German Driving Licence 2026
The Complete Guide
Everything you need to know about getting your driving licence in Germany — TÜV/DEKRA test format, Fahrschule costs, Autobahn rules, speed limits, traffic fines, and the Flensburg points system.
2,770
Road deaths in Germany (2024)
Down 9% from 2019 peak — Destatis/BASt
~3.3
Deaths per 100,000 population
Better than USA (12.9), slightly above UK (2.6)
€2,800
Average cost for Class B licence
ADAC average — ranges €2,000–3,500 across Germany
Click any card to copy the stat with source attribution
Key Findings
30 questions (20 basic + 10 class-specific), 45 minutes, maximum 10 error points to pass. Two 5-point questions wrong = automatic fail even if under 10 points total. Administered by TÜV or DEKRA.
Approximately €2,000–3,500 (ADAC average ~€2,800): Fahrschule registration €100–200, theory + materials €200–400, driving lessons €45–70 per 45 min, mandatory Sonderfahrten €540–840, theory test €22.49, practical test €116.93.
2,770 fatalities in 2024 (~3.3 per 100K). Steady decline from 3,046 in 2019. Approximately 60% of the Autobahn has no mandatory speed limit — the remaining 40% has posted limits.
0.5 promille (0.05%) general limit. Absolute zero (0.0) for novice drivers in Probezeit, under 21, and commercial drivers. Criminal threshold at 1.1 promille — automatic licence revocation + MPU.
2021 Bußgeldkatalog reform doubled most fines. Speeding 31–40 km/h in urban areas: €260 + 2 points + 1-month ban. Rettungsgasse violation: €200–320 + 2 points. Phone use: €100 + 1 point.
Germany has one of the world's safest road networks despite the Autobahn. Death rate ~3.3/100K vs USA 12.9, UK 2.6, Japan 2.6. Licence cost (€2,000–3,500) is among the highest globally but training is comprehensive.
Germany Road Safety: 6-Year Trend (2019–2024)
According to Destatis and BASt, road fatalities dropped 10.7% in 2020 due to COVID-19 but have fluctuated since. The 2024 figure of 2,770 deaths represents an ongoing improvement over the 2019 baseline.
2019→2020
-10.7%
2020→2021
-5.8%
2021→2022
+8.7%
2022→2023
+2.0%
2023→2024
-2.4%
Deaths per 100,000 Population
Source: WHO Global Status Report on Road Safety, Destatis. Per-capita rates are estimates and may vary by methodology.
German Theory Test Format#
The computerized theory test is administered by TÜV or DEKRA at testing centres across Germany
The German driving theory test (Theorieprüfung) for Class B consists of 30 multiple-choice questions — 20 basic knowledge questions and 10 class-specific questions — to be completed within 45 minutes. Each question carries 2 to 5 error points based on difficulty. To pass, you must accumulate no more than 10 error points total. However, answering two 5-point questions incorrectly results in automatic failure, even if your total is under 10. The test fee is €22.49, administered by TÜV or DEKRA under the arge tp 21 framework. The test is available in 12 languages including German, English, Turkish, Russian, and Arabic. Since 2025, new image selection tasks have been added to the question pool.
Questions
30 MCQs
20 basic + 10 class-specific
Duration
45 Min
~90 sec per question
Pass Mark
≤10 pts
Max 10 error points allowed
Test Fee
€22.49
TÜV/DEKRA theory exam
What the Theory Test Covers
- Traffic signs (Verkehrszeichen) & signals
- Right of way (Vorfahrt / Rechts-vor-Links)
- Speed limits (Innerorts, Landstraße, Autobahn)
- Stopping & parking rules
- Environmental zones (Umweltzonen)
- Vehicle technology & maintenance
- Tire requirements (winter/summer)
- TÜV/HU inspection rules
- First aid basics
- Fuel-efficient driving (Eco-driving)
- Autobahn rules & Rettungsgasse
- Hazard perception & Gefahrenbremsung
- BAC limits & Probezeit rules
- Tunnel & railway crossing rules
- Flensburg points system
How to Get Your German Driving Licence#
From Fahrschule to Führerschein — the complete 6-step process
Enrol at a Fahrschule
Register at a licensed driving school (Fahrschule)
Registration fee €100–200. Choose a Fahrschule near you — they handle all paperwork.
First Aid & Eye Test
Complete the mandatory Erste-Hilfe-Kurs and Sehtest
First aid course: €25–50 (9 hours), Eye test: €7 at any optician
Apply for Licence
Submit your Führerscheinantrag to the local Fahrerlaubnisbehörde
Application fee €40–50, biometric photos €10, processing takes 4–6 weeks
Theory Training & Test
Attend theory classes and pass the TÜV/DEKRA theory exam
14 sessions (12 basic + 2 class-specific). Test: 30 questions, max 10 error points, €22.49
Practical Driving Lessons
Complete mandatory and regular driving lessons with your Fahrlehrer
12 mandatory special drives (Sonderfahrten): 5 rural, 4 Autobahn, 3 night. Plus regular lessons.
Practical Test
Pass the practical driving test with TÜV/DEKRA examiner
45–75 minutes, €116.93. Examiner rides along and evaluates your driving in real traffic.
German Driving Licence Fees#
Total cost typically €2,000–€3,500 — ADAC average approximately €2,800
Costs vary significantly by region. Urban areas (München, Hamburg) tend to be more expensive than rural areas. ADAC reports an average of ~€2,800. Additional costs apply if you fail and must retake tests.
Licence Categories & Minimum Age
AM — Mopeds, small scooters (≤45 km/h)
15
years
A1 — Motorcycles up to 125cc / 11 kW
16
years
A2 — Motorcycles up to 35 kW
18
years
B — Cars up to 3,500 kg
17 with BF17 (Begleitetes Fahren)
18
years
A — Motorcycles unlimited
20 with progressive access from A2
24
years
C — Trucks over 3,500 kg
18 with professional qualification
21
years
D — Buses (8+ passengers)
21 with professional qualification
24
years
Licence Validity Periods
Driving right is permanent; document must be renewed
Medical + eye test required for renewal
Medical + eye test required for renewal
Staggered by birth year per EU directive
Probezeit (Probationary Period)
- 2-year probationary period for all new licence holders
- Absolute 0.0% BAC limit during Probezeit
- A-violation (serious): extension to 4 years + mandatory Aufbauseminar
- B-violation (minor): two B-violations equal one A-violation
- Aufbauseminar costs €250–500 and takes 2–4 weeks
Flensburg Points System
- 8 points = licence revoked
- 1 point: expires after 2.5 years
- 2 points: expire after 5 years
- 3 points: expire after 10 years
- 4–5 points: written warning (Ermahnung)
- 6–7 points: ordered seminar (Verwarnung)
Germany is famous for its Autobahn with no general speed limit — but only about 60% of the Autobahn network is actually unrestricted. The remaining 40% has mandatory posted speed limits, typically 80–130 km/h. The advisory speed (Richtgeschwindigkeit) on unrestricted sections is 130 km/h; driving faster increases liability in case of an accident. Urban areas (Innerorts) are limited to 50 km/h by default, with widespread 30 km/h zones near residential areas and schools. Rural roads (Landstraßen) are limited to 100 km/h for cars. Trucks over 3.5 tonnes are limited to 80 km/h on all roads outside urban areas, and trucks over 7.5 tonnes are limited to 60 km/h on rural roads and 80 km/h on the Autobahn.
| Road Type | Cars | Trucks 3.5–7.5t | Trucks >7.5t | Note |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Urban (Innerorts) | 50 | 50 | 50 | Tempo-30 zones: 30 km/h |
| Rural (Landstraße) | 100 | 80 | 60 | Single carriageway |
| Autobahn (unrestricted) | No limit | 80 | 80 | 130 km/h advisory (Richtgeschwindigkeit) |
| Autobahn (posted) | As signed | 80 | 80 | Typically 80–130 km/h |
| Tempo-30 Zone | 30 | 30 | 30 | Residential areas, near schools |
Urban (Innerorts)
50
Cars
50
3.5–7.5t
50
>7.5t
Tempo-30 zones: 30 km/h
Rural (Landstraße)
100
Cars
80
3.5–7.5t
60
>7.5t
Single carriageway
Autobahn (unrestricted)
No limit
Cars
80
3.5–7.5t
80
>7.5t
130 km/h advisory (Richtgeschwindigkeit)
Autobahn (posted)
As signed
Cars
80
3.5–7.5t
80
>7.5t
Typically 80–130 km/h
Tempo-30 Zone
30
Cars
30
3.5–7.5t
30
>7.5t
Residential areas, near schools
Only ~60% of Autobahn sections are unrestricted. The 130 km/h advisory (Richtgeschwindigkeit) means exceeding it increases liability in accidents.
Traffic Fines & Penalties#
As per the Bußgeldkatalog — fines nearly doubled since 2021 reform
The Bußgeldkatalog was significantly reformed in 2021, with fines almost all doubled. Key penalties: speeding 31–40 km/h over the limit in urban areas costs €260, 2 Flensburg points, and a 1-month driving ban. Failing to form an emergency corridor (Rettungsgasse) on the Autobahn carries €200–320 plus 2 points. Using a mobile phone while driving costs €100 plus 1 point. Drunk driving above 0.5 promille incurs a €500 fine, 2 points, and a 1-month driving ban for a first offence. The criminal threshold is 1.1 promille, which triggers automatic licence revocation and typically requires an MPU before reinstatement.
| Violation | Fine | Points | Driving Ban |
|---|---|---|---|
| Speeding urban up to 10 km/h | €30 | — | — |
| Speeding urban 21–25 km/h | €115 | 1 | — |
| Speeding urban 31–40 km/h | €260 | 2 | 1 month |
| Speeding urban over 70 km/h | €800 | 2 | 3 months |
| Red light (<1 second) | €90 | 1 | — |
| Red light (>1 second) | €200 | 2 | 1 month |
| Phone use while driving | €100 | 1 | — |
| Drunk driving 0.5–1.09 promille (1st) | €500 | 2 | 1 month |
| No seatbelt | €30 | — | — |
| Rettungsgasse violation | €200–320 | 2 | — |
| No Umweltplakette in zone | €80 | — | — |
| No winter tires when required | €60 | 1 | — |
Speeding urban up to 10 km/h
Speeding urban 21–25 km/h
Speeding urban 31–40 km/h
Speeding urban over 70 km/h
Red light (<1 second)
Red light (>1 second)
Phone use while driving
Drunk driving 0.5–1.09 promille (1st)
No seatbelt
Rettungsgasse violation
No Umweltplakette in zone
No winter tires when required
Fines shown are from the 2021 reformed Bußgeldkatalog. Criminal offences (BAC ≥1.1 promille, causing bodily harm) are prosecuted under the StGB, not the Bußgeldkatalog.
Know These Rules Before Your Theory Test
Traffic fines, speed limits, and BAC rules are heavily tested in the German Theorieprüfung. Practice with real exam-style questions.
Start Practicing for FreeImportant Driving Rules in Germany
Rechtsfahrgebot
Drive on the right side. On multi-lane roads, use the rightmost lane unless overtaking. Applies especially on the Autobahn.
Rechts-vor-Links
At unmarked intersections, the vehicle coming from the right has priority. This is the DEFAULT rule — applies far more often than foreigners expect.
Rettungsgasse
When traffic stops on multi-lane roads, drivers must form an emergency corridor between the left lane and all other lanes. Fines €200–320 for violations.
Reißverschlussverfahren
Zipper merge: when lanes reduce, drivers must merge at the actual narrowing point, alternating one vehicle from each lane. Legally mandated by StVO.
Umweltzone / Plakette
Many German cities have environmental zones requiring a green Umweltplakette (€80 fine without). Check before entering city centres.
Winter Tires (M+S / Alpine)
Winter tires mandatory in winter conditions (ice, snow, slush). Since October 2024, only Alpine symbol (3PMSF) tires are accepted. Fine: €60 + 1 point.
0.0 BAC for Novices
Absolute zero tolerance during the 2-year Probezeit and for all drivers under 21. General limit is 0.5 promille, criminal threshold 1.1 promille.
Required Equipment
Warning triangle (Warndreieck), first aid kit (DIN 13164), and reflective vest (Warnweste) must be in every vehicle. €15 fine each if missing.
TÜV/HU Inspection
Every registered vehicle must pass the Hauptuntersuchung (HU) every 2 years. The TÜV sticker on the rear plate shows when the next inspection is due.
Common Road Hazards in Germany
2,770 road fatalities in 2024 — know these hazards to stay safe on German roads
Autobahn Speed Differentials
Extreme speed differences between slow trucks and fast cars — closing speed can exceed 200 km/h
Black Ice (Blitzeis)
Sudden ice formation on roads in winter, especially bridges and overpasses
Dense Fog (Nebel)
Particularly dangerous in river valleys and the North German Plain, causes motorway pile-ups
Urban Cyclists
Germany has a strong cycling culture — check blind spots, respect cycling lanes, maintain 1.5m distance
Wildlife Crossings (Wildwechsel)
Deer and wild boar frequently cross rural roads, especially at dawn and dusk
Construction Zones (Baustellen)
Narrow lanes on Autobahn, sudden speed reductions, frequent lane shifts
Germany's 16 Bundesländer
Driving licence administration is handled by the local Fahrerlaubnisbehörde in each state
| Bundesland | Code | Capital | Population |
|---|---|---|---|
| Baden-Württemberg | BW | Stuttgart | 11.1M |
| Bayern | BY | München | 13.2M |
| Berlin | BE | Berlin | 3.7M |
| Brandenburg | BB | Potsdam | 2.6M |
| Bremen | HB | Bremen | 0.7M |
| Hamburg | HH | Hamburg | 1.9M |
| Hessen | HE | Wiesbaden | 6.4M |
| Mecklenburg-Vorpommern | MV | Schwerin | 1.6M |
| Niedersachsen | NI | Hannover | 8.0M |
| Nordrhein-Westfalen | NW | Düsseldorf | 18.1M |
| Rheinland-Pfalz | RP | Mainz | 4.1M |
| Saarland | SL | Saarbrücken | 1.0M |
| Sachsen | SN | Dresden | 4.1M |
| Sachsen-Anhalt | ST | Magdeburg | 2.2M |
| Schleswig-Holstein | SH | Kiel | 2.9M |
| Thüringen | TH | Erfurt | 2.1M |
Baden-Württemberg
Stuttgart · 11.1M
Bayern
München · 13.2M
Berlin
Berlin · 3.7M
Brandenburg
Potsdam · 2.6M
Bremen
Bremen · 0.7M
Hamburg
Hamburg · 1.9M
Hessen
Wiesbaden · 6.4M
Mecklenburg-Vorpommern
Schwerin · 1.6M
Niedersachsen
Hannover · 8.0M
Nordrhein-Westfalen
Düsseldorf · 18.1M
Rheinland-Pfalz
Mainz · 4.1M
Saarland
Saarbrücken · 1.0M
Sachsen
Dresden · 4.1M
Sachsen-Anhalt
Magdeburg · 2.2M
Schleswig-Holstein
Kiel · 2.9M
Thüringen
Erfurt · 2.1M
While driving laws are federal (StVO), licence issuance is handled by local authorities (Fahrerlaubnisbehörde) in each Bundesland. Fahrschule costs vary significantly by region.
Emergency Numbers
All toll-free, available 24/7. {number} is the EU-wide emergency number for fire and ambulance.
112
Fire & Ambulance
110
Police
116 117
Medical On-Call (Ärztlicher Bereitschaftsdienst)
Common Misconceptions About Driving in Germany#
Myth: The entire Autobahn has no speed limit
Fact: Only about 60% of the Autobahn network is unrestricted. The remaining 40% has mandatory posted speed limits, typically 80–130 km/h. Construction zones, urban sections, and high-traffic areas almost always have posted limits.
Myth: You can drive as fast as you want without consequence on unrestricted Autobahn
Fact: The 130 km/h advisory speed (Richtgeschwindigkeit) has legal significance. If you are involved in an accident while driving faster than 130 km/h, your liability share automatically increases — even if you were not at fault. Insurance companies may reduce payouts.
Myth: Right-before-left (Rechts-vor-Links) rarely applies in practice
Fact: Rechts-vor-Links is the DEFAULT priority rule at ALL unmarked intersections in Germany. It applies far more often than foreigners expect, especially in residential areas and smaller streets. Failure to yield costs €25–70 and can cause serious accidents.
Myth: Flashing your headlights on the Autobahn is acceptable to demand right of way
Fact: Aggressive use of headlight flashing (Lichthupe) to pressure other drivers is illegal under §16 StVO and considered coercion (Nötigung) under criminal law. It is only permitted as a warning of danger. Tailgating at high speed can result in criminal charges.
Myth: Passing on the right is always illegal on the Autobahn
Fact: While Rechtsüberholen (passing on the right) is generally prohibited, it is explicitly permitted when traffic is moving slowly (under 80 km/h) and the speed difference is no more than 20 km/h. Also allowed in marked lanes within urban areas.
Myth: Germany is strict about banning dashcams
Fact: The Bundesgerichtshof (BGH) ruled in 2018 that dashcam footage is admissible as evidence in court, despite data protection concerns. Short loop recordings are considered proportionate. Many German drivers now use dashcams, though continuous recording of public spaces remains a grey area under DSGVO.
New image selection tasks in theory test
TÜV/DEKRA introduced new question formats including image selection tasks in the theory test question pool, requiring candidates to identify correct traffic situations from multiple images.
Alpine symbol mandatory for winter tires
From October 2024, only tires bearing the Alpine symbol (3PMSF — Three Peak Mountain Snowflake) are accepted as winter tires. Older M+S-only tires are no longer sufficient. StVO reform also granted municipalities more autonomy over local traffic rules.
Bußgeldkatalog fines nearly doubled
Major reform of the fine catalogue with most penalties approximately doubled. Speeding fines, parking violations, and Rettungsgasse violations all significantly increased.
StVO reform & B196 extension
Comprehensive StVO reform: doubled parking fines, mandatory 1.5m cyclist overtaking distance, increased Rettungsgasse fines. New B196 licence extension allows Class B holders aged 25+ to ride 125cc motorcycles after a short course (no test required).
EU driving licence exchange rollout
All pre-2013 German driving licences must be exchanged for the new EU card format by January 19, 2033. Exchange is staggered by birth year. The new format is valid for 15 years (document only — driving rights remain permanent for AM/A/B).
How Germany Compares Globally#
Germany's driving regulations compared to other major countries — data compiled from official government sources
| Parameter | Germany | USA | UK | India | Japan |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| BAC Limit | 0.05% | 0.08% | 0.08% | 0.03% | 0.03% |
| Min. Age (Car) | 18 | 16 | 17 | 18 | 18 |
| Driving Side | Right | Right | Left | Left | Left |
| Highway Speed | No limit* | 120 km/h | 112 km/h | 120 km/h | 120 km/h |
| Test Questions | 30 | 20–50 | 50 | 15–20 | 50 |
| Licence Cost | €2,000–3,500 | $30–90 | £200–1,500 | ₹800 | ¥300K+ |
| Road Deaths/yr | 2,770 | 40,901 | 1,695 | 172,890 | 2,678 |
| Deaths/100K | ~3.3 | 12.9 | 2.6 | 12.4 | 2.6 |
Stricter than USA/UK (0.08%), but more lenient than India/Japan (0.03%). Novice/under-21: absolute 0.0%.
Same as India and Japan. USA allows from 16, UK from 17. BF17 allows 17 with accompaniment.
Unique globally — no general Autobahn speed limit. ~60% unrestricted, 130 km/h advisory.
Among the most expensive globally. USA costs $30–90, India ~$10. Comprehensive mandatory training.
~3.3 per 100K — among the safest despite no Autobahn limit. USA is 4x worse at 12.9/100K.
* Germany: no general Autobahn speed limit; 130 km/h advisory. Road deaths: Germany 2,770 (Destatis 2024), USA 40,901 (NHTSA 2023), UK 1,695 (DfT 2023), India 172,890 (MoRTH 2023), Japan 2,678 (NPA 2023). UK BAC is 0.08% for England/Wales; Scotland is 0.05%.
Sources & Methodology
Primary Sources
- Straßenverkehrs-Ordnung (StVO) — German Federal Government
- Bußgeldkatalog-Verordnung (BKatV) — German Federal Government
- Destatis — Verkehrsunfälle (Road accident statistics) — Statistisches Bundesamt
- Kraftfahrt-Bundesamt (KBA) — Flensburg points register — Federal Motor Transport Authority
- ADAC — Führerschein cost data — Allgemeiner Deutscher Automobil-Club
- TÜV/DEKRA — Prüfungsrichtlinie (test regulations) — arge tp 21
Verification Methodology
Every fact on this page has been cross-referenced against at least two authoritative sources. Our process:
- Primary data collected from official German federal legislation and government portals
- Cross-verified against Destatis publications, ADAC resources, and KBA data
- Regional variations noted where applicable (Fahrschule costs differ by Bundesland)
- Page reviewed and fact-checked on {date}
If you find an error, please contact us so we can correct it immediately.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much does a driving licence cost in Germany?
What is the German theory test format?
Is there really no speed limit on the Autobahn?
What is the BAC (blood alcohol) limit in Germany?
What is the Probezeit (probationary period)?
How does the Flensburg points system work?
What is BF17 (Begleitetes Fahren)?
What are the mandatory special drives (Sonderfahrten)?
What is the Rettungsgasse and why is it important?
Do I need winter tires in Germany?
What is an Umweltplakette and do I need one?
Can I convert my foreign driving licence to a German one?
What equipment must I carry in my car in Germany?
What is the MPU (Medizinisch-Psychologische Untersuchung)?
How long is the German driving licence valid?
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Founder & Chief Engineer
Data sourced from StVO, Destatis, KBA, ADAC, and official German government sources. Cross-referenced with multiple authoritative sources for accuracy.
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