of the YouTube channel "Europe with Saumitra", where he shares first-hand insights on studying and living in Europe. His mission: make Europe accessible to every Indian student, with zero consultancy fees.
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