German government letter help
for expats in Bonn.
Bonn is Germany's former capital and home to more than 20 UN agencies, Deutsche Post DHL Group, Deutsche Telekom and several international research organisations. The city has one of the highest concentrations of international civil servants and diplomats in Germany — many of whom still receive standard German bureaucratic mail.
What makes Bonn different
International staff at UN bodies and embassies often have partial immunity from German administrative procedures, but most still require an Anmeldung, a tax ID and dealings with the Finanzamt for locally taxable income. The Ausländerbehörde in Bonn handles a uniquely high volume of diplomatic and international-organisation visa categories.
Offices in Bonn whose letters we decode
- Finanzamt Bonn-Innenstadt, Bonn-AußenstadtRead our full guide to finanzamt letters →
- Bürgeramt BonnRead our full guide to burgeramt letters →
- Ausländerbehörde BonnRead our full guide to auslanderbehorde letters →
- Jobcenter BonnRead our full guide to jobcenter letters →
- RundfunkbeitragRead our full guide to rundfunkbeitrag letters →
The letters that land in every Bonn mailbox
- Mahnung — Payment reminderA formal reminder that a bill is overdue — and the clock is ticking.
- Steuerbescheid — Tax assessment noticeThe Finanzamt’s official decision on your tax year — you have one month to object.
- Bußgeldbescheid — Fine noticeAn administrative fine — typically traffic, minor offences, or Anmeldung violations.
- Anmeldung — Address registrationThe first bureaucratic step for every expat in Germany — and the source of many follow-up letters.
- Aufenthaltstitel — Residence permitThe document that permits you to stay, live, and work in Germany.
- Rundfunkbeitrag — German broadcasting feeThe mandatory €18.36/month household fee that surprises every expat shortly after Anmeldung.
- Steuer-ID-Brief — Tax identification number letterThe first letter most expats receive in Germany — confirming your lifetime tax number.
- Widerspruchsbescheid — Appeal decision noticeThe authority's response to your formal objection — and the start of the court deadline.
- Abmahnung — Formal warning noticeAn employer warning or a copyright cease-and-desist — both require an immediate response.
- Mahnbescheid — Court payment orderA court-issued demand for payment — you have 14 days to object or it becomes enforceable.
- Vollstreckungsbescheid — Court enforcement orderA default judgment allowing immediate enforcement — act within 14 days or the bailiff arrives.
- Arbeitsbescheinigung — Employment certificate for unemploymentA form employers must complete — your unemployment benefit depends on it.
How Aplet works
- Snap a photo of the letter on your phone — front page is enough.
- Pay €4.99 via Stripe (or pick a 3-letter pack at €9.99 or 5-letter pack at €14.99 and save). No account, no subscription.
- Get a plain-English explanation in under 60 seconds: which authority, what it means, what to do, the deadline, and what happens if you ignore it.
Works for every Bonn Kiez
Frequently asked questions
How do I decode a letter from Finanzamt Bonn?
Take a clear photo of the letter. Aplet identifies the exact Finanzamt Bonn branch, tells you in plain English what they're asking for — usually a tax return, supporting document, or outstanding payment — and gives you the deadline and the correct next step. You'll see your result in under 60 seconds and also receive it by email.
What common German bureaucracy terms does Aplet translate?
Steuerbescheid (tax assessment), Mahnung (payment reminder), Bußgeldbescheid (fine notice), Vollstreckung (enforcement), Bescheinigung (certificate), Widerspruch (objection), Anhörung (hearing), Aufenthaltstitel (residence permit), Meldebescheinigung (registration confirmation), Bürgergeld — all of them. Aplet explains what each one means and what you should do.
I just moved to Bonn — is this useful for my Anmeldung?
Yes. After your Anmeldung at the Bürgeramt, you'll receive follow-up letters about your tax ID (Steuer-Identifikationsnummer), insurance registration, and broadcasting fee within a few weeks. Aplet decodes all of them.
How fast do I get my answer, and how much does it cost?
One letter, one photo, €4.99 — or save with a 3-letter pack (€9.99, €3.33 each) or 5-letter pack (€14.99, €3 each). Your explanation arrives on screen in about 60 seconds and is also emailed to you so you have a permanent record. Unused letters from a pack stay credited to your email for next time. Payment is handled securely via Stripe.
Is my letter private?
Yes. Aplet processes your image once and does not store it. You never create an account. We never sell or share data. The only thing we keep is your transaction record with Stripe — no letter contents, no photos, no personal correspondence.
What if the letter is only in German?
That's exactly who Aplet is for. The AI reads German Amtsdeutsch — the formal, dense bureaucratic register — and returns a plain-English summary with the sender, meaning, required action, deadline, and consequences of inaction.