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Hallo from DΓΌsseldorf! πŸ“¦

The first month in Germany is exciting. It's also terrifying. And expensive. Nobody warns you how fast the hidden costs pile up.

I know because I've been there. Here's what I wish someone told me before I signed my first Mietvertrag:

πŸ’Έ 1. Budget for Kaution (Security Deposit)

Most landlords ask for 3 months of cold rent (Kaltmiete) as a deposit. If your rent is €900/month, that's €2,700 upfront β€” before you've bought a single piece of furniture.

Tip: Check if the landlord accepts a Kautionskonto (a blocked bank account) instead of cash. Many do.

πŸ“„ 2. You Need Proof of Address to Do Almost Everything

In Germany, your Anmeldung (official registration at the Einwohnermeldeamt) is the key that unlocks everything:

Bank account? Anmeldung required.
SIM card? Sometimes Anmeldung required.
Job contract formalities? Anmeldung required.

But here's the catch: to register, many offices need your landlord to sign a WohnungsgeberbestΓ€tigung (landlord confirmation form). Get this before your move-in date.

πŸ“‹ 3. The Hidden Costs Nobody Mentions

Beyond rent, expect to pay for:

Rundfunkbeitrag: €18.36/month per household (we wrote about this already!)
GEZ registration comes automatically after Anmeldung
Internet setup fees: Some providers charge €60–€100 for the first router
Nebenkosten (utility bills): Often not included in rent β€” can be €200–€400 extra/month

πŸ” 4. How to Actually Find an Apartment

Housing in German cities is competitive. Here's where to search:

ImmobilienScout24 β€” the biggest rental portal in Germany
ImmoWelt
Ebay Kleinanzeigen β€” yes, really! Lots of private landlords post here
Facebook Groups: Search for "Wohnungssuche [your city]"

For expats specifically: Check ExpatDaheim or HousingAnywhere for English-speaking landlords.

πŸ‘€ 5. Warning Signs in Listings

Avoid apartments that:

Ask for payment before viewing (Scam!)
Refuse to show you the Nebenkosten breakdown
Have no Energieausweis (energy certificate) β€” required by law
Claim the apartment doesn't need an Anmeldung (illegal for permanent residents)

πŸ“§ 6. The Letter from the Beitragsservice

Within 2–4 weeks of registering, you'll get a letter from ARD ZDF Deutschlandradio Beitragsservice. Don't panic β€” it's the Rundfunkbeitrag registration. Pay it, or apply for exemption if you're a student on BAfΓΆG.

First month in Germany is a marathon, not a sprint. But once you get through the paperwork mountain, it does get easier.

Welcome to Germany. We've got beer and bureaucracy β€” in that order. πŸΊπŸ‡©πŸ‡ͺ

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