Expat number in Germany — +49
Keep your French, British, German or US line alive while you live abroad — homeland banking, family, official portals.
Germany pricing — Expat-ready lines
Six pricing combinations for Germany. Yearly is the best value; mobile fits Expat best for most users.
−10% Yearly
−25%
All tiers include calls + SMS + voicemail + AI auto-pickup. No setup fees. Cancel anytime.
Why a Germany Expat number?
- Keep your homeland number alive without paying for a SIM you don't use
- Homeland bank, health insurance, government portals all keep working
- Voice calls forward to your local-country phone — relatives still reach you on the old number
- AI auto-pickup catches calls when you can't answer — full transcript in panel
- Yearly billing makes it ~$3-5/month vs €30+/month for a maintenance SIM
About Germany numbers
Germany uses country code +49 and is regulated by the Bundesnetzagentur (Federal Network Agency), which manages numbering allocation, spectrum licensing, and consumer protection under German telecommunications law. German mobile numbers begin with 015X, 016X, or 017X after the country code — for example, +49 151, +49 160, +49 176 — and are typically 10–11 digits in full international format. German landlines carry geographic area codes: Berlin uses 30, Hamburg uses 40, Munich uses 89, Cologne uses 221, Frankfurt uses 69, and Stuttgart uses 711, each followed by a subscriber number of variable length. Germany is Europe's largest economy and a major telecommunications market with strict data privacy laws under the DSGVO (German implementation of GDPR).
Expat + Germany — frequently asked
-
Will my Germany bank still send OTP codes?
Yes — most Germany banks send 2FA SMS to any local mobile number. NoKYCNumber lines are real local mobiles. Caveat: a small minority of banks have begun whitelisting carrier ranges; for those, a homeland SIM remains the only option. Test before relying on it for a critical bank account.
-
Can I receive Ameli / NHS / German health insurance codes?
Most public-service portals route OTP to any Germany mobile. They occasionally cross-reference the number with their internal records — if your records still show your old SIM, the new NoKYCNumber line may not match until you update. Update procedures are linked from each country page.
-
Will my old contacts still reach me?
Yes — set call-forwarding on the line and inbound calls to your old number ring on your local phone (Spanish, Portuguese, US, whatever). Outbound from the panel shows your old number as caller-ID.
-
How long can I keep this line?
As long as you keep the subscription active. Yearly billing with auto-renew is the standard expat setup — line stays yours indefinitely.
-
Does this work for a country I never lived in?
Yes — anyone can buy any of our 47 country lines. We have customers using a +44 line for inbound UK calls without ever having lived in the UK.
Buy a Germany Expat number — no KYC, crypto only
NoKYCNumber issues real Germany mobile and landline numbers usable for Expat. The line is allocated within Germany's national numbering plan with the +49 dial code; recipients see a normal local subscriber number, not a relay.
Pricing starts at $5.62/month on yearly billing for the recommended Expat setup. All tiers include calls, SMS, voicemail and AI auto-pickup. Pay in 30+ cryptocurrencies (BTC, ETH, XMR, USDT, SOL, LTC and more); the line activates within 60 seconds of the on-chain confirmation. No identity, no email, no card.
Need a cheaper option? Portugal is currently the lowest-priced Expat-ready country at Portugalprice/mo. Or compare all 47 countries on the Expat use case hub. Browse all 47 →
Ready for your Germany Expat line?
From $5.62/mo yearly. Live in 60 seconds, paid in crypto, never asks for ID.
Get this Germany Expat number →