A German university offer is not the finish line. For most non-EU students, the real hurdle is money, and the Germany student visa will not move without proof you can support yourself. For 2026 that proof is a blocked account, or Sperrkonto, holding €11,904 for the year. Get it right and your visa sails through. Get it wrong and a September start can slip to the spring. With the autumn intake approaching, this is the step to nail first.
By the Travel Explore editorial desk. Last updated 6 July 2026.
In this article
- The offer is step one, not the last step
- How the blocked account works
- Getting your visa without delays
- Questions before you apply
The offer is step one, not the last step
Admission letters feel like the win, and they are. But the consulate wants evidence you can live in Germany without working full-time. That is where the blocked account comes in. It is a special German bank account you fund before you arrive. The bank locks the total and releases a fixed amount each month, so you cannot spend it all at once. EU, EEA and Swiss students skip this. If you need a visa to enter Germany, it is effectively mandatory. Treat it as the centre of your application, not an afterthought.
How the blocked account works
For 2026 the required amount is €11,904, which works out to €992 released per month across a year. You deposit the full sum upfront, the account is blocked, and monthly instalments cover your living costs once you land. Opening one takes time, so start early. Some embassies want proof for the full length of a course, which matters if you are coming for a language year or a Studienkolleg rather than a standard degree. The figure can move year to year, so always confirm the current amount before you transfer anything.
Getting your Germany student visa without delays
Take Linh, a data science master’s student from Vietnam aiming for a September start. Her smart move was sequencing. She opened her blocked account the week her admission arrived, funded it, then booked her visa appointment with the confirmation in hand. The classic mistake runs the other way. Students book the appointment, then scramble to fund the account, and lose weeks to bank verification and consulate backlogs. Line up the account, health insurance, and admission letter before you request the interview. Order is everything here.
Not sure a student route is your best path to Germany? Compare your options in a couple of minutes.
Before you book the flight
- Budget €11,904 for the 2026 blocked account, released at €992 a month.
- Open and fund the account as soon as your admission lands.
- EU, EEA and Swiss students do not need a Sperrkonto.
- Confirm the current amount and any full-duration rule before you transfer.
Questions before you apply
How much is the blocked account for 2026? €11,904 for the year, released as €992 per month once you are in Germany.
Do all students need one? Non-EU students who need a visa do. EU, EEA and Swiss nationals do not.
Can I work while studying? Yes, within the permitted limits, but the visa still requires the blocked account as proof of funds.
When should I open it? The moment you receive admission, because bank verification and consulate appointments both take time.
Related reads
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- LinkedIn: A German university offer is the easy part. The blocked account is what delays student visas. Here’s the fix.
- Twitter: Germany student visa 2026: you need a blocked account of €11,904. Open it the day your offer lands.
- Facebook: Heading to Germany to study? Sort the blocked account first. Here’s how it works.
Start your Germany study plan right
Studying in Germany is one of the best value moves in higher education, but the money step decides your timeline. Fund the blocked account early, sequence your documents, and you protect your start date instead of gambling with it. For help planning your study route, start here: https://linktr.ee/travelexpore
Sources
- Study.eu, Germany blocked bank accounts for students (T2 specialist) — https://www.study.eu/article/germany-blocked-bank-accounts-for-students-guide
- Make it in Germany, official federal portal for skilled workers and students (T0 official) — https://www.make-it-in-germany.com/en/
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