Health Insurance in Germany Before Starting Work: What Candidates Need to Know

Relocation roadmap

Health insurance in Germany before starting work

What international engineers, technicians and skilled industrial workers should understand about health insurance before their first working day in Germany.

Before your first day
01
Understand whether statutory or private insurance applies to your situation.
02
Choose or confirm a health insurance provider before payroll onboarding.
03
Give your employer the information needed to register salary and contributions.
04
Do not confuse travel insurance with German health insurance for employment.
Why it matters

Health insurance is part of your work setup.

For international candidates, health insurance is not just something to arrange after arrival. It connects with your employment contract, payroll, social security contributions, medical coverage and onboarding.

Your employer may need health insurance details before you start.

In many employment processes, payroll cannot be completed cleanly without knowing which health insurance provider applies. If you wait until the last minute, onboarding can become slower and more stressful.

Health insurance checklist

What to clarify before your first working day

The practical goal is simple: know your insurance status, choose the right path and make payroll onboarding easier.

01 Contract signed

Clarify employer, start date and salary type.

02 Insurance status

Check whether statutory insurance normally applies.

03 Choose provider

Select or confirm a Krankenkasse if needed.

04 Employer data

Give your employer the required insurance information.

05 First day ready

Payroll, coverage and onboarding are easier.

Insurance options

Statutory, private or temporary coverage?

Most employees start with statutory health insurance, but the right path depends on employment status, salary, residence situation and previous coverage.

GKV

Statutory health insurance

The usual route for many employees. Contributions are linked to income and handled through payroll together with the employer contribution.

PKV

Private health insurance

Private insurance may be possible for certain groups, such as high earners or self-employed people. It should be evaluated carefully before choosing.

Temporary

Travel or incoming insurance

Short-term insurance can help during travel or transition, but it is not automatically enough for employment and payroll in Germany.

Employer onboarding

What your employer usually needs to know

Health insurance is part of salary administration. Your employer needs to know where contributions should be reported and how your social security setup should be handled.

Your chosen Krankenkasse. If you are entering statutory insurance, your employer may ask which health insurance fund you want to use.

Your personal data. Payroll onboarding usually connects health insurance with address, Tax ID, social security details and start date.

Your previous coverage. Candidates coming from another EU country, previous German employment or private insurance may need to clarify their status.

Your family situation. If spouse or children move with you, ask early how family coverage may apply to your situation.

Documents and data

Information to prepare before onboarding

Requirements vary by provider and situation, but these are common pieces of information international candidates should prepare.

Identity

Passport or ID

Health insurance providers usually need reliable identity information to register your membership correctly.

Employment

Job offer or contract

Your employment start date, employer and salary context can matter for membership and payroll setup.

Address

German address

A registered or contact address helps with official letters, membership documents and health card delivery.

Previous coverage

EU or prior insurance

If you were insured in another country or previously in Germany, clarify this before choosing a provider.

Recruiter-practical view

Why candidates should not leave this until arrival

Recruiters and employers do not expect you to know every detail of the German system. But they do expect you to be reachable, organised and ready to provide the information needed for onboarding.

It affects payroll. Health insurance information is part of the employment administration before salary payments start.

It affects first-week confidence. Knowing that coverage is being handled reduces stress during the first days.

It affects family relocation. Moving alone is different from moving with spouse or children, especially when coverage questions are unclear.

It affects trust. A prepared candidate is easier for employers to onboard than someone who waits until the last moment.

Common mistakes

Common health insurance mistakes before starting work

Most problems come from assuming that health insurance is automatic, optional or something that can be solved after the first working day.

!

Confusing travel insurance with employment coverage and assuming it is enough for working in Germany.

!

Not choosing or confirming a provider before the employer asks for payroll information.

!

Ignoring family coverage questions when moving with spouse or children.

!

Choosing private insurance too quickly without understanding long-term consequences, eligibility and family situation.

!

Waiting until arrival even though onboarding documents are requested before the first day.

!

Assuming the employer handles everything without asking what information they need from you.

Official information

Official sources for health insurance in Germany

Use official sources to understand the system. Avoid making decisions based only on forums, social media or informal advice.

This guide is for general orientation and does not replace advice from a health insurance provider, employer, tax advisor or legal professional. Your situation can vary depending on employment status, salary, family situation, residence status and previous insurance coverage.
Before your first day

Do not leave health insurance until the last minute

Health insurance connects your employment contract, payroll, social security contributions and first weeks in Germany. Clarify it early so onboarding is easier.

Scroll to Top