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intracompany transfer germany direct local hire

Intra‑company Transfer to Germany or Direct Local Hire: Which Route Is Best?

By Aykut Elseven
– posted 57 minutes ago

When a multinational employer needs to place a third-country national in Germany, the threshold question is whether to pursue an intracompany transfer to Germany or a direct local hire, two immigration routes that differ sharply in speed, compliance burden, cost, and long-term residence consequences. At Schlun & Elseven Rechtsanwälte, I advise global mobility teams on this decision regularly, and the right answer almost always depends on the duration of the assignment, the employee’s career category, and the company’s strategic intentions for the German operation.

This guide sets out a structured comparison of both routes, the ICT Card under EU Directive 2014/66/EU and the national employment-based residence permit under the German Residence Act (Aufenthaltsgesetz), so that HR leaders, in-house counsel, and tax specialists can make the call with confidence.

Executive decision matrix, quick answer

What is the intracompany transfer visa in Germany? The ICT Card (ICT-Karte) is a residence title that allows managers, specialists, and trainees of a non-EU company to work temporarily at a German group entity without a separate labour market test. It is Germany’s implementation of the EU ICT Directive 2014/66/EU.

Which route fits your scenario? The table below provides a rapid decision framework before you read the detailed analysis.

Scenario Recommended route Why
Short-term technical project (≤ 3 years), employee stays on home-country payroll ICT (secondment) Faster processing, no labour market test, employee retains home-country social security (with A1 certificate where applicable)
Permanent or indefinite staffing need, building a local team Direct local hire Clearer path to settlement, full integration into German employment and social security system
Initial secondment with planned conversion to permanent role Hybrid, start ICT, transition to local hire / EU Blue Card Combines speed of ICT with long-term residence benefits; requires careful planning of permit switch

What is an intra‑company transfer (ICT) and its legal basis?

The intra-company transfer mechanism allows multinational enterprises to second managers, specialists, or trainees from a non-EU parent, subsidiary, or branch to a related entity in Germany. The legal foundation is Directive 2014/66/EU, adopted by the Council of the European Union to establish uniform conditions for the entry and residence of third-country nationals within the framework of intra-corporate transfers.

EU legal basis, Directive 2014/66/EU

The EU ICT Directive creates a harmonised permit category across Member States. It defines three eligible personnel categories, managers, specialists, and trainee employees, and sets maximum durations: up to three years for managers and specialists and up to one year for trainees. Importantly, it grants intra-EU mobility rights: an ICT holder in one Member State may work in another for up to 90 days within a 180-day period under a notification procedure, or apply for a long-term mobility permit for stays exceeding 90 days.

German implementation, the ICT Card and practical eligibility

How does intra-company transfer work in practice? Germany transposed the Directive into the Aufenthaltsgesetz, creating the ICT Card (ICT-Karte, § 19 AufenthG) and the Mobile ICT Card (Mobiler-ICT-Karte, § 19b AufenthG). According to the Federal Office for Migration and Refugees (BAMF), the applicant must have been continuously employed by the sending company for at least six months (three months for trainees in some cases) immediately before the transfer. The host entity in Germany must belong to the same group of undertakings. No approval from the Federal Employment Agency (Bundesagentur für Arbeit) is required, a significant procedural advantage.

The German Missions abroad factsheet confirms that the ICT Card may be issued to managers and specialists for up to three years and to trainees for up to one year.

What is a direct local hire (employment-based residence) in Germany?

The alternative to an intracompany transfer in Germany is to hire the individual directly under a German employment contract and sponsor a national residence permit for employment purposes. The legal framework is found in the German Residence Act and the Skilled Immigration Act (Fachkräfteeinwanderungsgesetz), which broadened access for qualified professionals from third countries.

Labour market test and the Federal Employment Agency’s role

For many employment-based residence permit categories, the Federal Employment Agency (Bundesagentur für Arbeit) must confirm that no privileged worker (German or EU citizen) is available and that the employment conditions, particularly salary, are comparable to those of domestic workers. This labour market test in Germany can add weeks to the processing timeline. However, certain categories are exempt: EU Blue Card applicants who meet the salary threshold, IT specialists with demonstrated professional experience, and roles in designated shortage occupations are typically processed without a full labour market test.

Typical timelines and costs

A direct local hire work permit in Germany generally follows this sequence: the employer identifies the candidate and drafts a compliant employment contract; the candidate applies for a national visa at the German consulate in their home country; the consulate requests approval from the foreigners’ authority and, where applicable, the Federal Employment Agency. In my experience, end-to-end processing, from visa application to permit issuance, can range from several weeks to several months, depending on the consulate’s workload and whether a labour market test is required. Consular fees for the national visa are modest, but employer-side costs (legal advice, relocation, recruitment) can be significant.

Side‑by‑side comparison of intracompany transfer Germany and direct local hire

The following comparison table distils the practical differences that matter most to employers choosing between an ICT secondment and a direct local hire. I have drawn on the provisions of the EU ICT Directive, the Residence Act, and guidance from the BAMF and Make-it-in-Germany.

Feature ICT (secondment) Direct local hire
Legal basis EU ICT Directive 2014/66/EU; ICT Card (§ 19 AufenthG) Residence Act (§§ 18a, 18b, 18g AufenthG); Skilled Immigration Act
Eligible persons Managers, specialists, trainees of same corporate group Any third-country national with a qualifying job offer
Maximum duration Up to 3 years (managers/specialists); up to 1 year (trainees) Tied to employment contract; residence permit renewable indefinitely
Labour market test Not required Required in many categories; exempt for Blue Card and shortage occupations
Typical processing time Often faster, no Federal Employment Agency involvement; shorter if employee holds ICT from another EU state Longer in practice due to labour market test and multi-agency coordination
Employment relationship Employee remains on home-country contract; secondment agreement with German host entity German employment contract; full German employment law applies
Social security May remain in home-country system (A1 certificate under bilateral or EU agreements); German contributions may apply for longer postings German social security from day one; employer and employee contributions required
Tax Complex, depends on tax residency, double taxation treaties, and secondment length; split payroll may be necessary Standard German PAYE withholding; employer handles wage tax and contributions
Intra-EU mobility 90/180-day mobility to other EU states under notification; long-term mobility with Mobile ICT Card No automatic intra-EU work mobility
Path to permanent residence ICT time generally does not count toward settlement permit; limited pathway Clear pathway, especially via EU Blue Card (settlement possible after 21–33 months)
Best for Temporary projects, knowledge transfer, maintaining central employer control Long-term staffing, team-building, permanent recruitment

What is the 90/180-day rule in Germany?

Under the Schengen 90/180 rule, third-country nationals may stay in the Schengen Area, including Germany, for up to 90 days within any rolling 180-day period without a long-stay visa. For ICT holders with a permit issued by another EU Member State, the EU Immigration Portal confirms that residence and employment in Germany for up to 90 days within a 180-day period are permitted under a notification procedure. Stays exceeding this threshold require a separate German Mobile ICT Card. This distinction is critical for employers planning multi-country projects across EU sites.

Practical HR checklist for ICT secondments

Employers using the intra-company transfer route to Germany should follow a structured implementation process. In our experience at Schlun & Elseven Rechtsanwälte, the most common compliance failures arise from incomplete documentation or missed registration deadlines rather than from the immigration application itself.

Documents required

  • Secondment agreement. A written agreement between the sending entity and the German host entity specifying the role, duration, reporting lines, and remuneration arrangements.
  • Proof of group relationship. Corporate documents (e.g., commercial register extracts, shareholder certificates) demonstrating that the sending and receiving entities belong to the same group of undertakings.
  • Employment history. Evidence that the transferee has been employed by the sending entity for at least six months continuously (or three months for certain trainee categories).
  • Qualifications. Degree certificates, professional credentials, or evidence of specialist expertise relevant to the position in Germany.
  • Valid travel document and biometric photo.
  • Proof of adequate health insurance coverage.

Notification and registration steps

  • National visa application. The transferee applies at the German consulate in their country of residence. Processing times vary by consulate.
  • ICT Card issuance. Upon arrival, the local foreigners’ authority (Ausländerbehörde) issues the ICT Card. The BAMF must be notified when short-term mobility from another EU Member State is used.
  • Local registration (Anmeldung). The employee must register their address with the local residents’ registration office within 14 days of moving into accommodation.

Payroll and tax considerations for secondments

Secondment tax and social security obligations in Germany demand careful planning. If the employee remains on the home-country payroll, the employer must determine whether Germany has taxing rights under the applicable double taxation treaty and whether a shadow payroll or wage-tax registration is necessary. An A1 certificate (within the EU/EEA) or a certificate of coverage under a bilateral social security agreement can exempt the transferee from German social security contributions for a limited period. Without such a certificate, German social security obligations apply from day one.

Practical HR checklist for direct local hire

Hiring a non-EU national directly onto a German employment contract follows a different, and in many respects more front-loaded, compliance path. The local hire Germany work permit process involves coordination between the employer, the consulate, the foreigners’ authority, and often the Federal Employment Agency.

Labour market test process

  • Job posting. The role should be advertised through the Federal Employment Agency’s channels to satisfy the comparability and availability check. In practice, posting duration varies.
  • Agency review. The Federal Employment Agency assesses whether the salary and working conditions are comparable to those of domestic employees and whether no privileged worker is available. Certain categories (EU Blue Card holders meeting the salary threshold, IT professionals, shortage occupations) are exempt.
  • Approval timeline. The agency’s approval is typically communicated to the foreigners’ authority, which in turn communicates with the consulate. This multi-step coordination is the primary reason why local hire processing often takes longer than ICT applications.

Contract and employment law considerations

  • German employment contract. Must comply with the Nachweisgesetz (Proof of Employment Conditions Act), specifying salary, working hours, leave entitlement, notice periods, and applicable collective agreements.
  • Minimum wage and equal treatment. The contract must meet or exceed the statutory minimum wage and any sector-specific collective agreement rates.
  • Probationary period. Standard probation is up to six months; dismissal protection under the Kündigungsschutzgesetz applies after six months in companies with more than ten employees.

Onboarding and social security

From the first day of employment, the German employer must register the employee with a German health insurer, withhold and remit wage tax, and pay employer social security contributions (health insurance, pension insurance, unemployment insurance, long-term care insurance, and accident insurance). The employee’s residence permit for employment in Germany must be obtained before work commences, starting employment without a valid permit is a serious compliance violation carrying potential fines and criminal liability for the employer.

Long-term residence and career impacts

One of the most consequential differences between an intracompany transfer to Germany and a direct local hire concerns the employee’s path to permanent residence. For employers trying to retain key talent in Germany beyond an initial assignment, this factor can, and often should, tip the decision.

EU Blue Card Germany versus standard settlement permit

What is the fastest way to get permanent residency in Germany? For highly skilled workers, the EU Blue Card offers the most accelerated route. Under the Residence Act, Blue Card holders may apply for a settlement permit (Niederlassungserlaubnis) after 33 months of Blue Card employment, or after 21 months if they demonstrate German language proficiency at B1 level. Holders of standard employment-based residence permits must generally wait five years and meet additional integration requirements. The EU Blue Card Germany route is therefore significantly faster and is available only to locally hired employees (or those who switch from an ICT to a local employment contract and Blue Card).

Counting secondment time toward permanent residence

In my experience, this is where many employers and employees are surprised. Time spent in Germany on an ICT Card does not, as a general rule, count toward the qualifying period for a settlement permit under § 9 of the Residence Act. The ICT is designed as a temporary measure, and the legislative intent is to facilitate temporary transfers rather than permanent immigration. Employees who wish to remain in Germany permanently after an ICT assignment will typically need to switch to a different residence title, such as the EU Blue Card or a skilled worker permit, and begin accumulating qualifying time from that point.

This transition requires a new application and must meet the eligibility criteria of the target permit category.

Risk, compliance traps and mitigation

From what I am seeing in practice, the most frequent compliance errors fall into a small number of recurring categories:

  • Relying on the Schengen short-stay (90/180 days) for work that requires a permit. Visa-free entry does not authorise employment. Starting work before the ICT Card or employment residence permit is issued can trigger fines, entry bans, and criminal liability.
  • Missing the A1 certificate or social security posting certificate. Without it, German social security contributions become due retroactively, often with interest and penalties.
  • Incorrect employer entity. The ICT requires a genuine group relationship. Using a client site, joint venture, or unrelated service company as the host entity will invalidate the application.
  • Failing to register locally. Both seconded and locally hired employees must complete the Anmeldung within 14 days. Missed registrations cascade into tax and social security complications.
  • Underestimating the transition from ICT to local hire. The permit switch is not automatic, it requires a new application, and there can be processing gaps if not planned in advance.

My advice to clients is to map out every compliance obligation, immigration, tax, social security, employment law, before the employee boards a plane, not after.

Recommendation framework, which route and when

Based on the analysis above, here is my practical recommendation framework for choosing between an intracompany transfer to Germany and a direct local hire:

  • Temporary project (up to 3 years), employee needed quickly, no permanent staffing intent → ICT Card. Faster processing, no labour market test, employee stays on home-country contract.
  • Long-term or permanent role, building a German team → Direct local hire. Clearer path to settlement, full compliance with German employment law, straightforward social security.
  • Initial assignment with planned conversion to permanent role → Hybrid approach. Start with ICT for speed, then transition to EU Blue Card or skilled worker permit. Plan the switch from day one to avoid gaps.
  • Highly skilled professional meeting Blue Card salary threshold → Direct local hire via EU Blue Card. The accelerated settlement pathway (as early as 21 months) makes this the strongest long-term option.
  • Multi-country EU project requiring mobility across Member States → ICT Card with intra-EU mobility. The 90/180-day notification procedure and Mobile ICT Card provide flexibility that a national employment permit cannot.

Conclusion

The choice between an intracompany transfer to Germany and a direct local hire is not simply an immigration question, it is a business strategy decision with implications for tax, social security, employment law, and the employee’s long-term future in Germany. In my view, employers who invest in mapping the full compliance picture at the outset, rather than treating immigration as an isolated process, consistently achieve faster deployments with fewer surprises. Whether the right route is an ICT Card, a local hire with an EU Blue Card, or a phased hybrid approach, the key is to align immigration planning with the organisation’s broader workforce strategy from the very beginning.

Need Legal Advice?

For specialist advice on this topic, contact Aykut Elseven at Schlun & Elseven Rechtsanwälte.

Sources

  1. Federal Office for Migration and Refugees (BAMF), ICT information
  2. European Commission, EU Immigration Portal: Intra-corporate transferee (Germany)
  3. EUR-Lex, Council Directive 2014/66/EU (ICT Directive)
  4. Gesetze im Internet, Residence Act (Aufenthaltsgesetz)
  5. Make-it-in-Germany, ICT Card
  6. Federal Employment Agency (Bundesagentur für Arbeit)
  7. German Missions abroad, ICT factsheet
  8. Fachkräfteeinwanderungsgesetz (Skilled Immigration Act)

FAQs

What is the ICT Card and who is eligible?
The ICT Card (ICT-Karte) is a German residence title under § 19 of the Residence Act that implements EU Directive 2014/66/EU. It is available to managers, specialists, and trainees of third-country companies who are being transferred to a German entity within the same corporate group. The applicant must have been employed by the sending company for at least six months before the transfer.
Managers and specialists may be seconded for up to three years. Trainees may be seconded for up to one year. These are maximum durations set by the EU ICT Directive and reflected in Germany’s national implementation. Extensions beyond these limits are not possible under the ICT route; a different residence title would be required.
It depends on the permit category. Many standard employment-based residence permits require approval from the Federal Employment Agency, which checks whether comparable domestic workers are available and whether working conditions meet market standards. However, EU Blue Card applicants who meet the salary threshold, IT specialists with professional experience, and workers in designated shortage occupations are generally exempt from the labour market test.
Generally, no. The ICT Card is classified as a temporary residence title, and time spent under it does not typically count toward the qualifying period for a settlement permit under § 9 of the Residence Act. Employees who wish to settle permanently in Germany will usually need to switch to a different permit, such as the EU Blue Card, and begin accumulating qualifying time from that point.
In most cases, the ICT route is faster because it does not require a labour market test or Federal Employment Agency approval. However, processing times vary by consulate, and an employee who already holds an ICT Card from another EU Member State can begin working in Germany under the short-term mobility notification for up to 90 days while the German ICT Card is processed.
An ICT transferee remains employed by the home-country entity. However, a shadow payroll may be necessary in Germany for tax-withholding purposes, depending on the applicable double taxation treaty and the duration of the assignment. Placing the employee on a full German payroll would typically require a change of residence title to an employment-based permit or EU Blue Card.
The most common errors are: starting work before the permit is issued; failing to obtain an A1 or social security posting certificate; using an entity that is not genuinely part of the corporate group as the host for an ICT; not planning the transition from ICT to permanent hire early enough; and overlooking local registration and tax obligations. Each of these can result in fines, retroactive social security claims, or even criminal liability.

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Intra‑company Transfer to Germany or Direct Local Hire: Which Route Is Best?

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