American Couple Reacts: Cost of Living in GERMANY! Housing, Food, Transport & MORE! FIRST REACTION!

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  • Опубликовано: 29 сен 2024
  • American Couple Reacts: Cost of Living in GERMANY! Housing, Food, Transport & MORE! FIRST TIME REACTION! Hello Germany, we have missed you! We are excited to get back into our German education with this episode! We were very interested in learning about this topic. With costs of everything just about everywhere rising & rising we wanted an idea of Costs in Deutschland. This video SHOCKED US! It covers lots of expenses in Germany. We loved this video and learning more about German culture & day to day life. Please leave us a comment as we had quite a few questions at the end of this one too. Thank you SO much for watching! If you enjoy our content, please consider subscribing to our channel, it is the BEST way to support our channel and it's FREE! Also, please click the Like button. Thank you for your support! *More Links below.
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Комментарии • 842

  • @TheNatashaDebbieShow
    @TheNatashaDebbieShow  4 месяца назад +31

    American Couple Reacts: Cost of Living in GERMANY! Housing, Food, Transport & MORE! FIRST TIME REACTION! Hello Germany, we have missed you! We are excited to get back into our German education with this episode! We were very interested in learning about this topic. With costs of everything just about everywhere rising & rising we wanted an idea of Costs in Deutschland. This video SHOCKED US! It covers lots of expenses in Germany. We loved this video and learning more about German culture & day to day life. Please leave us a comment as we had quite a few questions at the end of this one too. Thank you SO much for watching! If you enjoy our content, please consider subscribing to our channel, it is the BEST way to support our channel and it's FREE! Also, please click the Like button. Thank you for your support!

    • @janpracht6662
      @janpracht6662 4 месяца назад

      Buying Nike's here in Germany? When I travel to the US I always go to an Outlet Store before I fly back home and fill up my suitcase with new clothes. In US Dollar it is so much cheaper than in Euro, sometimes you can save up to 50% (Levi's Jeans)! For example in the Outlet Center in Lexington near Boston, you find all kind of brands, Nike, Calvin Kline, Levi's etc for incredible prices (buy two pairs of shoes and get the second for 50%, a dream for consumers!). Even German brands like Adidas I got cheaper in the US Outlet than here in Germany!

    • @TheNatashaDebbieShow
      @TheNatashaDebbieShow  4 месяца назад +2

      €1 to USD is $1.08

    • @janpracht6662
      @janpracht6662 4 месяца назад

      @@TheNatashaDebbieShow A Levi's 501 Jeans costs in Germany about 100 to 120 Euro, in the US Outlet about 60 US $. But the limit for the European customs is 400 €- you shouldn't overdo it with branded clothes, that can get expensive, if they catch you... 😭

    • @nobodx
      @nobodx 4 месяца назад +1

      you might want to check out the Channel Type Ashton (previously called The Blackforest Family)
      Aston did some amazing comparison videos about Germany vs USA, but some can get quite extensive (like the one about healthcare with actual figures)

    • @patrykrzepka6059
      @patrykrzepka6059 3 месяца назад +1

      The costs in Germany are somewhat high in my opinion. I don't know how it is in America, but here our average income is around €1800, depending on the type of job. For me, it's €3000, but we also pay €1000 in taxes. So, I'm left with €2000. I pay €1200 in rent and around €300 for my car, including everything. Additionally, food costs for me, since I live with someone, are around €300. Then there are expenses for new items like clothing or perfume. So, in the end, I'm left with only peanuts from my salary. I'd be interested to hear how things are in America.

  • @kilianmeier5131
    @kilianmeier5131 4 месяца назад +184

    Please take into account that all prices in Germany are "tax included".

    • @marydavis5234
      @marydavis5234 4 месяца назад +3

      Newsflash, in the US ,only the cigarettes are taxed, everything else has no tax added.

    • @kilianmeier5131
      @kilianmeier5131 4 месяца назад +10

      @@marydavis5234 Yeah. I would get a little confused by always adding taxes to the prices. And every county/town could have different tax rates.

    • @marydavis5234
      @marydavis5234 4 месяца назад +8

      @@kilianmeier5131 Every county in the US has a different tax rate and some have an added town or city tax .I live in Vermont , the nearest place ,I can get groceries is 15 miles , there are two McDonalds, they are in different counties, each McDonald’s has a McDouble for two at 3.99, one will have a 6% tax added and the other McDonald’s in the other county ,which is not even 5 miles away from the other McDonald’s, the tax will be 8%.

    • @Tguson
      @Tguson 4 месяца назад +18

      @@marydavis5234 This is not what you say in the comment above. Make your mind up.

    • @marydavis5234
      @marydavis5234 4 месяца назад +5

      @@Tguson Buying groceries and McDonald’s are not the same thing.

  • @y.p.2396
    @y.p.2396 4 месяца назад +78

    Hi, I live in Berlin. Concerning housing costs: While it may seem cheap to Americans, the salaries are not as high in Germany. Furthermore, in order to get an apartment, the rent due must not exceed 33%-40% of your net income. So, in order to afford a one-bedroom flat at 1300€/month in Berlin, landlords will expect you to have a net income of at least 3000€, which is about 5000€ gross income per month (depending on your tax bracket classification). Most employees, especially ones without a degree, will not be able to afford it, leading to the current housing crisis in Berlin

    • @hansmeiser32
      @hansmeiser32 4 месяца назад +8

      "While it may seem cheap to Americans..."
      Yes, from my point of view 1300 EUR for a one-bedroom apartment is pretty high. We pay 700 EUR (cold) for a 3-bedroom apartment here in the outskirts of Bochum.
      One reason I would never move to any of these cities like Munich, Hamburg, Cologne, Düsseldorf, Berlin, Stuttgart etc.

    • @PenzMatt
      @PenzMatt 4 месяца назад +5

      Berlin war eine günstige Stadt zum wohnen in Westberlin. In Ostberlin sowieso. Nach der Wende wurden die staatlichen Wohnungen in Ostberlin billigst privatisiert, saniert und dann teuerst vermietet.
      In Bezirken wie Mitte, Friedrichshain und Prenzlauer Berg wurden die DDR Bewohner vertrieben und finanzkräftiges Klientel aus aller Welt zog ein.
      In Bezirken wie Friedrichshain spricht man mittlerweile Englisch und für eine 40 qm Wohnung bezahlt man 1000€ statt 150€ wie in den 1990er Jahren.
      Das wirklich tragische ist, dass diese Verdrängung ohne jeden Widerstand passiert ist. Ältere Menschen, Handwerker, oder Familien sieht man in der östlichen Innenstadt quasi nicht mehr. Sie wurden an den Stadtrand oder nach Brandenburg vertrieben.
      Die Löhne für Arbeiter und Dienstleister in Berlin sind unterdurchschnittlich, die Kosten zum Leben und die Miete überdurchschnittlich.
      Normalerweise müsste es zu Demonstrationen und Krawallen kommen, aber es scheint jeder nur noch mit sich und seinem über die Runden kommen beschäftigt sein.

    • @wolfi7106
      @wolfi7106 4 месяца назад +1

      ​@@PenzMattMiete ist in Berlin immer noch günstig im Vergleich zu andrren Regionen in Deutschland. Dort wird aber auch besser bezahlt.

    • @Quotenwagnerianer
      @Quotenwagnerianer 4 месяца назад +5

      "Furthermore, in order to get an apartment, the rent due must not exceed 33%-40% of your net income."
      You should add that this is not official or mandated by law it is just what some landlords look out for, even though it is none of their business.

    • @Mr.SpocksBrain
      @Mr.SpocksBrain 4 месяца назад +1

      @@wolfi7106das stimmt leider nicht

  • @DoctorNicolasGames
    @DoctorNicolasGames 4 месяца назад +1

    The grocery prices did go up recently, so add about 25% on average to those numbers (at least if you're shopping at Rewe or Edeka)

  • @ironwhistlesArt
    @ironwhistlesArt 3 месяца назад

    The Region that you asked is the middle Rhine Valley (Mittelrheintal). It starts just behind "Bonn" and endsat "Bingen am Rhein". It's my old Homeregion. I growd up there. Was a fantastic Time! :)
    Lots of vineyards and Castles along this Area of the Rhine. But, the only Castle that is in the original Conditions are the "Marksburg", near "Brauchbach". But the others are very beautiful to ... :)

  • @jasonsmart3482
    @jasonsmart3482 4 месяца назад +1

    Germany i have visited most outside of USA and South Africa. My aunt (RIP) lived there for 20 years - and loved it - and my cousin lives just outside Koln. I love the wurst there are so many different varieties sausages so im sure Natasha's taste bud will be tickled! Certainly worth a visit some beautiful historic towns, great lager, lovely countryside and mountains and wholesome foods. Oh and the Christmas Markets!! Oh and the kitchen thing its true you take the kitchen with you when you move rental property.

  • @peckelhaze6934
    @peckelhaze6934 4 месяца назад +1

    I am a Brit in the UK and often buy a sausage from Lidl and Aldi. My daughter up until this year paid £600 monthly, for a ground level two bedroomed flat, in our city. This city is 50 mile from London. We do get a kitchen. German supermarket prices are much the same as UK. UK has no charge for plastic but plastic is recycled.

  • @Schon1Kevin
    @Schon1Kevin 3 месяца назад

    about traveling in germany by public transports a very important thing hasnt been covered. to deal with the big inflation weve had 2 years ago the government has launched a 3 month program called "the 7€ ticket". people could buy a ticket for just 7 euros where they were able to travel by bus and the regular trains (no ICE) in all around germany for one whole month for just this 7 €. last year they launched the follow up ticket as a long term service, the "Deutschland Ticket" which costs 49€ for one month and has the same benefits. you pay 49€ and you can go everywhere in germany by bus and train (again, the so called "RE-Trains", no ICE) for the whole month no matter where you are. So that whole part about public transportation costs is outdated unless you wanna ride the ICE train for long distance.

  • @Yukimiko0001
    @Yukimiko0001 Месяц назад

    Me hysterically laughing at:"Wow that's cheap!". That's more than half my income.

  • @carltothea6762
    @carltothea6762 2 месяца назад

    Some things are not put into consideration in her video.
    The income in Germany is way lower than in the US looking at the same positions. So even though USD and EUR are similar right now the value of the rents are not comparable due to the ratio rent/salary. Especially considering the high taxes on the income. Like for unmarried singles without children they are around 3 times higher than in the US.
    And 1 bedroom apartment in Germany does usually mean basically 1-room all together other than in the US where this usually means literally 1 bed room and includes a living room as well.
    The statistical office stated in their latest issue for 2024 that 1 person has a cost of living of around 1.800EUR per month and the average net income is 2.300EUR, meaning there are many people having way less left for anything but of the ordinary, hobbies, vacations, savings, retirement provision, etc.

  • @humpty_bln
    @humpty_bln 2 месяца назад

    but when we dine out, the price includes tax and we don't have to pay the staff. We only tip for service maybe 10% max.

  • @jeronimoguerrero6108
    @jeronimoguerrero6108 4 месяца назад

    The rent prices in Germany are not as cheap as you think 😄. We pay all kinds of taxes so for example if you earn about 2800€ per month (which is the average salary in Germany) you probably have 1900€ left to spent after taxes. Also we count rooms and not bedrooms, she mixed it up a little but probably she didn’t know this. So in Berlin you pay 1300€ per month for 1 room with bath and kitchen. That’s all. Nothing more, nothing less. And everything you want to buy additional to that (Food, Transportation, Medics (not everything is covered by health insurance), A night out, Clothes etc. you have to take it from the 600€ you have left. 😅 and that adds up. To live in a smaller town is much cheaper than big cities in Germany. Especially because per Apartment 3000 people at the low end are applying to get it because so many people want to live in cities like Berlin or Munich. :)

  • @ChrisSeilerLFD
    @ChrisSeilerLFD 4 месяца назад

    14:18 You both are very welcome here. The infrastructure in the USA is more than questionable. Above all, the health care system and the school education. In general, for me as a European (German), everything in the USA (especially the financial aspects) feels wrong. I think "backward" is the right word.?

  • @nickgrazier3373
    @nickgrazier3373 4 месяца назад

    Hi Girls : my first thought when I saw that you are back was : oh good grief not this pair of buffoons again and Who, who let the girls in! But then I thought” heh I like this team leave them alone, said the other me then I was persuaded to watch, my other me is is such a bully sometimes, glad I did though, welcome back girls massive wide smiles and a bottle of sparkling water!
    FYI traditionally wine tasters in Europe were started off tasting water from different towns and areas, then once their palate has grown used to water go on to wine! Perhaps you’re a natural! Any way glad you’re back!!!! And welcome!!!

  • @afjo972
    @afjo972 4 месяца назад +39

    7:42 calling Dresden a „smaller less known city“ is outrageous 😂 the reason why the apartments are relatively cheap is because Dresden is in a former GDR state where tue economy lags behind a bit, salaries are lower and so are the rent prices obviously. Also, the residential buildings are mostly prefabricated high-rise buildings (Plattenbauten) which are considered to be less attractive and therefore generally cheaper. But, if she took a west German city around the same size like Nürnberg, the prices would be much higher

    • @rabenfederchen
      @rabenfederchen 3 месяца назад +1

      Thank you! Dresden is such a beautiful city (apart from the AfD and Pegida “walkers”) and is anything but unknown. I just say “Elb-Florenz" (Florence on The Elbe)

    • @Muck006
      @Muck006 Месяц назад

      @@rabenfederchen Politische Toleranz gibt's nicht mehr, oder?

  • @1889jonny
    @1889jonny 4 месяца назад +68

    I've lived in Germany for around 35 years, ten of those stationed here in the British army, I have no intention of ever leaving... From rent capping to healthcare, internet and food prices, I feel very lucky to be here. Many (not all) Germans have a deep-rooted sense of guilt or regret about WWII and about what their forefathers did. I have often been thanked for liberating Germany, even after pointing out that I was only born 25 years after the war ended. I think it's because (this is only my opinion) many Germans have a deep sense of history and most of that history is something to be proud of, but there's a dark chapter that will always make them feel uneasy. There's a famous saying... If you don't know where you came from, how can you know who you are? Just accept people's apologies with grace, it's ok to tell them that it wasn't them, but please don't criticize their feelings or opinions.

    • @CrankCase08
      @CrankCase08 4 месяца назад

      A chapter that has been deliberately darkened to fulfill a certain narrative.

    • @madrooky1398
      @madrooky1398 3 месяца назад

      @@CrankCase08 "a certain narrative" Oh, right, that one... 🤣

    • @DalaiDrama-hp6oj
      @DalaiDrama-hp6oj 3 месяца назад

      @@CrankCase08 You are deliberately consuming BS "News".
      Got BS vids on your own channel also.

    • @karlschneider9479
      @karlschneider9479 3 месяца назад +1

      A lot of my Irish friends here in Boston lived and worked in Germany during the 1980's and they loved it.

  • @Splattercat82
    @Splattercat82 4 месяца назад +46

    since may 2023 in we got the Deutschland-Ticket, that costs 49 €/month and you can travel all over germany with all regional means of transport (but not high speed trains like ICE and no taxis)

    • @annastark8130
      @annastark8130 4 месяца назад +6

      I get a companies ticket , (with the same conditions as the 49 euro ticket) and the monthly cost is only 32 Euro.

    • @willybauer5496
      @willybauer5496 4 месяца назад +2

      Yeah, but sadly we don't all work in yr company 😭

    • @mats7492
      @mats7492 4 месяца назад +4

      @@annastark8130 i do too but that depends on the employer, its a voluntary benefit..

  • @warrenheath6465
    @warrenheath6465 4 месяца назад +38

    Great to see you both back girls, missed you.
    As an Englishman I have great respect for German people and my view on 'the war' is that it's history like the slave trade and has nothing to do with life today. Deepest respect for those that gave their lives in any war no matter what side they were on.

  • @GottunddieWelten
    @GottunddieWelten 4 месяца назад +35

    Please be aware that in german apartments the living room is most of the time included in the number of rooms, while in the US you often have the living room and then you count the number of additional bedrooms.
    So in Germany a 1-room-apartment would really have only 1 room you would use for living AND sleeping, while in the US a 1-bedroom-apartment would have a living room and a bedroom (as far as I know).
    The kitchen(room) and bathroom are usually additional to the number of rooms.
    So 3ZKB would mean 3 Zimmer, Küche, Bad (3 rooms + Kitchen and bathroom).
    Small one-room-apartments sometimes have no kitchen but only a Küchenzeile (kitchenette) inside the room.
    A bathroom is standard in modern apartments. In really old apartments there may be no private bathroom but only a common bathroom in the staircase.
    Bringing and taking your own kitchen(furniture) with you is more a thing if you buy an apartment or a house. In flats for rent there is often a Einbauküche (built-in kitchen).
    I think 180€-200€ for grocery shopping is not accurate anymore. As a single who doesn't smoke, doesn't drink much and doesn't use many cosmetics I need 200€-250€ per month.
    The 49€-Ticket includes only regional busses, trains, trams and subways. You could cross the whole country with it, but it would require much time and many train changes.
    For Inter City (IC), Inter City Express (ICE), and Euro City (EC) you need a different ticket.

    • @Rafaela_S.
      @Rafaela_S. 4 месяца назад +2

      I'm at 100-150€ for groceries right now in Germany, as a single.
      And would argue that you could go below 75€ while still eating healthy, if you would want to.
      A big part is drinking, I make light tea with tap water which does cost me less than 10€ a month, if you buy water in a supermarket, you can go above 60€ just for drinking.
      If you biy some special drinks like coca cola or some "premium" water, you can go easily above 100€ a month.
      Same for food, pasta, rice and potatos are really cheap, use them to cook meals and you will save money.

    • @joseppedaia3673
      @joseppedaia3673 4 месяца назад +1

      @@Rafaela_S. 75€ is a stretch, but would be possible I guess. You really have to cut down on or leave out some stuff. But 200€+ per month... I really hope there is something other included than groceries itself. We're (2 people) are at 300€ per month and that doesn't only cover the cheapest of the cheap stuff, but also a good bunch of "organic food" (ask me how much I hate the english equivalent wording to "bio"...)

    • @joseppedaia3673
      @joseppedaia3673 4 месяца назад

      I'm confused by her (Erika) referring to a german apartement with the count of bedrooms. Considering the price thats, like stated, actually a 0,5 room apartement with livingroom and bedroom begin the same room. And not even twice as big ;)

    • @rebelmoon9059
      @rebelmoon9059 4 месяца назад +1

      ​Don't think it's a stretch.. The problem with eating is... We eat or throw away way to much

    • @joseppedaia3673
      @joseppedaia3673 4 месяца назад +1

      @@rebelmoon9059 that's for sure!
      Let me rephrase: 75€ is definitely possible, I wouldn't call it the norm though

  • @FrankyDee550
    @FrankyDee550 4 месяца назад +21

    Hello lovely Ladies,
    here a little information to show the relationship between prices and average income in Germany, here is the information from the Federal Statistical Office for 2023. The gross salary is the salary agreed with the employer, before taxes and social security contributions are deducted. The average gross salary of full-time employees in Germany in April 2023 was 4,323 euros. If you look at all employees in Germany, including all employees in part-time or marginal employment, the average salary in the same year was around 3,199 euros per month. The average net income of all employees was 2,165 euros per month. In this case the prices are not so cheap after all.
    Greetings from Germany.

    • @hype3344
      @hype3344 4 месяца назад

      Sry to say that but these statistics are just not thru. The average of ~4k is a dream that our gov has but not reality

    • @NeverMind439
      @NeverMind439 4 месяца назад +6

      While a lot of people would wish to have the average Salary at all. My father is glad to even come NEAR it... i think it is around 1600 to 1700? And my parents have to pay the house, the new Roof because it did rain through, a car, gasoline, Maintance (Seemingly atm our car is driving onto the 250.000km mark and it seems the the turbo makes problems)... they have less than me, who is a "Bürgergeldempfänger" because of a variety of mental health issues, to go grocerie Shopping monthly. My mother is sitting in a wheelchair after a accident and yeah...

  • @Schon1Kevin
    @Schon1Kevin 3 месяца назад +10

    You are completely ignoring the fact that the salary in the US is 3 to 4 times as high. according to google the average nurse in the US earns slightly more than 100k a year whilst in germany it is 37k and that is if youre working as a nurse for quite some time already. if u just started its more like 26k. also the income taxes in the US are at about 24% on average while its 33% in germany. so you even get more out of the 3 times earning. the average german is spending about 50% of his income just for rent.
    the prices for the groceries increased by about 31% on average within the last year. Milk is about 1,09€ now.
    Fun fact about the "budget friendly supermarkets", the so called "discounters": trader joe's is actually aldi nord. just renamed for the US market.

    • @PowerControl
      @PowerControl 3 месяца назад +1

      Nurses in the US have to study. In Germany it is only an „Ausblidung“. So that this is apples to oranges.

    • @mindscraper1978
      @mindscraper1978 2 месяца назад +1

      Included in the german taxes are retirement, unemployment insurrance, health care, debt free higher education, lets add these to the 24% taxes to the US system, oh, and don't forget the additional costs if you have to go to the doctor or even emergency.

    • @Schon1Kevin
      @Schon1Kevin 2 месяца назад +1

      @@mindscraper1978 you are correct in some points, but thats irrelevant for what was said in the video: "that things are so cheap in germany". for someone in germany its definately not cheap because the average numeric income is 3 times lower with higher taxes. of course this includes health insurance but as with every insurance, for the majority of the time its a cost with nothing in return. speaking on a monthly basis of course. if you ever get seriously sick our health system is the best you can have of course. no questions asked. its just that this even lowers the net income even more and what you got for living. the average living costs in relation to the income is 13% higher in the US compared to germany whilst germany has 9% higher taxes which include all those things. so there is an average deficite of just 4% in living costs. and this doesnt include inflations, subventions and other stuff. in the end it is atleast equal aslong you dont get seriously sick in the US which can basically ruin your entire life. but math always works with averages and not an extreme.
      you were wrong about the retirement tho. yes, currently this system is in place but it keeps working worse and worse and at the point where my generation would benefit from it, it wont excist anymore. so its another cost with nothing in return. but thats a whole topic to talk about by its own.
      In the end germany is cheap for americans to visit, no questions asked. but germany is not a cheap country to live in which was implied by the statement. if you take me as an example. im a german, living in germany but working in switherland. i get paid what my coworkers in switzerland earn aswell. my salary is 120% higher than what i would earn in a german company without me having to pay the costs which are twice as high in switzerland. a döner costs about 13 franken in zürich which are 13,60. thats pretty much double the price as in germany.

    • @mindscraper1978
      @mindscraper1978 2 месяца назад

      @@Schon1Kevin I didn't say that germany is cheap, I just said that the salary isn't that much higher and the "taxes" aren't that much lowert in the US, so living in Germany isn't that much cheaper but if we are in trouble, like illness or unemployment and retirement we kinda can rely on our insurances. And there aren't that many people who can work in another country that easily, even less if they are american.

  • @djs98blue
    @djs98blue 4 месяца назад +11

    I’ve always thought all soldiers lost, on all sides, are not only heroes they are also all victims of foolish governments. If government was better we wouldn’t need any soldiers.

    • @oldeuropemyhome76
      @oldeuropemyhome76 2 месяца назад

      I couldn't agree more. War serves no regular person's interest.

  • @Guenner8685
    @Guenner8685 4 месяца назад +5

    Maybe from your perspective it looks cheap for renting an apartment. But you have to concider, the average german income is about 3500 Euro. After Tax and Social you are lft with 2250 Euro. Then a small 1 Bedroom Apartment, where normaly one person lives, costs you 1100 Euro, that's half of your income!
    And there are a lot of people in the City who earn much less than the average. Prices are high right now. Berlin used to be among the cheaper cities and 1100 Euro would get you a 3-4 Bedroom Apartment (100m² +). So no, it's not cheap from a german perspective.

  • @Kari_B61ex
    @Kari_B61ex 4 месяца назад +19

    I lived in Germany for 6 years (British Forces) and the cost of food was excellent. We used to shop in Kaufland and Aldi/Lidl. When we lived there Aldi & Lidl hadn't yet arrived in the UK.

    • @beckysam3913
      @beckysam3913 4 месяца назад

      its because the government subsidise , funds, food sector, the basics, its socialism.

  • @bastipetri3084
    @bastipetri3084 3 месяца назад +10

    Regarding the kitchen-topic:
    German here
    When I moved into my rented apartment, the kitchen was included (provided by my landlord, about 20 years old (the kitchen, not the landlord)).
    Two years later, the kitchen started to slowly come apart.
    Since it was part of the renting-contract, I couldn´t remove/renew it without consent of my landlord.
    Smelling the chance to get a kitchen to my liking, I offered him to replace it on my own cost, if he removes it from the contract.
    His counter offer was, that I renew the kitchen to my liking, on his cost (with him consenting to the price), but it stays in the contract, meaning I can´t take it with me if I move out.
    We found a consent and I got "my" kitchen for wich he payed almost everything.

  • @bladablitz
    @bladablitz 4 месяца назад +8

    To put the rental prices into perspective: the prices in Berlin and Munich are very expensive for an average income. We are talking about an average income of around 2200 euros. Of course, you have to keep in mind that throughout Europe all taxes and health insurance and pension provisions have already been deducted, so it is a net income. Unfortunately, one important factor was not taken into account: heating and hot water must also be added to these rental prices. So it´s realistic to add around 150 to 200 euros.

  • @alexandrarohla1531
    @alexandrarohla1531 4 месяца назад +46

    I lived in Germany for 19yrs best health care in the world

    • @seelenwinter6662
      @seelenwinter6662 4 месяца назад +5

      but getting from year to year more worse...

    • @knutjunker2019
      @knutjunker2019 4 месяца назад

      No, certainly not the best healthcare system in Europe, there are much better and fairer ones.
      But not the worst either.

    • @wanderslust1781
      @wanderslust1781 4 месяца назад

      It was 20 years ago is getting worse and worse.

    • @frankmcloughlin7076
      @frankmcloughlin7076 3 месяца назад

      I live in Munich, the health system is adequate to good...that's about it..

  • @potdog1000
    @potdog1000 4 месяца назад +12

    of the myriad of mistakes i have made in my life the biggest one is not staying in Germany when i was posted there in the 70s, i loved it

  • @Ghhft33
    @Ghhft33 4 месяца назад +21

    Soooo glad your back we missed you tooooo

  • @marklane58
    @marklane58 4 месяца назад +53

    Thanks for mentioning the soldiers on all sides. This is one of my favorite speeches and I tear up every time. In 1934, Mustafa Kemal Ataturk wrote the words that reached out to the mothers of his former enemies. “Those heroes that shed their blood and lost their lives, you are now lying in the soil of a friendly country. Therefore, rest in peace. There is no difference between the Johnnies and the Mehmets to us where they lie side by side here in this country of ours. You, the mothers, who sent their sons from far away countries wipe away your tears. Your sons are now lying in our bosom and are in peace after having lost their lives on this land they have become our sons as well” ...Much as I love this speech I just read that it is disputed as to who wrote it. History is so fickle. His Story. Can't be sure of anything. I looked into what is time and now I'm not even sure if I'm really here.

    • @karenward267
      @karenward267 4 месяца назад +5

      Well said about the Germans. The successive generations have shouldered the burden of the previous generation. Plus, the German government, in a desire to show the world that they are not all bad people and that they are atoning for their guilt, have saddled successive generations with survivors guilt. We,who grew up in the UK and EU, don’t hold the Germans for the “sins of their fathers.” As a Brit in the US, Germany is beautiful and the German people are very welcoming of foreigners invading their country every year. Germany is agreat country to live in based on the quality of life, healthcare, and education. The Germans have always had a great quality of life. It was a tad rough as post 1989, both Germanys have reintegrated. It was/is rough for certain groups, but they are once again, one country. Go visit and experience the culture, arts, and just everyday life in Germany. It a great, welcoming experience. Glad you did this episode.

    • @grandetristesse2.060
      @grandetristesse2.060 4 месяца назад +2

      Nobody cares

    • @grandetristesse2.060
      @grandetristesse2.060 4 месяца назад +1

      ​@@karenward267isn't it interesting how only some countries are meant to be held accountable and is obligated to feel "guilty" even though no Nation is innocent? And most Nation either get away with it or they just don't care and will tell u that they don't care .
      People act like ww2 Germany was N1 villain, they forget about other countries which did worse...

    • @amathans
      @amathans 4 месяца назад +3

      @@grandetristesse2.060 Many people care. You can speak for yourself, but you cannot and should not speak for everyone. Kindness costs nothing.

  • @lilydawnpippard625
    @lilydawnpippard625 4 месяца назад +8

    This video makes me miss Germany so much.. I lived there for about 10 years when first married and both my children were born there.

  • @m.h.6470
    @m.h.6470 4 месяца назад +2

    The thing about "not every German wanted to go to war" is this: A lot of Germans back than WANTED war, because they believed, that they were treated unfairly for losing WWI. The other powers treated Germany as the main aggressor, even though it was Austria, that triggered the war. This treatment caused Germany a lot of issues, like hyper inflation. The Nazis used that anger and resentment to fuel their war plans.

  • @aka_Tatjana
    @aka_Tatjana 4 месяца назад +15

    Just a quick note regarding public transport costs. It shows that the video is about a year old. Since last year we have the "Deutschland Ticket" ("Germany Ticket") which allows you to use all local public transport everywhere in Germany for 49€ per month. For some (like me ;)) it's free because my employer sponsors the Deutschland ticket as a benefit.

    • @Splattercat82
      @Splattercat82 4 месяца назад

      excepted the highspeed trains like ICE and taxis

    • @RichieFairlamb
      @RichieFairlamb 4 месяца назад

      Being over 65 I can travel anywhere in the UK on a bus free of charge..

    • @leDespicable
      @leDespicable 4 месяца назад

      @@RichieFairlamb Germany is not that progressive, unfortunately. Our senior citizens are stuck at home when they can't drive anymore, especially in rural areas where public transport is basically non-existent anyway.

  • @stefanbierganns3193
    @stefanbierganns3193 4 месяца назад +30

    Purchasing a kitchen sounds expensive to most but you have to understand, most of us Germans love to have their own, most of the time custom styled kitchen. Also it depends what brand of kitchen tools like dishwasher, fridge, oven etc you want. If you move out of an appartment you take the kitchen with you and most of the time the kitchen fits into the new place. I did this myself some years back and no problems there. Its just another concept.
    Renting an appartment in Germany can either be really easy if you move to an area with low demand or hard and expensive if you go for one of the major cities over here. Munich, Cologne and Hamburg are expensive and due to not enough appartments there is a competition who gets one and who gets none.
    As I mentioned in the chat, public transportation got cheaper recently. We introduced the so called "Deutschland Ticket". This one comes for 49 Euros and allows you to use every public transport system everywhere in Germany incl the Regionalbahn, shorter train lines across Germany.
    I hope I was able to answer some of your questions.
    Love and Greetings from Hamburg, Germany

    • @Attirbful
      @Attirbful 4 месяца назад +8

      I sooo agree. Whenever American react videos explain the shock at Germans moving to places without kitchens, I keep saying, how happy I was to have my own custom kitchen in my first apartment. I have lived in places/apartments in America where I had to work around the twenty year old crappy kitchens with droopy doors and broken hinges, in dingy colors, and cabinets surfaces that were not perfectly fitting my needs but that were in there, and I was less than happy….

    • @stefanbierganns3193
      @stefanbierganns3193 4 месяца назад +1

      @@Attirbful And I can add...at times you maybe can takeover the existing kitchen in a new appartment..but I prefer my own though. And the pricetag for reasonable kitchen went down imho.

    • @Attirbful
      @Attirbful 4 месяца назад

      @@stefanbierganns3193 Well, don‘t ask me in that respect, as I just had the kitchen in my parents‘ house remodeled as I am moving in and it came with a price tag of more that €17.000… Mind you, it is a tiny kitchen of less than 7 square meters and I have plenty of kitchen gadgets and needed to use every available cm of the small space. Yes, it was expensive (since the remodel also involved walls, floors, electricity and water renovations on top), but I am really happy to have everything set up ideally now for the next thirty years of my life (I hope)… And indeed. When I moved into another house previously, we bought the two kitchens that were in the house already and were happy to use those for years without having to to renovate the kitchen(s) in addition to many other renovations we had to do then. However, I would never have picked the horrible tiles, and most likely very different cabinets had I had the chance to do it myself. It was a compromise, but I am happy to have a kitchen now that is precisely as I want it…

    • @stefanbierganns3193
      @stefanbierganns3193 4 месяца назад

      @@Attirbful As I said, there is a huuge range. The kitchen my wife and I have over here was around 9k back then...still works like a charme though.

    • @romanakipper7713
      @romanakipper7713 4 месяца назад +1

      Plus most people (at least young people, people who are not super-rich) will simply buy a second hand one. The most I payed for a kitchen was about 500 Euros, and that was the „fqncy one“. I would not want having to live with a kitchen I consider ugly… (Still in many flats you have the option to buy it from the former tenant and/or nowadays they ARE often included, esp kn smaller flats

  • @sharonmartin4036
    @sharonmartin4036 4 месяца назад +8

    Showing your naughty little 12 year-old self again Natasha! Just BTW, German sausages are fabulous. In fact, most German food is fabulous.

    • @subliminalstyrene811
      @subliminalstyrene811 4 месяца назад

      Sauerkraut und geräucherte Kassler Kotletten, mit knödel Defrigginlicious ! not to mention Eissbein !

    • @sharonmartin4036
      @sharonmartin4036 3 месяца назад

      @@subliminalstyrene811 Oooh! Stop! You are making me very hungry. LOL.

  • @Roberternst72
    @Roberternst72 4 месяца назад +13

    16:47 the background of the „sitting down costs *in some cases* more than take-away“ is due to the different V.A.T. on food (7%) and services (19%), because with sitting down and getting served etc the German tax code considers the whole deal a service.

    • @keithparker5125
      @keithparker5125 4 месяца назад

      There is a similar situation in the UK - take-away food is VAT exempt but food eaten in-house is subject to the addition of VAT (currently 20%)

    • @Brainreaver79
      @Brainreaver79 4 месяца назад +1

      yeah but the prices nearly ever change. the burger in a mcd costs the same regardless which vat you pay. the coffee in a cafe costs the same... so the shop just makes more monrey depending which tax you pay.. but the item never gets more expensive. (at least i havent seen it yet)

    • @Roberternst72
      @Roberternst72 4 месяца назад +1

      @@Brainreaver79 Well, yes, I have only vague memories of an actual difference in one restaurant, more than ten years ago, and in one ice cream parlor, even longer ago… and even those incidents feel like misremembering images of menu prices…

    • @SomeReallyUniqueName
      @SomeReallyUniqueName 3 месяца назад +1

      Note, if you buy take-away and eat it there anyway, the shop owner *will* complain. Not because they are mean, but because *they* can get in trouble for tax evasion.

  • @bigjtq9176
    @bigjtq9176 4 месяца назад +11

    In Sweden, you simply don't tip since the waitress get a fixed salary. You CAN however, today the tip isn't "personal" but put in a common pot and then shared between the staff...

    • @chgr4674
      @chgr4674 4 месяца назад +2

      I think that’s better because the cooks also deserve part of the tips. Their work is so important for the customer to be happy. In Germany I think some restaurants also share their tips

    • @jk0000079
      @jk0000079 3 месяца назад

      Same in Germany, really. There will not be any "scene" made by a waitress, if you pay the exact bill amount and not give any tip (unlike some tiktok videos from the US of A). And a tip of significantly over 10% is seen mostly as "excessive" in Germany, or more like "you really just want to brag about how rich you are". Rounding up by about 5% is "normal", if you were happy with the service *and* you can afford that *voluntary* action of paying more for something you could have gotten as well without the tip just fine.

  • @FHB71
    @FHB71 4 месяца назад +2

    You always have to put the prices into perspective to the income you get. Income is much dependent on where you live and thus the price for rent is relative. I live in the city center of a smaller but very popular city and I pay about 1000 Euros (three rooms appartment) and I have fixed costs of around 1600 Euros per months all in all (rent, heating, internet, water, electricity etc.) with about around 200 Euros for food, so I am looking at around 2000 Euros of fixed costs which is a lot here and does not leave me with much margin on top.

    • @percypino8962
      @percypino8962 4 месяца назад

      Wages in Germany are significantly lower than in the USA, so it just seems like it is cheaper in Germany.

  • @dereklupton5259
    @dereklupton5259 4 месяца назад +5

    Thank you for the "sins of our fathers" comment, which is absolutely correct. It gives great context to those calling for reparations for things that happened 100's years ago.

    • @Splattercat82
      @Splattercat82 4 месяца назад +1

      Nalf hat dazu ein richtig tolles Video gemacht

    • @hansmeiser32
      @hansmeiser32 4 месяца назад +1

      "It gives great context to those calling for reparations for things that happened 100's years ago."
      You should know that Germany did pay (for decades) reparations after World War II to different countries, especially to Israel and Jewish survivors of the Holocaust. Some payments are still made today.

    • @dereklupton5259
      @dereklupton5259 4 месяца назад

      @@hansmeiser32 yes I know, thank you for reminding us. My comment was not aimed at Germany, rather, agreeing with the ladies that generally we should not be paying for "the sins of our fathers" as many would have us do, e.g. transatlantic slave trade for one example.

  • @marynorth7988
    @marynorth7988 4 месяца назад +1

    Despite an uncle of mine being shot dead by a German soldier in the second world war.....my Gran and Grandad ...Harry's mum and dad ...did not blame the soldier . They told me ...young men were following orders given by men miles away from front line . It was those folk Gran and Grandad hated ! Gran was always so sad for every mum from wherever victims of the war came from !

  • @raystewart3648
    @raystewart3648 4 месяца назад +1

    UK South
    £10.00 Per month for my Mobile/Cell - unlimited texts, 12GB of data and 300 hours of calls.
    Internet - £21.00 Per month - unlimited data, super fast fibre speeds up to 55 mbps Download and 14 mbps upload

  • @julioverne579
    @julioverne579 2 месяца назад +1

    Just when I could not love you gals more deeply you cite what most of my generation of germans (35) feels. No we do not feel guilty. But we are ashamed. I was born in Bela Vista, Sao Paulo, Brazil. I got adopted bz germans in 1990. My adopive family membrs told me how hitler took Germany and then the other countries. The Nazis killed and deported chunks of my german adoptive family heritage. My Grandpa Alfreds father was a socialist or marxist. They took him away one night. Never to be seen again. We never even spoke of him again. My grandmas brothers all went to war. Two of them went to Russia to claim St. petersburg. One never came back. One came back a broken man. The younger brother of my Grandma Erika his name was Adolf... He drunk himself to death. i remember meeting him when I was 6 or so at his mother Hedwigs Flat. He would even drink the perfume out of his mothers cabinet. I suffer from alcoholism even as a great grandson. The nazis defiled at least 3 generations of germans with their violence

  • @sandraboyle5722
    @sandraboyle5722 4 месяца назад +4

    Numbers looking good girls…. 99.6K , but I’m sure you will hit that 100K soon…. Nice to see you back..

  • @Stuntchicken007
    @Stuntchicken007 4 месяца назад +5

    Matt Bentley this isn't an airport so there's no need to announce your departure.. Auf wiedersehen and have a safe flight!

  • @MacMov
    @MacMov 4 месяца назад +21

    German here. That whole saying "When in Germany, don't mention the war" in some countries like the US or the UK is total BS in my opinion. Keep "mentioning" it, keep digging in it, it's important. No one should ever stop hearing and learning about it. Those who claim they've heard enough of it, are those who know the least about it. And those (still a minority) you piss off by mentioning it, are exactly the right kind of people you should be pissing off: ignorant idiots who should learn some human decency, especially when they think history can not repeat itself, in Germany or anywhere else. Not to mention those who deny that this country and its people back then committed some of the most horrific crimes imaginable or who say that "the others were just as bad or worse". Please keep getting on those people's nerves! Thanks very much!

    • @michaausleipzig
      @michaausleipzig 4 месяца назад +4

      Couldn't agree more!! Very well said!

    • @Nickel1147
      @Nickel1147 4 месяца назад +4

      Half German here but my relatives fought for Britain. I totally agree with you. We should not be silent about genocide and crimes against humanity. Of course i don't blame Germans born after the war, but they should know the truth. ❤🇬🇧

    • @grandetristesse2.060
      @grandetristesse2.060 4 месяца назад +1

      Pathetic

    • @grandetristesse2.060
      @grandetristesse2.060 4 месяца назад +2

      Not really. Forgetting and not caring about it is best. Only if Germans today weren't an overseas territory of the USA that have been Americanized with all woke propaganda it would have been good.
      Also I say what happens in the past doesn't matter because it doesn't, no Nation on earth (majority) don't care about the past "crimes" that their countries committed because thats just how the world operated it was a common model and no country/Nation is innocent.
      The list of human wars start since 100,000 years ago even earlier if we include other hominids
      It's just human nature, nothing to be ashamed of. Instead forget about it and have some patriotism instead of "feeling bad for some randoms on the past😢😖🥺"

    • @grandetristesse2.060
      @grandetristesse2.060 4 месяца назад +2

      ​@@Nickel1147human homicides and genocides and wars have been a thing since mankind was primitive so if you wanna hold someone or some Nation "accountable" for thier "horrific" crimes then starts since 100,000 bc or since 6000 bc or throughout the entire antiquity or medieval ages
      Also you shouldn't not be forgetting the past of islamic caliphates, Asian empire's, African tribes, indigenous American tribes

  • @Lixmage
    @Lixmage 4 месяца назад +3

    Its not wrong to not tip fundamentally. What is wrong is American restaurant owners are allowed to NOT pay their wait staff... Let's not have the tail wagging the dog!

    • @marydavis5234
      @marydavis5234 4 месяца назад

      No always true, local sit down restaurants in my area, pays servers $15.00 an hour , the federal government taxes you 10% for tip service jobs, if you get no tips for one day, you get paid a lot less for that day, as the 10% tip rate will come out of your $15.00 an hour pay.

    • @Lixmage
      @Lixmage 4 месяца назад

      @@marydavis5234 I take your point Mary, but from outside the US, it really is hard to understand how this one solitary profession is legally allowed to go unpaid by owners... We too have a small tipping culture, but we tip for good service and NOT the employees fundamental economic survival.

    • @marydavis5234
      @marydavis5234 4 месяца назад

      @@Lixmage the employers has to pay the employee ,the minimum rate ,if they get no tips, TIPS aka To Insure Prompt Service, restaurants here are not governed by the government , and restaurants owners said, if tips were banned here, the prices on the menu would be doubled or tripled the price, would you rather pay $10.00 for a meal with a $3.00 tip, or pay $30.00 for a meal with no tip.

  • @Mrs_Deviant_Lemon
    @Mrs_Deviant_Lemon 3 месяца назад +1

    I came across your channel just now and I love you guys already lol.
    I moved to Germany almost a year ago to live with my German husband and I tell you, I'm born in South Africa and everything here for me is expensive 😂😂 Also, to me its a massive culture shock still. In a good way. But what a beautiful country and culture. Even though I miss my family dearly, I love it here. I LOVE that you can take your dog just about anywhere! I haven't made any friends just yet though. I find it a bit hard to make friends in general 🙈🙈🙈 But great channel and I cant wait to see more.

  • @Tobysland
    @Tobysland 4 месяца назад +1

    Hi debbie, hi natasha, i life in Berlin near the center of Berlin and my flat are beautyful, 2 Big rooms, a nice kitchen an a big floor for my dog and a realy Great bathroom. It is about 65qm in the middle of a park with 3 lakes. It cost per month with all inklusiv cost 802€. Here i wanna die 😅 i love you Girls ❤️🇩🇪👋😂

  • @hittingthebridge406
    @hittingthebridge406 4 месяца назад +1

    Also, we pay our rent per month, not per week. This has lead to confusion before. ;) Grocery shopping is WAY cheaper in Germany, though. When I'm in the US, I notice most items are 3 times as expensive. The checkout moment is always shocking. You definitely get more for your money in Europe, also in regard to quality - in my experience. But keep in mind that German salaries are way less than American salaries also.

  • @leDespicable
    @leDespicable 4 месяца назад +6

    The funny little train you saw is what we call a "Bimmelbahn" in German, basically small - mostly diesel-driven - train on wheels with a bell. They're usually usually found in theme parks or run through towns on special occasions. We have one in the neighbouring town that runs during the annual town fair to get people from the train station to the fairground and back

    • @jkb2016
      @jkb2016 3 месяца назад

      Also, the only case that legally allows passengers in a trailer while in traffic. It has to ride slow, though.

  • @haraldschuster3067
    @haraldschuster3067 3 месяца назад +1

    Private insurances in Germany only save you "a buck or two" when you're young and don't get sick. If you develop something chronic, they'll cost you an arm, two legs and then some. Almost everyone I know tried to get back into public health insurance when they got older and needed regular treatment as the premiums from private insurers soon were higher than the fees for the public ones.

  • @lookingforahike
    @lookingforahike 4 месяца назад +1

    after taxes and insurances, a normal workers salary is around 1900 Euros. So 1500 for rent is quite expensive in germany.

  • @irenebaxendale8367
    @irenebaxendale8367 4 месяца назад +9

    Hello ladies, so glad you are back 😊

  • @nordwestbeiwest1899
    @nordwestbeiwest1899 4 месяца назад +1

    Rents in Germany have risen by an average of 7% due to inflation! If you want to know more information about the health system and costs in Germany, check out the channel of the American Type Ashton: www.youtube.com/@TypeAshton

  • @fritzmeier1717
    @fritzmeier1717 4 месяца назад +1

    The video is pretty old? A small box cigarettes is meanwhile 8 € and a loaf of real bread is 4-5 €.

  • @blackmiu2545
    @blackmiu2545 4 месяца назад +1

    I'm from Germany, and i dont like Gerolsteiner Water. I like "Wittenseer Flaute or Steife Brise" the most.

  • @KittenKatja
    @KittenKatja 3 месяца назад +1

    Different countries, different laws.
    Our products may be cheap in comparison to your standards, but your standards include the ability to apply more than 1 coupon to the total.
    You see, in Germany, only 1 coupon can be applied, coupon stacking is forbidden, that's why platforms like Steam stack the coupons as one coupon, so Sales up to 90% can be found. (which is still unlawful, but who is going to report such discounts?)

  • @rosalindyates7331
    @rosalindyates7331 4 месяца назад +1

    Brilliant reaction as usal. I don't think there is a country on this earth that doesn't have a dark chapter in its history. Heaven knows the UK has quite a few dark chapters.

  • @jurgeng4613
    @jurgeng4613 4 месяца назад +1

    to be honest these food prices belongs to the "before Corona- aera". today even when the food prices come down a bit they are about 25% higher then mentioned in the video, it also depends on the article, some are higher and some increased lower.

  • @AP-RSI
    @AP-RSI 4 месяца назад +2

    Great, you are back!
    BTW: There are 1,500 varieties of German sausages! So... try again! Until you find the right taste! 😉🙃
    8:00 I don't know if the video has already included the heating and electricity costs, but I pay around €800 for a 2-room apartment with approx. 65 square meters and everything in the Karlsruhe area (approx. 15 km outside, in Baden-Württemberg / Black Forest). But that already includes electricity, heating and water costs! Oh yes, and in my case the kitchen was already installed and is included in the rent. And for Internet, incl. landline phone + mobile phone, I pay around €50 / month and have a 250GB line for Internet.
    10:10 The prices she quotes when shopping are no longer correct. For example, a liter (cheapest milk from a discount store) costs €1.30! The prices have gone through the roof. And the stores she lists are normal grocery stores (Rewe, Edeka, Nahkauf) that are generally considered expensive! Discounters (Aldi, Lidl, Penny, Kaufland, etc. pp.) are usually much cheaper!

  • @Ghhft33
    @Ghhft33 4 месяца назад +8

    Good morning peeps around the world

    • @lindasimson7790
      @lindasimson7790 4 месяца назад

      Good morning to you as well, best wishes from Scotland xxx♥️🍷

    • @atconnys8786
      @atconnys8786 4 месяца назад

      N8

  • @SusseBo
    @SusseBo 4 месяца назад +3

    $1200 for a one room flat plus amenities. In Denmark and in the province. Our internet is cheap. We go to Germany to purchase cheap groceries.

  • @Splattercat82
    @Splattercat82 4 месяца назад +5

    my heart cryed when you wrote the comment at the beginning. i am german too and know what this feeling of guilt in our german heads mean. please make a reaction to the video of Nalf - The trueth about german guilt. I love your Videos, stay as you are

  • @debbie8674
    @debbie8674 4 месяца назад +13

    These prices really are SHOCKING!!! ❤

    • @malcolmhouston7932
      @malcolmhouston7932 4 месяца назад +2

      I get the impression that at least some of the time you are thinking $$$ and not €€€.- they are not the same

    • @JaniceHope
      @JaniceHope 4 месяца назад +5

      They all include tax.

    • @Wizerud
      @Wizerud 4 месяца назад

      @@malcolmhouston7932currently less than 10% difference at $1.08 per Euro and has been ranging between $1.04 and $1.12 for the past year. Adding 10% to the prices here would give you an approximate dollar amount. Not a huge difference.

    • @marydavis5234
      @marydavis5234 4 месяца назад

      @@JaniceHope only the cigarettes will be taxed here in the US.

    • @Scamander
      @Scamander 4 месяца назад +4

      @@marydavis5234 sales tax?

  • @Slippy6582
    @Slippy6582 4 месяца назад +3

    The prices for an apartment are maybe just a little bit of... But not so much. Only thing that got more expensive is gas. For me and my family it was 100€ more a month. That is like 10% more rent in a month. But otherwise it is pretty much the same, the video is not that old.

  • @Jean-MarcBordeaux
    @Jean-MarcBordeaux 4 месяца назад +3

    Nice to see you both bright and breezy. Yes prices are expensive also in France for everything in Food and in the supermarket , I think Americans need that European style in the kitchen and the bathroom, Comments at the beginning was truly wonderful,

  • @carstenhardt1589
    @carstenhardt1589 4 месяца назад +1

    Some notes from a German:
    About those terrible Nazi years: I would say that the prevailing attitude is "We currently living Germans are not guilty for what another generation did, but we have a responsibility to see to it that it never happens again". And yes, we also have a small minority who only regret that Hitler didn't get all of them ... :( But they sure don't speak for Germany!
    Kitchen interiors and appliances: Think of it as "Why would I pay part of my rent for kitchen stuff that I don't want/like? I'd rather bring my own stuff!" Please keep in mind that Germans tend to stay longer in one place so fitting this place out to your liking and thus actually making it your home makes a lot of sense. Sometimes the former renter might leave the kitchen or other stuff behind for you and ask for some money for that ("Abfindung").
    Tipping: If I am content with the service received, I give a tipp that is worth saying "Thank you", usually about 10%. If I am not content, I give nothing. If you really, really manage to p§ss me off, you get a few cents - because that's not a tipp, it's an insult and you earned it.
    Food prices: Please note first that food quality is a lot better outside the USA (see TypeAshton's video on the topic for details). Portions are smaller because they are actually meant to be eaten and not put in the doggy bag ;)
    Second, restaurants make a large part of their money from drinks, so don't expect free water or free refills - it's a different business model.
    Health insurance: All you need is the mandatory health insurance ("Gesetzliche Krankenkasse"), and your monthly fee for that depends solely on your income as explained in Erika's video because the "business model" here is solidarity: We all pay into one large "pot" from which all costs are covered.
    What you might want (because it gives you some premium treatment) is a private insurance ("Privatversicherung") which works more like what you have in the USA: You have an individual fee which essentially is based on what you will cost the insurance company. Typically this means that the fee is low (often below what you pay in the mandatory system) when you are young and healthy but will rise substantially when that changes ... and of course you can't simply move back to the mandatory insurance which now would be a lot cheaper. That's why practically everyone except those with the highest incomes stays with the mandatory system.

    • @carstenhardt1589
      @carstenhardt1589 4 месяца назад

      Oh, and regarding sausages: In Germany, they are not a species but a whole large family (plus all the Italian sausages you can get in every supermarket), so I am quite sure that there is one for you. :)

  • @vanessacare2615
    @vanessacare2615 4 месяца назад +3

    Interesting and shocking thank you for a great video

  • @arielabril1981
    @arielabril1981 3 месяца назад +1

    Girls,salaries in Germany are way lower than the states.

  • @christophsimon-cq9qb
    @christophsimon-cq9qb 4 месяца назад +4

    The City pictures seen are from the City of Trier. One of the oldest cities in Germany (used to be a captial in the last century of the Western Roman Empire beside Rome iteslef) situated in the Mosel river valley. Most of the train pictures are also taken in the Mosel valley

    • @deadinside9744
      @deadinside9744 3 месяца назад +1

      Trier is the oldest City in germany.

    • @christophsimon-cq9qb
      @christophsimon-cq9qb 3 месяца назад

      @@deadinside9744 This is a bit argued. There are 2 citiers south of the DAnube river claim to be as old as Trier or older. I couold not find any definite answer about this in history books. That is why I said one of the oldest

  • @bigjtq9176
    @bigjtq9176 4 месяца назад +3

    As a historien, I also find it fascinating how many Germans still feel guilt about what happened during WW2. As you girls said, what happened then, few have anything to do with today.
    However, what is also forgotten many times, is that this "guilt' cause German politicians doing strange and less favourable decisions for the German people.
    Housing cost is very different here in Sweden. Rents is lower and of course you get a fully equipped kitchen and bathroom..

    • @keelbyman
      @keelbyman 4 месяца назад +1

      I'd have to agree with that. It really irks me that the Government of the day apologises 'on our behalf' about something we couldn't possibly have taken part in.

    • @RichieFairlamb
      @RichieFairlamb 4 месяца назад

      The war has been over almost 80 years..Time to move on....Ex Soldier who served there in the 60s..I always found the German people friendly in Lemgo-Lippe..

    • @raydafuq3570
      @raydafuq3570 4 месяца назад

      We get raised on WW2. It's literally indoctrination. I don't feel guilty at all and everyone who thinks I should can kiss my ass. The problem is with their hardcore indoctrination they achieve the opposite because people think like me yet still we read about it everyday. We learn it in school, it gets discussed with friends, family, colleagues etc. and as soon as you aren't agreeing with it you get called a Nazi. This drives more and more people to the right side of politics because the left acts more and more like Nazis themselves. Trying to forbid parties that aren't on their side, ban songs that were never problematic, open attacks on privacy and freedom of speech, you get insulted all the time by your own government and their bootlickers just because you have common sense. It's ridiculous.

    • @DSP16569
      @DSP16569 4 месяца назад

      No not guilty but responsible to see the signs for an upraising of Nationalistic mindsets in politics (and the people) and a responsibility to fight this tendencies as early as possible.

    • @raydafuq3570
      @raydafuq3570 4 месяца назад

      @@DSP16569 I see equally as dangerous mindset in politics for decades. If you think nationalism is the only thing we should watch out for you didn't understand the assignment.

  • @lillchen915
    @lillchen915 3 месяца назад +1

    About the private health insurance, there are doctors you can only go to with a private health insurance. These patients sometimes get treated better or faster and I’m not sure if this is still being done this way but back in the days people that worked for the country like teachers or the post office would get private health insurance just for working there.. loved the video btw 🥰

  • @Roberternst72
    @Roberternst72 4 месяца назад +2

    17:09 that „train“-on-wheels is ofc just an attraction, not a part of any regular public transport system… :) If the license plate („TR-AM“) isn’t a joke, you should find it in „TR“ier.

  • @connyklein5447
    @connyklein5447 4 месяца назад +2

    I live in a small city in the Niedersachsen region in germany and pay 870 € for a one-bedroom loft style apartement by the size of 89 qm in the city centre. This includes heating, trash fee, water ecetera. Electrizity goes extra as well as telefon, internet and TV. The person that rented the apartement before me, sold their kitchen to me, what was very convenient.

  • @sutej72
    @sutej72 4 месяца назад +1

    In Sweden for those prices of 1.200 to 2.000 Euros they are proberbly newly built apartments and in that you get the kitchen and bathroom without furniture but you do get Bathtub or shower, sink and toilet in the bathroom and you get stove, oven, sink and someti,es even a dishwasher and washing machines in the apartment. Usually hot water is included. What you pay extra would be the cabel bill for TV, Internet/Wifi and so on. In Sweden we also have to pay for a TV license that you through taxes once a year. This price is from where I live in Malmö but its more expensive if you live in Gothenburg or Stockholm.

  • @patrickhocke8677
    @patrickhocke8677 4 месяца назад +1

    Thank you. Thank you for your words to this comment. As a german i must say we learn that wie are guilty .

  • @RustyDust101
    @RustyDust101 4 месяца назад +21

    Careful on Hamburg's buses. You can't pay on the buses anymore except with apple or Google or PayPal or certain prepaid cards.
    Edits incoming
    Edit 1: private health insurance is available for anyone. However the roughly 64500€ yearly salary is the Break-even-Point when choosing private healthcare insurance. Private health insurance may get you some higher quality services in hospitals or specialty doctors earlier. But even the statutory health insurance gets you basically the same care but maybe with slightly longer wait times for anything that isn't an emergency. Emergencies will a) always be covered, b) same quality as private.
    In rented apartments it is normal to just find the sockets and pipes. Most people rent for a long time and like to furnish their kitchens themselves to their tastes and styles. If you rent furnished you will obviously get the kitchen as well. Furnished rents are obviously a bit higher.
    Bathrooms are fully equipped, as most of them are integrated with the tiling. Those are too difficult to remove and keep using them a second time. So bathrooms are completely furnished with toilets, sinks, shower stalls and/or bathtubs.

  • @cob4467
    @cob4467 4 месяца назад +1

    Thank you girls. All wars are horrible. We are suffering now In the UK sins of the fathers. We are a nation of apologists. That's why we apologise to lamp-posts in this country.

  • @flensburgerpilzproductions3141
    @flensburgerpilzproductions3141 4 месяца назад +10

    On some of the reactions and prices I hear from the US, you guys over there must earn at least 2-3 times the salary we get here.
    Just for comparasion - the montly expences from me and my lady (41 and 37yo, both fully employed, no children):
    Rent: 1200€ (5 room house, 1670sqft, small town in nothern germany) - includes heating and other stuff around the house
    Electricity: 110€
    Phone/Internet/Mobile: 150€ for all that stuff together
    Car loan: 400€
    Gas for vehicles: 250€
    Insurance: Around 150€ (home, car, 2 motorcycles, scooter, electronics)
    Other insurances: around 100€ a month (accident insurance and so on)
    Food and stuff: 300-400€ (really depends where and what we buy)
    Thats what comes to mind - might have forgotten something

    • @biankakoettlitz6979
      @biankakoettlitz6979 3 месяца назад

      ...tey earn much more in Amerika , but they work 2-3 times as much, too, or do you want to work 60hours as an usual employer ?

    • @jk0000079
      @jk0000079 3 месяца назад

      From a number of YT/instagram, or tiktok posts it would seem like a software engineer employee with 10y of experience is getting anything between 3x and 5x more in the "key business areas" in the US of A, than a person with the same experience and capabilities here in Germany. Of course in the US of A they can be as well fired from day to day, have to pay their health insurance, or totally-blown-out-of-proportions medical bills themselves, without any contribution from the employer. What surprised me more, was some statement, that even a plumber in the US of A is earning enough to save 2+ milion USD by the time they are 60y old .. 99.5+% of German employees (including those with masters degrees) can only *dream* of having such savings by the time they are 60y old, even if they would go only on cheap vacations all life long and cook at home all the years, and never go to any restaurants.

  • @Roberternst72
    @Roberternst72 4 месяца назад +8

    19:16 That river valley looks like somewhere along the Mosel.

    • @HauptmannMumm
      @HauptmannMumm 4 месяца назад

      oder Rhein

    • @Roberternst72
      @Roberternst72 4 месяца назад

      @@HauptmannMumm I don’t know, but the hills at the Rhine look higher, because the riverbed cut deeper into the rocks, the Rhine river itself looks wider and deeper than the one on the picture, and the banks of the Rhine look wider as well…. My second guess would be the Saar… but for all those rivers, I feel like there’s a lack of vineyards on the hills… I am pretty sure that the river is in Western Germany, and my other guesses would be the Lahn or the Main, Taunus and Westerwald and Siebengebirge look different though… those elevations make me think „some river flowing through either in the Eifel or Hunsrück“, and Mosel is the one dividing Eifel and Hunsrück… soooo… my gut says, Mosel. Maybe somewhere around Cochem.

    • @duke6321
      @duke6321 4 месяца назад

      That's the Rhine Valley

    • @Roberternst72
      @Roberternst72 4 месяца назад

      @@duke6321 Where though?

    • @bjoernphotography
      @bjoernphotography 3 месяца назад

      I am pretty sure its at the river mosel between koblenz and Cochem - because of the fibre cable hanging there… its an optical fiber cable which was installed around the early 2000…

  • @brynjones5361
    @brynjones5361 4 месяца назад +1

    Costs have changed in the last year. Europe used to import a huge volume of natural gas from Russia. The war in Ukraine changed that. Many electricity plants use natural gas; especially here in Ireland. Last year electricity and heating oil went up by almost 200%. The wholesale price for gas has come down, but this is only a fraction of the cost to the consumer because the bulk of the of the cost is for delivery. On top of the household costs; the higher energy costs have a knock on effect for industrial production, food production, which increases the cost of a hotel, eating out, the lighting and refrigeration in the supermarket, and so on.

  • @leighnisbett9691
    @leighnisbett9691 4 месяца назад +3

    In the UK we have a bus pass that costs just over £60 per month and it allows you to travel on the buses as you have prepaid your fares , it also works on night buses if you have been clubbing or went out for a date night if you don't have a car . The tax is included in the price displays in the stores .

  • @garyskeels9495
    @garyskeels9495 4 месяца назад +3

    Hi lovely ladies, hope you are both well. Looking forward to this vid lots of love from York

  • @lindachallinor5154
    @lindachallinor5154 4 месяца назад +1

    You have to remember wages the average wage in UK for example is about 35
    K across all industries but a lot of jobs that in USA are well paid nurse for example are not in UK it's why our nurses head on over.

  • @stupidboba92
    @stupidboba92 4 месяца назад +1

    Gerolsteiner is a rather expensive water while being the most hated and controversial. Most Germans hate it, if you can get your hands in Saskia water Germanys No. 1 water brand that we have at lidl here then you should try it :) About the single bedroom Apartment for 1500€ it seems expensive to a German. I live in Duisburg a ugly cheap city in Germany and our 4 bedroom flat Costs only 760€ so 1500€ for a single room is expensive to me

    • @TheNatashaDebbieShow
      @TheNatashaDebbieShow  4 месяца назад

      Why is it controversial? It's pretty easy to find here

    • @stupidboba92
      @stupidboba92 4 месяца назад +1

      I meant controversial as in the taste, i dont know most Germans hate the taste of Gerolsteiner and its not sold that much here compared to other brands. It also Costs about 6 times the price of other brands :) Btw what I wanted to also talk about are the train tickets. We nowdays have a monthly regional train subscription which lets you ride around all germany as much as you want and also into neighbourhood countries, Belgium, Netherlands, Switzerland, Austria, poland, Luxembourg, Czech Republic, Denmark for only 49€ a month its called the Deutschland Ticket and its great!​@@TheNatashaDebbieShow

  • @goatbrother8718
    @goatbrother8718 4 месяца назад +2

    In Germany we talk about the war multiple times during our school career, most of us visited a concentration camp on field trip. Totally fine to address that topic in a polite and respectful manner.
    The videos outdated on the public transport, you can now get the „Deutschlandticket“ which allows you to use all buses, trams, undergrounds and trains (except from faster trains the Intercity express aka ICE and maybe the Intercity aka IC) for 49€/month and it is a monthly subscription that you can unsubscribe each month

  • @irminschembri8263
    @irminschembri8263 4 месяца назад +2

    You can have private health insurance as a teacher here, too, as we are civil servants and the state government is your employer and responsible for your well being. But you can choose mandatory health insurance if you are afraid of higher costs in old age.
    I never regretted to have chosen private.

    • @RichieFairlamb
      @RichieFairlamb 4 месяца назад

      We pay national insurance on our wages which covers us throughout life via the NHS..

  • @thomasthuringer6060
    @thomasthuringer6060 4 месяца назад +1

    The percentage the rent in germany can be raised per year is reglemented by law so it can not be raised more than 20% in 3 years.There is an exeption if the owner renovates the apartment to make it better. In this case up to 8% of the costs can be added to the yearly rent.The problem here in germany are the "Nebenkosten", that means costs of water, heating, housekeeping, trash and electicity that come on top of the rent.And those costs have exploded in the last 10 years putting them at aproximately 25% of the rent or more, denpends on state and city. As far as healthcare goes the main difference between public and private insurance lies in the payment. If you are insured public, all your bills exept prescription fees and non exential mediction are directly covered by your incurance company. If you have private you have to pay all bills yourself first and get the money back later from your insurer.

  • @Splattercat82
    @Splattercat82 4 месяца назад +5

    good morning from germany, we missed u too

    • @TheNatashaDebbieShow
      @TheNatashaDebbieShow  4 месяца назад +2

      👋🏻 We missed you more!!!

    • @Splattercat82
      @Splattercat82 4 месяца назад +1

      @@TheNatashaDebbieShow we missed you to the moon and back ♥

  • @Stefan23E
    @Stefan23E 4 месяца назад +3

    Greetings from Germany! Good to have you back,guys!

  • @jamielindsay1506
    @jamielindsay1506 4 месяца назад +3

    Oh my lord! I thought the price of things was bad enough here in Northern Ireland! 😮 It's so much cheaper in Germany. What a place to live! This was a fascinating episode. Thank you N&D! ❤
    P.S. I would recommend you take a look at the Nurburgring. It's the longest racing circuit in the world.

    • @george-ev1dq
      @george-ev1dq 4 месяца назад

      NI is one of the cheapest places to live in Europe, Ireland on the other hand is very expensive

    • @jessgunn6639
      @jessgunn6639 4 месяца назад

      @@george-ev1dq the wages are also much lower in northern Ireland and that needs to be taken in to account

    • @george-ev1dq
      @george-ev1dq 4 месяца назад

      @@jessgunn6639 Wages in NI are pretty much the same as the rest of Western Europe, NI average wages are in the top ten in Europe.

    • @annaf3915
      @annaf3915 4 месяца назад

      The video may be a bit dated because food prices have skyrocketed since 2022. Milk is at least 1,20 € now, potatoes are 2 € and 10 eggs will cost you 4 € or more

  • @roter_panda
    @roter_panda 2 дня назад

    Hello there :) German here, your question what our Sausage tastes like ( 6:19 ) depends on which one you gonna taste ;) Its like our Bread, many variants are available and more or less different in their own individual taste.
    Oh and at 7:50 you have to know, that most of our apartments comes completly empty. When we move to another apartment, we took everything from our old apartment to our new one, or we buy new stuff. 10:10 Nevermind its mentioned in the Video :D

  • @patrickadam-sh4uu
    @patrickadam-sh4uu 4 месяца назад +3

    Hallo from germany. I love your Channel❤❤❤

  • @mandypotts9090
    @mandypotts9090 4 месяца назад +3

    Great show full of information , interesting insights and a glimpse of the beautiful German countryside l really enjoyed this. Episode 🇩🇪👍.( it’s nice to have you back where you belong ladies 💞)

  • @Tobysland
    @Tobysland 4 месяца назад +1

    I think the German health system is one of the best in the whole world, you don't have to pay when you go to the doctor, medicines are almost free except for a packaging fee and if you have to call the ambulance, you don't have to be afraid to get a $3000 bill afterwards, so it's probably the best health system for the entire population, whether poor or rich 👍🇩🇪👋❤️

    • @marydavis5234
      @marydavis5234 4 месяца назад +1

      The bills you see online for US hospitals is before your healthcare insurance pays their part.

    • @Tobysland
      @Tobysland 4 месяца назад +1

      @@marydavis5234 oh , ok. But in Germany all people have an insurance, of your homeless the Gouverment pay for you, ist that good 👍

    • @AP-RSI
      @AP-RSI 4 месяца назад

      No, I think the healthcare system in some Scandinavian countries is even better than ours in Germany!

  • @Pophet84
    @Pophet84 2 месяца назад

    what people ALWAYS get wrong, is that the cost of living, is ALWAYS relativ to the income of the citizens!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
    it doesnt matter if you live in switzerland or india.
    a bottle of water in india is like 1 CENT and in switzerland its like 4 DOLLERS.
    again, that is always relativ to the income.

  • @redtop1705
    @redtop1705 4 месяца назад +4

    Lovely to see you back❤️😄

  • @Muck006
    @Muck006 Месяц назад

    *Concerning RENTAL PRICES in Germany*
    We have the "Mietspiegel" for cities, which basically lists the PRICE RANGES OF WHAT YOU ARE ALLOWED TO CHARGE per m² ... which depends upon the condition of the flat, the equipment [kitchen included/modern bath??], the location, ...

  • @GeschichtenUndGedanken
    @GeschichtenUndGedanken 4 месяца назад +1

    München is a very nice town but did you ever think about another?

  • @Muck006
    @Muck006 Месяц назад

    In Berlin you DONT NEED to "live in the city center" ... unless you are a PARTY GIRL. Public Transport is pretty good (there are people who nag about it, but they have expectations of PERFECTION ... which doesnt exist or comes at a higher cost), where the REGULAR SERVICE ends at ~1am, BUT there is a NIGHT BUS network that will most likely get you home anyways ... all you need is PLAN AHEAD and learn which buses to take.
    *_I live at the edge of the city ... and having a FOREST and LAKE around the corner is very nice!_*