
Moving to Valencia
from Germany
You already know the EU rules: register, get a SIP, declare your taxes. The harder shift is the rhythm change, when Munich Punktlichkeit meets Spanish ahora and your dinner moves from 18h to 21h.

12,000+
German residents
2h45
Direct from FRA
60%
Cheaper vs Munich
Four reasons Germans pick Valencia, not Mallorca or Barcelona
Cost gap, daily flights, sun arithmetic, and a real expat scene. Mallorca is full, Barcelona is expensive, Valencia is the sweet spot.
Rent 60 percent below Munich
1-bed in Russafa: 950 to 1,250 euros. Same flat in Munich Schwabing: 1,800 to 2,400 euros. Eixample at 1,400 euros buys a balcony view, not a courtyard. Berlin Mitte is converging upward, Valencia is not.
Daily Eurowings, Lufthansa, Ryanair
Direct flights from Frankfurt, Munich, Berlin, Hamburg, Dusseldorf, Cologne. Eurowings runs 2 to 3 daily slots. The 2h45 trip turns Heimaturlaub into a long weekend, not a multi-day expedition.
Mediterranean lifestyle, no Berlin Grauschleier
300 days of sun against Hamburg's 1,500 hours per year. The mood difference compounds: a January terraza lunch in shirt sleeves makes Berlin Februar feel like a hostage situation.
Growing German tech community
Around 12,000 Germans in Valencia province, concentrated in Russafa, Eixample, and the Marina tech corridor. Stammtisch meets Wednesdays at the German Club, Saturday Brotzeit at the bakery on Calle Cuba.
No visa, just register at the Oficina de Extranjeros
As a German citizen you have full freedom of movement. The only step is the Certificado de Registro de Ciudadano de la UE, which gives you a NIE and confirms residency. Book the cita previa online, pay the 12 euro tasa, present passport and proof of means or work contract. Out in 30 minutes if your file is clean.
Full NIE registration guideSix German habits Valencia will dismantle
The bureaucracy is not the hard part, the rhythm is. Here is what catches German expats off guard in months 1 to 6.
Punktlichkeit meets ahora
'Ahora' can mean now, 30 minutes, or after the next coffee. Spanish trains and Renfe AVE run on time, but social and contractor schedules float. Build a 30 minute buffer into every appointment, double for tradesmen, and stop interpreting lateness as disrespect.
Anmeldung, but friendlier
Empadronamiento is the Spanish Anmeldung: register your address at the Junta Municipal. Same idea, no Buergeramt 8am queue trauma. Cita previa online, 15 minute appointment, you walk out with a volante. Renew every 2 years if you do not own.
Krankenkasse becomes SIP
Spanish public healthcare via SIP card is universal once you contribute or autonomo. Quality is high (Spain ranks ahead of Germany on OECD responsiveness in 2026), waits in Valencia are shorter than Berlin. Most Germans add private (Sanitas, DKV, Adeslas) at 40 to 80 euros monthly to cut elective queues.
Mittagessen at 14h, never 12h
Lunch at 12 noon flags you instantly as a foreigner. Spanish kitchens fire from 13h30, peak at 14h30, close at 16h. Dinner restaurants open at 20h30. The mid-afternoon pause (siesta in summer, sobremesa year-round) is a feature, not a bug. Your Mittagspause stretches into a 90 minute thing.
Hausordnung Ruhezeiten do not apply
Mediterranean noise tolerance is decibels above German Hausordnung. Children scream until 23h, terrazas hum past midnight, motos rip down Avenida del Puerto at 02h. If quiet is non-negotiable, look at Godella, Rocafort, or El Vedat. Otherwise embrace the buzz, and invest in good ear plugs.
Cashless is normal, paperwork is not
Contactless dominates: Apple Pay, Bizum (Spain's instant peer transfer), card-on-file at the panaderia. But every gestoria and notario expects original paper documents in triplicate, with apostille and sworn translation if from Germany. Digitisation is happening but moves slower than the Bundestag.
What you keep, what you trade
An honest audit of what survives the move and what does not.
What you keep
- DB-quality train experience on AVE Madrid-Valencia, 1h45 with 95 percent on-time rate
- Quality bakeries: Panaria, Belmonte and the German bakery on Calle Cuba do real Vollkornbrot
- Strong Stammtisch and DAAD network for academics, plus the German Club Valencia
- Lidl and Aldi everywhere, with Brot, Kaese and Apfelschorle on the shelf
- EU healthcare reciprocity for German pensioners via S1 form
What you trade
- Pfand bottle returns, swap for Spanish bring-your-own-bag at supermercados
- Hauseigentumergemeinschaft formal monthly meetings, swap for Comunidad de Propietarios with WhatsApp drama
- Steueridentifikation, swap for NIE plus DNI plus IBAN plus padron in every form
- Drop the Pommesbude at the Hauptbahnhof, gain bocadillo de calamares at El Cabanyal
- Ordnung muss sein, swap for the Spanish ya veremos and learn to love the surrender
German expat FAQ
When do I cancel my Krankenkasse?
Is there a Deutsche Schule in Valencia?
Tax: Welteinkommen or Spain only?
Can I bring my hund?
Can I keep my German driver licence?
How do I open a bank account before I have NIE?
Ready to swap Hamburg for Valencia?
Talk to someone who has lived through the move. Twenty minutes, no Verkaufspitch, honest answers about Krankenkasse, schools, taxes and the Mittagessen recalibration.