EU Jobs in Cologne (Germany)
1 open positions in Cologne (Germany)
Read our deep-dive guide: Working in Cologne — cost of living, neighbourhoods, schools, taxes.
About Cologne (Germany) as an EU work hub — Home to EASA
Cologne (Germany) as an EU Work Hub
Cologne (Köln) is the home of the [European Union Aviation Safety Agency (EASA)](/institutions/easa/), one of the EU's largest technical agencies with around 800 staff. EASA's modern campus at Konrad-Adenauer-Ufer overlooks the Rhine and the Hohenzollern Bridge, a few minutes' tram ride from the city's medieval cathedral. Germany's 99.2 correction coefficient applies here, the same as Frankfurt and Karlsruhe, but Cologne's housing is roughly 20-30% cheaper than Frankfurt, making it one of the better-value EU postings in Western Europe. The city of just over a million people has a long international tradition (Roman colony, medieval Hanseatic hub, post-war NATO and Bundesrat presence) and an open, festival-driven culture (Karneval and Kölsch beer included).
EU institutions present in Cologne
EASA, founded in 2002 and operational since 2003, is Cologne's only EU institution but it is a substantial one. Located at Konrad-Adenauer-Ufer 3 in the Deutz district just across the Rhine from the cathedral, EASA regulates civil aviation safety across the EU plus the four EFTA states. Its remit covers airworthiness certification of aircraft and parts, type certification of helicopters and drones, pilot licensing rules, air operations, ATM/ANS oversight, and continuing safety oversight of more than 8,000 aircraft. Recruitment focuses on aerospace engineers, pilots-turned-inspectors, certification experts (structures, propulsion, hydromechanical and flight control systems, etc.), air traffic safety specialists, lawyers and administrative support. EASA is one of the most technical recruitment profiles in the EU system: most operational positions require a relevant engineering degree plus 5-15 years of industry experience. The agency runs its own selection procedures separately from EPSO and posts directly on its careers portal. Beyond EASA, Cologne hosts the European Astronaut Centre of the European Space Agency (ESA, technically intergovernmental rather than EU) at Cologne-Wahn, and the German Aerospace Center (DLR) is a frequent partner agency.
Cost of living and the Germany correction coefficient
Cologne shares Germany's correction coefficient of 99.2 for 2025 (correction-coefficients.json), the same value applied uniformly to Frankfurt and Karlsruhe. This is just below the Brussels base. To work through FG-IV step 1: the basic gross of EUR 4,449.31 multiplied by 99.2% gives a corrected gross of EUR 4,413.72. After roughly 13% in pension and sickness contributions and Community tax under Annex VII Article 4 of the Staff Regulations, the net base lands around EUR 3,090 before allowances. The expatriation allowance (16% of basic) and household or dependent-child allowances bring an FG-IV step 1 net in Cologne typically to EUR 3,500-4,000 per month. Use our salary calculator for your grade and step. The reality on the ground is that Cologne's actual cost of living is below the 99.2 coefficient suggests, particularly for housing — many EASA staff find their EU salary stretches further here than in Frankfurt, Brussels or The Hague. Eurostat HICP data (https://ec.europa.eu/eurostat) confirms North Rhine-Westphalia consumer prices below the German average for 2024-2025.
Housing realism, neighbourhood by neighbourhood
Cologne is one of the most affordable major German cities for renters. Numbeo's Cologne data (https://www.numbeo.com/cost-of-living/in/Cologne) puts a one-bedroom city-centre apartment at EUR 850-1,200 per month and a three-bedroom at EUR 1,400-2,200. Deutz, the district where EASA actually sits, has redeveloped massively since the LANXESS arena and Köln-Messe expansion; expect EUR 950-1,300 for a one-bed in newer stock and 5-15 minutes' walk to work. Innenstadt (the old town and central districts of Altstadt-Süd, Altstadt-Nord) runs slightly higher (EUR 1,000-1,400 for a one-bed) but offers cathedral and shopping access. Belgisches Viertel and Ehrenfeld are the trendy neighbourhoods, popular with younger staff (EUR 950-1,300 for a one-bed). Lindenthal and Sülz are family-oriented, leafy districts with excellent schools (EUR 1,100-1,500 for a one-bed, EUR 1,800-2,800 for a three-bed). Mülheim, just north of Deutz, has been gentrifying and offers good value (EUR 800-1,100). Family staff often look at Rodenkirchen or Lindenthal for houses (EUR 1,800-2,800 for a 4-room rental). Eurostat HICP rents data shows Cologne rents rising in line with Germany overall but from a lower base.
Transport, schools and languages
Cologne's KVB network covers tram (Stadtbahn), bus and S-Bahn across the city; an annual pass is around EUR 800, and the Deutschland-Ticket at EUR 58 per month covers all regional transport nationally. Cologne Hauptbahnhof, in the shadow of the cathedral, is a major ICE hub — Brussels in 1h47 by Eurostar/ICE, Paris in 3h15, Frankfurt in 1h, Berlin in 4h20, Amsterdam in 2h45. Cologne/Bonn Airport offers direct flights to most European capitals and many short-haul holiday destinations. Cologne does not have a dedicated EU-financed European School. The standard arrangement for EASA staff with school-age children is the Europäische Schule RheinMain in Frankfurt (commute is impractical) or the accredited Type II European School arrangement at the King Fahd Academy or the International School Bonn for Cologne-Bonn region staff. Many EASA families use the German state school system, which is well-regarded in NRW; alternatively, the Internationale Friedensschule Köln offers IB curriculum. German is dominant in daily life and required for most public-administration tasks; English works well within EASA, where it is the working language. Cologne's dialect (Kölsch) is locally proud but standard German covers everything functionally.
Tax treatment for EU staff in Germany
As elsewhere in Germany, EU staff in Cologne are exempt from German income tax (Einkommensteuer) on their EU salary by Article 12 of Protocol No 7 on the Privileges and Immunities of the European Union (EUR-Lex CELEX 12012E/PRO/07). Community tax under Annex VII Article 4 of the Staff Regulations applies instead, with progressive bands 8%-36% on assessable remuneration, plus around 13% in pension and sickness contributions. German national rates (up to 45% plus 5.5% solidarity surcharge) do not apply. German national social-security contributions do not apply because EU social-security coverage is exclusive. The KirchSteuer (church tax) does not apply to EU salary. Side income — German rental, freelance, capital gains within scope — remains fully taxable under German law and triggers a German tax declaration. Article 13 of Protocol No 7 keeps your fiscal domicile in your country of origin. EASA staff hired locally as contract or temporary agents and seconded national experts (SNEs from member-state aviation authorities) have slightly different setups — SNEs remain on home-country payroll with daily allowances. Always check with EASA HR before signing on a property.
What is hiring in Cologne right now
Live and recent vacancies are entirely from EASA. Three current openings illustrate the technical profile: a Certification Expert for Hydromechanical and Flight Control Systems (AD7), a Structures Expert (AD7), and a Senior Military Advisor to the Executive Director (AD10). Earlier 2026 saw Project Officer recruitment in airworthiness directives and Type Certification, plus contract agent roles in IT and administrative support (FG III/FG IV). EASA's regular hiring also covers propulsion and hydromechanical experts, drone and U-space rules specialists, ATM/ANS oversight officers, and a substantial cohort of pilots and former civil-aviation safety inspectors moving into regulatory roles after industry careers. EASA recruits via its own careers portal at easa.europa.eu/careers and via EPSO. Engineering profiles dominate, with the Type Certification and Continuing Airworthiness directorates the largest hirers, but the ATM/Aerodromes directorate has expanded as the EU rolls out the Single European Sky and U-space frameworks. The Executive Director's Office and Strategy & Safety Management directorate also recruit lawyers and policy officers. See the jobs feed filtered to Cologne and the EASA institution page.
Frequently asked questions about Cologne (Germany)
- What is Cologne's EU correction coefficient for 2025?
- Germany's coefficient is 99.2 and applies uniformly to Cologne, Frankfurt and Karlsruhe. Multiply your basic gross by 0.992 to obtain the corrected gross before contributions and Community tax.
- Is there a European School in Cologne?
- There is no dedicated EU-financed European School in Cologne itself. Families typically use the well-regarded NRW state school system, the Internationale Friedensschule Köln (IB curriculum), or arrange schooling in nearby Bonn. Frankfurt's European School is too far for daily commute.
- Does EASA recruit through EPSO?
- EASA posts vacancies both through its own careers portal at easa.europa.eu and through EPSO. Most aviation-technical roles are advertised directly on the EASA portal because the qualification profiles are highly specialised.
- What backgrounds does EASA hire?
- EASA recruits aerospace engineers, structural engineers, propulsion specialists, pilots-turned-inspectors, air traffic management experts, drone-rules specialists, lawyers and certification project managers. Most operational roles require a relevant engineering degree plus 5-15 years of industry experience.
- How does Cologne housing compare to Frankfurt?
- Cologne is roughly 20-30% cheaper for comparable rental stock. A one-bedroom in central Cologne runs EUR 850-1,200 per month versus EUR 1,200-1,700 in central Frankfurt. Family flats are similarly cheaper. The same 99.2 coefficient applies to both.
- Do I pay German tax on my EASA salary?
- No. Article 12 of Protocol No 7 exempts your EU salary from German income tax. You pay EU Community tax under Annex VII Article 4 of the Staff Regulations instead. Side income (rental, freelance) remains taxable under German law.
- Can I commute to EASA from Bonn or Düsseldorf?
- Yes. Bonn is 20-25 minutes by S-Bahn (line 13/19) and Düsseldorf is 25 minutes by RE/IC. Many EASA staff with families live in Bonn for the schools and commute daily. The Deutschland-Ticket at EUR 58/month covers both routes.
- Is Cologne well connected to the rest of Europe?
- Yes. Cologne Hauptbahnhof reaches Brussels in 1h47 by Eurostar/ICE, Paris in 3h15, Frankfurt in 1h, Amsterdam in 2h45, and Berlin in 4h20. Cologne/Bonn Airport offers direct flights to most European capitals. For ECB staff or Brussels-based collaborators, day trips work easily.
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