Bringing Parents to Germany as a Physiotherapist (2026) | Jet Set Jobs

Bringing Parents to Germany as a Physiotherapist: A 2026 Guide

📌 The short answer: Since 1 March 2024, Germany finally lets skilled workers bring their parents (and parents-in-law) to live with them - no longer only in cases of 'exceptional hardship.' As a recognised physiotherapist on an EU Blue Card or skilled-worker permit, you can sponsor your parents, provided your qualifying permit was first issued on or after 1 March 2024. The two catches: you must prove you can support them, and - the big one - you must arrange private health insurance for them. The rule currently runs until the end of 2028. All information here is general and rules can change.

For many Indian professionals, one worry outweighs almost every other when moving abroad: what about my parents? Leaving ageing parents behind is one of the hardest parts of emigrating. For decades, German law made bringing them almost impossible - allowed only in rare cases of 'exceptional hardship.' That has now changed, and it is genuinely good news for physiotherapists. This blog closes our settlement cluster with the newest and most emotional of the family rules.

Here we explain the new parent-reunification route, who exactly qualifies, the all-important cut-off date, and the practical hurdles - especially health insurance - you need to plan for. Immigration rules change and this provision is new, so treat this as a current-picture guide, not legal advice, and confirm details with official sources or a specialist.

The big change: parents can finally join

Since 1 March 2024, a new provision in German law (§36(3) of the Residence Act, introduced by the Skilled Immigration Act) gives skilled workers a real right to bring their parents - and their parents-in-law - to live in Germany. Before this, parent reunification was only possible if you could prove 'exceptional hardship,' a bar so high that very few families ever cleared it. Now, for qualifying skilled workers, parents can join without any hardship being shown. This is one of the most significant family-friendly reforms in recent German immigration history, and it directly benefits physiotherapists.

Who qualifies - and the crucial cut-off date

There is one condition you must understand clearly, because it is strict and non-negotiable. To sponsor your parents under this route, you must hold a qualifying skilled-worker title - an EU Blue Card, or a skilled-worker permit under §18a/§18b - and that residence title must have been first issued to you on or after 1 March 2024. What matters is the date your qualifying permit was first granted, not when you entered Germany. Skilled workers whose first permit predates that date are, for now, excluded and remain on the old hardship-only route - a cut-off that German courts have upheld.

📌 For physiotherapists arriving through Jet Set Jobs now, this cut-off is good news: your recognition and skilled-worker journey is happening well after 1 March 2024, so you fall on the right side of the rule. It is one more reason the Blue Card or skilled-worker route matters.

Note that to bring your parents-in-law (your spouse's parents), your spouse must be living permanently in Germany with you. The age of you - the sponsoring 'child' - is irrelevant; what counts is your residence title.

The requirements - and the real hurdle

The new route removes the hardship test, but the general conditions for a residence permit still apply. You will need to show:

  • A secured livelihood - enough income to support your parents, including their accommodation. A binding financial undertaking (Verpflichtungserklärung) is typically required.
  • Adequate living space - though under this provision the authorities largely presume your home is suitable, so the documentation is lighter than for other cases.
  • Private health insurance for your parents - and this is the big one.
⚠️ Health insurance is the hurdle that catches most families. Your parents cannot simply join Germany's statutory (public) health system, and family co-insurance does not usually cover parents. They need comprehensive private health insurance accepted for residence purposes - which, for older people, can be expensive or hard to obtain depending on age and health. Budget for this carefully and research it early; it is the single most common reason parent applications stall.
AspectDetail
Legal route§36(3) AufenthG (skilled-worker parent reunification, since 1 Mar 2024)
Who can sponsorRecognised skilled workers on Blue Card / §18a-b permit
Crucial conditionYour qualifying permit first issued on/after 1 March 2024
Who can joinYour parents (and parents-in-law, if spouse lives in Germany)
Main requirementsSecured livelihood + mandatory private health insurance
Time limitProvision currently runs until 31 December 2028

How it works, and what parents gain

The process is the familiar two-step route: your parents apply for a national (D) visa at the German mission in India, increasingly online through the Consular Services Portal, then convert it to a residence permit at the local foreigners' office after arriving and registering. You'll need apostilled birth certificates proving the relationship, plus proof of your income and their insurance. Timelines of roughly three to six months are realistic, though embassy procedures for this new route are still settling in. Encouragingly, once here, your parents' residence can later lead to a settlement permit and even, in time, naturalisation - this is a genuine long-term family future, not a temporary visit.

Leaving my parents in India was the one thing that made me hesitate about Germany. Learning that I could bring them once I was recognised changed everything - the hardest part of the decision simply disappeared. (Illustrative candidate experience - not a specific individual.)

A note on timing and the 2028 deadline

Two timing points matter. First, this is a route for once you are a fully recognised skilled worker on a qualifying permit - not something available during your initial recognition phase, so it belongs to a later stage of your journey. Second, the provision is currently temporary: it is scheduled to expire on 31 December 2028 unless the government extends it, following an official review. Nobody can predict that outcome, so if bringing your parents is important to you, it is wise to plan and act within that window rather than assume it will always be available.

What this means for Jet Set Jobs physiotherapists

For candidates on our pathway, this reform turns one of the most painful parts of moving abroad into a solvable plan. Because you'll be building your career on a post-2024 skilled-worker or Blue Card permit, you fall within the group this route was designed for. The key is to prepare early - especially on the health-insurance question for your parents - and to understand the timing. Our counsellors can help you see how this fits into your wider journey, always as general guidance on a supported pathway, not legal advice or a guarantee. This blog completes our settlement, PR and family cluster.

📌 Bottom line: Since 1 March 2024, recognised physiotherapists on a Blue Card or skilled-worker permit can bring their parents (and parents-in-law) to Germany - provided that qualifying permit was first issued on or after 1 March 2024. You must prove you can support them and, crucially, arrange private health insurance for them, which is the main hurdle. The route currently runs until the end of 2028. This is general information, not legal advice - verify current rules and plan early.

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