Can you study without an Abitur?
Yes, in Germany you can often study without an Abitur, for example through completed vocational training plus work experience, or a Meister qualification. The exact rules are set by each federal state. Whether you can enroll at Tomorrow University is decided by your individual Eligibility Check, so the best move is to start there.
Can you study at a university in Germany without an Abitur?
In general, the Abitur is not the only route into a German university. In many federal states you can also study with a vocational qualification, for example a completed vocational training (Berufsausbildung) plus several years of work experience, or a Meister and comparable advanced qualifications. This is often called the third educational pathway. The specific rules, such as how many years of experience count or whether your field has to match your degree, are set independently by each federal state. This is general information about studying in Germany, not a promise from Tomorrow University. For your own situation, always check the rules of your federal state and the entry requirements of the university you have in mind.
What are the entry requirements at Tomorrow University?
To study at Tomorrow University you need a secondary school leaving certificate and English at B2 level. Bachelor's programs also include an entrance exam that you complete successfully before you start. If your certificate is not German, we run an official document verification together with the Hessian Ministry of Higher Education, Research and the Arts (the Ministry Check), which determines whether your qualification meets the level needed to study at university in Germany. What matters is this: your individual Eligibility Check, or the Ministry Check, decides whether you meet the requirements. That is exactly what the check is for, so the simplest path is to have your case reviewed.
Can you study online and alongside a full-time job?
Yes. Tomorrow University programs are 100% online, self-paced, and designed to fit around full-time work. There is no on-campus requirement, optional in-person immersions exist but are never mandatory. You learn when it suits your week. Many programs also offer a full-time or part-time option, for a Master's that is roughly 18 months full-time or 24 months part-time, depending on the workload. That keeps studying alongside your job realistic, even in busy stretches.
What if your qualification is from outside Germany?
Then your eligibility runs through the Ministry Check: together with the Hessian Ministry of Higher Education, Research and the Arts, your non-German certificate is formally verified and assessed for whether it meets the level needed to study at a university in Germany. Because study is 100% online, you do not need a German student visa, there is no requirement to be on site. For the details of your own case, the Eligibility Check is the right first step.

Christian Rebernik
Co-Founder & CEO