Hiring technical talent in Germany
Germany’s technical labour market is under pressure. But successful international hiring depends on more than finding candidates — it requires realistic requirements, clear expectations and a process that candidates can actually complete.
Technical hiring is not only a sourcing problem
Many German employers describe the same situation: suitable electricians, mechatronics technicians, CNC specialists, maintenance profiles, industrial mechanics, automation technicians and engineers are difficult to find.
International hiring can help, but it does not work automatically. A company can attract more candidates and still fail if the salary range is unclear, German requirements are unrealistic, CVs are screened too narrowly or relocation support is underestimated.
Why technical hiring in Germany feels difficult
The German labour market is not simply “short of everyone”. The real issue is a combination of demographic pressure, occupation-specific bottlenecks, qualification mismatch and recruiting process friction.
Occupation-specific shortages
The Bundesagentur für Arbeit identified 163 occupations with skilled worker bottlenecks in 2024. This means employers should look at shortages by occupation, not only at the labour market in general.
Qualification mismatch
KOFA reported that around 391,000 qualified positions could not be filled with appropriately qualified unemployed workers in June 2025. The problem is not only vacancy volume, but matching.
Open positions remain significant
The IAB estimated 1.26 million open positions in Germany in the fourth quarter of 2025. Even in a weaker economy, many employers still compete for suitable skilled workers.
Demographic pressure
Destatis reports 51.2 million people aged 20 to 66 in Germany, with projections showing a decline in the working-age population in the coming years, even under high net migration scenarios.
The shortage is real, but the hiring process still matters
Data explains why international hiring is becoming more relevant. But data alone does not hire a technician. Employers still need a process that translates market reality into realistic hiring decisions.
Requirements are often too broad
Many job descriptions combine essential skills, nice-to-have experience and ideal language levels into one rigid profile. This reduces the candidate pool before screening even starts.
Language expectations are not always role-specific
Some technical roles need strong German from day one. Others may work with A2, B1 or English if the workplace is structured and onboarding is realistic.
Salary and contract expectations are clarified too late
International candidates compare salary, rent, relocation effort, contract security and family impact. If these expectations are unclear, processes often fail late.
International CVs are screened through a German lens
A candidate from Spain, Eastern Europe or North Africa may not present training, certificates or experience in the same way as a German applicant. That does not automatically mean the profile is weak.
Relocation friction is underestimated
Housing, Anmeldung, tax ID, bank account, family relocation and first salary timing can decide whether a technically suitable candidate actually starts.
What employers should clarify before starting the process
International technical hiring works better when the company defines the real hiring conditions before searching for candidates.
Technical must-haves
Which skills are essential from day one, and which can be trained during onboarding?
Language level
What German or English level does the role actually require in daily work?
Salary range
Is the salary attractive enough when relocation, rent and family situation are considered?
Contract model
Is the role direct employment, temporary staffing, try-and-hire or project-based?
Relocation support
What practical help can the company realistically offer before the start date?
Screening process
Who evaluates international CVs, certificates, experience and technical fit?
Go deeper into the hiring process
Technical hiring becomes more effective when employers connect market reality with practical screening, language, salary and relocation decisions.
Data sources used for this guide
Build a more realistic technical hiring process
International hiring is not only about reaching more candidates. It is about defining the role, screening profiles, setting expectations and reducing the friction that prevents suitable candidates from starting.
