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Shoptime Frankfurt am Main - advice needed

Discussão em 'Frankfurt' iniciado por artur_ka, 14/5/11.

  1. artur_ka

    artur_ka New Member

    Afiliado:
    14/5/11
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    País:
    República Tcheca
    Nacionalidade:
    Polonês (PL)
    Linguagem:
    English
    Hi all

    Looks like I will move quite soon to Frankfurt am Main and I'm looking around to get more information about cost of living and best place to rent a flat.
    Below my questions, thanks in advance for any information:

    1. I will have my office in city center - where is the best place to rent a flat, of course I'm not looking on flat in city centre cause is to expensive, I can spend up to 45 minutes to get to city center
    2. how much costs to rent a flat, 2 bedrooms, from 70m to 90 square m ?
    3. how much live costs in Frankfurt (telephony, food, internet, etc) for three family ?
    4. is a base health insurance enough or should I buy third party health insurance, if you how much does it costs

    cheers
    Artur
     
  2. texkourgan

    texkourgan Addicted member
    Networker Editor

    Afiliado:
    29/1/08
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    7,051
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    Sexo:
    Feminino
    Cidade:
    Berlin
    País:
    Alemanha
    Nacionalidade:
    Americano (US)
    Linguagem:
    English, a little Deutsch
    The EasyExpat Guide to Frankfurt should be able to give you some basic ideas about moving to Frankfurt.

    As far as cost of living:
    Expats will find that the cost of living in Germany is generally high. Germany pays high taxes, which will expend a major part of one's income. Incomes are often high, which can offset some of the added expenditures.

    Accommodation (monthly rent in good area)
    Furnished 2 bedroom apartment
    €800.00
    Room in shared apartment €350.00

    Utilities
    Telephone line (monthly rental) €31.00
    Mobile/cell phone €64.00
    Monthly electricity (100sq.m apartment) €117.00


    Hope that helps a bit!
     
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  3. Chismey

    Chismey New Member

    Afiliado:
    25/4/05
    Mensagens:
    2
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    Cidade:
    Frankfurt am Main
    Hi,

    45 min to City Center certainly gives you reach - but only if travelling by public transport.
    By car, it can easily take you 40 min to get from the city "entrance" to the center, although Frankfurt ist not so big. You can ride by bike from east to west in 50 min at most.
    So living in the city can spare you a car because you can do everything by bike.

    Good areas in Frankfurt town for a family with child are all northerly areas (Frankfurt-Bornheim -Bockenheim, -Heddernheim, -Eschersheim, -Seckbach). Frankfurt-Berkersheim and -Bonames are a little more outside (north) but still Frankfurt - with fields, horses, like living in a small village. Then there is Bad Vilbel (very nice).

    Possible is also more to the north - Oberursel, Friedberg, Bad Homburg - but A5 (Autobahn) is VERY busy in rush hours so I would not bet on 45 min. BUT: There is S-Bahn (metro) connection...the better deal. Still, all that is connected by metro is not really cheap.

    To the west, Hattersheim, Hofheim - even Wiesbaden - are doable by car.

    The cheaper areas are in the south - towards and around Darmstadt (Darmstadt it self takes about 30-40 min ride by car - without traffic).

    I would not stay to close to Neu-Isenburg, Dreieich or Langen - these are areas with a lot of air-traffic (Frankfurt Airport arrival routes - less than 1000 m high - lots of ).
    That is also valid for westen towns south of A66 (Autobahn): Kelsterbach, Flörsheim

    Health Insurance:
    In Germany, we have a differentiation between "Public" and "Private" health insurances.
    1. Public would be what you call "basic" - advantage: One worker paying includes the whole family without extra costs. Costs are 15,5 Percent of your brut wage - half of it is covered by your employer.
    2. Private offers lots of more services - especially alternative medical treatments (practitioners services -> acupuncture, homeopathy etc.) - more comfort in stationary treatment - but you have to pay per person - and in absolute figures (no percentages). You will have to earn a specific minimum to be able to join a private insurance...
    3. You are free to add specific private packages to your public insurance (for example for teeth or preferred treatment in hospital) - that is what many people do.

    Public is fine - lots of services have to be paid extra anyway - also with private insurances (professional teeth cleansing, health check-up, and al that is not "basic", glasses - there is almost no coverage for glasses or contact lenses, anti-conception etc. - everything that is no desease yet).

    So far from me ;)

    Chis
     
  4. EasyExpat

    EasyExpat Administrator
    Moderador

    Afiliado:
    10/2/03
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    Cidade:
    London
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    Reino Unido
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    Britânico (GB)
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    English, Français
    Wahoo, great post Chismey. Thanks a lot for your detailed advice.
    :thumbup:
     
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