
In Bavaria, only about one in two international doctors passes the Fachsprachenprüfung (FSP): roughly 48 % pass and more than half fail. This is not a guess – the figure is reported by the Deutsches Ärzteblatt, and the Bavarian Medical Association (BLÄK) has confirmed it. Why is the FSP so demanding in Bavaria in particular? Here are its distinctive features – and what really matters when you prepare.
The number: roughly one in two fails
The headline in the Deutsches Ärzteblatt is blunt: "every second foreign doctor fails the Fachsprachenprüfung in Bavaria." Of the doctors examined, around 52 % did not pass and 48 % passed – a magnitude the Bavarian Medical Association has expressly confirmed. The message is clear: the FSP is not a formality but a real hurdle. Good preparation makes the difference.
Who examines – and at what level
In Bavaria the FSP for doctors and dentists is administered by the Bavarian Medical Association (BLÄK) on behalf of the licensing authorities (Approbationsbehörden). It tests professional language at C1 level – not "just" B2. It does not test your medical knowledge, but whether you communicate confidently in everyday hospital life: with patients, within the team and in writing.
What makes Bavaria's FSP special
The three-part structure (history-taking, written documentation, doctor-to-doctor conversation) is similar across Germany. But several points stand out in Bavaria:
- A board that includes a linguist. Unlike many federal states, alongside two licensed doctors there is also a linguist on the board. They pay particularly close attention to genuine C1 level, grammar and pronunciation.
- Three parts of about 20 minutes each. Doctor-patient conversation, a written history/medical letter, and a doctor-to-doctor conversation – around 60 minutes in total.
- No offsetting between parts. Each part counts on its own. A weakness in the written part usually cannot be "offset" by a strong oral performance.
- Strong focus on plain language. In the patient conversation it is strictly assessed whether you translate technical terms into language a patient understands – e.g. "Dyspnoe" → "shortness of breath", "Hypertonie" → "high blood pressure".
- Fee. The examination fee in Bavaria is currently around €400.
New: a separate FSP for nursing (since December 2025)
To have an international nursing qualification recognised, Bavaria has had a separate procedure since December 2025, coordinated by the Bavarian State Office for Nursing (LfP) and carried out locally at approved training institutions. Key points:
- It serves as proof of job-related German at B2 level – in parallel to certificates such as Goethe or telc.
- Oral part (~40 min): a professional-patient conversation + a handover conversation. Written part: nursing-specific documentation.
- Here too, the oral and written parts must each be passed independently (around 60 %), with no offsetting.
Tips for preparing in Bavaria
- Prepare for dialect. The simulated patient may use a slight southern-German accent or regional terms – practise listening with genuine Bavarian material.
- Hand over in a structured way. For the doctor-to-doctor conversation, a fixed scheme such as ISBAR (Identification, Situation, Background, Assessment, Recommendation) helps.
- Train two registers. Being able to say the same thing in patient-friendly and technical language.
- Simulate realistically – with feedback. Run the patient conversation, the medical letter and the handover several times and have them corrected.
- Register early, because of possible waiting times.
Prepare specifically for the FSP Medicine – 100 % digital
KlinikDeutsch's Medical German course trains history-taking, the medical letter and the doctor-to-doctor conversation – with AI conversation simulation and exam simulation with instant feedback. At your own pace, around the clock.
Go to the Medical German course →Sources: Deutsches Ärzteblatt (aerzteblatt.de) · Bavarian Medical Association – BLÄK (blaek.de) · Bavarian State Office for Nursing – LfP (lfp.bayern.de).
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