Are you interested in coming to Germany to live, study or to work?
I’ll handle your entire university admission and visa process — or guide you on how to relocate to Germany.
Thinking about starting a new chapter in Germany — for work, study, freelancing, or building a life with more security and opportunity? I’ve been there:
— I came to Germany on a Job Seeker Visa.
— I completed my MSc in User Experience Design at a public university in Ingolstadt.
— I secured a job that qualified for the EU Blue Card.
— I brought my family to Germany through a Family Reunion visa.
— I started my own software company in Berlin’s tech hub, often called Europe’s Silicon Valley.
— And now, I’m ready to help you make your dream come true too.
Here are the reasons I (and many others) believe Germany is worth relocating to — and also a few things to watch out for.
Depending on why you want to move, there are different legal routes. Pick one that fits your situation; sometimes you’ll combine steps.
Visit / Explore — Schengen Visitor Visa: Requires a valid passport, proof of funds, travel insurance, accommodation, return ticket, and ties to your home country; allows up to 90 days in the Schengen zone (not for work or long-term study).
Job Seeker Visa – With a recognized degree, proof of savings, and health insurance, you can stay in Germany for up to 6 months to find a job and convert it into a work permit if successful.
Skilled Work Visa / EU Blue Card – With a degree or vocational training, a job offer, and meeting salary requirements, you can work legally in Germany, contribute to the system, and often reach Permanent Residency faster.
Germany Student Visa – With university admission, proof of funds, language skills, and health insurance, you can study in Germany, work part-time, and stay after graduation to find a job.
Berlin is one of Europe’s creative and tech hubs — lots of startups, remote-friendly companies, and international clients. Germany’s freelance market gives you access to European clients and steady, higher-value projects than many emerging markets.
— Benefits: access to EU clients, higher rates, strong professional networks (especially in Berlin).
A German passport dramatically increases global mobility (visa-free travel), provides stronger consular support, and makes living/working across Europe trivial. It also simplifies family reunification and long-term security for your kids.
Real thought: citizenship is not instant — it takes years, language & integration tests, and sometimes legal complications around dual nationality. Don’t expect overnight results.
Benefits: freedom to travel/work, stronger social safety nets, long-term family security.
I’ll handle the heavy lifting: admission & application strategy, visa paperwork, freelancing/business registration, and practical setup (bank account, health insurance, tax basics).
I won’t promise miracles — just practical, step-by-step help so you don’t waste months stuck in red tape.
— Deliverables: study application filing, business setup in Germnay, Easy family reunion process etc.

Hey, I’m Ali — a designer and entrepreneur based in Germany.
Do you want to build your life or career in Germany, or create a digital product?
I’m ready to help.
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