A Day in the Life of an Indian Student in Germany – From Classes to Curry Cravings

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Moving abroad is exciting, overwhelming, and sometimes a little spicy (especially if you’re an Indian student who cannot survive without masala). Germany, with its world-class universities, free tuition, and global exposure, is one of the top destinations for Indian students. But beyond university brochures and visa paperwork, what does a real day look like?

Here’s an inside peek into the life of an Indian student in Germany – from early morning lectures to late-night Maggi cravings.

Morning: Waking Up in a Different World

The alarm rings at 6:30 AM, but let’s be honest – most Indian students in Germany hit snooze at least twice. Classes in German universities usually begin around 8 or 9 AM. Unlike in India, there’s no fixed “attendance drama,” but being punctual is non-negotiable.

Germany values time as much as we value chai. If class begins at 8:15, you’re expected to be seated by 8:10. Professors often walk in, start the lecture without formalities, and the seriousness in the room reminds you – you’re not in Delhi anymore.

Quick Breakfast Choices:

  • Bread, cheese, and coffee (very German).
  • Or the desi version: leftover sabzi with bread, or Maggi because Maggi is forever.

By 7:45 AM, you’re either cycling to campus (yes, bikes are everywhere), or running to catch the tram. Public transport is punctual to the second – another reminder of German efficiency.

Mid-Morning: Classes, Group Work & Culture Shock

University classes in Germany feel different compared to India. There’s more emphasis on self-study, discussions, and research than rote learning. Professors expect you to read before class and participate actively.

Typical Classroom Experiences:

  • No one addresses professors as sir/madam. It’s usually by their last name with Herr (Mr.) or Frau (Ms.).
  • Asking questions is encouraged – in fact, professors may be disappointed if you stay silent.
  • Group projects are common, and yes, you’ll work with Germans, Europeans, and other international students. It’s both exciting and intimidating at first.

The First “Oh Wow” Moment:

When you realize that tuition is free, yet you’re sitting in a lecture with state-of-the-art facilities, advanced labs, and world-renowned professors. For most Indian students, it feels surreal.

Lunchtime: Curry Cravings vs. German Food

By noon, your stomach growls louder than your professor’s voice. Here’s where cultural differences really hit.

Options for Lunch:

  1. Mensa (University Canteen):
    Affordable meals (3-4 Euros for students), but heavy on bread, potatoes, sausages, or pasta. If you’re vegetarian, options exist but are limited.
  2. Home-Cooked Tiffin:
    Many Indian students batch-cook dal, rice, and sabzi over the weekend. Carrying your own dabba makes you feel instantly at home.
  3. Indian Restaurants or Grocery Stores:
    In cities like Berlin, Frankfurt, or Munich, you’ll find Indian restaurants, but they’re pricey compared to your student budget.
  4. Curry Cravings Hack:
    Always keep masala mixes (Maggi, MDH, Everest) stocked. They can turn bland German veggies into ghar-ka-khana in minutes.

Pro tip: Don’t be surprised if your German friends eat cold sandwiches for lunch while you’re secretly munching aloo paratha from your tiffin.

Afternoon: Libraries, Labs & Side Hustles

After lunch, many students head to the university library – and you’ll be amazed. German libraries are massive, silent, and open late. Students use them not just for books but as study and social spaces.

Lab Sessions (for Engineering/Science students):

Hands-on, practical, and often longer than expected. Professors expect you to apply theories independently.

Part-Time Jobs:

Many Indian students work part-time (HiWi jobs, research assistantships, café work, delivery services). Regulations allow 120 full days or 240 half days per year of work.
This means afternoons might also include:

  • Helping in research labs.
  • Working at Indian grocery shops or restaurants.
  • Doing part-time delivery for companies.

Balancing work and study teaches one of the greatest German lessons: discipline and self-management.

Evening: Social Life, Sports & Festivals

Evenings in Germany are not about cramming in extra classes like in India. Instead, students often:

  • Join university clubs (sports, music, debate, coding).
  • Play football or go cycling – Germans love outdoor fitness.
  • Hang out with friends in student dorms or cafés.

Indian Student Associations:

Almost every university has an Indian Student Association. They celebrate festivals like Diwali, Holi, or Independence Day, bringing a slice of India to Germany.

Imagine celebrating Diwali in Berlin – fairy lights, Bollywood songs, and German friends trying gulab jamun for the first time. That’s student life at its best.

Night: Cooking, Calls Home & Curry Cravings (Again)

Dinner is usually lighter in Germany – bread, salad, soup. But for Indian students, it often turns into a full meal: dal, rice, roti, sabzi. Cooking together with flatmates becomes both cost-effective and fun.

At around 9 or 10 PM, the “homesickness hour” sets in. Most students call family back home in India. The time difference works well – it’s early morning in India.

Late nights are often spent:

  • Completing assignments.
  • Watching Netflix or cricket streams.
  • Or heating up Maggi for the third time that week.

Weekends: Exploring Germany

The weekdays are busy, but weekends are magical. With a student semester ticket, you often get free or discounted travel within your region.

Students spend weekends:

  • Exploring castles, rivers, and forests.
  • Visiting Christmas markets in winter.
  • Traveling to other EU countries (Paris, Amsterdam, Prague – all just a train ride away).

For Indian students, weekends are also for grocery shopping at desi stores – stocking up on rice, spices, and atta.

Lessons Every Indian Student Learns in Germany

  1. Time is sacred – being 5 minutes late is considered rude.
  2. Self-reliance is survival – from laundry to cooking, everything is DIY.
  3. Cultural openness – you’ll meet students from 50+ countries.
  4. Value of money – no tuition doesn’t mean free living. Budgeting is key.
  5. Homesickness is real – but so is growth. Germany changes you in the best way.

Final Thoughts: From Curry Cravings to Career Goals

A day in the life of an Indian student in Germany is not just about classes or food – it’s about growth, resilience, and independence.

You learn to balance German efficiency with Indian adaptability, to survive on pasta one day and cook biryani the next, to miss home yet build a new one thousands of miles away.

Germany doesn’t just give you a degree – it gives you a life experience that shapes your career and character forever.

So, if you’re dreaming about studying in Germany, picture this:
Cycling through cobbled streets, attending world-class lectures, eating dal-chawal at midnight, and planning a weekend trip to Paris. Sounds exciting? Because it truly is.

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