REWE and Edeka for groceries, Lidl and Aldi for budget
May 7, 2026Charlottenburg · Experience date Dec 6, 2025
Most supermarkets close at 22:00 and are shut on Sundays. Stock up on Saturdays. For halal meat go to Neukölln, for Asian groceries try Asia Munchis on Kantstraße in Charlottenburg.
Turkish supermarkets in Neukölln and Wedding — the secret of Berlin shopping
Apr 16, 2026Kreuzberg · Experience date Dec 24, 2025
Berlin's Turkish supermarkets (around Hermannplatz in Neukölln, Müllerstrasse in Wedding, Karl-Marx-Strasse) are extraordinary for fresh produce, dairy, and spices at very low prices. A week's worth of vegetables costs 5–10 EUR. Variety of cheeses, olives, and mezze far exceeds what REWE stocks. Open until 10pm or later. Shops like Kaufland Hermannplatz area, Edessa Supermarkt, and Uzay Markt are well-stocked, cheap, and authentic. Best for: daily fresh produce, yogurt, herbs, beans, and pulses. Many expats do their protein and produce shopping here and their specialty items at REWE.
Volunteering and civic life in Berlin — ways to integrate
Apr 9, 2026Friedrichshain · Experience date Dec 9, 2025
Berlin has an active civil society with many volunteer opportunities. Tafel (Berlin Food Bank): distributes surplus food, volunteers needed at 46 Berlin Tafel locations. Flüchtlingshilfe (refugee assistance): numerous organizations coordinate volunteers — Moabit hilft, Willkommen in Pankow, and Berliner Register. Language exchange (Tandem): multiple free events weekly in Kreuzberg, Mitte, and Prenzlauer Berg. Community gardens (Kleingarten and Gemeinschaftsgärten): waiting lists but worth joining — Parks like Prinzessinnengärten in Kreuzberg. NABU (nature conservation): volunteer opportunities at Tempelhofer Feld and surrounding areas. Volunteering is one of the most effective ways for non-German-speaking expats to meet locals and practice German.
Contributor: Emma Larsson Berlin's library system — free access to culture and coworking
Mar 20, 2026Neukölln · Experience date Feb 24, 2026
Berlin has an excellent public library network (Stadtbibliothek). Annual library card (Bibliotheksausweis): 10 EUR for adults, free for children. Benefits: borrow books, magazines, DVDs, e-books (Onleihe digital lending), and language learning courses (Babbel free with library card in some districts). Berlin Central Library (Zentral- und Landesbibliothek, ZLB) at am Blücherplatz in Kreuzberg: massive, excellent English-language section, quiet study spaces. Also: Amerika Haus in Charlottenburg has an English-language library. Libraries are excellent free coworking spaces with reliable WiFi.
Contributor: Chloe Bennett Berlin's expat community — how to find your people
Mar 5, 2026Neukölln · Experience date Nov 20, 2025
Berlin has 100,000+ expats and one of Europe's largest international resident communities. Finding community: Internations Berlin (largest expat social network, monthly events, some free), Meetup.com Berlin (hundreds of groups: hiking, tech, language exchange, arts), Facebook groups 'Berlin Expats', 'English-Speaking Berlin', and nationality-specific groups (Americans in Berlin, British Berlin). Reddit r/berlin is active and helpful. Language exchange cafés: many in Mitte, Kreuzberg, and Prenzlauer Berg run weekly tandem events. WorkSpace community events at WeWork and various coworking spaces have networking focus.
Contributor: Tom Fletcher Elterngeld and Kindergeld — family benefits in Germany
Feb 27, 2026Prenzlauer Berg · Experience date Apr 13, 2026
Germany offers generous family benefits. Kindergeld (child benefit): 250 EUR/month per child, paid automatically to EU citizens and foreigners with long-term residence permits, apply at your local Familienkasse. Elterngeld (parental leave benefit): 65–67% of net income for up to 12 months (14 months if both parents take some leave), capped at 1,800 EUR/month, applies to employees who've contributed to social security. Apply for Kindergeld within 6 months of birth. Elterngeld must be applied for before birth ideally, or within the first 3 months. Contact: Familienkasse der Bundesagentur für Arbeit, Bayern/Berlin offices, or online at kindergeld.org.
Contributor: Chloe Bennett Air quality in Berlin — generally good, wood burning exception
Feb 27, 2026Schöneberg · Experience date Apr 24, 2026
Berlin's air quality is generally good compared to many European capitals. Regular monitoring: Umweltatlas Berlin (umweltatlas.berlin.de) shows real-time air quality by district. Problem period: cold winter weeks when wood and coal burning (illegal but practiced in some Neukölln and Wedding areas) creates localized PM10 spikes. Berlin city center near Alexanderplatz and Potsdamer Platz has slightly higher NO2 from traffic. Overall: Berlin's air quality is significantly better than Istanbul, Bangkok, or Mumbai. An air purifier is optional in Berlin, unlike Bangkok. Invest in a good one only if you live near a major road.
Contributor: Priya Sharma