Anmeldung and Tax ID in Germany
The first administrative steps international professionals should understand after arriving in Germany: address registration, Tax ID, payroll and onboarding.
Your first registered address matters more than you think.
Anmeldung is not just a bureaucratic formality. For international workers, it can affect the Tax ID, payroll setup, bank account, health insurance communication, letters from authorities and the practical start of life in Germany.
A room, shared flat or temporary apartment is not only a place to sleep. If it does not allow registration, your first weeks can become harder: no stable address, delayed letters, slower payroll onboarding and more uncertainty.
How Anmeldung connects to your first payroll setup
The exact process can vary by city and personal situation, but for many candidates the practical sequence looks like this.
Check whether registration is possible.
Ask for the Wohnungsgeberbestätigung.
Book or use the local city process.
It usually arrives by post after registration.
Employer uses the data for salary setup.
What address registration means in practice
Anmeldung means registering your address with the local registration authority after moving into accommodation in Germany. In practice, this step creates an official address record and gives you a registration confirmation.
It is handled locally. You register through the city or municipality where you live, usually through a Bürgeramt, Bürgerbüro or local registration office.
The address must be real. You normally need accommodation where the landlord, main tenant or housing provider can confirm that you moved in.
It affects your first weeks. Registration can matter for official letters, employer onboarding, bank account processes and health insurance communication.
Appointments vary by city. Some cities offer online processes, while others rely heavily on appointments at local offices.
What the Tax ID is used for
The German Tax ID, or Steuer-ID, is used for tax and payroll purposes. For employees, it is especially relevant because employers need correct tax information to set up salary payments.
It is not the same as a tax number. The Steuer-ID is a personal identification number. A Steuernummer is a different tax number used in other tax contexts.
It is normally sent by post. After registration, the Tax ID is usually sent to your registered address.
It stays with you. If you already lived in Germany before, you may already have one and do not receive a new number every time.
It can be recovered. If you cannot find it, the official BZSt portal provides information on how to request it again.
Documents to prepare before your appointment
Requirements can vary by city and personal situation, so always check the official city page. These are common documents candidates should expect to prepare.
Passport or ID
You normally need an official identity document. Non-EU citizens may also need residence-related documents.
Wohnungsgeberbestätigung
This confirms that you moved into the address. It is one of the most important documents for registration.
Registration form
Some cities provide a form online. In other cases, the office may support the process during the appointment.
Family documents
If you move with spouse or children, check whether marriage or birth certificates are needed.
Official Anmeldung portals in major German cities
Use official city portals for appointments, required documents and local procedures. Avoid relying only on forum posts or outdated relocation checklists.
Berlin
Residence registration through the Berlin service portal.
Official portalHamburg
Registration of main or sole residence through Hamburg’s service portal.
Official portalMunich
Residence registration information from the City of Munich.
Official portalFrankfurt am Main
Registration, re-registration and deregistration information from Frankfurt.
Official portalStuttgart
Main residence registration information from the City of Stuttgart.
Official portalCologne
Residence registration information from the City of Cologne.
Official portalDüsseldorf
Residence registration information from Düsseldorf’s service portal.
Official federal sourceTax ID / BZSt
Official information about the German Tax Identification Number.
Other municipalities
Search for “Anmeldung + city name” or “Wohnsitz anmelden + city name” and use the official city website.
Common problems during the first admin steps
Most problems come from housing, timing or unclear expectations. Plan these points before your first week starts.
Temporary housing without registration can delay official letters and create practical onboarding problems.
No Wohnungsgeberbestätigung means the accommodation may not be usable for Anmeldung.
Waiting too long for appointments can make the first weeks stressful, especially in large cities.
Confusing Tax ID and tax number can create unnecessary confusion during payroll onboarding.
Not checking city-specific rules can lead to missing documents or wrong appointment types.
Assuming the employer handles everything is risky. Employers may support onboarding, but registration is usually your responsibility.
Connect administration with your relocation plan
Anmeldung and Tax ID are easier when housing, contract and first-week planning are already clear.
Job offer and contract
Check salary, contract type, location and relocation conditions before accepting.
HousingHousing in Germany
Understand why temporary housing, shared flats and registration-friendly accommodation matter.
First weeksFirst weeks in Germany
Organise the first practical steps after arrival without losing focus on work.
Prepare your work setup, not only paperwork
Administrative steps are part of becoming ready to start work. They should connect with your CV, offer, housing and onboarding.
Plan your address, documents and payroll setup early
Anmeldung and Tax ID are not isolated paperwork. They connect your housing, employer onboarding, salary setup and first weeks in Germany.
