Step 1 — Confirm jurisdiction and the right channel
Check which German mission or outsourced Visa Application Centre (VAC) serves your country/region of residence. You must have legal residence status there. Many locations use VFS Global or TLScontact for intake, but the decision remains with the German mission.
Step 2 — Book your appointment early
Peak months (April–September, December) fill fast. Grab the earliest suitable slot, then work backward to finalize documents. If you can choose locations within your country, check multiple VACs for availability.
Step 3 — Complete the application (VIDEX)
Germany uses the VIDEX online form for Schengen short stays. Fill it accurately, print, and sign where indicated. Ensure your itinerary, accommodation, and insurance details match the form to avoid “inconsistency” flags.
Step 4 — Prepare a document set that matches your profile
Think in three bundles—identity & purpose, means & ties, and travel readiness:
- Identity & travel plan: Valid passport; VIDEX form + signature; two biometric photos (35×45 mm); day-by-day plan; round-trip booking or planned routing; internal transport (e.g., rail/low-cost flights) if visiting multiple cities.
- Accommodation: Confirmations for hotels/Airbnbs with names/addresses for the full stay; or invitation + Verpflichtungserklärung (formal financial sponsorship) if staying with a host.
- Travel insurance: Must cover emergency medical care and repatriation of at least €30,000, valid for the entire stay and across all Schengen countries.
- Financial means: Last 3–6 months of bank statements from an active account; recent salary slips or other proof of regular income; tax returns if available; credit card limit screenshot can help. Add prepaid items (tours, internal transport) to show expenses are covered.
- Ties to home/residence country: Employer letter on letterhead (role, salary, leave dates, return date), business registration and tax for self-employed, enrollment letter for students, evidence of family and property ties.
- Special categories: Minors need birth certificate, parental consent(s), and parent ID copies. If one parent is absent, include notarized consent or legal proof of sole custody. Retirees can submit pension statements.
Step 5 — Align the itinerary with the “main destination” rule
Your hotel nights and in-country routing must clearly show Germany is the main destination. If you’re splitting nights across Germany, France, and the Netherlands, the most nights rule decides where you apply. Avoid ambiguous splits (e.g., 3/3/3) unless first entry also matches Germany.
Step 6 — Pay the fees
Budget for the €90/€45 visa fee payable in local currency at the daily consular rate, plus the VAC service fee. Optional fees (SMS alerts, photocopying, premium lounges, courier returns) are your choice; they do not influence the decision.
Step 7 — Attend your appointment & biometrics
Bring your printed VIDEX, checklist, and originals + copies. Answer questions concisely and consistently with your documents: purpose (tourism), dates, funding, occupation, prior travel. First-timers submit fingerprints; repeat travelers may be matched from VIS records if within 59 months.
Step 8 — Track and wait
Standard processing is up to 15 calendar days, but it can extend (complex files, peak volumes) up to 45 days. The VAC tracking portal will change status at milestones; the passport returns by courier or pickup.
Step 9 — Check your visa sticker
Verify: valid from/until, number of entries (1/2/MULT), and “Duration of stay (DAYS)”—that number (e.g., 20) is the maximum nights you can spend in Schengen within that trip window. Report any errors immediately to the VAC/mission before traveling.