🎯 If you are a GNM or BSc Nursing graduate dreaming of working in Germany, there is one question almost every nurse asks first: ‘How long will it take me to learn German?’ This blog answers that – honestly.
Germany needs over 40,000 nurses right now. Indian nurses are among the most preferred internationally – thanks to strong clinical training, English proficiency, and a genuine commitment to patient care. But there is one mandatory requirement that every nurse must meet before they can set foot in a German hospital: B2 level German proficiency. If you are starting from zero – no German at all – this can feel overwhelming. Let us break it down clearly.
The CEFR (Common European Framework of Reference for Languages) measures language levels from A1 (complete beginner) to C2 (native-like mastery). B2 sits at the upper-intermediate level – it means you can:
Germany requires B2 as the minimum standard before a foreign nurse can be granted full professional recognition (Berufsanerkennung) and work independently as a registered nurse. Without it, you cannot legally begin work as a qualified nurse in most German states.
The honest answer depends on how many hours per day you study and whether you have structured classroom training or are self-studying. Here is a realistic timeline:
| Level | Duration (Classroom) | Hours Required | What You Can Do |
|---|---|---|---|
| A1 | 2–3 months | 80–100 hours | Basic greetings, introduce yourself |
| A2 | 2–3 months | 80–100 hours | Simple conversations, basic sentences |
| B1 | 3–4 months | 150–200 hours | Understand everyday German, basic medical terms |
| B2 | 3–4 months | 200–250 hours | Full professional communication as a nurse |
| A1 → B2 Total | 11–13 months | 600–800 hours | Ready for Germany as a qualified nurse ✅ |
At Jet Set Jobs, our full residential offline programme runs A1 to B2 across approximately 48 weeks-giving nurses structured, daily classroom learning with certified trainers who specialise in preparing nurses for the German healthcare environment.
This is where many nurses get a shock-especially when they see fees charged by some institutes. Here is a realistic cost breakdown:
| Type of Training | Typical Cost (A1–B2) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Private institute (self-pay) | ₹1,50,000 – ₹3,00,000 | Varies widely – check carefully |
| Online self-study only | ₹10,000 – ₹40,000 | No structure, hard to stay consistent |
| Exam fees (TELC/Goethe) | ₹15,000 – ₹25,000 per exam | Payable at exam centre |
| Jet Set Jobs, Programme | FREE for qualified nurses ✅ | Refundable deposit model – zero cost to you |
At Jet Set Jobs,, qualified GNM and BSc Nursing graduates do not pay for language training. Here is how our model works:
💡 In 80+ years of the Sachdeva Group’s educational legacy, we have seen that the biggest barrier for Indian nurses is not capability – it is cost and access to quality training. Our free model removes that barrier entirely.
A common question: ‘Can I go to Germany with just B1?’ The short answer is-it is complicated.
Our strong recommendation: aim for B2 from the start. It takes a few extra months but opens every door.
At Jet Set Jobs, over 583 nurses have started their journey – from zero German to B2-certified and working in Germany. Our programme is offline, residential, and completely free for eligible nurses.
If you are a GNM or BSc Nursing graduate and want to work in Germany, the best first step is a free 30-minute consultation with our team. We will assess your eligibility, explain the process, and answer every question you have- with no pressure.
📞 Book Your Free Consultation Today Call or WhatsApp: +91 96259 66817 Email: support@jetsetjobs.in Website: Jet Set Jobs