How to present certificates and qualifications in a German CV
Learn how to show vocational training, university degrees, licenses and technical credentials clearly when applying for technical jobs in Germany.
Certificates help reduce uncertainty in technical recruiting
For international technical candidates, certificates can help German recruiters understand your education, formal training, safety relevance and technical credibility. They do not replace experience, but they can make your experience easier to trust.
Degrees, vocational training and licenses help recruiters understand your technical foundation.
Some jobs require specific certificates, safety training, authorisations or documented technical knowledge.
Clear documents make it easier to verify your training, specialisation, validity dates and technical scope.
Which certificates and qualifications should you include?
Prioritise certificates that are relevant, verifiable and useful for the role. Not every document needs the same space in your CV.
University degrees
B.Sc. Electrical Engineering, M.Sc. Mechanical Engineering, Automation Engineering, Embedded Systems, Industrial Engineering or Computer Engineering degrees.
Vocational training
Mechatronics technician, industrial mechanic, electronics technician, CNC machining, welding pathways or technical draughtsperson training.
Licenses and authorisations
Forklift license, crane license, high-voltage authorisation, electrical safety authorisation, driving licences or work-at-heights training.
Welding certificates
ISO 9606-1, MIG/MAG, TIG, material group, welding position, thickness range and validity date.
Electrical qualifications
Electrical engineering degree, EPLAN training, PLC training, low-voltage systems, switchgear, testing and measurement training.
Mechanical and manufacturing
SolidWorks, CATIA, AutoCAD, GD&T, CNC programming, quality management, hydraulics, pneumatics or machine safety training.
Automation and embedded
Siemens TIA Portal, Siemens S7, Beckhoff TwinCAT, robot programming, industrial networks, Linux embedded, C/C++ or functional safety.
Quality, safety and standards
ISO 9001, IATF 16949, ISO 14001, ISO 45001, CE marking, machine directive, occupational safety or first aid certificates.
Not every certificate has the same weight
One of the most common mistakes is putting an engineering degree, an official license, an internal company course and a short online course into one unclear list. Strong credentials should be visible first.
University degrees and recognised technical education usually carry the highest formal weight.
Professional training can be central for skilled trades, industrial and technical roles.
Some tasks require specific authorisations, safety training or legally relevant documentation.
Software, machine, automation or quality certificates can support your technical specialisation.
Useful if relevant, but it should not receive the same visual weight as a degree or official license.
Examples by technical profile
The right certificates depend on your profession. A strong CV does not show every course you have ever taken. It shows the documents that help validate your technical direction.
Electrical engineer
Show your degree, specialisation, electrical design tools, automation training and safety-related qualifications when relevant.
- M.Sc. Electrical Engineering — Technical University of Valencia, Spain
- Specialisation: Industrial Automation and Power Electronics
- EPLAN Electric P8 Training — 2024
- Siemens TIA Portal Basic Course — 2023
- Electrical Safety Training for Low-Voltage Systems — 2022
Mechanical engineer
Prioritise degree, CAD tools, technical drawings, simulation, quality, manufacturing and mechanical systems training.
- B.Sc. Mechanical Engineering — Politecnico di Torino, Italy
- SolidWorks Professional Certification — 2024
- GD&T and Technical Drawing Interpretation — 2023
- Hydraulics and Pneumatics for Industrial Systems — 2022
- ISO 9001 Quality Management Training — 2021
Mechatronics technician
Show vocational training, maintenance-related courses, pneumatics, hydraulics, PLC basics and machine-specific training.
- Vocational Training: Mechatronics Technician
- Pneumatics and Hydraulics for Industrial Maintenance
- PLC Basics — Siemens S7 / TIA Portal
- Machine Safety Training
- Maintenance Documentation Training
Welder
A welding certificate should show process, material, position, thickness range and validity. “Welding certificate” alone is not enough.
- ISO 9606-1 Welding Certificate
- Process: 135 MAG
- Material group: 1.1
- Position: PB
- Thickness range: 8–12 mm | Valid until 2027
CNC operator
Show CNC training, machine controls, technical drawing interpretation, measuring tools and quality control training.
- CNC Milling and Turning Training
- Heidenhain Control Basics
- Fanuc Control Introduction
- Technical Drawing Interpretation
- Quality Control and Measuring Tools Training
Automation technician
Prioritise PLC, HMI, commissioning, industrial networks, safety systems, troubleshooting and automation tools.
- Siemens S7 / TIA Portal Training
- HMI Configuration Basics
- Industrial Networks: Profinet / Profibus
- Commissioning and Fault Diagnosis Training
- Functional Safety Basics
How to list certificates clearly
A certificate should be easy to verify. The name alone is often not enough, especially when the certificate is technical, local or valid only for a certain period.
Use the official name where possible, especially for technical or industry-recognised certificates.
Include who issued the certificate and where, especially for international applications.
Add issue date and expiry date when relevant, especially for welding, safety or authorisation documents.
For specific certificates, add process, software, machine, standard, material or technical focus.
Concrete listing examples
The best certificate descriptions are short, verifiable and technically precise.
Translations, recognition and document clarity
International certificates can be valuable, but they need to be understandable. Do not invent German equivalents. Explain local titles clearly and check recognition requirements when the qualification is legally relevant.
Certificates are not the same as skills
Skills show what you can do. Certificates show that part of your training, authorisation or qualification can be documented. A strong application uses both clearly, without mixing them into one unclear list.
Practical ability to diagnose automation faults in real production or commissioning environments.
A documented course showing formal training in PLC basics, diagnostics or HMI integration.
Practical ability developed through production, workshop or project experience.
A documented welding qualification with process, material, position, thickness range and validity.
Common mistakes when presenting certificates
Certificates should increase trust. If they are unclear, badly translated, poorly ordered or impossible to verify, they can create confusion instead.
Degrees, licenses, short courses and internal training should not appear as one unclear list.
Dates help recruiters understand whether a qualification is recent, old or still valid.
Welding, safety or authorisation documents often need validity or expiry information.
Technical titles should be translated carefully and not forced into inaccurate German equivalents.
Short or irrelevant courses should not visually compete with a degree or core vocational qualification.
Important certificates should not be buried at the end of the CV or inside long paragraphs.
A certificate is easier to trust when the issuer is clear.
Attachments should be clean, complete, correctly named and easy to open as PDF documents.
Continue preparing your German CV
Certificates work best when they support your technical skills, work experience and application documents.
Make your qualifications easy to verify
Clear certificates and qualifications help recruiters understand your formal background, technical credibility and fit for German roles.
