- Your identity has been clarified and you fulfil the passport obligation.
For the passport obligation, it is sufficient if you have a substitute identity card.
- You have been living in Germany for at least five years without interruption with a residence title.
- Your livelihood and that of your dependents is secured by fixed and regular income.
This includes that you
- are entitled to gainful employment and
- You fulfil your tax obligations (certificate from your tax office).
- You are insured in the statutory health insurance scheme or have an unlimited or automatically renewing health insurance cover.
- You have paid contributions into the statutory pension insurance or into another pension scheme with comparable benefits.
- You have sufficient knowledge of German and basic knowledge of the German legal and social system.
- You have sufficient living space for yourself and your family.
- There is no interest in deportation or other reasons of public security or order that stand in the way of issuing the EU permanent residence permit.
Note: The minimum residence period of five years also includes:
- Periods during which you had another residence title but stayed abroad for professional reasons
This period may not exceed six months. If you are abroad for a longer period of time, the Aliens' Registration Office may be able to grant you an exemption. However, you may not stay abroad for more than ten months for professional reasons within the minimum period of five years spend more than ten months abroad for professional reasons.
- up to four years in the following cases:
You already had a settlement permit or a permanent residence permit-EU. This has only become invalid because you
- you have left the EU, or
- were granted long-term resident status in another EU member state.
- Periods during which you studied or completed vocational training in Germany
You can have half of these credited.
- Periods during which you were entitled to freedom of movement.
- the period between the date of application for international protection and the date of issue of a residence title granted on the basis of the granting of international protection.
The following persons cannot be granted an EU permanent residence permit:
- Persons who have already been granted a comparable permit in another EU Member State
- Refugees, persons with a residence permit on humanitarian grounds and foreign nationals who have only applied for refugee status or subsidiary protection
- Persons staying in Germany for educational purposes or for other temporary purposes only
- Diplomats and other persons who enjoy a special legal status, in particular under the Vienna Conventions on Diplomatic and Consular Relations
Note: If you cannot obtain a permit for permanent residence in the EU, this also applies to your family members who have joined you in Germany.