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Oct 24, 2025

BAMF Advertises 400 Integration-Unit Posts to Tackle Processing Backlog

BAMF Advertises 400 Integration-Unit Posts to Tackle Processing Backlog
On 24 October 2025, the Federal Office for Migration and Refugees (BAMF) quietly posted more than 400 vacancies for “Sachbearbeitende Integration” across its Nürnberg headquarters and regional branches in Karlsruhe, Frankfurt and Stuttgart. The roles, initially limited to 24-month contracts, focus on processing integration-course certificates, recognising foreign vocational qualifications and reimbursing language-school providers.

BAMF officials told industry newsletter Migration Inside that the hiring surge is meant to prevent backlogs as new language-course rules take effect on 1 January 2026. From that date, employers must upload course-attendance data within ten days of each module’s completion—otherwise subsidies will be clawed back. The new hires will operate an expanded digital help-desk and audit submissions.

For corporate mobility teams, the recruitment drive signals both opportunity and obligation. More BAMF staff could speed up the issuance of the B1 language certificates now required for permanent-residence filings. At the same time, on-site audits of employer-sponsored integration courses are expected to double in 2026. HR departments should ensure course providers are TÜV-certified and that attendance is documented via the BAMF API.

Relocation firms anticipate that the additional staff will also accelerate the popular fast-track assessment of foreign IT degrees—a bottleneck that currently delays some Blue-Card filings by up to eight weeks. Applicants in the queue could see decisions in half that time once the new teams are trained.

Labour-market economists view the hiring spree as a sign that, despite political rhetoric, Germany still aims to integrate rather than exclude newcomers deemed eligible to stay. The parallel rise in deportations makes capacity on both fronts indispensable.
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