First aid training is mandatory in order to obtain a driver's license in Germany.
Germany Requires First Aid Training for Driver's Licenses
Want to drive in Germany? Better be prepared to save a life. Unlike most countries where driver's education focuses purely on vehicle operation and traffic laws, Germany requires every aspiring driver to complete a comprehensive first aid course before they can get behind the wheel. This isn't optional—it's written into federal law.
The Erste Hilfe Kurs (first aid course) became mandatory in 1970 when Germany amended its Road Traffic Licensing Regulation. The logic was straightforward: if you're going to operate a vehicle capable of causing serious accidents, you should know how to help until professional help arrives. Over five decades later, this requirement remains one of the most distinctive aspects of German driver training.
What the Course Actually Covers
This isn't a quick online module you can breeze through during lunch. The mandatory first aid course runs approximately 7.5 to 9 hours, typically completed in a single day. There's no final exam, but you're expected to actively participate in practical training sessions.
- CPR and rescue breathing techniques for adults, children, and infants
- Wound care and bleeding control, including pressure bandages and tourniquets
- Managing unconscious victims and the recovery position
- Responding to shock, burns, and fractures
- Securing accident scenes and alerting emergency services
The course costs between €30-60 depending on the provider and location, and certificates are valid for life—though authorities recommend refresher training every 2-3 years. Interestingly, when you apply for your license, the certificate must be less than 2 years old, ensuring the training is relatively recent.
Why Germany Takes This So Seriously
Germany's approach reflects its broader safety culture. The same 1969 regulation that introduced mandatory first aid training also required all vehicles to carry a first aid kit—connecting the knowledge with the tools to use it. On the Autobahn, where speeds can exceed 200 km/h, accidents can be catastrophic. Those critical minutes before emergency services arrive can mean the difference between life and death.
The training serves another purpose: reducing bystander paralysis. In many countries, witnesses to accidents freeze, unsure whether their help will cause more harm. German drivers graduate with confidence that they know what to do, creating a culture where roadside assistance from fellow motorists is normalized rather than exceptional.
A Model Other Countries Haven't Adopted
Despite Germany's success with this requirement, few other nations have followed suit. Austria and Switzerland have similar mandates, but most of Europe, North America, and Asia treat first aid training as optional or limit it to basic awareness modules. Critics argue it adds cost and time to an already expensive licensing process, while proponents point to Germany's relatively low traffic fatality rates as evidence of its effectiveness.
For the millions of expats who've navigated Germany's rigorous Fahrschule (driving school) system, the first aid course is just one of many requirements—alongside vision tests, theory exams covering hundreds of questions, and mandatory driving lessons including night driving and Autobahn experience. But it's the requirement that surprises newcomers most, and the one they often remember as unexpectedly valuable long after they've passed their driving test.
