When most people think about Ausbildung in Germany from India, they think about the care sector. And while care is the most accessible Ausbildung track for Indian students right now, it is far from the only one. Germany's IT sector has one of the most severe skilled worker shortages in the country — and Ausbildung in IT is a direct entry point into one of Europe's strongest tech industries, with significantly higher post-qualification salaries.
If you have a strong Class 12 Maths or Computer Science background, are aged 18–25, and are committed to learning German to B2 — IT Ausbildung in Germany is worth understanding seriously.
The Two Official IT Ausbildung Tracks in Germany
Germany has two main IT Ausbildung qualifications, both 3-year programmes run under the official German vocational training system:
Fachinformatiker/in
Anwendungsentwicklung
Application Development
Programming (Java, Python, C#, SQL), software architecture, app development, testing, project documentation. You build software at your employer.
📌 Best for: Strong maths/coding interest. Class 12 with Computer Science or Maths background.
Fachinformatiker/in
Systemintegration
System Integration
IT infrastructure, networking, server administration, cloud systems, cybersecurity basics. You maintain and optimise IT systems at your employer.
📌 Best for: Students interested in networks, cloud, and infrastructure rather than coding per se.
Both tracks award the same formal qualification tier, both are equally recognised by German employers, and both open the same post-qualification salary range. The choice between them is about your interest — coding vs systems.
Stipend During IT Ausbildung — Real Numbers in € and ₹
| Training Year | Monthly Stipend (€) | Monthly Stipend (₹ approx.) | What This Covers |
|---|---|---|---|
| Year 1 | €1,050–€1,200/month | ₹94,500–₹1,08,000 | Rent, food, transport, phone. Most trainees break even or save slightly. |
| Year 2 | €1,100–€1,300/month | ₹98,900–₹1,17,000 | Living costs covered. €100–200/month savings typical. |
| Year 3 | €1,200–€1,400/month | ₹1,08,000–₹1,26,000 | Higher stipend. Many start sending money home to India. |
IT Ausbildung stipends are among the highest across all Ausbildung sectors. Tech employers — SAP, Deutsche Telekom, Siemens, Bosch, and thousands of mid-size German tech companies — pay at the upper end of the range.
Post-Qualification Salary — What You Earn at 25
A Fachinformatiker in Germany at 21 earns approximately ₹2.5–2.9L/month — 3 to 8 times more at the same age.
Eligibility — What You Actually Need
| Requirement | What Is Actually Needed | Common Misconception |
|---|---|---|
| Education | Class 12 pass. Maths/CS background strongly preferred but not legally mandated. | Many students think you need a BTech or diploma. You do not. |
| Age | 18–25 preferred. 18–20 ideal for most employer partnerships. | No legal upper age limit in Germany, but employer preference skews younger. |
| German language | B2 certified (TELC or Goethe-Institut). Both tracks are conducted in German. | Many assume English is sufficient in IT. It is not — workplace communication is in German. |
| Coding experience | Not mandatory. Logical, problem-solving mindset matters more than prior coding. | Students assume they need to code already. Employers teach you. |
| Entrance exam | None. Zero. No NEET, no JEE, no Indian entrance qualification. | Many assume some Indian exam is required for a German IT programme. |
The German Language Question — The One Real Challenge
IT Ausbildung in Germany is not conducted in English. This surprises many Indian students who assume that because IT is a global field, the work language is English. At most German companies, the internal working language is German — documentation, meetings, colleague communication, and Berufsschule instruction are all in German. B2 level is the minimum standard.
This is not a reason to rule out IT Ausbildung. It is a reason to be clear-eyed about what B2 actually means for the IT context — professional-level German, comfortable with technical documentation, able to participate in meetings. JSJ's language training is specifically structured to build toward this standard, not just toward a certificate.
What IT Ausbildung Actually Looks Like Day to Day
The Ausbildung dual system splits your week between your employer (3–4 days) and the Berufsschule (1–2 days):
🏢 At Your Employer
Application Development: Writing real code, testing software, participating in development sprints. Real projects from early in Year 1.
System Integration: Configuring servers, managing networks, solving IT infrastructure problems on actual systems.
🎓 At Berufsschule
Programming concepts, networking principles, Agile/Scrum basics, IT security, business processes, German workplace communication.
All instruction is in German. Exams (Zwischenprüfung + Abschlussprüfung) are in German.
Is IT Ausbildung Available Through JSJ Right Now?
IT Ausbildung places for Indian candidates are more competitive than care-sector places. IT positions attract more global applications, many German companies prefer candidates with some demonstrable technical exposure, and the language standard requirement is higher in practice than the minimum B2 implies.
Destination Germany's employer network of 180+ companies includes IT employers, and JSJ submits profiles to IT employer partners for candidates whose profile, language level, and background are the right fit. A free consultation with JSJ will give you a specific assessment of your profile for IT vs other available tracks.
📞 Book Your Free Consultation — Jet Set Jobs × Destination Germany
Ausbildung Programme Germany 2027 | Age 18–25 | Class 12 pass
| Science background preferred
Programme fee: ₹2,50,000 + GST | German A1–B2
training included | Stipend: €1,000–€1,400/month (IT sector)