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Germany’s defence sector is expanding at a pace not seen in decades, and the demand for qualified engineers, cybersecurity specialists and systems architects far outstrips domestic supply. For employers in this space, hiring foreign talent for Germany’s defence industry is no longer a strategic option, it is an operational necessity. Yet obtaining a residence permit is only the first hurdle: security-clearance procedures, export-control licensing under the Federal Office for Economic Affairs and Export Control (BAFA), sanctions screening and GDPR-compliant onboarding all create a compliance landscape that can derail even the most promising hire.
At Schlun & Elseven Rechtsanwälte, I advise defence contractors and dual-use suppliers on precisely this intersection of immigration law and operational compliance, and in this guide I set out the practical roadmap my clients use to recruit internationally while staying on the right side of German and EU law.
Key action: Before posting a role, classify it within the three-tier sensitivity taxonomy below, then map the correct immigration route and the corresponding compliance obligations, in that order.
Since 2021, German defence budgets have grown sharply. The establishment of the €100-billion Sondervermögen (Special Fund for the Bundeswehr) accelerated procurement timelines for armoured vehicles, naval vessels, cyber capabilities and satellite communications. Prime contractors and their supply chains, many of them mid-sized dual-use firms, now face thousands of unfilled engineering and IT positions. The federal government’s Make it in Germany portal actively encourages international recruitment, and programmes such as Hand in Hand for International Talents run by the German Chambers of Commerce (AHK) are channelling qualified candidates toward shortage occupations.
From what I am seeing in practice, however, most employers underestimate the compliance overlay that defence work adds to a standard immigration case. A standard skilled-worker visa gets a candidate through the door, but it does not authorise access to classified technology or controlled data. The sections below walk through each layer, role classification, visa route, security clearance, export controls, sanctions and data protection, so that in-house counsel, HR leaders and compliance officers can build a single, joined-up hiring workflow.
Not every position in the defence industry carries the same legal restrictions. The first step in any international hiring project is to classify the target role according to the level of sensitivity it entails. I recommend a three-tier model.
German law does not impose a blanket nationality requirement on all defence-sector employees. However, the Security Clearance Check Act (Sicherheitsüberprüfungsgesetz, SÜG) and specific contract clauses from the Federal Ministry of Defence (BMVg) or the Federal Office of Bundeswehr Equipment, Information Technology and In-Service Support (BAAINBw) may stipulate that certain posts be filled only by German nationals or, in NATO-classified projects, by nationals of NATO or EU member states. In my experience, Tier A roles are the most affected; Tier B roles typically allow foreign nationals provided export-control and access-management safeguards are in place.
Once the role is classified, employers can select the most efficient visa pathway. Below is a summary of the principal routes under the German Residence Act (Aufenthaltsgesetz, AufenthG), followed by a comparison table.
The EU Blue Card, implemented in Germany under §18g AufenthG (transposing Directive (EU) 2021/1883, the recast Blue Card Directive), remains the premium route for highly qualified professionals. Applicants need a recognised university degree and a binding job offer that meets the applicable salary threshold. The Blue Card offers accelerated family reunification, intra-EU mobility and a clear path to permanent settlement. For defence employers, it is particularly well-suited to senior engineers and project leads in Tier B and Tier C roles. Employers should note that the salary threshold is adjusted annually; the applicable figure must be confirmed with BAMF or the Make it in Germany portal at the time of application.
A reduced threshold applies to shortage occupations in STEM fields, a category that covers many defence-relevant engineering disciplines.
Under §18a and §18b AufenthG, foreign nationals with a recognised vocational qualification or university degree can obtain a residence permit for qualified employment. This route suits technicians, mechatronics specialists and production engineers whose qualifications must first be formally recognised in Germany. Recognition of foreign qualifications can take several months; employers should initiate the process through the relevant chamber (IHK or HWK) as early as possible.
§19c AufenthG, read together with §6 of the Employment Regulation (Beschäftigungsverordnung, BeschV), permits the hiring of IT specialists who possess at least three years of relevant professional experience and meet a minimum salary floor, even without formal degree recognition. Given the acute shortage of cybersecurity and software-engineering talent in the defence sector, this route is one I frequently recommend to clients.
The recognition partnership model, introduced as part of the 2023 Skilled Immigration Act amendments, allows a foreign worker to enter Germany and begin employment while their qualification-recognition procedure is still ongoing. The employer, the employee and the recognition authority enter a three-way agreement. Government-backed programmes such as Hand in Hand for International Talents, coordinated by the AHK network, pre-screen candidates in their home countries and match them with German employers, offering a valuable pipeline for defence supply-chain firms.
§81a AufenthG provides an accelerated administrative procedure (beschleunigtes Fachkräfteverfahren) under which the employer initiates the visa process directly with the local foreigners authority (Ausländerbehörde). The authority coordinates with the Federal Employment Agency and recognition bodies, compressing what would otherwise be a multi-month process into a target timeframe of a few weeks. This fast-track route is particularly useful when a defence contractor has an urgent project start date, though it requires the employer to pay an administrative fee and to have a structured relationship with the competent foreigners authority.
The Opportunity Card (Chancenkarte), introduced under §20a AufenthG, uses a points-based system to allow qualified professionals to enter Germany to search for employment. While it does not grant an immediate work permit tied to a specific employer, it functions as a powerful pipeline tool. Defence contractors can identify promising candidates already present in Germany on an Opportunity Card and then convert them to a Blue Card or skilled-worker permit once a concrete offer is made.
| Route / Procedure | Best-fit defence roles | Key employer considerations |
|---|---|---|
| EU Blue Card (§18g AufenthG) | Senior engineers, project leads, R&D managers (Tier B & C) | Salary threshold applies (confirm annually); reduced threshold for STEM shortage occupations; security clearance still needed for Tier A access |
| Skilled Worker Visa (§18a/§18b AufenthG) | Technicians, production engineers, mechatronics specialists | Qualification recognition required, can take 3–6 months; consider recognition partnership to reduce delays |
| IT Specialist (§19c AufenthG / §6 BeschV) | Cybersecurity analysts, software engineers, systems architects | No formal degree required if 3+ years experience and minimum salary met; ideal for fast-moving cyber roles |
| Section 81a fast-track | Any skilled role where speed is critical | Employer-initiated; administrative fee; compressed timeline (target: weeks rather than months); requires coordination with local foreigners authority |
| Opportunity Card (§20a AufenthG) | Pipeline / pre-screening tool for future hires | Does not authorise employment directly; convert to Blue Card or skilled-worker permit once offer is made |
Obtaining a visa authorises a foreign national to reside and work in Germany, but it does not grant access to classified information. For any role that touches national-security-sensitive material, employers must also navigate the security-clearance landscape.
Security vetting for defence industry personnel is governed by the Security Clearance Check Act (Sicherheitsüberprüfungsgesetz, SÜG). The Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs and Climate Action (BMWK), acting through its designated security authority, conducts clearance checks for private-sector employees who require access to classified information in the context of government contracts. The BMVg and BAAINBw define the classification level required for each contract or sub-contract. Three levels of check exist, Ü1 (basic), Ü2 (extended) and Ü3 (expanded extended), with increasing depth of investigation and longer processing times.
In my experience, a basic Ü1 check can be completed in a matter of weeks, while Ü2 and Ü3 checks may take several months. The employer’s role is to initiate the application, ensure the candidate completes the personal security declaration (Sicherheitserklärung) accurately, and manage the interim period during which the employee must not be exposed to classified material. This last point is critical: allowing a new hire to begin work on classified tasks before clearance is granted exposes the employer to serious legal and contractual consequences.
There is no universal statutory bar on foreign nationals holding a German security clearance. However, certain NATO-classified projects require nationals of NATO or EU member states, and individual procurement contracts from the BMVg or BAAINBw may stipulate German nationality for specific posts. Third-country nationals, even those holding a valid Blue Card, may therefore be excluded from Tier A roles. I always advise clients to check the specific contract terms and the applicable classification rules before extending an offer, rather than discovering a nationality bar after the visa has been issued.
Hiring a foreign national to work on controlled technology can itself constitute a “transfer” or “deemed export” of that technology, triggering licensing requirements under German and EU export-control law. This is an area where employers frequently underestimate their exposure.
Two principal control regimes apply. The EU Dual-Use Regulation (Regulation (EU) 2021/821) controls items, software and technology that have both civilian and military applications. Germany’s national Export List (Ausfuhrliste) and the War Weapons Control Act (Kriegswaffenkontrollgesetz, KrWaffKontrG) additionally control military items. When an employer grants a non-EU national access to controlled technology, even within Germany, the employer may need an authorisation from BAFA, the federal authority responsible for export-control licensing.
BAFA assesses whether a proposed technology transfer requires a licence, taking into account the nature of the technology, the nationality and background of the individual, and the end use. Employers should file a pre-classification inquiry with BAFA early in the recruitment process to determine whether a licence is needed. Processing times vary, but building the BAFA inquiry into the hiring timeline, alongside the visa application and any security-clearance process, avoids costly delays later.
Separately from export controls, employers must screen candidates and their associated entities against EU and national sanctions lists. This includes the EU Consolidated Financial Sanctions List and relevant entries under the Foreign Trade and Payments Act (Außenwirtschaftsgesetz, AWG). In practice, I recommend that employers integrate automated sanctions-screening tools into their pre-hire workflow.
| Obligation | Common trigger | Practical control |
|---|---|---|
| Export-control licence (BAFA) | Granting non-EU national access to Annex I dual-use technology or military-list items | Pre-classification inquiry to BAFA before hire; restrict access until licence confirmed |
| War weapons authorisation | Involvement in production, transport or handling of items under KrWaffKontrG | Confirm Genehmigung requirements with BAFA; document role boundaries |
| Sanctions screening | Candidate or associated entity appears on EU/national sanctions list | Automated list screening at offer stage; periodic re-screening during employment |
Even after the visa, clearance and export-control licence are in place, the employer’s compliance obligations continue throughout the employment relationship. A structured onboarding process is essential.
The General Data Protection Regulation (Regulation (EU) 2016/679, GDPR) applies to all personal data processed during recruitment and employment, including data collected for security-clearance applications. Defence contractors must ensure that the processing of sensitive personal data, nationality, criminal-record checks, financial background, has a valid legal basis, typically the employer’s legitimate interest or a legal obligation. Where classified or controlled technical data is involved, additional information-security requirements under the BMVg’s facility-security guidelines apply on top of GDPR.
For Tier A and Tier B roles, employers should implement compartmentalised access controls that mirror the employee’s clearance level and export-control authorisation status. In practice, this means:
All foreign hires, and indeed all employees in controlled roles, should receive documented training on export-control obligations, classified-data handling, insider-threat awareness and reporting duties. At Schlun & Elseven Rechtsanwälte, I recommend that employers maintain a training log that can be produced in the event of an audit by BAFA, the security authority or a contracting agency.
Where a compliance gap is identified, employers should immediately restrict the affected employee’s access, conduct a root-cause analysis, self-report to the relevant authority where required (BAFA for export-control matters, the security authority for clearance breaches) and implement corrective controls. Early engagement with experienced immigration and compliance counsel significantly reduces the risk of enforcement escalation.
A, Pre-hire legal checklist
B, Onboarding checklist
C, Export-control screening checklist
In my view, employers should engage specialist immigration and compliance counsel as soon as any of the following triggers arise:
Hiring foreign talent for Germany’s defence industry is achievable and, for most employers, essential. The legal framework, from the Residence Act to the EU Dual-Use Regulation, provides workable pathways, but each pathway carries compliance requirements that demand careful planning. Getting the role classification right at the outset, selecting the correct immigration route, and building security-clearance, export-control and data-protection checks into a single onboarding workflow is, in my experience, the difference between a successful international hire and a costly compliance failure. Employers who treat immigration and defence compliance as a single, integrated process, rather than two separate workstreams, will be best positioned to secure the talent they need.
I encourage in-house teams to use the checklists above as a starting point and to consult with experienced counsel on the specifics of each case. The Germany lawyer directory is a useful resource for identifying specialists in this area.
For specialist advice on this topic, contact Aykut Elseven at Schlun & Elseven Rechtsanwälte.
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