Junior Financial Controller
Job description, salary, sourcing, interview questions and a 30/60/90 plan to hire a Junior Financial Controller in a German SMB.
Compiled by the Join team from public data and our hiring experience.
Updated
At a glance
- Median salary€52,000€45,000 – €62,000
- Time to fill40–60 days
- Experience0–2 years
How to hire a Financial Controller for your SMB
Before you write the job posting, settle three framing questions. They determine the profile you actually need and help you avoid the confusions between accounting and controlling that are common at German SMBs.
Question 1: Controller, accountant or Group Controller? The accountant (Finanzbuchhalter:in) keeps the books and prepares the close (45 k€ median). The Financial Controller analyzes, forecasts and advises management as a business partner with numbers (68 k€ median). The Group Controller consolidates several entities, owns the group reporting and engages with supervisory bodies (85 to 130 k€). Mixing these three levels in a single ad attracts poorly fitted applications and costs time. Name the seniority level explicitly in the title: Financial Controller:in (m/w/d) or Senior Controller:in (m/w/d), not the meaningless controlling wanted profile.
Question 2: Which responsibility perimeter exactly? At a German SMB the perimeter of a Financial Controller varies strongly: from pure reporting (month-end analysis, a KPI dashboard) to full business partnering (forecast, budget, investment cases, pricing analysis, working-capital steering). List the covered areas explicitly in the ad. Recruiting a controller with a pure reporting profile and then expecting business partnering creates frustration on both sides; hiring a business-partner profile without tool maturity when the reporting still runs in 14 Excel sheets is likewise a mis-hire.
Question 3: Which tools and which data architecture? The ecosystem matters. A candidate trained on SAP CO is not instantly productive on a pure Power BI stack with its own data warehouse, and vice versa. With a planned reporting migration, a person who has built a BI reporting before (Power BI, Tableau, Lucanet) is a clear advantage. Name your stack in the ad; experienced candidates often filter on this criterion. SAP CO is standard at group subsidiaries, Lucanet and IDL Konsis at consolidating Mittelstand firms, Power BI and Tableau at tech-savvy SMBs, advanced Excel as the common bracket.
If the three answers converge on a full-time Financial Controller (not an accountant or a Group Controller), go to the ad template below.
JD template
Financial Controller (m/w/d): business partnering and reporting at an SMB
Mission. You analyze the company’s financial performance, build the forecast and budget and advise management as a business partner with numbers. You report to the [commercial lead / CFO / management].
Key responsibilities.
- Build and comment on the monthly management reporting (a P&L bridge, margin per business unit, working capital, cash flow) with a plan-actual analysis and a cause breakdown.
- Steer the annual budget process and the quarterly forecasts: align assumptions with operational functions, build sensitivity scenarios, validate with management.
- Business partnering with sales, operations, product and HR: pricing analyses, investment cases, headcount planning, margin review of new products.
- Build investment and pricing cases (NPV, IRR, payback, sensitized scenarios) for management.
- [If applicable] Consolidated reporting of several entities or business units, group reporting to the parent or holding company.
- Evolve the reporting and BI architecture: automate manual steps, build self-service dashboards, reduce the reporting lag after month-end.
- Interface with accounting and the tax adviser: analytical consistency of the cost-center allocation, accruals with a plan effect.
- Prepare and accompany the discussions with the auditor, banks and the advisory board or supervisory body.
Profile.
- Required: a completed business-administration degree with a focus on controlling, finance or accounting (bachelor’s or master’s) or equivalent experience; [3 to 8] years of experience in controlling, of which at least [2] years in a comparable role with autonomy; advanced Excel (Power Query, Power Pivot, dynamic arrays) and command of at least one BI or consolidation tool (Power BI, Tableau, Lucanet, Jedox, SAP CO, IDL Konsis); P&L and balance-sheet reading at HGB level.
- Desired: SAP CO experience; IFRS familiarity (leasing under IFRS 16, development costs, revenue recognition); SQL basics (reading and writing joins); experience at a multi-site or multi-entity SMB; an international certification (CIMA, CMA, ACCA) or the IHK certified accountant (Bilanzbuchhalter:in); sectoral depth in [our industry].
- Disqualifying: no experience with autonomous forecast or budget building; no command of bridge analyses (volume, price, mix); pure accounting experience without an analytical profile; rejection of modern BI tools.
What we offer.
- Gross annual compensation fixed [55-85] k€. No structural variable component; a possible annual profit-share of 5 to 10 % per company practice.
- Model: [full-time, hybrid 2 to 3 days / week on-site, based in [city]].
- Benefits: [company pension, bike leasing, employee shares, vacation, home-office policy, professional development (e.g. CIMA, CMA, IHK Bilanzbuchhalter:in, BI certifications)].
- Stack: [ERP, a BI or consolidation tool, treasury tools, advanced Excel].
Salary band
Base salary, gross annual
- 25th percentile
- €45,000
- Median
- €52,000
- 75th percentile
- €62,000
Gross fixed salary per year for an entry-level Financial Controller (0 to 2 years of experience, typically a recent business-administration graduate or a candidate stepping up from a controlling internship or working-student role) at a German SMB. Berlin, Munich and other tech- or industry-heavy metros pull upward; regional and rural placements trend downward. Early SAP CO or Power BI exposure and a completed internship in controlling or accounting pull up within the band; a purely academic profile with no placement pulls down. As at mid level, this position carries no structural variable component.
Sources: Stepstone Gehaltsdaten Junior Controller:in Deutschland 2026; Stepstone Gehaltsreport 2026, Schwerpunkt Controlling; Destatis Verdiensterhebung (April 2025, Berufsgruppe 7220 Finanzdienstleistungen, Rechnungswesen und Controlling)
Where to source this role
LinkedIn
€300-500 / month (Job Slots plus Recruiter Lite)Clearly the strongest channel for Financial Controller profiles in Germany, especially with a business-administration degree and a corporate or Mittelstand background. Active sourcing via InMail (Recruiter Lite or Premium) delivers notable response rates for this role: controllers are more reactive to cold outreach than accountants, because they review move options more often. Expect 50 to 70 % of qualified applications via LinkedIn when a job post and active sourcing are combined.
XING
ProJobs from €195 / monthStill very relevant for Financial Controllers in the classic Mittelstand (mechanical engineering, industry, wholesale, construction, healthcare), especially in NRW, Bavaria and Baden-Württemberg. Profiles over 35 with a long Mittelstand tenure are often more reachable here than on LinkedIn. ProJobs delivers good results for industrial controllers with SAP CO experience.
Finance headhunters (Robert Half Finance, Hays Finance)
Success fee 20-25 % of the gross annual salaryFor mid and senior controlling roles in Germany, specialized recruiters are a realistic channel, especially when the profile needs a specific combination (e.g. SAP CO plus IFRS plus group reporting). Robert Half Finance and Hays Finance have deep databases of passive candidates. Fee typically 20 to 25 % of the gross annual salary; guarantee usually 3 to 6 months. Only use when LinkedIn and XING do not deliver after 30 days or the profile is very narrow.
Referrals and alumni networks
€1,500-3,000 referral bonus after a passed probation periodOne of the most effective channels for this role: good controllers know other good controllers, often from a shared business-administration degree or from earlier corporate stations. Structure an internal referral program with a €1,500 to €3,000 bonus on a passed probation period. Alumni networks of universities with a strong controlling program (WHU, Mannheim, Vallendar, EBS) deliver additional qualified contacts.
Evaluation playbook
The Financial Controller role reveals itself across three to four evaluation stages. Stage 3 (a budget or month-end case study) is the central filter: without demonstrated analytical confidence and business-partnering ability, tool skills and an academic profile have no foundation.
Stage 1: CV review
Look for: sectoral coherence (a controller from industry works differently than someone from services or SaaS), tenure (at least 24 months on previous controlling roles), concrete tool mentions (SAP CO, Lucanet, Power BI, Tableau, IDL Konsis, Jedox) and explicit responsibility perimeters. A candidate who names only reporting or analysis without detailing the tools and granularity is conspicuous. Check the academic profile: a business-administration degree with a focus on controlling, finance or accounting is standard; CIMA, CMA or the IHK certified accountant (Bilanzbuchhalter:in) is a plus for profiles with corporate experience.
Stage 2: Phone interview (30 min)
Three questions only: (1) Describe your current responsibility perimeter (forecasting, budgeting, month-end analysis, business partnering with which functions?), (2) Which tools do you use most intensively, and in which module do you feel most confident? (3) Why are you looking for a change now? (clear narrative vs. scattered). Outcome: go/no-go in a 5-minute debrief.
Stage 3: Structured interview plus case study (120 min)
Work through the 15 questions below, alternating behavioral, situational, technical, case and values (60 min). Add a case study: either building a budget from a provided data set (a revenue forecast, an OPEX breakdown, an investment cash flow) or analyzing a month-end close with unusual variances (60 min, at the whiteboard or with an Excel file). At least 2 interviewers, ideally the commercial lead or CFO plus an experienced controller. Independent scoring before the debrief.
Stage 4: References (structured check)
Call two references: a former manager (commercial lead, CFO, management) and a business partner from an operational function (sales, operations, product) who worked with the candidate. Ask both the same four questions: What is she/he strongest at? Where would you hire someone complementary? Would you hire them again tomorrow? A concrete example where they influenced a business decision with numbers? The fourth question delivers the real signal: effectiveness as a business partner, not pure number production.
Structured interview questions
BehavioralBusiness partnering Describe a situation where your analysis changed a business decision made by management. What was your role concretely?
What a strong answer surfacesBusiness-partnering ability: the candidate describes the data analysis, the translation into a recommendation and the effect on the decision (an investment stopped, pricing changed, sales focus shifted). Bonus: the candidate names how they then convinced management of the recommendation. Candidates who describe only I produce reports without an impact example act as a data supplier, not as a business partner.
BehavioralAnalytical rigor Tell me about a particularly intense budget or forecast phase. What happened, and what did you learn from it?
What a strong answer surfacesCalm under pressure and method: the ability to prioritize under deadline (the headline figures first, granularity later), to gather inputs from several functions and to uncover inconsistencies. Bonus: the candidate afterward built a template, checklist or schedule for the following cycles. Anyone who describes a budget phase where everything ran smoothly has never budgeted autonomously or downplays the reality of the process.
BehavioralBusiness partnering Describe a situation where you had to explain a complex financial message (e.g. a margin erosion or a forecast miss) to management or an operational team.
What a strong answer surfacesThe ability to translate: turning a technical concept (a contribution-margin shift, working-capital tie-up, an EBITDA bridge) into operational vocabulary, without condescension or unnecessary jargon. Bonus: a concrete example with a visual representation (a waterfall chart, a bridge chart) and a clear action derivation. At an SMB the controller is often the financial translation layer between accounting and management; pedagogy is therefore critical.
SituationalAnalytical rigor In the month-end close you find that the margin in one business unit is 4 percentage points below plan. How do you analyze the cause, and how do you communicate the result?
What a strong answer surfacesA structured plan: (1) build a bridge (volume, price, mix, unit costs, special effects), (2) quantify the respective contributions, (3) cross-check the cause with the operational function (sales for pricing, operations for unit costs), (4) a clear recommendation to management. Anyone who voices a guess straight away without a bridge analysis (it's the competition) or pushes the difference into the next month with further detailed analysis needed lacks analytical rigor.
SituationalBusiness acumen Management asks you to build a business case for a planned investment (machine, software, a new branch) of €800,000. Which steps do you take, and which metrics do you deliver?
What a strong answer surfacesMethod: (1) align the assumptions with the operational stakeholders (sales for the revenue effect, operations for the productivity effect), (2) build a cash-flow series over 5 to 7 years with investment, operating and tax effects, (3) deliver metrics: NPV, IRR, payback period, sensitized scenarios (best, base, worst), (4) a clear recommendation with risk notes. Anyone who presents only an ROI without a cash-flow series and without sensitivity stays superficial; anyone who delivers 80 Excel tabs without a clear recommendation lacks business partnering.
SituationalBusiness acumen Liquidity will fall below a critical threshold in 90 days if nothing happens. How do you structure your recommendation to management?
What a strong answer surfacesA structured plan: (1) build a working-capital bridge (receivables, payables, inventory), (2) identify and quantify levers (accelerate dunning, extend payment terms, reduce inventory, defer investment), (3) scenarios with a clear time profile, (4) a recommendation with the 2 to 3 most effective levers and an owner per lever. Anyone who jumps straight to expand the credit line without quantifying the levers overlooks the operational steering potential; anyone who names purely operational levers without addressing the escalation path on failure is not mature enough.
TechnicalExcel and BI competence Which tools do you use for reporting and analysis? Describe the tool you are most confident in, and one that has given you the most difficulty.
What a strong answer surfacesConcrete familiarity with at least one modern reporting and BI solution (SAP CO, Lucanet, Power BI, Tableau, Jedox, IDL Konsis, Cognos) and with advanced Excel (Power Query, Power Pivot, dynamic arrays). The ability to talk in detail about one module (e.g. consolidating a forecast in Lucanet, building a Power BI dashboard with DAX measures, parameterizing a SAP CO profit-center report). Admitting a difficulty shows honesty; anyone who masters all tools is suspect.
TechnicalP&L and balance-sheet reading Explain the EBITDA bridge between two consecutive fiscal years at an industrial SMB with the following structure: revenue minus material costs, personnel costs, other operating expenses. Which drivers do you break out, and in which order do you present them?
What a strong answer surfacesExpected answer: (1) volume effect on revenue, (2) price effect on revenue, (3) mix effect on revenue, (4) material-cost effect (volume plus price plus supplier mix), (5) personnel-cost effect (FTE change plus tariff increase plus bonus), (6) other effects (energy, rent, special effects). Presentation order: from the largest to the smallest driver, with the respective sign. Anyone who cannot break down the EBITDA bridge or mixes effects (e.g. volume and mix in one driver) does not command P&L analysis at mid level.
TechnicalP&L and balance-sheet reading The difference between HGB and IFRS in the recognition of development costs and lease agreements? In which cases must a German SMB worry about it?
What a strong answer surfacesAnswer: under HGB, development costs are generally expensed immediately (an option to capitalize self-created intangible assets under § 248(2) HGB, rarely used in practice); under IAS 38, development costs are to be capitalized under six criteria. Leasing under HGB distinguishes operating and finance leasing (capitalization only for finance leasing); under IFRS 16 virtually all leases are capitalized. A German SMB is affected when it has a parent or subsidiary in IFRS consolidation (a listed group or group-wide IFRS reporting). Candidates who know the HGB-IFRS logic without having applied IFRS are a fit for a mid role at a pure SMB; anyone who has never heard of it is a warning signal at a group subsidiary.
CaseBusiness acumen Forecast build: your company has reached 24 M€ in revenue over 8 months this year (a run rate of 3 M€ per month). Sales reports 30 % growth for next year based on the pipeline. Which steps do you take before you confirm a forecast number?
What a strong answer surfacesExpected steps: (1) adjust the run rate for seasonality (Q4 is stronger or weaker than average in many sectors), (2) decompose the pipeline assumption (historical vs. assumed win rate, the ramp time for new customers, the churn assumption for existing customers), (3) cross-check top-down market growth (a sector analysis, competitive moves), (4) build sensitivity bands (best, base, worst) and validate the base scenario with sales. Anyone who simply takes 30 % into the forecast acts as a data supplier; anyone who rejects 30 % without discussion is not capable of business partnering.
CaseAnalytical rigor Working-capital analysis: receivable days (DSO) have risen from 45 to 62 days, payable days (DPO) have stayed constant at 38 days, inventory turnover has worsened from 6 to 4.5. Which levers do you propose to management, in which order?
What a strong answer surfacesMethod: (1) decompose the DSO rise (which customer segments, new payment terms, dunning discipline), (2) decompose inventory turnover (which item groups, ordering behavior, seasonal stocking), (3) quantify the levers (each day of DSO at 30 M€ revenue equals about €82k of tied-up liquidity), (4) order by impact and implementation speed (dunning in 30 days, inventory reduction in 90 days, supplier payment-term negotiation in parallel). Anyone who makes proposals without quantification or names the levers with equal priority lacks analytical steering ability.
CaseExcel and BI competence You take over a role where the monthly management reporting is produced in 14 manual Excel sheets with a 3 to 5-day lag after month-end. What 90-day plan restores it?
What a strong answer surfacesA systematic method: (1) an audit of the existing sheets and identification of the 3 to 5 most important metrics, (2) identify the source systems (ERP, CRM, payroll) and evaluate the data connection (direct vs. CSV export), (3) choose Power Query or Power BI as the platform depending on company maturity, (4) an iterative approach: first automate the top-3 reports, then expand, (5) target: bring the reporting lag to 2 days after the close. Anyone who answers a full BI implementation in 6 months without naming iteration lacks operational pragmatism; anyone who answers it stays manual but faster lacks tool maturity.
ValuesBusiness partnering How do you take critical feedback from a business partner (e.g. the head of sales, the head of operations) who calls your analysis detached from reality?
What a strong answer surfacesA learning posture: the candidate describes taking the feedback seriously (not just hearing it), reviewing the assumptions jointly with the business partner and either adjusting the analysis or communicating the assumptions more clearly. Bonus: the candidate translated the learning into a recurring practice (e.g. a monthly assumptions review with the operational functions). Anyone who describes having justified their own logic instead of taking the remark on board shows a coachability weakness that is critical in business partnering.
ValuesBusiness partnering Describe your relationship with accounting, the tax adviser and the auditor. Where do you see the interface between controlling and accounting?
What a strong answer surfacesA partnership posture: the controller uses accounting as a data source but checks the analytical consistency themselves (e.g. cost-center allocation, accruals with a plan-actual effect). Bonus: a concrete example where the candidate reworked an account structure with accounting in order to break things down better analytically. Anyone who describes accounting as a subordinate function or a mere data supplier shows a defensive posture that complicates audits and the month-end close; anyone who has no view of their own on the interface does not operate at mid level.
ValuesBusiness partnering An analysis shows an unpleasant effect (e.g. a margin erosion in a strategically important product, a performance shortfall in a newly hired sales unit). Management asks you to soften the message before it goes to the advisory board. How do you react?
What a strong answer surfacesThe ability to say no without confrontation while preserving analytical integrity: the candidate proposes to add context to the message (a root-cause analysis, an action plan) rather than altering it, and names the risks of a softened presentation to the advisory board. Bonus: the candidate cites the responsibility of the CFO function toward supervisory bodies and personal professional liability. Anyone who answers I adjust it without questioning does not protect management in a supervisory case; anyone who refuses dryly without offering an alternative lacks business partnering.
How to recognize a great hire
| Trait | Below bar | On bar | Above bar |
|---|---|---|---|
| Analytical rigor | Delivers reports with no recognizable bridge analysis (volume, price, mix, special effects). Plan-actual variances are commented on without a cause breakdown. Recurring inconsistencies between data sources are not uncovered. | A structured bridge analysis on the most important metrics (P&L, margin, working capital). Quantifies drivers and checks assumptions with the operational functions. Spots and reports data inconsistencies in their own perimeter. | The analytical reference on the team: breaks down complex effects (an EBITDA bridge across multiple business units, consolidation effects) without help. Anticipates risk areas before they become a problem. Trains juniors in the bridge methodology. |
| Excel and BI competence | Uses Excel at a basic level (VLOOKUP, simple pivots). Reporting stays manual with many copy-paste steps. No own BI experience; dependent on IT for data extraction. | Advanced Excel (Power Query, Power Pivot, dynamic arrays, DAX basics). Commands at least one BI or consolidation tool (Power BI, Tableau, Lucanet, Jedox) in full autonomy. Can read SQL queries and write simple joins. | Builds complete BI dashboards with DAX measures, drill-down and self-service logic. Automates month-end reporting (Power Automate, scripts) to a 2-day lag. Structures data models for self-service and consolidation across several subsidiaries. |
| P&L and balance-sheet reading | Reads the P&L and balance sheet at a surface level (revenue, EBITDA, equity). Accruals, working-capital mechanics, the cash-flow reconciliation are not confidently commanded. HGB-IFRS differences are unknown or unclear. | Commands the P&L, balance sheet and cash-flow statement confidently; can break down an EBITDA bridge and perform a working-capital analysis. Understands the HGB-IFRS logic (leasing, development costs, revenue recognition), even if not all topics have been applied personally. | A deep understanding of accounting mechanics including consolidation (elimination of intercompany revenue, capital consolidation, currency effects). Recognizes analytical distortions from accounting options (e.g. capitalizing development costs, operating vs. finance leasing) and adjusts the analysis accordingly. |
| Business partnering | Delivers reports on request without active recommendations. Little contact with operational functions outside the reporting occasion. A defensive posture on questions about the method or the assumptions. | Active recommendations on business decisions with a clear data basis. Maintains an accessible relationship with sales, operations and management. Can explain and visualize technical topics in operational vocabulary. | A recognized financial point of reference in the company: other functions consult spontaneously to anticipate the financial impact of their decisions. Structures assumptions reviews with operational functions and trains other teams in the key concepts (contribution margin, cash-flow effect, investment ROI). |
| Business acumen | Analyses stay in financial logic (accounts, postings, balances) without a link to operational reality. Sector specifics (business model, value creation, cost structure) are not built into the analysis. | Understands the business model and the central operational drivers (customer acquisition cost, order throughput, material-cost mechanics). Links financial and operational metrics in analyses and forecasts. | Brings a genuine strategic view of the business model: recognizes levers that operational functions themselves do not see and proposes pricing, investment or structural adjustments. A concrete example: a recommendation that led to a measurable margin or cash-flow improvement. |
30 / 60 / 90 day success plan
By day 30
- An understanding of the complete reporting perimeter (month-end close, KPI reporting, the forecast cycle, the budget process) and the most important data sources (ERP, CRM, payroll, treasury)
- An audit of the existing reporting: identifying the three to five most important weak points (manual bottlenecks, inconsistencies, missing driver analyses)
- First documented 1:1s with management, the commercial lead and at least two operational business partners (sales, operations) on expectations and priorities
- Taking over the running reporting routines (month-end analysis, the KPI dashboard, the forecast update) without external help
By day 60
- First independent bridge analysis on the month-end close produced and presented to management (a plan-actual variance with broken-down drivers)
- At least two manual reporting steps automated (Power Query, Power BI or comparable); the reporting lag reduced
- The forecast cycle taken over: inputs gathered from the operational functions, assumptions documented, sensitivity bands built
- First structured recommendation to management on an analytical finding (a margin shift, a working-capital effect, an investment topic)
By day 90
- A stable month-end cadence with a max. 5-working-day lag (or an agreed target) held consistently
- The budget process prepared or already kicked off (depending on the annual calendar): timeline, templates, stakeholder mapping
- Documentation of the central reporting and forecast procedures (sources, assumptions, validation steps) completed
- A formal review with management or the commercial lead: development areas set for the following 90 days (e.g. a BI roadmap, assumptions reviews, expanding business partnering)
Common hiring mistakes for this role
Controller recruiting at the German SMB suffers from three recurring confusions: seniority level, functional breadth and tool maturity. These four mistakes most often cost time and money.
Confusing controller and accountant
The most common confusion at SMBs. The accountant (Finanzbuchhalter:in) keeps the books and prepares the close (45 k€). The controller analyzes, forecasts and advises management with numbers (68 k€). Anyone who looks for a controller at an accountant's salary either attracts accountant profiles labeled with Excel experience, or loses the controller candidates in the first conversations. Clarify the analytical demand and the seniority level clearly in the ad: forecasting, budgeting, business partnering, investment analysis are controller tasks, not accountant tasks.
Underestimating sectoral specifics
A controller from mechanical engineering has different reflexes than someone from SaaS or services. The focus areas differ: order margin and working capital in industry; ARR, net revenue retention and CAC payback at SaaS; project margin and revenue recognition in services. Anyone who recruits far away sectorally needs 4 to 8 months of re-onboarding and intensive support from the commercial lead. If you work in a specific environment (construction, healthcare, software subscription), name it explicitly in the ad and weight the sector question in the interview.
Hiring without a case study
A trap many German SMBs pay for dearly: a candidate who presents well, speaks fluently about Excel and BI, but struggles with the technical concept in a budget build or a month-end analysis. Very common, because many profiles have worked in heavily supplied reporting environments where the models and assumptions were given. The case study (stage 3) is not optional for this position; anyone who skips this stage buys blind and pays the risk in the first budget cycle or the first critical investment analysis.
Confusing tool maturity with business partnering
A second trap, frequent with tech-savvy profiles: the candidate commands Power BI, DAX and SQL excellently but cannot name an example in the interview where their own analysis influenced a business decision. Tool maturity without business partnering produces beautiful dashboards that have no effect. In the interview, weight the behavioral and values questions at least as heavily as the technical and case questions, especially for positions with high management exposure.
Frequently asked questions
What does a Financial Controller earn at an SMB in Germany?
The reference range for a Financial Controller with 3 to 8 years of experience at a German SMB (based in Berlin or Munich) is 55 to 85 k€ gross fixed per year (median around 68 k€). Bavaria, Baden-Württemberg and Hesse trend upward (+5 to +10 %); eastern Germany and rural regions outside the metros trend downward (-10 to -15 %). Profiles with SAP CO depth, BI tools (Power BI, Tableau, Lucanet) or group-reporting experience trend upward. This position has no structural variable component; some SMBs offer an annual profit-share of 5 to 10 %.
What is the difference between a Financial Controller, an accountant and a Group Controller?
Three levels, three profiles. The accountant (Finanzbuchhalter:in) keeps the books and prepares the financial statements (5 to 10 years of experience, 38 to 56 k€). The Financial Controller analyzes the results, builds the forecast and budget, advises management as a business partner with numbers (3 to 8 years, 55 to 85 k€). The Group Controller or Head of Controlling consolidates several entities, owns the group reporting, engages with supervisory bodies and the auditor (8 to 15 years, 85 to 130 k€). The seniority level must be named clearly in the ad title to avoid mis-hires.
How long does it take to hire a Financial Controller in Germany?
Expect 55 to 80 days between publishing the ad and the signed contract. The market is tight on mid profiles with the combination of Excel and BI maturity, P&L and balance-sheet reading and business-partnering experience. The timeline lengthens in the regions outside the metros and in the peak months of September and January (the budget and year-end-close cycle). Cutting below 55 days usually comes at the expense of the case study, which noticeably worsens hiring quality and raises the risk in the first budget cycle.
Which tools must a Financial Controller command?
Mandatory at mid level: advanced Excel (Power Query, Power Pivot, dynamic arrays, DAX basics) and at least one BI or consolidation solution (Power BI, Tableau, Lucanet, Jedox, IDL Konsis). In an SAP environment, additionally SAP CO (profit-center and cost-center reporting). At group subsidiaries, Lucanet or IDL Konsis is often expected. SQL basics (reading and writing joins) are increasingly standard at tech-oriented SMBs. Command of at least one tool in depth is more important than a surface knowledge of many tools.
What legal requirements apply to Financial Controller postings in Germany?
Three central requirements: (1) a gender-neutral job title with (m/w/d) or colon spelling (§ 11 AGG), (2) the obligation of pay transparency in the ad or before the first interview (EU Pay Transparency Directive 2023/970, implementation into German law by 7 June 2026), (3) transparency about the use of AI tools for pre-selection and guaranteed human oversight (EU AI Act, applicable from 2 August 2026). In addition: the probation period is to be agreed at a maximum of 6 months under § 622 BGB, fixed-term probation employment must be justified under § 14 TzBfG.
What training or degree is required for a Financial Controller?
The standard is a bachelor's or master's degree in business administration with a focus on controlling, finance or accounting (university or applied-sciences university). Universities with a strong controlling program (WHU, Mannheim, EBS, Vallendar) deliver above-average profiles. Plus: internationally recognized certifications such as CIMA (Chartered Institute of Management Accountants), CMA (Certified Management Accountant) or ACCA for profiles with a corporate background; the IHK qualification as a certified accountant (Geprüfte:r Bilanzbuchhalter:in) is a plus for analytically strong accountants moving into controlling. Equivalent experience without a degree is acceptable at an SMB if proven by references and case-study performance.