10 Things Nobody Tells You About Living in Berlin Until You’re Already There

By Irem Demirci

1. You Can Earn Well and Still Live Simply

Berlin salaries are competitive, but the culture doesn’t push luxury consumption.

You’ll see high earners cycling, shopping at local markets, and living modestly and nobody questions it.

2. Finding an Apartment Is Harder Than Finding a Job

Many people secure a job in weeks and search for housing for months.

The competition isn’t just about money; it’s about paperwork, timing, and patience.

3. English Works… Until It Doesn’t

You can survive daily life in English, but the moment something becomes official - contracts, healthcare, bureaucracy - German suddenly matters.

4. Neighbourhood Matters More Than “Central”

Berlin isn’t lived from the centre outward.

People choose neighbourhoods based on parks, bakeries, cafés, and daily routines not prestige postcodes.

5. Silence Is a Social Rule

Quiet hours are respected.

Drilling, loud music, or noise complaints are taken seriously even in “cool” areas.

6. Weekends Are Sacred

Emails slow down.

Shops close.

People disconnect.

Berlin doesn’t reward hustle, it protects personal time.

7. You Don’t Need a Car

Public transport, bikes, and walkability cover most needs.

Car ownership is often more inconvenient than helpful.

8. Bureaucracy Is Slow But Predictable

Processes take time, but rules are clear.

Once you understand the system, life becomes easier, not faster, but steadier.

9. People Stay Longer Than Planned

Many arrive “for one year.”

Most stay far longer.

10. Berlin Doesn’t Impress You, It Grows on You

It’s not love at first sight.

It’s trust over time.

Berlin rewards patience, stability, and routine; not speed or status.