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Kenntnisprüfung (Knowledge Exam) Germany — The Complete 2026 Guide for Foreign Doctors

MedGermany.in | Complete Guide Series

Kenntnisprüfung (Knowledge Exam) Germany — The Complete 2026 Guide for Foreign Doctors

Last Updated: February 2026  |  Reading Time: ~12 minutes  |  Target Audience: Non-EU Doctors, Indian MBBS/BDS Graduates

The Kenntnisprüfung (knowledge exam) is a clinical assessment required for foreign-trained doctors whose medical qualifications are deemed not fully equivalent to German standards. It tests your medical knowledge across core clinical disciplines and is one of the two main routes — alongside the Approbation track — through which non-EU doctors obtain their German medical license (Approbation). Passing it demonstrates you meet the competency standards of a German medical graduate.

If you are an Indian MBBS or BDS graduate (or trained outside the EU/EEA) who wants to work as a licensed doctor in Germany, there is a very strong chance you will encounter the Kenntnisprüfung. This guide explains exactly what it is, who must take it, how it is structured, what it tests, how to prepare, and what happens if you fail.

1. What Is the Kenntnisprüfung and Who Must Take It?

When you apply for Approbation in Germany, the responsible state authority (Landesprüfungsamt or Approbationsbehörde) evaluates whether your foreign medical degree is equivalent to a German medical degree. This assessment process is called the Anerkennungsverfahren (recognition procedure).

If the authority finds that your qualification is substantially equivalent, you receive Approbation directly. However, if gaps are identified — which is almost always the case for graduates from India, Pakistan, Egypt, Syria, the Philippines, and most non-EU countries — you will receive a Defizitbescheid (deficiency notice). This document officially states the subject areas in which your training is considered insufficient compared to German standards.

Who Must Take the Kenntnisprüfung?

You will typically be required to take the Kenntnisprüfung if:

  • Your medical degree is from a non-EU/EEA country (e.g., India, Pakistan, Egypt, Philippines, Syria, Ukraine outside the EU context, etc.)
  • The state authority issues you a Defizitbescheid listing knowledge or practical deficiencies
  • You cannot demonstrate equivalency through additional documentation (additional training records, specialist certifications, etc.)
  • You are a BDS (dental) graduate applying for dental Approbation and have been found to have competency gaps

 

As an Indian MBBS holder, your degree is generally recognized as a valid medical qualification — meaning you studied the right subjects. However, differences in curriculum depth, clinical training structure, and systemic medical practice mean that a Defizitbescheid is almost universally issued. This means the Kenntnisprüfung is, for most Indian doctors, not optional — it is a required step on the path to Approbation.

Kenntnisprüfung vs. Approbation — The Big Picture

 Direct Approbation RouteKenntnisprüfung Route
Who it applies toEU/EEA graduates, or non-EU with full equivalencyNon-EU graduates with Defizitbescheid
Exam requiredFachsprachprüfung (FSP) onlyFachsprachprüfung + Kenntnisprüfung
Timeline6–12 months post-language cert12–24 months depending on preparation
DifficultyModerate (language focused)High (clinical knowledge + language)

 

2. Exam Structure: Clinical Examination + Oral-Practical Exam

The Kenntnisprüfung is not a written multiple-choice test. It is a hands-on, oral-practical clinical examination conducted face-to-face with a panel of examiners. Think of it as a comprehensive final clinical examination — similar in format to what German medical students undergo at the end of their degree. The exam is conducted entirely in German.

The structure varies slightly between German states, but the core format is consistent nationwide:

Part 1: Clinical Case Examination (Praktisch-Mündliche Prüfung)

This is the core of the Kenntnisprüfung. You are presented with a clinical scenario — either a real or simulated patient — and must:

  1. Take a structured patient history (Anamnese) in German
  2. Perform a focused physical examination
  3. Formulate a differential diagnosis (Differentialdiagnosen)
  4. Propose a diagnostic workup (appropriate investigations)
  5. Suggest a treatment plan (Therapieplan) and explain your reasoning
  6. Respond to follow-up questions from the examiners

 

This section tests not just your knowledge but your ability to apply it clinically — and communicate clearly in medical German. Examiners assess your thought process, clinical reasoning, patient communication style, and command of German medical terminology.

Part 2: Oral Examination on Clinical Disciplines

Following the clinical case, the examiners conduct a structured oral exam covering multiple clinical disciplines. You will be asked direct questions on topics including diagnosis, pharmacology, emergency management, anatomy, and pathophysiology. This is where breadth of knowledge is essential.

Duration: The total examination typically lasts 60–90 minutes across both parts. Some states conduct the exam over half a day with short breaks.

Examination Panel

The exam is conducted before a panel of typically 2–3 medical examiners, often including:

  • A senior physician (Facharzt or Chefarzt) from a relevant specialty
  • A representative from the state medical chamber (Ärztekammer)
  • In some states, an additional academic assessor

 

Key insight: The Kenntnisprüfung is designed to replicate the German medical final exam (Zweites Staatsexamen / M2). Preparing from German medical textbooks and AMBOSS (in German) is essential — not just from general medical resources.

3. Topics Covered — What You Will Be Examined On

The Kenntnisprüfung covers the full breadth of clinical medicine as taught in German medical schools. The Defizitbescheid you receive will list the specific subject areas the authority considers deficient — and your exam will focus on those areas. That said, the following disciplines are the most commonly examined:

Core Clinical Disciplines

SubjectKey Topics Tested
Internal Medicine (Innere Medizin)Cardiology, pulmonology, gastroenterology, nephrology, endocrinology, haematology, rheumatology — diagnosis, management, pharmacotherapy
Surgery (Chirurgie)Acute abdomen, trauma management, surgical principles, pre/post-operative care, common surgical emergencies
Emergency Medicine (Notfallmedizin)BLS/ALS protocols, sepsis management, acute MI, stroke, anaphylaxis, polytrauma, toxicology
Pharmacology (Pharmakologie)Drug mechanisms, interactions, contraindications, dosing principles for common drug classes
Gynaecology & ObstetricsAntenatal care, obstetric emergencies, gynaecological pathology — often included for general physicians
Paediatrics (Pädiatrie)Common childhood diseases, developmental milestones, paediatric emergencies, vaccination schedules
NeurologyStroke, epilepsy, dementia, headache classification, peripheral neuropathies, MS
Psychiatry (Psychiatrie)Depression, schizophrenia, anxiety disorders, emergency psychiatry — doctor-patient communication skills highly tested
Pathophysiology & AnatomyApplied pathophysiology questions within clinical scenarios; anatomical knowledge relevant to clinical reasoning

 

Note: If your Defizitbescheid specifies only certain subjects, your exam may focus primarily on those. However, examiners have discretion and may ask questions across disciplines during the clinical case discussion. Prepare broadly.

For Dental Approbation (BDS Graduates)

If you are applying for dental Approbation, the Kenntnisprüfung covers dental-specific disciplines: oral surgery, periodontology, prosthodontics, endodontics, orthodontics, paediatric dentistry, and oral pathology. The format is similar — oral-practical examination conducted in German.

4. How to Register for the Kenntnisprüfung — and What It Costs

Registration Process

Registration for the Kenntnisprüfung is managed by the state (Bundesland) where you are applying for Approbation. The process is as follows:

  1. Receive your Defizitbescheid from the Approbationsbehörde (state authority)
  2. Contact the Landesprüfungsamt (State Examination Office) of your state
  3. Submit your application for the Kenntnisprüfung along with required documents
  4. Receive an exam date (waiting times vary significantly by state — see table below)
  5. Prepare and appear for the exam

 

In most states, you must also hold a valid Berufserlaubnis (temporary work permit for doctors) while you prepare for and await the exam. This allows you to work in a supervised clinical role — gaining German clinical experience while preparing. It is strongly recommended to obtain a Berufserlaubnis position during your preparation phase.

Kenntnisprüfung Cost by State (2026 Estimates)

State (Bundesland)Exam Fee (approx.)Waiting Time for Exam Date
Bavaria (Bayern)€350 – €5003–6 months
North Rhine-Westphalia (NRW)€400 – €6004–8 months
Baden-Württemberg€300 – €5003–5 months
Hesse (Hessen)€350 – €5003–6 months
Berlin€400 – €6006–9 months
Hamburg€350 – €5004–7 months
Lower Saxony (Niedersachsen)€300 – €4503–5 months
Saxony (Sachsen)€250 – €4002–4 months

 

Note: Fees are set by each state and may change. Always verify current fees directly with the Landesprüfungsamt of your target state. Exam fees are non-refundable in most states if you cancel after a set deadline.

MedGermany Tip: Bavaria and North Rhine-Westphalia have the largest number of hospital positions and tend to be the most popular states for Indian doctors. However, Saxony and Lower Saxony often have faster exam turnaround times and are worth considering if you want to complete the process sooner.

5. Preparation Strategies and Resources

The Kenntnisprüfung is a challenging exam — not because the questions are designed to trick you, but because you must demonstrate German-standard clinical knowledge in German. Preparation requires both medical content revision and intensive German medical language training. Plan for 4–9 months of focused preparation, depending on your starting level.

Step 1: Understand Your Defizitbescheid

Before you begin studying, carefully read your Defizitbescheid. It lists the specific subject areas where deficiencies were identified. Prioritise these subjects in your study plan — they will form the core of your examination. That said, do not neglect other disciplines entirely, as examiners can explore related topics during the clinical case discussion.

Step 2: Build Your Medical German Foundation

You cannot pass the Kenntnisprüfung without strong medical German. The entire examination is conducted in German. This is not just about knowing medical terms — you must be able to:

  • Take a comprehensive patient history (Anamnese) fluently and empathetically
  • Explain diagnoses and treatment plans to the patient in accessible German
  • Conduct a clinical discussion with examiners using precise medical terminology
  • Document clinical findings in German (Arztbrief writing)

 

You need a minimum of B2 medical German — ideally C1 — before sitting the Kenntnisprüfung. If you have already passed the Fachsprachprüfung (FSP), your language level is sufficient, but you should continue practising specifically in the context of clinical case discussions.

Step 3: Use the Right Study Resources

Preparation should be based on German-standard medical resources. The following are highly recommended:

ResourceWhat It CoversBest For
AMBOSS (German)Full clinical medicine, exam-style questions, clinical cases in GermanPrimary study platform — essential
Herold Innere MedizinComprehensive internal medicine German textbookDeep-dive internal medicine revision
Duale Reihe seriesClinical subject textbooks in GermanSubject-by-subject revision
MedGermany FSP/KP CoursesClinical German, case simulations, exam preparationStructured guided preparation
Klinische Visite (YouTube)Clinical case walkthroughs in GermanCase-based learning in German
Berufserlaubnis positionReal German clinical environmentApplied learning + language immersion

 

Step 4: Practice Clinical Cases — Out Loud, in German

The single most important preparation activity is practising clinical cases out loud in German. Do not just read or take notes. You must be able to speak through a complete clinical case — from Anamnese to differential diagnosis to treatment plan — in German, under pressure, in front of a panel.

  • Practise Anamnese with a partner (doctor colleague, tutor, language teacher)
  • Work through AMBOSS clinical cases in German and narrate your reasoning aloud
  • Join preparation groups with other KP candidates — peer practice is invaluable
  • If possible, enrol in a structured Kenntnisprüfung preparation course that includes mock examinations

 

Step 5: Work in a Berufserlaubnis Position

Working in a German hospital or clinic under a Berufserlaubnis position while you prepare is one of the most effective preparation strategies available. It gives you:

  • Daily exposure to German clinical terminology in a real clinical environment
  • Supervised practice of clinical skills to German standards
  • Familiarity with German clinical documentation (Arztbrief, Patientendokumentation)
  • Reference letters and evidence of clinical competence for your Approbation application
  • Income to support yourself during the preparation period

 

Talk to a consultant (such as MedGermany) about securing a Berufserlaubnis placement in your target state before or immediately after receiving your Defizitbescheid.

Suggested Study Timeline

MonthFocus
1–2Review Defizitbescheid, enrol in medical German course (if B2 not achieved), begin AMBOSS German
3–4Intensive subject revision (Defizitbescheid subjects first), begin clinical case practice in German
5–6Daily clinical case simulations, AMBOSS exam-mode practice, mock exam with tutor or group
7–8Full mock examinations (60–90 min oral format), consolidate weak areas, refine clinical German
8+Appear for Kenntnisprüfung

 

6. Pass Rates and What Happens If You Fail

Pass Rates

Official nationwide pass rate statistics for the Kenntnisprüfung are not publicly published in Germany. However, based on data shared by state Ärztekammern and reported by physician networks, the following general estimates apply:

Preparation LevelEstimated Pass Rate
Well-prepared (6+ months structured prep, Berufserlaubnis experience)~70–80%
Moderately prepared (3–5 months, self-study only)~40–55%
Under-prepared (rushed, insufficient German)~20–35%

 

The most common reasons for failure reported by candidates include: insufficient German language fluency under exam pressure, weak emergency medicine knowledge, inability to structure a coherent differential diagnosis, and poor familiarity with German clinical protocols.

What Happens If You Fail?

Failing the Kenntnisprüfung is not the end of the road. Here is what happens:

  1. You receive a written assessment detailing which areas you performed insufficiently in
  2. You are typically permitted to retake the exam — most states allow 2–3 attempts, some allow unlimited retakes
  3. There is usually a mandatory waiting period before retaking (commonly 3–6 months)
  4. You can continue working under your Berufserlaubnis while preparing for the resit
  5. Use the detailed feedback to focus your preparation on the specific areas flagged

 

Important: Always check the specific retry policy of your state's Landesprüfungsamt before applying. NRW, for instance, has a clearly defined policy allowing up to 3 attempts; other states vary. If you exhaust your attempts in one state, it may be possible to transfer your application to another state, though this is administratively complex.

If you fail more than once, a structured preparation course with mock examinations and personalised feedback is strongly recommended before your next attempt. Many candidates who fail on the first attempt pass on the second with targeted preparation.

7. Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)

Q1: Can I get Approbation without the Kenntnisprüfung?

Yes — but only if your medical degree is assessed as fully equivalent to a German medical degree. For most non-EU graduates, including Indian MBBS holders, full equivalency is rarely granted. The Defizitbescheid effectively makes the Kenntnisprüfung mandatory for your specific situation. Some candidates with additional specialist qualifications or significant post-graduate training may provide supplementary evidence to reduce or eliminate the requirement, but this is uncommon.

Q2: Is the Kenntnisprüfung the same as the FSP (Fachsprachprüfung)?

No — they are entirely different examinations. The Fachsprachprüfung (FSP) tests your medical German language competency (history-taking, documentation, doctor-to-doctor communication). The Kenntnisprüfung tests your clinical medical knowledge in German. Most candidates must pass both to obtain Approbation: the FSP first (to demonstrate language competency), and then the Kenntnisprüfung (to demonstrate clinical knowledge equivalency).

Q3: Which state is best for the Kenntnisprüfung?

There is no single 'best' state. Bavaria and NRW offer the most hospital positions but have longer exam waiting times. States like Saxony, Lower Saxony, and Thuringia often have faster exam scheduling. Choose your state based on the availability of Berufserlaubnis positions, exam waiting time, language school availability, and your personal network. MedGermany can assist you in selecting the most suitable state for your specific profile.

Q4: How long does it take to get from India to German Approbation?

The typical timeline for an Indian MBBS graduate starting from scratch (no German language knowledge) is 2.5 to 4 years: approximately 1–1.5 years to reach B2/C1 medical German, 6–12 months for the FSP and Approbation process, and 6–12 months of Kenntnisprüfung preparation. With efficient planning, strong language aptitude, and a Berufserlaubnis position, some candidates complete the process in under 2.5 years.

Q5: Can I work as a doctor in Germany while preparing for the Kenntnisprüfung?

Yes — through a Berufserlaubnis (temporary medical licence). This is a time-limited, state-specific, supervised work authorisation that allows you to practise in a clinical role (usually as Assistenzarzt / Arzt in Weiterbildung) under supervision. It is available to qualified doctors who are in the Approbation process. Working under a Berufserlaubnis is one of the most powerful preparation tools for the Kenntnisprüfung.

Q6: Does the Kenntnisprüfung apply to dentists (BDS) as well?

Yes. BDS graduates from non-EU countries applying for dental Approbation may also receive a Defizitbescheid and be required to sit a dental Kenntnisprüfung. The format is oral-practical, conducted in German, covering core dental clinical disciplines. BDS candidates should ensure they also pass the Fachsprachprüfung for dentists, as German language proficiency is equally critical.

Q7: What level of German do I need to pass the Kenntnisprüfung?

The exam is conducted entirely in German, so you need at minimum a solid B2 level — ideally C1 — with specific strength in medical German. Having passed the FSP is a strong indicator that your language level is sufficient for the Kenntnisprüfung. However, the KP requires you to discuss complex clinical reasoning, argue differential diagnoses, and respond to rapid follow-up questions — which demands a higher level of fluency and confidence than the FSP alone.

Q8: What is the Defizitbescheid and what should I do when I receive one?

A Defizitbescheid is the official written notice from the Approbation authority stating that your foreign medical qualification is not fully equivalent to a German medical degree, and listing the subject areas considered deficient. When you receive one, you should: review it carefully with a medical licensing consultant, register with the Landesprüfungsamt for the Kenntnisprüfung, apply for a Berufserlaubnis to begin working, and begin structured preparation immediately. Do not delay — exam waiting times can be 3–8 months.

How MedGermany Helps You Navigate the Kenntnisprüfung

At MedGermany, we have guided hundreds of Indian doctors and BDS graduates through the German Approbation process — including the Kenntnisprüfung. Here is how we can support you:

  • Approbation application support: We manage your documentation, submissions, and authority communications
  • State selection strategy: We advise on the most suitable state based on your profile, specialty, and timeline goals
  • Berufserlaubnis placement: We connect you with hospital positions in Germany so you can work and prepare simultaneously
  • Kenntnisprüfung preparation guidance: We provide structured study plans, connect you with preparation courses, and offer mock exam practice
  • End-to-end guidance: From German language course selection in India to your first consultant position in Germany

 

Whether you are just starting your German language journey from India or have already received your Defizitbescheid and need to prepare for the exam, we can help you move forward efficiently and confidently.

Ready to start your journey? Book a free consultation with the MedGermany team at www.medgermany.in — we will review your profile and give you a clear roadmap to German Approbation.

Sources: Bundesärztekammer (bundesaerztekammer.de) | Anerkennung in Deutschland (anerkennung-in-deutschland.de) | Make it in Germany (make-it-in-germany.com) | State Landesprüfungsämter

© 2026 MedGermany.in | www.medgermany.in | This guide is for informational purposes only. For personalised advice, consult a licensed Approbation consultant.