The Chancenkarte (Opportunity Card, Chancenkarte nach §20a AufenthG) is Germany’s newest visa, introduced in June 2024 specifically to pull skilled workers from non-EU countries. For Indians it is arguably the best route: 12 months to job-hunt on the ground, legal to work part-time while you search, and only 6 points to qualify.
Here’s the exact points calculator, who qualifies as of 2026, and how to apply from India.
How the points system works
You need 6 points minimum, earned across four categories: qualifications, language, experience, and age/other. At least one category must be fulfilled; beyond that, mix and match.
Category 1: Qualifications
- Full recognition of your foreign degree in Germany (Anabin H+): automatic qualification — you don’t even need the Chancenkarte, you can apply for a work visa directly.
- Partial recognition of a regulated profession: 4 points
- Degree in a shortage occupation (engineering, IT, medicine, nursing, teaching): 1 point
Category 2: German language
- A2: 1 point
- B1: 2 points
- B2: 3 points
- C1 or higher: 4 points
Category 3: English language
- C1 (proven by IELTS 7.0+ or TOEFL 95+): 1 point
Category 4: Work experience
- At least 2 years of experience in the past 5 years: 2 points
- At least 5 years of experience in the past 7 years: 3 points
Category 5: Age
- Under 35: 2 points
- Under 40: 1 point
Category 6: Connection to Germany
- Previous stay of ≥6 months in Germany (study, work, internship): 1 point
- Spouse/partner also meeting Chancenkarte criteria: 1 point
Three example profiles
Profile A: Indian IT professional, 29, 5 years experience, B1 German
- Degree in shortage occupation (IT): 1 point
- German B1: 2 points
- English C1 (IELTS 7.5): 1 point
- 5 years experience: 3 points
- Under 35: 2 points
Total: 9 points ✓
Profile B: Indian MBA graduate, 32, 4 years experience, A2 German
- Shortage occupation: no
- German A2: 1 point
- English C1: 1 point
- 2+ years experience: 2 points
- Under 35: 2 points
Total: 6 points ✓ (just qualifies)
Profile C: Indian nursing diploma, 26, 3 years experience, no German
- Partial recognition of regulated profession (nursing): 4 points
- Under 35: 2 points
Total: 6 points ✓
Documents needed from India
- Passport (12+ months validity)
- Completed application form — download from the German Missions India website
- Two biometric photos
- Degree certificate + transcripts, apostilled by MEA
- Anabin printout showing H+ or H+/- status, OR ZAB Statement of Comparability (€200)
- Work experience letters covering the years you are claiming
- Language certificate (Goethe, telc, TestDaF, or ÖSD for German; IELTS/TOEFL for English)
- Financial proof: either €1,091/month × 12 = €13,092 blocked account, OR a part-time work contract (20 hrs/week at €13+/hour covers the requirement)
- Health insurance covering first 12 months
- Accommodation proof (Airbnb for first 4–8 weeks accepted)
- A written points self-assessment — this is what the consular officer uses
The application process
- Book a VFS appointment under “Chancenkarte / Opportunity Card” at VFS Global India (Delhi, Mumbai, Bangalore, Chennai, Kolkata).
- Attend the appointment with all documents. Fingerprint collection takes 10 minutes.
- Decision within 8–12 weeks. Well-prepared Indian applicants see 75–80% approval rates.
- 90-day window to enter Germany once the visa is issued.
What you can and can’t do on a Chancenkarte
You can:
- Stay in Germany up to 12 months
- Work part-time up to 20 hours per week
- Do paid trial work (Probebeschäftigung) for up to 2 weeks per employer
- Convert to a full work visa or Blue Card the moment you have an offer
- Travel freely in the Schengen zone
You cannot:
- Work full-time before converting the visa
- Bring family with you on the Chancenkarte itself — family reunion starts only after you convert to work visa
- Extend the Chancenkarte — it’s one-shot. After 12 months, convert or leave.
Strategy: what to do week 1 in Germany
- Anmeldung — you cannot do anything without it. See Week 1 guide.
- Open a bank account — N26 or DKB, both fully online. See bank guide.
- Register with the Arbeitsagentur — Germany’s federal employment agency. They have free advisors who help foreign professionals find roles.
- Find part-time work immediately — Minijob (€520/mo tax-free) or 20-hour student-tariff work. Makes the financial proof renewable and extends your runway.
- Start applying in week 2 on LinkedIn, Stepstone, Xing, and company career pages.
Chancenkarte vs Job Seeker Visa vs direct Blue Card
If you already have a €48,300+ job offer, skip the Chancenkarte — apply directly for the Blue Card.
If you have 5+ years experience and don’t need to work during the search, the Job Seeker Visa (6 months) is lighter on paperwork.
For everyone else — especially 25–35 year olds with 2–5 years experience and some German — the Chancenkarte is the most flexible route in.
Common mistakes on points claims
- Claiming 5 years experience without letters covering all 5 years: each year needs a letter from the relevant employer stating role, dates, and responsibilities.
- Claiming B1 German without a certificate: self-declaration is not accepted. Goethe-Institut or telc certificate only.
- Claiming shortage-occupation without Anabin H+: your degree must actually be listed in Anabin as equivalent. Without that, the 1 point is denied.
- Claiming “previous stay” for a 2-week tourist trip: doesn’t count. Must be ≥6 months and study/work/internship.
📚 Related
All 7 direct routes · Job Seeker Visa · Blue Card vs Work Visa · German CV template