Laurence Lewis:
Hi, I have been living in Munich for 6 years and have recently finished a PhD. I am a British citizen but I am planning on staying in Germany and I'd like to get German citizenship. I have yet to do the 'Eingurgerungs test' and pass B2 level German but I can do both quite soon. However, I have been told that I need to have paid 'Rentenversicherung' for 60 months (5 years), i.e. have been on an employment contract for that time. Unfortunately I have only been on a contract for 2 of those 5 years (the rest of the time I was on a stipend). Is the 60 months of Rentenversicherung payment really a requirement? I'm finding it hard to get a firm answer on this. If it is a hard requirement, is there a way to circumvent the rule by appealing to a specific organisation? Lastly, I know that it is generally required that someone has lived in Germany for 8 years before they can get citizenship, but I have also heard that that time can be reduced to 6. Does anyone know if this is really possible?
Any help would be greatly appreciated.
Laurence
Dear Laurence,
my situation was similar to yours only difference being i'm from Pakistan. After finishing my Masters i did my PhD also in Germany and after finding a permanent position in Hessen i went to inquire my respective Naturalization office(EBH) about my chances for German Naturalization (after approx.6yrs residence in Germany). To my surprise the case worker was a very friendly person, he told me about Ermessenseinbürgerung (Discretionary Naturalization according to Section §8 of Naturalization Act i.e. after 6 years residence in Germany). I was only asked to take an Einbürgerungstest and not required to do B1 language test, as the case worker thought my German language skills are good enough and as evidence he suggested to submit my Masters and PhD Degree obtained at German Universities.
I will recommend to simply inquire at your responsible EBH and fulfill the requirements. Should you need any further information, feel free to write to me.
Best regards,
Raj++
P.S: this is not a legal advice.