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Blue Card & Citizenship: 6-Month Stays Abroad Each Year

6. Oktober 2025 13:53 |
Preis: 50,00 € |

Ausländerrecht


Beantwortet von


15:38

Hello,

I am an Armenian citizen living in Berlin since June 1, 2022 with a German Blue Card.
My work, taxes, health insurance, and registered address have always remained in Germany - I continue working remotely for my German employer while visiting Armenia regularly.

My travel pattern looks like this:
– February 2023 → short trip (~2–3 weeks)
– mid-December 2023 → returned around June 2024 (almost 6 months abroad; came back about 1 week before the 6-month limit)
– 27 December 2024 → 17 February 2025
– 9 August 2025 → 8 October 2025
– 15 December 2025 → end of February 2026 (planned)

Essentially, I spend around 5–6 months per year in Armenia, every year until 2027, while maintaining all legal, financial, and residential ties to Germany.

I plan to apply for German citizenship in June 2027 (after 5 years of residence).

My questions are:

Could this annual pattern (spending around half the year abroad, but never over 6 months continuously) affect my eligibility for citizenship in Berlin?

Could it impact my Blue Card validity, given that the law allows absences up to 12 months but some authorities interpret the "6-month rule" differently?

Are there any tax-residency risks if I spend ~180 days outside Germany but continue paying taxes, social security, and rent here?

How exactly do the authorities calculate "time spent abroad"?
– Is it by calendar year (Jan–Dec), or by any rolling 12-month period?
– Do days of departure/arrival count?

I want to understand whether this lifestyle could cause any future problems , especially for citizenship eligibility or tax residency, if I keep this travel pattern every year until 2027.

Please answer in English, if possible.
Thank you in advance.

6. Oktober 2025 | 14:52

Antwort

von


(20)
Am Waldeck 10
18279 Lalendorf
Tel: 01733415717
Web: https://www.christina-schmauch.de
E-Mail:
Diese Anwältin zum Festpreis auswählen Zum Festpreis auswählen

Good afternoon,
on behalf of your description I would like to answer your questions in the following way:
When you plan to stay not longer than 6 months because of employment reasons out of Germany it cannot effect your right to ask for the german citizenship. The time is one reason, but in addition it depends on further circumstances, like having a flat still in Germany and paying rent.
I know, that sometimes authorities interpret rules in a different way. But we have standards depending on the law and it can't be, that sometimes authorities try to change it in their one way. If something like that will happen, when you ask in 2027 for the german citizenship and Einbürgerungsbehörde which is responsible for your application will refuse, you have the right to take the case to the court.
As long as you have your permanent address in Germany paying taxes, rent and so on here and you plan for the future no longer stay outside, it is not a problem. As you have written, your working practice will stop in 2027, it means, that this practice is only short-term and not for the next years.
There won't be a negative impact on your Blue Card. As you have written, you can stay for 12 months out of Germany without risk.
To avoid problems with your actual stay or in future, it might be a good idea, to get in touch with your "Ausländerbehörde". So you are able to get a better assessment and can avoid problems for the future.
The 12-month-period starts the day leaving Germany and ends when coming back.

I hope, that I was able to answer all your questions. Please, don't hesitate and ask a further one in case of not having completely understood my explanations.

Kind regards,
Ch. Schmauch (Lawyer)


Rechtsanwältin Christina Schmauch

Rückfrage vom Fragesteller 6. Oktober 2025 | 15:34

Thank you very much for your detailed answer, Ms. Schmauch , that was very helpful and reassuring.

I have just two short follow-up points:

If I continue to work for my German employer and pay all taxes and social security in Germany. However, since I spend around 5–6 months abroad every year, could there be any risk that the tax office (Finanzamt) or another authority might question my tax residency in Germany under the "183-day rule"? Or is it safe as long as my home, job, and life center remain in Berlin?

Antwort auf die Rückfrage vom Anwalt 6. Oktober 2025 | 15:38

No, there is no risk, you are safe.
Kind regards, Ch. Schmauch

ANTWORT VON

(20)

Am Waldeck 10
18279 Lalendorf
Tel: 01733415717
Web: https://www.christina-schmauch.de
E-Mail:
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