Fraufruit wrote: ↑Fri Feb 23, 2024 9:53 am
I'd just like to clarify this one statement, please -
"German visas are never "bound that we must continue to reside at the same address", you can always move."
Do you mean that they can both move to a different address together or could one or the other get their own place and move there?
The German state doesn't oblige anyone to stay together, you can separate or divorce.
As long as
you already have a Niederlassungserlaubnis (permanent residence) that is not a problem, even if afterwards you do not have enough money to live on, the state will give you welfare (Grundsicherung).
It
is a problem if you
do not yet have a Niederlassungserlaubnis, do not have your own income and then separate.
If you hadn't yet lived for 3 years (if you're Turkish, it's only 2 years) in Germany at that point, you do
not have your own right to stay in Germany, see this article written by a lawyer:
https://www-anwalt--diedrich-de.transla ... r_pto=wapp
Even if you had already been in Germany for 3 years (2 years if you're Turkish), if you do not already have a Niederlassungserlaubnis, the state expects you to start working, i.e. that you can support yourself after the divorce, or you will not get another visa extension the next time round.
Supporting yourself while only being separated, i.e. not yet being divorced, is not yet a problem, since the working spouse has to pay you Trennungsunterhalt (separation alimony).
Note: after separating, your lawyer has to
ask the working spouse for Trennungsunterhalt, you don't get it automatically, for details please see the "Divorce in Germany" wiki, the wiki link miraculously still works:
https://www.toytowngermany.com/wiki/Divorce_in_Germany