Das ist wunderbar und willkommen in Deutschland 🇩🇪 Deutschland ist ein wunderschönes Land❤ ich lebe hier über 50 Jahre, und habe auch ein Deutsche Pass und bin dankbar dafür 🙏 Ich wünsche euch alles liebe und gute ❤❤
@jps308 ай бұрын
Had a similar situation. A coworker's husband was sick with cancer and the end was coming. Our old boss would have given her all the leave she needed but the company had just been sold to a large company. When she ran out of days off, they came around asking the employees to donate their vacation days. Apparently the huge conglomeration couldn't afford what the family owned business could.
@NearFromHome8 ай бұрын
A tale that is far far too common :(
@MYTravelBF8 ай бұрын
As Americans in Germany, we were shocked by the difference in work-life balance as well. The focus on you having a personal life outside of work and not this deeply entrenched 'rise and grind until you retire culture' has made for much healthier lives overall. We wish people in the US coudl see how this improves so many aspects of life, along with the other points you mentioned! We loved the new style video too! We'll be a few years behind you in the citizenship line, just have to improve our German first...
@NearFromHome8 ай бұрын
Thanks so much! We really experimented with a lot of aspects that led to this new style, and are really happy with how it came out. We totally agree with everything you said about work-life balance. I also wish people in the US could understand, but its really something you have to experience for an extended period of time. It took us even a year or two to truly feel it.
@derka61185 ай бұрын
People also take good care of their health here in Germany. Less obesity than the United States
@williamhuey2178 ай бұрын
Great video! I was stationed in Germany for 6 years w/ the U.S. Army in Schweinfurt /Wuerzburg and it was a great experience. If you are looking to better your German, I highly recommend the Goethe Institute. I attended language training with them for 3 months at their Rothenburg ob der Tauber location and it really helped me improve from about an A2 level when I started to B2/C1 at the end.
@NearFromHome8 ай бұрын
Yes! Ben did A1.1 and A1.2 at Goethe, and loved it. Camille has done all the B levels at Edeltraud in Munich. These intensive courses are really the best way to learn I think. Camille has B1, and that's all that is needed for citizenship. Unfortunately, Ben doesn't have time to take an intensive course.
@gozer878 ай бұрын
When we were stationed in Germany, my village had a train station that we could then use to connect to trains everywhere.
@NearFromHome8 ай бұрын
beautiful :)
@stevenneidert80198 ай бұрын
Hi Ben and Camille. That was an awesome video. You were spot on for the differences in work-life balance. I wish you the best in getting your German citizenship.
@NearFromHome8 ай бұрын
Thanks so much! We just signed up for the naturalisation test an hour ago, so we are one step closer. Hopefully by this time next year we will have german passports.
@hans-dieternichau54678 ай бұрын
Welcome here in Germany! More and more Americans are falling in love with Germany! It's always not easy,but you should live where you feel most most comfortable! I accompanied you on the videos and you already got an impression that you feel better here! All the best for your future here in my homeland☘️☘️☘️🍺🍺
@NearFromHome8 ай бұрын
Thanks mate! Happy to be here.
@1foreverr8 ай бұрын
And more and more germans are moving out. Germany became an expensive shthоlе.
@Steeler-wg5zo8 ай бұрын
@@1foreverr No idea, man. It's just as expensive elsewhere now, if not more expensive overall.
@WolfF20228 ай бұрын
@@Steeler-wg5zo then you haven`t heared from the 2nd highest taxation world wide, and you`re forced to pay health care insurance, which costs a lot and gives you quite less.
@tim102438 ай бұрын
Great to have you here in Germany
@NearFromHome8 ай бұрын
Thanks!
@barbarawissinger5 ай бұрын
I’ve lived in Bavaria for over 30 years, German at C2 level & gainful employment for the whole period. I have begun the process for German citizenship so that I can leave the country for more than 180 days without losing my residency. The S2 to Erding is terribly unreliable, so public transport is only mittelmäßig.
@NearFromHome5 ай бұрын
Awesome! Glad so many people are benefitting from the new law. DB needs to be overhauled. It's been a downhill spiral since privatisation in the 90s :/
@MrMojo2718 ай бұрын
As an American, you don’t sound American, but British. ?? Love Bad Tölz und München
@NearFromHome8 ай бұрын
I grew up in England. Though they all think I sound American :) because I moved to the US as a teenager and stayed for over a decade.
@dieZera8 ай бұрын
@@NearFromHome that explains a lot, because I couldn't quite put my finger on it, sounded like some mixture of accents to me ;).
@philippbock33995 ай бұрын
@@NearFromHome When I heared you speaking I thought so, too. Your English is so clear and sounds o British. Many greetings from Philipp
@christinehorsley4 ай бұрын
@@NearFromHome Nah, you sound British. With a rather public school accent.
@SamFlightlevel494 ай бұрын
Nice to finally find someone sharing positive thoughts about Germany while we are being showered with politicians and co-citizens talking about the upcoming downfall of our country and blaming it on the work life balance, social state and the tolerance you are talking about
@NearFromHome4 ай бұрын
Thanks so much! There are definitely problems in Germany, but the social state, work life balance, and immigrants are not some of them! I would say those are Germany's strengths.
@SamFlightlevel494 ай бұрын
@@NearFromHome Well, seems that you are not voting to the right side of the spectrum neither 😅... Happy to have you as a fellow citizen 🙏🏼
@NearFromHome4 ай бұрын
@@SamFlightlevel49 Thanks mate. Happy to be here, and will be happy to vote when it’s finally our time. And yeah…..not right in the slightest. I care about other people :) lol
@stevegibson64838 ай бұрын
I just discovered your channel. Your presentation style and solid informational content are refreshing. You have a new subscriber!
@NearFromHome8 ай бұрын
Thanks so much!! :)
@dieZera8 ай бұрын
I think it is a great and long overdue step to allow dual citizenship. Go for it!
@NearFromHome8 ай бұрын
YES! Thanks!
@hanshansen81374 ай бұрын
Please move to Hamburg. Weekend trips to Berlin, Lübeck, Lüneburg, Flensburg, Bremen, danish Copenhagen, dutch Amsterdam. Please become a nordic guy.
@NearFromHome4 ай бұрын
I'm loling at this comment. Maybe I will have a midlife crisis, and become a Nordic guy....at least that's the only way I will get to all those places. It would be so hard to leave the mountains though.
@hanshansen81374 ай бұрын
@@NearFromHome You're welcome!
@TerryMoore-bn8tt8 ай бұрын
I'm so delighted for you both! I love the videos you make. They've made many of our trips more informed and fun! Vielen Dank!
@NearFromHome8 ай бұрын
Thank you so much! :D
@lordofnumbers93178 ай бұрын
A very well-known German TV series called “Der Bulle von Tölz” also takes place in Bad Tölz. Of course, this is a crime series, like "Die Rosenheimcops", which takes place in Rosenheim (Upper Bavaria). Ottfried Fischer plays the “Bulle von Tölz” who, in addition to solving murder cases, also has to take care of many little things in connection with his mother, the priest and the local construction lion. Every episode has a little bit of humor in it. Highly recommended.👍
@NearFromHome8 ай бұрын
LOL. I didn't know there is a famous Krimi from Bad Tölz. We have been meaning to watch die Rosenheimcops for German practice and to integrate (lol). We will add it to our list of German practice Serien.
@churlskunk4 ай бұрын
I LIVE IN TEXAS! GET ME TF OUT HERE! I'VE HAD IT!
@NearFromHome4 ай бұрын
do it do it do it!
@TinyEpics4 ай бұрын
@@churlskunk I’m from Texas but have lived in Europe since 2013. Never looked back!
@redstone51493 ай бұрын
Go…and stay there. And don’t call America when you need your country saving.
@NearFromHome3 ай бұрын
@@redstone5149 lol
@checkthemikecrophone90506 ай бұрын
This video is right on time I love this. So inspiring 🙌🏾🇩🇪. I’m proud of you man. So many great places to live there
@NearFromHome6 ай бұрын
Thanks :)
@ProbstRobert4 ай бұрын
Welcome, we need people like you!
@NearFromHome4 ай бұрын
Thank you!
@Opa_Andre4 ай бұрын
Your video about Bad Tölz brought back so many memories. I've been there around 10 years ago for the last time. Before that I visited this town on a regular base, be it for business trips or be it for visiting it with my family - especially to visit the Alpamare, the fun bath area with lots of pools, waterslides and so on. Unfortunately it got run down and finally closed around 2014-1015.
@NearFromHome4 ай бұрын
:)
@huha474 ай бұрын
I was applying for German citizenship several years ago as I was entitled under the immigration laws since my great grandfather came from Germany. I had collected all the necessary documents, several being translated, had met with Counsulate, just needed the ship records. In the meantime, unfortunately, came the refugee crisis, everything stopped. Later, when I was serious to finally submit my documents, Covid shut things down again. I decided finally to opt for Austrian citizenship, which had a waiting time of 11 months for a first meeting, which meant more delay. Due to a health issue, I moved to the Carinthian Alps, got an appointment within 2 weeks, then needed a language test certification and also to pass a history/culture/political test. All done, time to renounce my American citizenship, which I did, then was Stateless for 3 months, an interesting experience. After the US confimation, it was just a few weeks before finally getting my new citizenship in August 2023. Been living in Austria since late 1992, no plans ever to return to the US. Good luck to you in 2024! LG aus Villach.
@NearFromHome4 ай бұрын
Wow that sounds like a pain, but I'm glad it finally worked!
@steve81nz398 ай бұрын
you're making the right move mate
@NearFromHome8 ай бұрын
I hope so!
@Kazaii648 ай бұрын
Very well thought out video. Thanks for sharing so much.
@NearFromHome8 ай бұрын
Thanks so much! :)
@Kazaii648 ай бұрын
@@NearFromHome and best of luck with your application!
@George-rm7yw8 ай бұрын
I absolutely love Bad Tölz. I discovered it by accident driving to Austria on my first alpine holiday and we drove through it to escape the traffic. Have been back there many times. As an Aussie, I can totally understand your reasons.
@NearFromHome8 ай бұрын
It's a really great town, and also under the radar. Thanks for watching!
@Lennyjana4 ай бұрын
I have lived in Germany since 1983 and since April 2024 I am a Germany. Well Germany is my home sweet home I love the enviroment, people are friendly and so on
@NearFromHome4 ай бұрын
:)
@ulrichjahn99758 ай бұрын
Every now and then there is a „feel good“ story in US media about donated PTO, just like the one you’ve experienced. Always makes me feel so sad. No actually mad! This is humiliating and should not be tolerated.
@NearFromHome8 ай бұрын
Those feel good stories that are just rebranded dystopias sting every time. Just like when people come together to donate to a sick persons GoFundMe. I mean I’m glad that humans are nice and we all help each other out when we can, but that doesn’t excuse the inhumane situation.
@Steeler-wg5zo8 ай бұрын
Once again you can see the perversity of the US labor market, when colleagues give up their sick-days just to save their (poor?🤑) employer money. Simply disgusting! 🤮😵💫
@NearFromHome8 ай бұрын
it's awful. So glad I don't live there anymore.
@danielw.24428 ай бұрын
Thank you very much for sharing your personal story and reasons.
@NearFromHome8 ай бұрын
Thanks mate :) it was a different kind of video to make, but I enjoyed it and I hope others do too.
@TinyEpics6 ай бұрын
Have lived here in Germany since 2014 and this year on my 10th anniversary I will finally get my German citizenship and German passport! So happy I didn't do this sooner, because I would have had to give up my American citizenship. Now I have the best of both worlds. Good luck to you on getting your citizenship!
@NearFromHome6 ай бұрын
Yeah, my wife is considering keeping her American citizenship. But for me, being British, I just really didn’t want the permanent tax filing hassle and what not when I know I’ll never be going back. For some it’s worth the hassle, for others it’s not. Just depends on your situation.
@TinyEpics6 ай бұрын
@@NearFromHome Just filed my application for German citizenship with the help of an immigration lawyer today. Curious how long it will be until the German passport is in my hands!
@flowerpower87653 ай бұрын
I used to live in Tölz, went away 42 years ago. It was quite different at the time,the centre street which is now pedestrian space was full of traffic, especially weekends. We also had American barracks right on the town entrance and as a German Luftwaffe soldier I had access and enjoyed often the good food there
@NearFromHome3 ай бұрын
wow! That's crazy. I'm so glad to hear that Bad Tölz has been making changes to re-pedestrianize. I assumed it was always pedestrian only.
@asmir4584 ай бұрын
I am happy for you that you have found Germany as your new home. I am living in Germany for the last decade and I am happy for the things this country is offering. Of course there are things that are not perfect but there is no place that is perfect. If at some point in the future another place is better for my life I will move. But for now I will stay.
@NearFromHome4 ай бұрын
Thanks! That is exactly the attitude we have. Living in Germany is a MAJOR improvement from living in the US, but there are some concerning issues here.
@asmir4584 ай бұрын
@@NearFromHome I think I know what you are thinking about. If it's the safety and the direction politics are heading towards you should just be prepared in advance and have options where you can go to. In case of a war you will have time to flee in the beginning. Even in the case of the Ukraine-Russia conflict they didn't close the border for men immediately. I am observing what is happening here and if I notice that it's getting dangerous I will move. Just be cautious and prepared and it should be fine.
@dougmattingly4 ай бұрын
Hi Near From Home! I am a professional American musician (performer and college music educator) with a doctorate of musical arts degree from a highly regarded university school of music. Rather than Western European Art Music (aka "classical") I am a guitarist who specializes in jazz, blues, and various forms of American-originated popular music. Before being able to mvoe to Germany or the EU in general, I am assuming I would need to be hired by a German institution or company? Any advice or resources you could point me toward would be greatly appreciated. To avoid the language barrier, I'd possibly be interested in moving to the UK as well. Any move I would hope would be permanent. Thanks in advance for your time. /// Wonderful videos! I just discovered your channel today as my wife and I will be traveling to Europe over the Xmas holiday 2024.
@karinland85332 ай бұрын
Simple Germany is the chanal for you
@Kenjey5 ай бұрын
welcome to germany! glad to have you here!!
@NearFromHome5 ай бұрын
:D
@JohnDixon446 ай бұрын
Great videos and presentation! I'm roughly the same time here in Munich - 5 years (from USA). Also thinking about going for citizenship. All truth on work-life balance. I've found some of the same places on your list, but definitely not all. I'm always on the lookout for the best cycling routes. Your take on that topic would make for a cool video!
@NearFromHome6 ай бұрын
Thanks so much!
@bobhodges8588 ай бұрын
Helpful….how nice if you did a video for retired people and what we need to do. Thanks
@NearFromHome8 ай бұрын
Maybe one day! I try to stick to what I know though, which is why I framed this video more through a personal story lense than a bureaucratic one. I’m not qualified in the slightest to help people sort through all of the legal forms :)
@hape38628 ай бұрын
German here. "What we have to do" for what? German citizenship? Just one thing: get on an airplane. Really, as an American you can stay in the EU for 90 days without a visa. To get a residence permit, you have to prove that you can support yourself and that you have health insurance (either your American or German). No further conditions. Find an apartment and stay as long as you want with the annually renewable residence permit. Or apply for citizenship after three or five years. As a pensioner, however, you will not have access to our social security system, i.e. public health insurance and our pension system will not be available to you. (Don't worry, with private health insurance all doctors and hospitals are open to you, all as in every single one). And with your American pension, you should get much more for your money here than in the USA, as rents and the cost of living are much cheaper here.
@MichaelDavis-us4lp8 ай бұрын
Another great video Ben and Camille!!! I have a question that is a bit off topic, but hoping you might be able to help me out. My son and I will be down in the Munich area and are trying to plan a day trip cable car ride up Zugspitze on May 5th. It seems near impossible as tickets aren't available from Ehrwald or Eibsee. There doesn't seem to be maintenance scheduled for that day, but the availability is not there. I have emailed both sites, but have not heard back in the last couple months. Any insight would be helpful and appreciated!!! We will be staying in Munich from the 10th to the 12th also if you would like to catch up for lunch. I've been tuned in to your channel for quite some time now planning my own adventure through Europe and have picked up so many tips. Cheers from Australia!
@hape38628 ай бұрын
Hi, I'm German and just looked into reservations for the Zugspitzbahn (cable car/cog railway) - I seems you are too early! As of today, the latest date for reservation is May 1st. So, just wait 4 days and the 5th of May should become available. But don't worry, even without a reservation you should be able to buy a ticket on site.
@heinzschoenherz62368 ай бұрын
I am from Munich...Don`t worry - I can`t imagine that you need a reservation for the 5th May...It's not high season yet and no school hollidays
@NearFromHome8 ай бұрын
you are doing the lords work, because I had no idea. danke!
@NearFromHome8 ай бұрын
danke!
@MichaelDavis-us4lp8 ай бұрын
@@heinzschoenherz6236Thank you for your comment and the advice.
@chellele58165 ай бұрын
Love Bad Tölz! ❤ Having lived in Munich for 23 years now, I am so excited to be able to apply for a German passport too, and keep my Aussie one. Just looked up when the naturalization tests are at the MVHS - next available in September so get in soon. It is a 12 -18 month wait for passport applications to be processed!
@NearFromHome5 ай бұрын
yup! We have our test in July. I need to make the appointment at the Ausländerbehörde tho :I. Good luck!
@Everything-Nana-Allure11 күн бұрын
I wish you all the best. I applied for my citizenship mid June and 29.10 I was able to sign for my Urkunde. 5 Nov my passport was printed... 11.nov was sent to my City ready for collection. I am officially German. Endlich 😅
@chellele581611 күн бұрын
@@Everything-Nana-Allure congratulations and thank you!
@gerdipediaTV8 ай бұрын
I have to subscribe to your channel immediately if you are already standing in front of the Plönlein in my hometown Rothenburg ob der Tauber on your channel picture. Freut mich das du deutscher Staatsbürger werden willst.
@NearFromHome8 ай бұрын
:D We love Rothenburg. That's so crazy that such a beautiful town is your hometown. :O
@robwilliams24108 ай бұрын
Former American Citizen over here. Are you a dual US/UK citizen? Your thumbnail mentions that you are renouncing your US citizenship, but you don’t mention this in your video. In contrast, you mention the new legal option in Germany to have dual citizenship. As a former American, I would highlight the heavy burden that Americans living in other countries, both with the obligation to report global earnings and file a tax return. This also creates a huge obstacle to investing money here in Germany, building wealth and planning for retirement. Evan Edinger does a great job discussing the tax regulations for American expatriates in a KZbin video that I highly recommend. Also, there is a little known distinction between renunciation and revocation that few people know about, but can have a significant impact on the fees that the American government assesses when giving up citizenship. Mind you that I’m not qualified to give legal advice, and the laws definitely have changed since I became a German citizen nearly 11 years ago, but I’m happy to share my experiences if you would care to get in touch.
@NearFromHome8 ай бұрын
Yeah, that’s why I steered clear away from the more bureaucratic topics. I’m a travel KZbinr, I like showing hidden gems and the logistics of how to get there. I like helping people have better holidays :) Every so often I like making a more personal video like this, a travel and chat, but even then I can’t help showing you where I went, how I got there, and what to do. I don’t really want to do the sort of “sit down and explain something I read online” topics that then delve into those nitty gritty details. I just don’t feel qualified to give that kind of advice, and it usually goes out of date. Whereas everything here, personal topics and places to go, theoretically can’t go out of date. Myself I’ll be becoming a dual citizen of the UK and Germany. I actually cancelled my application for USA citizenship when I moved to Germany and handed in my residency card to the German embassy to formally sever the tie. I chose to use that as the inspiration for the title because the reasons I want German citizenship are counterposed against the reasons I gave up my USA citizenship opportunity. But didn’t want to bog down the video with all of that :) it was getting kinda long anyway.
@cocobunitacobuni87388 ай бұрын
Congratulations! I will do the same towards the end of the year. I can't wait. Are you going for Niederlassungserlaubnis first or straight for Einbürgerung? The system is pretty backed up at the moment. Fortunately, since I'll have two German degrees so I don't need to prove German knowledge but I have registered for the Einbürgerungstest for July.
@NearFromHome8 ай бұрын
Going straight for naturalisation! I already have permanent residency via article 50 of the Brexit agreement. So no worries there. But it disappears if I ever leave for too long, so I’d feel much more comfortable having the real passport :)
@cocobunitacobuni87388 ай бұрын
@@NearFromHome good luck with the paperwork! Oh Lingoda is awesome we use it at our University's Language center for staff members of the Uni. I am enrolled also but haven't used any of my credits yet
@notroll12794 ай бұрын
From the few US citizens living in Germany, I understand that some find doing tax returns for both countries annoying so they consider giving up their US citizenship. Is that something that crossed your mind already?
@NearFromHome4 ай бұрын
YES! lol The fact that we could be double taxed also has us wondering if Camille should give up her US citizenship.
@notroll12794 ай бұрын
@@NearFromHome I understand that most residents in Germany don't actually need to pay money to the IRS as taxation is pretty high in Germany and it's counted against what you'd have to pay in the US (though I'm not a tax advisor...) - but most are just annoyed by having to do a second set of tax returns or paying an accountant to do them.
@NearFromHome4 ай бұрын
@@notroll1279 after a certain income you do have to pay double taxes. Camille is a US citizen, but isn't at that point, but if she ever was, we would seriously consider it. For now, the two tax returns are SO annoying.
@christinehorsley4 ай бұрын
@@NearFromHome You’ve got quite a while before hitting retirement age, but here’s an early word of warning to you, because after giving up your US citizenship you’ll still have to do US income taxes for 3 more years afterwards: Pension resp German retirement pay (= Rente) is NOT “earned income” for your US income tax report, you cannot claim the FEIE for such retirement income. So it gets difficult once you retire …
@mucxlx5 ай бұрын
There is no way you could live in Bad Tölz without a car ;D. You can do that in Munich or other big cities but not in the countryside. With some exceptions like Lindau where you get good public transportation.
@NearFromHome5 ай бұрын
True! But aside from NY you can't even live in US cities without a car.
@cbailey23764 ай бұрын
Get a bicycle 🚲.
@Jason0424-gt2vs8 ай бұрын
I also moved to a rural area in germany in Lower saxony but the public transport is not the best here. Decentralized and too late so im making my driver license here. 20-30 minutes drives in Germany for a bigger City are complete normal btw
@NearFromHome8 ай бұрын
Yeah, if I lived elsewhere in Germany I’d probably have a car by now, but it all depends.
@Em-iq9kc24 күн бұрын
I love Germany. Hope to go back again for a much longer time soon, return to my great great grandparents' homeland.
@NearFromHome24 күн бұрын
❤️
@IsenbergerHerold2 ай бұрын
If you like trains - Did you ever realize, that we here in Bochum have Germanys biggest railway-museum? ;-)
@NearFromHome2 ай бұрын
I did not :O We will have to check it out!
@DebiChapman-y7b8 ай бұрын
Thanks for your perspective. I can jump in my car to the mall, beach, stores, errands in just a few minutes (not 20). I also work for the school system so I get 3 months vacation + 14 holidays off, vacation leave, sick leave and personal leave with full medical benefits paid by my employer. So it really depends on where you live and who you work for.
@NearFromHome8 ай бұрын
But at what cost? When most do not live with such freedoms? Everyone has access to what I displayed in my video. Few have access to what you have mentioned. The point of my video is that it does not depend on where you live and who you work for, here in Germany. It only depends on those things where you live because they are not guaranteed. You have a car, you can drive to the beach. You have sick leave, you can take it off. We have a train, we can ride it. We all have sick leave, we can all take it. - this was my difficulty in the United States. I lived a good life, but I wanted to live somewhere where we all live good lives.
@nicostreeck83948 ай бұрын
Some companies actually do offer benefits like Stock options, Urlaubs- and or Weihnachts-money, deferred compensation, company pensions, gym (membership or own), special rates on phone-/ internet-plans, sabbaticals,company cars, free coffee, free attendence of sports events (like a firmenlauf), reduced pricing at a company cafeteria, shopping benefits (through internet offers like corporate benefits), some do even have their own private kindergarten and offer vacation programs for children of employees. Sometimes you also can get products cheaper that the company produces or even get Deputate (like breweries who give their employees free beer)
@NearFromHome8 ай бұрын
Not too shabby if you can find that :)
@nicostreeck83948 ай бұрын
@@NearFromHome mainly big coroperations offer benefits like that. Car producers, Hightech (like optics producers), corporations in Energy production, banks I am not too sure. Maybe look through the DAX40 company list. Since everyone is looking for new applicants rn you might be in luck finding something with better benefits. A lot of companies in Munich, Frankfurt a.M., Düsseldorf and Berlin are also English speaking and might offer German courses as benefits for their employees.
@CoL_Drake5 ай бұрын
"sick days" in a western country are such a horrible thing ... how can afghanistan have better laws for that then the usa ? i sadly got very sick in october, i got covid and i never really recovered, i got 60 days paid off and since i am on "sick days" from the sate for 60% of my wage.
@NearFromHome5 ай бұрын
Wow very lucky! I am glad to hear that so many other countries have sensical and compassionate laws around sick leave. The US's policies around the issue are awful.
@Kev67644 ай бұрын
Yes do an episode of all day in Bad Tolz, please.
@NearFromHome4 ай бұрын
:D
@iarovyid8 ай бұрын
Wondering why have you never been to city of Ulm? It's really close to Munich and i think it's very interesting and beautiful. Would love to see it filmed by you guys ❤
@NearFromHome8 ай бұрын
We’ve been to Ulm personally! But these videos take a long time to make and at least a week if not more to edit. All for essentially no money, lol. So planning g our backlog of which videos and when is actually rather hard. It’ll happen one day though! Perhaps even this year.
@iarovyid8 ай бұрын
Sure, I understand. Looking forward to it, though!
@lifewalkthrough8 ай бұрын
Congratulations! We hope to move there too soon! Btw, are you planning to make a video about Frankfurt am Main?
@NearFromHome8 ай бұрын
One day!!
@agn8558 ай бұрын
@@NearFromHome - _"Mainhattan"_ …the most American city in Germany, just in case you’re getting homesick
@notdirsale74268 ай бұрын
Für ein Amerikaner haben sie einen sehr starken britischen Akzent.Wenn sie Amerikaner sind wird wohl auch einer der hauptsächlichen Gründe sein das US Bürger die im Ausland leben ihr Einkommen nochmals Steuern an die USA versteuern müssen .Also einfach eine Geldfrage.Deshalb geben viele ihre Staatsbürgerschaft zurück.
@irminschembri82638 ай бұрын
Halte die Daumen, dass es mit der Staatsbürgerschaft klappt. 🤞 Keeping my fingers crosssed that everything works out well with acquiring German citiitenship. ( And then there are English-speaking people who claim that German is more complicated than English ! Just compare the length of both sentences.😁)
@xxyyzzplants1315 ай бұрын
your a lucky man, I work for the USG and believe me the benefits are at least as good as Deutschland's I lived there for 9 years, the health insurance companies are better in GE.
@NearFromHome5 ай бұрын
I am glad you had a good experience. As for myself and all my peers, we have found the benefits in Germany to be much better.
@johnhinkle33108 ай бұрын
If Germany now allows dual citizenship, are you renouncing your USA citizenship because the USA requires you to do so?
@NearFromHome8 ай бұрын
I actually renounced my USA citizenship due to tax reasons. Theoretically I could keep it, but I don’t even plan on going back and would not rather be beholden every year to the IRS :) I will actually be keeping my British citizenship as dual alongside German once I receive it.
@JED-v8q8 ай бұрын
@@NearFromHome Now this explains your accent. I was wondering if my hearing was off.😂 Welcome to Germany!
@NardoVogt8 ай бұрын
Welcome... Or better said: Servus und Willkommen
@NearFromHome8 ай бұрын
Danke! :)
@toniagrantham9538 ай бұрын
Every day is cake day!🤣🎂😋
@NearFromHome8 ай бұрын
:D this is the truth
@Why-D8 ай бұрын
Bad Tölz ist schon schön!
@NearFromHome8 ай бұрын
:D
@lazystart8 ай бұрын
So in comments replies, I see that you're retaining a UK/DE dual citizenship due to tax reasons. From your experience, would just US/DE dual citizenship have any downsides or gotchas to look out for? I'm from the US and am looking at the DE dual citizenship and see the greatest benefit as having one inside-the-EU and one outside-the-EU citizenship.
@NearFromHome8 ай бұрын
The only real downside is that you would have to pay double taxes over a certain amount with duel US/DE citizenship. My income is over that threshold, so I renounced my US green card. We are definitely excited to have the whole EU opened up to us!
@grey_wizard6 ай бұрын
cool outfit bro
@NearFromHome6 ай бұрын
Thank you! That really means a lot :)
@hanneweber42464 ай бұрын
Very interesting
@NearFromHome4 ай бұрын
Thank you!
@jpaz3908 ай бұрын
Thank you for the amazing videos. We are planning a Fall trip and your videos are so helpful! When you do the short day trips, do you purchase your tickets in advance on the app or do you book from the kiosk at the HBF? Also, you mentioned an Italy series in another video. We would love to see those! Thank you both for all of the hard work and research.
@NearFromHome8 ай бұрын
Hi! I’m so glad we could be helpful :) for me personally I use the Deutschland 48€ ticket, so I haven’t bought train tickets in months. For tourists, the kiosks are fine, though the DB navigator app is what I would usually use. Our Italy series is on an Italy playlist on our channel page, and don’t forget we offer itinerary consultations if you might find that helpful.
@nomap21618 ай бұрын
Great video! I had no idea the residency requirement lowered. I retire at 51 next year from the federal government and we plan to move to Europe for the lower cost of living compared to the US. Fortunately federal government employees get 6 weeks of vacation a year, but my wife had to deal with low yearly sick days and only a week vacation per year. We’ll have to put Germany on our radar now. We loved Munich and going back there this May/June for holiday.
@1foreverr8 ай бұрын
Lower cost of living. 😂 You are in for a big surprise.
@hape38628 ай бұрын
@@1foreverr Bullshit. Du bist bestimmt so ein AfD-Miesepeter.
@NearFromHome8 ай бұрын
We were paying 300 dollars a month for one used car payment, plus 150 dollars a month for gas. We also ended up spending around 4, 000 dollars in three years on repairs. Compare that to 49 euros per person for unlimited access to public transit. If we need access to reeducation, or theoretically had children attending higher education, it's completely free. Compare that to the 50,000 dollars worth of debt Ben had after dropping out of his first year of Uni in the US. If one of us can't work because of illness or disability, we know we will be ok. Compare that to 66 percent of American adults who file for bankruptcy due to medical debt. Germany isn't perfect, but I know which country I'd rather live in.
@wokeaf13378 ай бұрын
The less sweet, the better the quality of the cake. If it's too sweet, they try to make up for the lack of flavor.
@NearFromHome8 ай бұрын
Truth
@Amerigohall2 ай бұрын
Is it possible to acquire knowledge about economics, international politics and geography entirely in English in German libraries, or is it necessary to know German for this knowledge?
@NearFromHome2 ай бұрын
No. That is forbidden knowledge which you seek. But also it would depend entirely on which library you went to, some of them will have books in English and some might not.
@Amerigohall2 ай бұрын
@@NearFromHome Why is it forbidden knowledge?
@NearFromHome2 ай бұрын
@@Amerigohall just making a joke
@Amerigohall2 ай бұрын
@@NearFromHome I mean you're kidding me?
@NearFromHome2 ай бұрын
@@Amerigohall Yeah. I’d recommend googling more specifically about where you would be and what libraries are available because I can’t answer that question for Germany. Some libraries have good English sections and others don’t.
@safiremorningstar3 ай бұрын
I hope you're getting paid to make basically a commercial for Germany and I don't mean they're just going to give you a citizenship with its passport Etc, because you can you can find the same things you find in Germany in about a half a dozen countries that I know of, and that includes Germany's neighbor Switzerland.
@NearFromHome3 ай бұрын
Sure. But I don’t live in Switzerland?
@islandgurl41233 ай бұрын
I wish my living in Germany as a US Army dependent, child, for 9 years qualified me to get citizenship 😢
@NearFromHome3 ай бұрын
Ikr! I feel so bad for military dependents. :/
@islandgurl41233 ай бұрын
@@NearFromHomewe moved back to the US in ‘92 and I’ve never felt like I belonged here. I miss Germany
@safiremorningstar3 ай бұрын
I probably could get German citizenship without too much difficulty but I don't see the point... It would just be another country that I have to pay taxes in which I currently can't afford even if I did make any money.
@NearFromHome3 ай бұрын
Citizenship does not alter your tax status. Tax is residency based, not citizenship based, unless you are American in which case America does tax on citizenship. They are the only country in the world that does this.
@ursulasakaski97688 ай бұрын
Love your video. It is so awesome that you are going to get your German citizenship. I wish you the best of luck. 😊
@NearFromHome8 ай бұрын
Thanks so much. We are excited!
@henryluebberstedt7819Ай бұрын
That makes me feel "honoured" as a German. Becoming German because you like the train connections so much. It comes just behind the reason that you can travel so well from Germany. Others want to become German so that they can get medical treatment here. Or because education here is free. Hundreds of thousands come here because in Germany you get paid for doing nothing. What I hardly ever hear: the country and its people touch me emotionally. I've made (German) friends here, started a family with my German partner. I love the way the society works. No. The most important reason always seems to be: What material advantages do I have with this passport. As a German, I really feel like I'm being taken for a fool. Germany is my home and I'm deeply connected to the people and the history. When I hear guys like you talking its like you look at the Passport like an everlasting ticket for a theme park...
@NearFromHomeАй бұрын
lol. Don’t worry mate. I pay my taxes ;) you are getting plenty of material out of me. However this video is about systems. The ways in which society has been organised here to make life enjoyable. The way we can move around and interact with the world. This changes vastly between countries. You are right though that it isn’t about “the German people” as for me it’s about “the German system”. Speaking frankly, people are nice everywhere. Everywhere has people. Everywhere has history. Everywhere has personal connections to be made, lives to live, love to be found. In all honesty, people are people. There is no German blood that makes you nicer to be around than someone else, nothing in the DNA. What you do have though, are people who uphold a system of living. The trains, the education, the community welfare, the vacation days. That is something to be proud of. You uphold those values, and those values are why I’m here because I share them too. I want my tax money to go to your education system, I want it to support the healthcare, so that we all together may benefit from living within this country together. I can fall in love anywhere. But I can’t build a society like this without millions of others who all care as I do. You aren’t being taken for a ride. So I couldn’t agree less with your sentiment.
@henryluebberstedt7819Ай бұрын
@@NearFromHome Sorry for being a bit rude. Ich bin da einfach dünnhäutig geworden.
@NearFromHomeАй бұрын
That’s totally fine. Immigration is a hot button issue, and trust me, I have many many complaints about the way other travel content creators cover Germany too. However, if you go through more of my channel, I’m sure you’ll see how much I love this country. My goal was to only stay here for 2 years before moving on, I never dreamt of a passport. However I have fell in love with the way of life, the people, and the culture. I can’t find it in my heart to leave and have no plans to. That was a total surprise. The list of things I want to film and share is longer today than when this channel began, which is saying something after almost 100 videos 😅
@markalexander713328 ай бұрын
Hi near from home team. 😊👍
@NearFromHome8 ай бұрын
Hi!!
@nobodix8 ай бұрын
blinded by the normalcy of being exploited 😕 the german/european concept is: one for all. all for one. or simply: solidarity
@NearFromHome8 ай бұрын
Community focused vs Individuality focused is a dichotomy I wasn’t aware of, truly, until moving here and seeing the other side.
@anubisswift8 ай бұрын
If God intended every man to drive a car, then we should have been born with a parking space -jerry reed
@NearFromHome8 ай бұрын
lolol
@shamicentertainment12628 ай бұрын
I'm sure you've been asked before, but how come you sound british if you are american!? I'm guessing you left england when you were young, grew up in the USA but kept the answer? Ist es richtig oder nicht?
@NearFromHome8 ай бұрын
Richtig! I lived in the US from age 11-26. My accent is very transatlantic ;)
@JGGuitarCovers8 ай бұрын
I love the trains in Germany! So handy! Bad Tölz is beautiful but my favourite place is Tegernsee
@NearFromHome8 ай бұрын
Tegernsee is basically my favourite as well!
@szudy764 ай бұрын
I wish I could move to Germany 😢
@NearFromHome4 ай бұрын
:')
@pako17244 ай бұрын
We Germans tend to complain about everything and everyone all the time, often forgetting or ignoring how good life here actually is, compared to 95% of the rest of the world... Btw, you said you're American? You sound pretty British to me.
@johnhinkle33108 ай бұрын
Genius, congrats!
@NearFromHome8 ай бұрын
Thanks!
@Astrofrank8 ай бұрын
Amerikanische Arbeitsverträge sind komplizierter als deutsche? Das hätte ich nicht erwartet.
@jensschroder82148 ай бұрын
Why German citizenship? Maybe because the new law now makes it easy to keep your old citizenship and get the new one. Because German citizenship opens the doors to many countries to visit. Because life is good in Germany. Maybe because you don't know whether the next government will change its mind and laws for access in future.
@NearFromHome8 ай бұрын
Yeah pretty much. I’m also personally unhappy with having been an EU citizen and having my rights removed. So getting a citizenship that will give me back those rights would be pretty excellent. There are a lot of reasons really, but today I must wanted to dive into the “because life is good” - what does that mean to me? That’s what this video hopefully explains.
@aleterra4 ай бұрын
you are not afraid of a war in germany ?
@NearFromHome4 ай бұрын
I am… :O
@aleterra4 ай бұрын
@@NearFromHome shit, that was not the answer I expected :(
@suzijw8254 ай бұрын
There is no war in German. Where are you getting your information from?
@NearFromHome4 ай бұрын
@@suzijw825 nobody said there is currently a war in Germany...
@alexbigkid5 ай бұрын
Dude BMW is Not Bavarian Motor Works! It is Werks 😂
@NearFromHome5 ай бұрын
It’s Werke actually 😭 Bayerische Motoren Werke. I’ll let you guess what that translates to in English ;)
@alexbigkid5 ай бұрын
@@NearFromHome Ohh I am German, but it looks like my German became verenglished 😂😂😂 I’d translate Werke to hmm Factory, well plural form of Factories.
@NearFromHome4 ай бұрын
@@alexbigkid You can translate it to factory if you want :) but BMW doesn’t. Not when translating their name.
@alexbigkid4 ай бұрын
@@NearFromHomewhat do you mean? Every German speaker will translate it so. Or are you talking about the origins of the company building engines for airplanes?
@NearFromHome4 ай бұрын
@@alexbigkid Just Google it mate. Come on. A cursory fact check and you wouldn’t have been wrong in two languages. Just go to bmw.com - it’s a pretty nice website. lol. They’ll explain their name and history to you in great detail.
@alanharrison11428 ай бұрын
A great decision… I once did something similar from the UK to the US… you may remember it 😂
@NearFromHome8 ай бұрын
lolol vaugly
@Wrong-Way-Round8 ай бұрын
Well where do I start, ok, you do not have to have citizenship to live in Germany, you could opt for a residency 'Title', with this you are entitled to practically everything that a German is entitled to except vote. You never stated what the citizenship will cost you, I can tell you that British expats here have paid between €250 and €800 depending on how long they have lived here, what courses they had to take, which tests they had to sit and lastly their age. Dual citizenship is also nothing new here in Germany, I served here in the Forces from '73-''77 and then settled here with just a residency permit. I was offered German nationality after 5years, I declined again after 10years, declined again. I married a German and had two kids in '81 &'85. Both had British and German birth certificates. At the age of 14 they could then choose which nationality the would like , they didn't but had theirown British passports then from 14 on ( no longer on mine) Under Dual Nationality Reg's my Daughter also got her German passport, if my son has one I don't know but both also have German passes, But Both still have Dual nationality, for 43 & 39years respectively. I myself have lived here for 47 years now, I did not take either dual nor German citizenship, I am still a British national with the NEW Residecy permit (Aufenthalts Title) which is similar to and can also be used as an ID card within Germany Total cost for me €39, 95c. For travelling outside of Germany I use my British passport and am like all EU members still allowed to be in other EU countries for up to 90 days. Personally I think all this dual or change of nationality was/is just one big moneymaking scam. But hey at 73 what do I know I paid €39,95. No matter what you do, we all need to renew passports every ten years. Good luck anyway, I would tho' if I were you apply for the British one again, allways good to have a plan B 😉
@NearFromHome8 ай бұрын
I did say I think within the first paragraph of the script “irrevocable right”. I’m on the same Brexit residency title, but if I were to go and live in Britain for a year to perhaps help my family as they age….I would lose my right to come back to Germany. Maybe it isn’t worth it to you but an extra 250€ feels like pocket to change for a lifetime membership back into the EU.
@Wrong-Way-Round8 ай бұрын
Methinks it'll cost you more, You can let us know 🤔
@NearFromHome8 ай бұрын
@@Wrong-Way-Round I think focusing so much on the money is a bit strange. At the end of the day it’s just not that much. I’d be 10 times more and still consider it a deal to gain actual nationality.
@Wrong-Way-Round8 ай бұрын
@@NearFromHome we have 3 to 4 hundred brits around our town alone most of which applied, taking into consideration all the other foreign applicants not only in our town but the whole of Germany 🤔 in Scotland we have a saying "many a micle macs a mucle" many a mickle makes a muckle" meaning it all adds up to a great amount. There were around 7-8 thousand Brits living in Hamburg. So much more €'s being taken back off people on top of which if some are receiving UK pensions here they will be receiving tax bills here for that too. One I know of got a bill for €10k another for €2,5k. I know of one guy that handed his €500 German nationality back after getting a €10k backtax bill. So not such a petty amount for some.
@samjohnson28018 ай бұрын
But he said the public transit is what does it for him he loves it but what about when the germans go on strike and you cant get to work jajajajajajajs
@NearFromHome6 ай бұрын
I'd rather have a base system that needs to be reformed than live in a country with no public transit (and no interest in creating it)
@samjohnson28016 ай бұрын
@@NearFromHome yeah like not working and still getting paid
@NearFromHome6 ай бұрын
@@samjohnson2801 …….so you don’t like unionized strikes?? Not sure I see how that fits with what I was saying though. It’s way easier to pay people better wages than lay track. So I’d yeah I’d rather live in a system that is being improved than in a place with nothing at all.
@scarba4 ай бұрын
How can American have such an English accent?
@NearFromHome4 ай бұрын
Because I am English
@Jason0424-gt2vs8 ай бұрын
you get a bus once a day here 😅
@NearFromHome8 ай бұрын
That’s a real shame. I hope someone comes in to make those lines more dependable and run often enough to be useful.
@bjorndehoust57685 ай бұрын
... wow...young Russell Crowe's got the German Passport!😅
@NearFromHome5 ай бұрын
Are you not entertained? :D
@i86ij998 ай бұрын
I would have guessed the real reason is Brexit
@NearFromHome8 ай бұрын
The reclamation of my rights as a European citizen will be a massive benefit :) but I wanted to keep this video about the lifestyle and what I've come to really appreciate about the country. If you'd asked me a few years ago, I'd say I'd be getting citizenship for the passport and that would be that, however now, my feelings have changed and its more than just a passport to me now.
@Be-Es---___6 ай бұрын
For an American, your intonation is pretty British
@NearFromHome6 ай бұрын
For a British, my intonation is pretty American ;)
@neilfazackerley77588 ай бұрын
You sound more British that American.
@NearFromHome8 ай бұрын
That's because I am!
@janroach18524 ай бұрын
Why don’t you just become a citizen in another European country where you don’t have to give up your citizenship? oh I see. You have lived there five years already. What about the 40 percent tax on your income?
@NearFromHome4 ай бұрын
My honest answer about the tax? I pay it, mostly, happily, and I promise I’m not being untruthful. That money I pay goes into many of these systems that I love and benefit from and that others benefit from even more. I’d rather live in a place like Germany with its benefits and pay high tax than somewhere like the USA and pay less. Perhaps I as an individual would wealthier, but my community would be worse. And you just can’t put a dollar value on the communal safety and happiness that I benefit from on a daily basis here in Germany that I could never buy in America.
@christinehorsley4 ай бұрын
I can’t believe this. Deutsche Bahn has become the most unreliable mass transportation system in the developed world. Even though in Munich and most major German cities the local transit systems are working well, once you leave the outer perimeters, you’re at the mercy of Deutsche Bahn 👎👎👎 So I’m waiting to find out more … Okay, German cakes 🍰👍 and coffee & cake culture 👍 Walkability of cities 👍 There must be some other reason 🤔🤔🤔
@NearFromHome4 ай бұрын
tbh, compared to the US's non existent public transit system, DB seems like a miracle that we are so grateful for. It clearly needs an overhaul, but I am very grateful to be living in a country where these systems already exist. I am confident Germany has enough talented people to reform the network. It's just a matter of if they are willing to...
@mylifeintheusa47208 ай бұрын
American Companies don't fire you for taking a few days off because you are sick. My husband's company offers a 6 month leave before they lay you off. Personally, I always experienced working in Germany as very stressful. I needed more vacation days. In the US working seems to be much more relaxed.
@NearFromHome8 ай бұрын
Can’t relate. That was not my experience in the slightest. And you can say that American companies don’t fire you for taking time off……but would you say it to my coworker? Probably not.
@japanruben2 ай бұрын
I WILL live in Germany one day. Currently living in USA and I hate the lack of public transit and lack of walkability. I am manifesting my future life in Germany 🇩🇪 ❤
@NearFromHome2 ай бұрын
❤️
@neptunusatalanta23308 ай бұрын
Owning a Passport does not make you German...
@NearFromHome8 ай бұрын
But your approval does? ;)
@a.r.stellmacher87098 ай бұрын
Just wondering, you are talking about coming from America, yet you got a heavy English accent. Surely, you must be English. Your misses though sounds American. Anyways, enjoy your lives in this beautiful country called Germany.
@NearFromHome8 ай бұрын
I’m originally from England, and did grow up there. However I also spent over a decade living in the USA. When moving to Germany I gave up and abandoned not only my USA permanent residency but my citizenship applications as well. Which was the inspiration for the title.
@a.r.stellmacher87098 ай бұрын
@@NearFromHome Ah nice, thank you.
@stampcollector748 ай бұрын
Nice to have you here! ♥ Bad Tölz I've been there because of ice hockey. = D 🏒 Best wishes from Thuringia.
@NearFromHome8 ай бұрын
Thanks! :)
@khecke8 ай бұрын
You are funny - traveling in Germany - but the public transportation is constantly on strike. Ich brauche Lingoda nicht, weil ich auch die deutsche Sprache einwandfrei beherrsche. I worked for a private company in the Chicago area and got 4 weeks vacation and unlimited sick-days and I earned 4 times as much as what I earned in Germany. I live much better in America than in Germany.
@NearFromHome8 ай бұрын
Better to have and be on strike than never built at all :)
@khecke8 ай бұрын
@@NearFromHome The Germans are so happy that the Bundesbahn and Lufthansa is striking most of the time - and the German population is so happy with their present Government - especially with Olav Scholz. Do you ever watch the German news and understand what is going on with the German economy?
@Harryset18 ай бұрын
@@khecke "Jeder ist seines Glückes Schmied". Ganz gleich, wie man den Wahrheitsgehalt dieser Aussage persönlich einschätzt - man kommt an dem markanten Satz nicht vorbei. Do you ever watch US American news and understand what is going on in the USA?
@khecke8 ай бұрын
@@Harryset1 Yes I watch the news in America and I am not too happy with what is going on in America right now, but I hope it will be better after the election in November.
@Harryset18 ай бұрын
@@khecke "Let's hope for the best, prepare for the worst". Aus meinem Blickwinkel betrachtet: It's bad, and it's going to get worse. Ihnen persönlich: Good luck!
@RoscoPColtrane174 ай бұрын
Say hello to the Turks and Arabs for me
@NearFromHome4 ай бұрын
I will. They are great. Plus, their food is so much better than German food. :)
@ringo75614 ай бұрын
I'm in Germany now on vacation...I'll say hi to them too. It sure beats the crime in the U.S.
@NearFromHome4 ай бұрын
@@ringo7561 The wonders of a social safety net!
@RoscoPColtrane174 ай бұрын
@@NearFromHome The food argument 😂. Let them cook in their own countries, besides cooking is based on recipes so anyone can make them. It’s not a secret.