Trained as a Nurse Abroad? Bavaria Moved This Recognition to Its Own Dedicated Office in 2023
Nursing (Pflegefachfrau/Pflegefachmann/Pflegefachperson) is a legally regulated profession in Germany, so unlike engineering, recognition genuinely is required before you can work under that title. Since July 1, 2023, the Bayerisches Landesamt für Pflege (LfP), based in Amberg, has been the single office responsible for this across all of Bavaria, having taken it over from the previous district-government structure. To apply, you need a state or state-recognized nursing qualification from your training country, documentation showing you completed it, and an unrestricted right to practice there. The office compares your training against the German reference profession and one of two things happens: full equivalence, or a compensation measure, either an adjustment course (Anpassungslehrgang) or a knowledge exam (Kenntnisprüfung), when real gaps show up. Without a compensation measure, the review itself typically takes up to about four months once your documents are complete, but with an adjustment course added, the whole process can stretch anywhere from roughly six months to several years depending on how large the gap is. Either way, B2-level German is required before you can hold the final professional license, and since 2025, diplomas and licenses in English, Spanish, French, or Portuguese no longer need a German translation for the initial application.
The Official Rule
Nursing is a genuinely different situation from many other professions covered on this site: Pflegefachfrau, Pflegefachmann, and Pflegefachperson (nurse, in its gender-neutral German forms) are legally regulated professions in Germany, which means formal recognition of your foreign qualification isn’t optional if you want to work under that title. There’s no equivalent of the engineering situation, where you can work in the field without the paperwork, here the recognition procedure is the gate itself.
Since July 1, 2023, the Bayerisches Landesamt für Pflege (LfP), based in Amberg, has been the single responsible office for this recognition across the entire state of Bavaria. Before that date, this sat with Bavaria’s individual district governments alongside a range of other health-profession recognitions; consolidating it into one dedicated authority was meant to give applicants one consistent process regardless of where in Bavaria they intend to work.
To start, you need a state or state-recognized nursing qualification actually completed in your training country, documentation proving that completion, and an unrestricted right to practice the profession there. The LfP then compares the duration and content of your training against the current German reference qualification.
| Outcome | What it means |
|---|---|
| Full equivalence | Your training is recognized as equal, no further measure needed |
| Anpassungslehrgang | Supervised adjustment placement combining practical and theoretical training, roughly 6 months to 3 years depending on the gap |
| Kenntnisprüfung / Eignungsprüfung | A knowledge or aptitude exam to demonstrate the missing content directly |
Without a compensation measure, the review itself typically takes up to around four months once your file is complete, though this doesn’t count any delay caused by missing documents at the start. If a compensation measure is required, the realistic total timeline stretches considerably further, and B2-level German is required before you can hold the final professional license, regardless of which path your case takes.
A genuinely useful, easy-to-miss detail: documents in English, Spanish, French, or Portuguese have not required a German translation for the initial application since a 2025 change, which can meaningfully speed up the early stages for applicants from a wide range of training countries. Costs run roughly 40 to 70 euros for application processing plus around 40 euros for certificate issuance, with translation, certification, and any compensation-measure costs sitting on top of that as variable extras.

What Real People Say
Internationally trained nurses navigating this process, according to practical guides written specifically for non-EU professionals, consistently describe timing as the thing that trips people up most: medical certificates, criminal record extracts, and good-standing certificates from your home country typically expire after about three months, so applicants who gather every other, more stable document first and save these time-sensitive ones for last tend to avoid the frustrating cycle of re-obtaining paperwork that expired while waiting on something else.
The temporary work permit option that lets you start earning while recognition is still pending comes up repeatedly as the detail that changes how families actually plan the move financially, treating what could otherwise be an anxious, income-free waiting period as productive working time instead.
Step by Step
- Confirm your qualification is a state or state-recognized nursing training, completed, with an unrestricted right to practice in your training country.
- Gather your diploma, training documentation, and CV early, and check your specific country’s information sheet (Merkblatt) on the LfP site for exactly what’s required.
- Prioritize stable documents first, and request time-sensitive ones (medical certificate, criminal record extract) last, since these typically expire after about three months.
- Submit your application to the LfP, online or by mail to their Amberg office, and budget for a wait of up to roughly four months if no compensation measure is needed.
- If a compensation measure is required, ask about the temporary work permit that can let you begin working under supervision while you complete it.
- Start B2 German study as early as realistically possible, since it’s required for the final license regardless of which path your case takes.
Compliance Note
This page explains the general framework around nursing qualification recognition through the Bayerisches Landesamt für Pflege, but this is not legal or immigration advice, and specific requirements can vary by training country and individual case. For your specific situation, confirm current requirements directly with the LfP or a qualified recognition counselor.
FAQ & Common Pitfalls
Why did this move to a dedicated nursing office instead of staying with the general district governments?
Nursing recognition used to be split across Bavaria's individual Bezirksregierungen along with a range of other health professions, and the volume and complexity of foreign nursing applications was substantial enough that the state consolidated it into one specialized authority, the LfP, effective July 1, 2023. The practical benefit for applicants is a single, consistent point of contact and process for the whole state, rather than potentially different practices depending on which district happened to be responsible for your case before.
What actually happens during an Anpassungslehrgang, and how long does it really take?
It's a supervised adjustment placement designed specifically to close the gaps identified between your foreign training and the German reference qualification, combining practical clinical work with theoretical content. The length depends entirely on how significant those gaps are, guidance describes a range anywhere from about six months on the shorter end up to three years for more substantial differences. This isn't a fixed bureaucratic waiting period, it's actual supervised training time, and it runs in parallel with the recognition decision rather than after it.
Can we work in Germany at all while the recognition process is still underway?
This is genuinely one of the more useful features of the current system for people trying to plan a family's finances around a move. A specific temporary permit structure exists precisely so a nurse whose recognition is still pending can begin working and earning income under supervision rather than sitting through the entire multi-month process with no income from the profession at all, which matters a great deal when a family's budget depends on it.
Do I need B2 German before I even start this process, or only at the end?
B2 is required to actually hold the final professional license, it's the last gate you clear rather than the first one you need for filing. That said, starting German study early, in parallel with gathering your documents and going through the initial review, genuinely makes sense given how long the overall process can run, especially if a compensation measure turns out to be necessary and adds months or years to the timeline.