What the SCHUFA is, how to request your free report, what affects your score, and practical tips for building credit history as a newcomer in Germany.
The SCHUFA (Schutzgemeinschaft fuer allgemeine Kreditsicherung) is Germany's largest credit reporting agency. It collects data about your financial behavior and calculates a score that determines whether you can rent an apartment, get a phone contract, open a bank account, or take out a loan.
Think of it as the German equivalent of a credit score — except it is run by a private company, and nearly every landlord, bank, and telecom provider in Germany uses it.
Your SCHUFA score is a number between 0 and 100, where higher is better. It represents the statistical probability that you will pay your obligations.
| Score Range | Rating | What It Means | |
When you first arrive in Germany, you have no SCHUFA history — which is different from having a bad score. Unfortunately, many landlords and service providers treat "no data" almost as negatively as "bad data."
Your initial score is typically around 90-95 based solely on demographic and address data. It improves as you build a positive track record.
You are legally entitled to one free SCHUFA report per year under Article 15 of the GDPR (Datenkopie nach Art. 15 DS-GVO). Here is how:
Errors are surprisingly common. If you find incorrect data:
When apartment hunting, landlords almost always ask for a SCHUFA BonitaetsAuskunft. This is a one-page summary confirming you have no negative entries. It costs EUR 29.95 on meineschufa.de and is valid for about 3 months (though landlords prefer recent ones).
Tip: Get one before you start apartment hunting. Having it ready at viewings shows landlords you are serious and prepared.
Upload your SCHUFA report to Clario and get a plain-English summary in 30 seconds — free, no credit card needed.
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