Timeline for Moving back to Germany from Austria but still working in Austria and making previous years in Germany count towards PR
Current License: CC BY-SA 4.0
3 events
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May 28 at 19:43 | comment | added | Relaxed | Aufenthaltstitel is not any specific permit, regular or otherwise. A Niederlassungserlaubnis is an Aufenthaltstitel as is a Blue Card so I am not sure what you have in mind. But only permits for skilled workers come with the lower residence requirements, that's why I make a distinction between § 18c and § 9. Trying to think in terms of sections in the law rather than vague document names might help. | |
May 28 at 19:03 | comment | added | vitesh shah | In the case, where my previous stays do not count, then I was looking at normal residence permit "Aufenthaltstitel". My idea there was (if I was still allowed to keep current job), I get the normal residence permit, then use the fact that my German is C1 + my degree from Germany to get quicker Niederlassungserlaubnis. However, that also doesnt seem to be working according to the answer. | |
May 27 at 17:34 | history | answered | Relaxed | CC BY-SA 4.0 |