List of Bank Accounts in Germany (+FAQ)
When living in Germany, having a German Bank Account (or a Euro account) can be useful. Here's a list of accounts for people having an address in Germany. For some banks, having a registered address is not necessary.
This article covers accounts for individuals, also called current account or giro account (Girokonto).
For other account types, see
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
What is a German bank account?
In this article, German bank account means an account that has an account number (IBAN) starting with DE….
Do I need a German or a Euro bank account?
To pay rent and most bills or receive salary, you usually need an account that can send and receive SEPA transfers in EUR.
So your bank account does not need to be from Germany. It must only be able to send and receive SEPA transfers in EUR. Many accounts from other EU and EEA countries can do that.
However, some companies and authorities have problems using non-German account number (IBAN). This is illegal but it may happen. Then, a German account is more convenient.
Which bank account can I use for my freelancing?
To receive income from freelancing or your business, you usually need a business bank account. Regular bank accounts listed here are for individuals who want to receive their salary from being an employee, their scholarship or similar.
Do I get interest on my money?
On giro accounts in Germany, you usually do not get interests paid out. For such offers, check the List of German Savings Accounts.
What do I need to open a German bank account?
This varies from bank to bank. However, these things are common:
- You always need prove your identity, e.g. with a passport or national ID card.
- You often need give an address, so that the bank can send you a credit or debit card.
- Sometimes, you need to show your registration (Anmeldung)
- Some banks want to see your income and credit history. (E.g. DKB is known to be picky.)
See also: Bank Accounts Recommended for Foreigners.
Which bank account is the best for me?
A bank account that
- speaks your language. There many offers with support in English or even more languages.
- has free cash withdrawals. While all supermarkets already allow card payments, you will still need to use cash at smaller shops, cafés, restaurants or food trucks.
- has no monthly fees. There are so many bank accounts even without fees, so you don't need to pick one that costs money.
- lets you sign up with our documents. If you don't have an registered address (Anmeldung) yet, this can be difficult.
See also: Bank Accounts Recommended for Foreigners.
Lists of (Giro) Bank Accounts for Individuals
Bank Accounts With English Support
- Bunq, speaks also: Dutch, French, Italian, Portuguese, Spanish
- Commerzbank (online banking, after signup)
- Deutsche Bank (online banking, after signup)
- Insha
- Lydia
- Monese, speaks also: Bulgarian, Czech, German, Estonian, Spanish, French, Italian, Lithuanian, Polish, Portuguese, Romanian, Turkish
- N26, speaks also: French, German, Italian, Spanish
- Nuri
- Revolut, speaks also: Bulgarian, Croatian, Czech, Danish, Dutch, Estonian, Finnish, French, German, Greek, Hungarian, Italian, Japanese, Latvian, Lithuanian, Norwegian, Polish, Portuguese, Romanian, Slovakian, Slovenian, Spanish, Swedish
- Tomorrow
- Vivid Money, speaks also: French, German, Italian, Spanish
- Wise, speaks also: Chinese, French, Hungarian, Indonesian, Italian, Japanese, Polish, Portuguese, Romanian, Russian, Spanish, Turkish
- Yuh
Bank Accounts With German Account Number (IBAN)
Bank Accounts With No Monthly Fees
- DKB
- Insha
- Lydia (free plan with limited features)
- Monese (Starter plan)
- N26
- Nuri
- Revolut
- Vivid Money
- Wise
- Yuh
… if you receive money on it regularly
- 1822direkt if you receive minimum €700 every month
- Commerzbank if you receive minimum €700 every month
- comdirect if you receive minimum €700 every month
- ING if you receive minimum €700 every month
- Norisbank if you receive minimum €500 every month
- O2 Banking if you receive minimum €700 every month
… for young people
- comdirect if you are under 28
- ING if you are under 28
- Norisbank if you are under 21
- O2 Banking if you are under 28 and a student, apprentice or trainee
Bank Accounts With Free Cash Withdrawals
… at all bank machines worldwide
- Bunq: 4 per month are free
- DKB: minimum €50 per withdrawal
- Nuri: more info
- O2 Banking: 3 per month free more info
- Revolut: 200 EUR / 5 per month are free
- Wise: 200 EUR / 2 per month are free
… at all bank machines in EEA
… at bank machines of the bank's network
- 1822direkt: 4 per month at Sparkasse group bank machines
- Commerzbank: unlimited at Cash Group bank machines
- Norisbank: unlimited at Cash Group bank machines
…at shops
Some banks cooperate with shops: You can go to the checkout of a branch and withdraw money from your bank account, using your card. There are 2 systems:
- Cash-Back (do not confuse with Cashback): you need to spend a minimum amount at the shop
- Viacash / Barzahlen.de: here you don't even need to buy something
Cash-Back
Viacash
Bank Accounts With Multiple Currencies
- Bunq: more info
- Lydia: EUR & GBP
- Monese: EUR, GBP and RON (RON only with Romanian ID
- Revolut: AUD, BGN, CAD, CHF, CZK, DKK, EUR, GBP, HKD, HRK, HUF, JPY, NOK, PLN, RON, SEK, USD, ZAR
- Vivid Money: up to 105 currencies, but can be topped up only in EUR
- Wise: 50+ currencies
- Yuh: CHF, USD, EUR, GBP, JPY, AUD, CAD, SEK, HKD, NOK, DKK, AED, SGD
Bank Accounts With A Broker
These accounts allow you to trade shares and funds / ETFs. The term in German is usually Depot.
- 1822direkt: more info
- Commerzbank: more info
- comdirect more info
- DKB: more info
- ING: more info
- Norisbank: more info
- O2 Banking: more info
- Revolut: more info
- Vivid Money: more info
- Yuh: more info
Bank Accounts With Crypto Currencies
These accounts allow you to trade Bitcoin etc.
Bank Accounts With Bonuses
These accounts will pay you for signing up.
- 1822direkt: €25 or €75 bonus (depending on account type) if you receive 3 salary payments of min. €1000 each within the first 6 months (conditions)
- Commerzbank: €50 welcome bonus if you send or receive 5 payments per month of min. €25 (salary, providers etc.) and agree to sales calls (conditions)
- Norisbank: €50 welcome bonus if you use their account switching service (more info)
- Vivid Money: €20 welcome bonus + up to €90 cashback, if you top up and spend €20 within the first 90 days
Comparisons of Bank Accounts
These finance services compare current bank accounts on the market and let you filter the list by specific features:
Bank Accounts for Individuals Compared
Bank Accounts for Students Compared
Bank Accounts Recommended for Foreigners
All listed banks also accept non-Germans. But some make it easier than others.
Bank accounts suitable for expats:
- have support in English (or even more languages)
- do not require you to have a registered address (Anmeldung)
- accept many foreign passports and identity cards for opening
Recommended bank accounts for expats are:
Vivid Money
- accepts many documents
- support in 5 languages
- free / no monthly fees
- free Visa debit card if topped up with €200
- IBAN from Germany 🇩🇪
- €20 signup + €70 Cashback bonus via this link
Revolut
- accepts many documents
- support in 24 languages
- free / no monthly fees
- Visa debit card for €5.99 one-time delivery fee
- IBAN from Lithuania 🇱🇹
Wise
- accepts many documents
- support in 13 languages
- free / no monthly fees
- Mastercard debit card for €8 one-time delivery fee
- IBAN from Belgium 🇧🇪