Got a New Passport? Your Residence Permit Needs Its Own Update Too (Übertrag)
A new passport doesn't carry your German residence permit over automatically, since the permit itself is issued as a physical electronic card (eAT) tied to your specific passport number, and a passport renewal breaks that link. You have 6 months from the date your new passport was issued to complete the transfer (Übertrag), and it's mandatory, not optional. In Munich, the process runs in two steps: upload your documents online first, then book an in-person appointment once they're checked, budget 10 to 12 weeks for the new card to actually arrive, and 82 euros total (67 euros for the card plus 15 euros for shipping from the federal printing office). One detail worth knowing before you start: if your underlying residence permit has 6 months or less of validity left anyway, doing a separate Übertrag usually isn't worth it, you'll be renewing the whole permit soon regardless.
The Official Rule
A German residence permit isn’t just tied to you, it’s tied to a specific passport number, issued as a physical electronic card (eAT). Get a new passport, and that link breaks, even though your underlying right to stay in Germany hasn’t changed at all. Reconnecting the two is called an Übertrag, and it’s a real, separate process from a routine permit renewal.
- Your new passport is issuedThis is the date that starts your 6-month clock, not the date your old passport would have expired. The transfer is mandatory, not something you can leave until your next full renewal.
- Upload your documents onlineIn Munich, the process starts with an online submission: your old passport if you have it, your new passport, a current biometric photo, and for some applicants, additional proof like a signed declaration or documentation of public benefits received.
- Book the in-person appointmentOnce your documents are checked, you book a specific appointment for ordering the new residence permit card, bringing both your old and new passport with you.
- Wait for the new eAT cardMunich's own timeline runs 10 to 12 weeks, since the card itself is produced by the federal printing office (Bundesdruckerei), not issued on the spot. Status inquiries generally aren't answered during this production window, so budget the wait into your plans rather than expecting updates along the way.
Total cost in Munich runs around 82 euros: 67 euros for the electronic residence permit itself, plus 15 euros for shipping from the Bundesdruckerei. Fee reductions and exemptions that apply to other residence documents, for Turkish nationals under the EU-Turkey Association Agreement, recognized refugees, and people receiving certain public benefits, are worth asking the KVR about directly for this specific transaction, since exact discounted amounts can vary and are best confirmed rather than assumed.
One detail can save you the whole process: if your underlying residence permit itself has around 6 months or less of validity remaining, a standalone Übertrag usually isn’t worth pursuing separately. You’ll be filing a full renewal application soon regardless, and that renewal naturally picks up your new passport’s details as part of the same process. Check your permit’s actual expiry date before starting a transfer you may not need at all.
If travel comes up before your new eAT card is ready, you’re not automatically stuck. Sources describing this situation consistently say that carrying your old passport, your new passport, and your still-valid residence permit together lets you travel and return to Germany while the formal transfer is still processing, the combination of documents is what demonstrates the connection between your identity and your existing permit. This is worth confirming directly with the KVR if you have firm travel plans rather than assuming it’ll work without checking.

What Real People Say
Guides covering this process across several German cities describe the same recurring surprise: people assume a passport renewal is purely a passport office matter and don’t realize their residence permit needs its own separate update until sometime later, often when a border officer or an employer’s HR department flags the mismatch between passport and permit numbers. The consistent advice is to treat a new passport and the Übertrag as a package, not two unrelated errands with different timelines.
The production wait is also a repeated theme: because the eAT card is manufactured centrally rather than printed on the spot, the multi-week wait catches people off guard if they assumed a passport update would be as quick as, say, updating an address. Guides recommend building the 10-to-12-week Munich timeline into any travel or job-related planning that depends on having matching documents, rather than assuming it’ll be resolved within days of the appointment.
Step by Step
- Mark your 6-month deadline from your new passport’s issue date, not from when the old one would have expired.
- Check whether your underlying residence permit has more than about 6 months of validity left. If it doesn’t, you’re likely better off waiting for your regular renewal instead of running a separate Übertrag.
- Submit your documents online first: your old passport if available, your new passport, a current biometric photo, and any additional proof your specific situation requires.
- Book the in-person appointment once your documents are checked, and bring both passports with you.
- Budget 10 to 12 weeks and roughly 82 euros, and don’t expect status updates during the production window, that’s normal, not a sign something went wrong.
- If travel comes up before the new card arrives, confirm directly with the KVR that carrying both passports plus your current permit will work for your specific trip, rather than assuming it without checking.
FAQ & Common Pitfalls
The 6-month clock, does it start from when my old passport expired or when my new one was issued?
From the issue date of your new passport, not the expiry date of the old one. This matters because people sometimes renew a passport well before the old one actually expires, if that's your situation, the 6-month Übertrag deadline is already running from the day you picked up the new passport, even if the old one would technically still have been valid for a while longer.
My residence permit only has 4 months of validity left. Should I still do the Übertrag?
Generally no, and this is a genuinely useful shortcut to know. If your underlying residence permit has around 6 months or less remaining, a standalone Übertrag usually isn't worth the separate process, since you'll be filing a full renewal application soon anyway, and that renewal will naturally use your new passport's details. Check your specific permit's expiry date against this before starting a transfer you may not actually need.
I need to travel abroad before my new eAT card is ready. What do I do?
You're not necessarily stuck waiting. If you need to leave before the new card arrives, sources describing this situation say you can still travel and return to Germany by carrying your old passport, your new passport, and your still-valid residence permit together at the border, the combination is what proves the connection between your identity and your permit while the formal transfer is still in progress. It's worth double-checking your specific situation with the KVR directly before relying on this if your travel plans are firm.