EU Blue Card vs Section 16d vs Skilled Worker Visa - Which Route Fits You? (2026) | Jet Set Jobs

EU Blue Card vs Section 16d vs Skilled Worker Visa - Which Route Fits You?

📌 The short answer: For most Indian physiotherapists, the journey begins on the Section 16d recognition visa - the route designed for completing professional recognition in Germany. Once you are fully recognised, you can move onto a Skilled Worker Visa or, if you meet the salary threshold, the EU Blue Card. Because physiotherapy is a regulated profession, your recognition status - not just your salary - determines which route fits at each stage. This blog compares all three clearly, with current 2026 figures.

One of the most confusing parts of the Germany pathway is the alphabet soup of visa routes - Section 16d, EU Blue Card, Skilled Worker Visa, and more. Candidates often ask 'which visa do I need?' as though there is one answer. In reality, the right route depends on where you are in your recognition journey and whether you meet certain conditions. This blog untangles the three main routes and shows how they fit together for a physiotherapist.

The key insight to hold onto: because physiotherapy is a regulated profession, your professional recognition status is the hinge on which your visa route turns. Understanding that makes the whole picture click into place.

The Three Main Routes at a Glance

RouteIn One LineWhen It Applies
Section 16d (Recognition Visa)Enter Germany to complete your professional recognitionWhen you still need to finish recognition (e.g. an adaptation course)
Skilled Worker Visa (§18a/§18b)Work as a recognised skilled professionalAfter your recognition is complete
EU Blue Card (§18g)A premium work permit for degree-holders meeting a salary thresholdAfter recognition, if you meet the salary and degree conditions

Notice the common thread: recognition sits at the centre. Section 16d gets you into Germany to complete it; the Skilled Worker Visa and Blue Card are routes you move onto once it is done. Let us look at each in turn.

Route 1 - The Section 16d Recognition Visa (the usual starting point)

Section 16d of the Residence Act is the residence permit specifically designed for people who need to complete the recognition of their foreign professional qualification in Germany. For physiotherapists who receive a deficit notice (Defizitbescheid) and need to complete an adaptation course or knowledge exam, this is the natural route - it lets you enter Germany, work in a related capacity under supervision, and finish your recognition on German soil.

This is the route most Indian physiotherapists on the JSJ pathway begin with, because the typical journey involves completing the final recognition steps after arrival. You travel on the Section 16d visa, work during your adaptation period (earning a salary), complete your compensatory measure, and achieve full recognition - at which point you transition to a longer-term work permit.

Section 16d - Key Features
PurposeTo complete professional recognition in Germany
Who it suitsPhysiotherapists who still need to finish recognition (most candidates)
During the visaYou work under supervision and complete your adaptation course / exam
LanguageB2 German is central to qualifying and to working
After completionTransition to a Skilled Worker Visa or EU Blue Card once recognised
📌 Think of Section 16d as the 'bridge' visa: it carries you from India into Germany and across the final stretch of recognition. It is not a lesser route - it is the purpose-built pathway for internationally trained professionals completing recognition, and it is how a large share of Indian physiotherapists begin their German careers.

Route 2 - The Skilled Worker Visa (§18a / §18b)

Once your recognition is complete and you hold the permit to practise as a physiotherapist, the Skilled Worker Visa becomes available. This is the standard residence permit for recognised skilled workers - §18a covers those with vocational qualifications and §18b those with academic qualifications. With full recognition and a qualifying job, this route lets you work as a fully recognised physiotherapist in Germany.

For many physiotherapists, the Skilled Worker Visa is the route they hold after completing the Section 16d phase - it reflects their new status as a recognised professional. It is a solid, straightforward work permit that also opens the path toward permanent residency over time.

Route 3 - The EU Blue Card (§18g)

The EU Blue Card is Germany's premium work permit for university-educated professionals who meet a salary threshold. It carries notable advantages - faster permanent residency, immediate full work rights for your spouse with no language test, and EU mobility. For an Indian physiotherapist with a BPT degree who, after recognition, holds a qualifying job at the required salary, the Blue Card can be an attractive route.

EU Blue Card - 2026 FactsDetail
Standard salary threshold (2026)€50,700 gross per year (about €4,225/month)
Shortage occupation / recent graduate (2026)€45,934.20 gross per year (about €3,827/month)
Regulated profession conditionYour permit to practise must be in place or in prospect at visa application
Permanent residencyAfter 21 months with B1 German, or 27 months with A1
SpouseImmediate, unrestricted right to work - no language test required
Degree requirementA recognised university degree (a BPT can qualify)
⚠️ Crucial nuance for physiotherapists: the EU Blue Card requires that, for a regulated profession, your permit to practise is in place or clearly in prospect at the time of the visa application. Because physiotherapy is regulated, you generally cannot use the Blue Card to bypass recognition - recognition still comes first or must be clearly on track. This is why most physiotherapists reach the Blue Card after recognition, not instead of it. Healthcare is on the shortage-occupation list, which means the lower salary threshold can apply - but the recognition condition remains.

How They Fit Together - Your Likely Route Map

Putting the three routes in sequence shows how a physiotherapist's visa journey typically unfolds:

StageTypical Visa Status
Arriving to complete recognitionSection 16d recognition visa
During adaptation periodWorking under supervision on Section 16d
Full recognition achievedTransition point - eligible for longer-term permits
Working as a recognised physiotherapistSkilled Worker Visa (§18a/§18b) or EU Blue Card (§18g)
Long-term settlementPermanent residency, then potentially citizenship
📌 For most candidates, the practical reality is simple: you do not choose between these routes upfront in isolation. Your journey flows through them - Section 16d to get in and complete recognition, then a Skilled Worker Visa or Blue Card once recognised. The programme and your employer help determine the right route at each stage based on your recognition status, your salary, and your circumstances.

Which Route Is 'Best'?

There is no single 'best' route - there is the right route for your stage. Section 16d is right when you need to complete recognition. The Blue Card is attractive once you qualify, for its faster PR and spouse benefits. The Skilled Worker Visa is a solid standard route for recognised professionals. Rather than fixating on one, understand that you progress through them, and that recognition is the key that unlocks the later, more advantageous options.

What matters most is not picking the 'perfect' visa name, but completing your recognition and reaching B2 German - because those are what open every route. Get those right, and the visa route follows naturally, with guidance at each step.

📌 Bottom line: For Indian physiotherapists, the visa journey usually begins with the Section 16d recognition visa - the purpose-built route to enter Germany and complete professional recognition while working under supervision. Once fully recognised, you transition to a Skilled Worker Visa (§18a/§18b) or, if you meet the 2026 salary thresholds (€50,700 standard, €45,934.20 for shortage occupations like healthcare), the EU Blue Card with its faster PR and spouse work rights. Because physiotherapy is regulated, your recognition status - not just salary - drives which route fits. You progress through these routes rather than choosing one in isolation, and recognition plus B2 German are the keys that unlock them all.

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