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Munich has 4 schools in the german curriculum category, providing families with focused options.
Compare 7 German Curriculum international schools in Munich, Germany. Filter by curriculum, fees (average EUR 10,225), location, and more to find the right international school now.
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Leonardo da Vinci Munich is a private Italo-German school offering a continuous path from primary through Gymnasium. The curriculum blends Italian educational traditions with the Bavarian system, creating a plurilingual and intercultural learning context. Students progress toward the Bavarian Abitur, with alternative qualifications such as QUALI or EMA after grade 9, or MSA after grade 10; there is also a route to complete the Abitur by entering class 11. The Italo-German bilingual setting emphasizes multilingualism and intercultural competencies within a cosmopolitan school community. Close individual guidance supports each learner as they navigate diverse subjects across grades. The school operates under BiDIBi e.V., a non-profit dedicated to promoting Italian language and culture in Bavaria, and collaborates with universities and cultural organizations to enrich education. From first grade to maturity, LDV München aims to prepare students for the global world while preserving Italian educational values and Bavarian standards. The campus champions language-rich learning and intercultural collaboration.
Obermenzinger Gymnasium is a private German gymnasium in Munich's Obermenzing district with about 340 pupils and 75 staff. It follows the German curriculum and offers the G9 pathway in two branches: Wirtschafts-Wissenschaftliches Gymnasium (WWG) and Sprachliches Gymnasium (SG). Bilingual teaching has been available since 2013 through German-English B-class tracks. The school uses a Two-Teacher System with Pedagogical Assistants to support small classes. ABIplus enables students to obtain a professional qualification alongside the Abitur. The campus emphasises STEM and cultural education, with an ICT program that includes ICDL certification from grade 6 and robotics/ computer science in the G9 pathway; since 2024/25, AI tools have been integrated for teaching. Living Europe / Erasmus+ exchanges have been active since 1996, with study trips. Facilities include a canteen, sport hall and outdoor courts; MusiKultur, theatre and instrumental ensembles complement arts education. Scuba diving is integrated into the curriculum with trips and PADI training.
Located in Germany, Nymphenburger Gymnasium is an IB World School authorised in 2012 to offer both the International Baccalaureate Diploma Programme and the German Abitur. The Diploma Programme spans two years and uses six subject groups plus the core—Creativity, Activity and Service (CAS); the Extended Essay (EE); and Theory of Knowledge (TOK). Subjects are chosen from Group 1 German A Literature HL; Group 2 English Language & Literature HL and English B HL; Group 3 History SL and Global Politics SL; Group 4 Biology HL and Physics HL; Group 5 Mathematics Analysis & Approaches SL; Group 6 Film SL. As of 2024 a Course Candidate option lets Abitur students complete at least two DP subjects and, core elements to tailor study—for example Biology HL for Medicine or Film for the Arts. Core remains central to inquiry, research and service. Since 2012, the school has facilitated IB Diploma and Abitur pathways.
Jan Amos Comenius Grundschule (JACG) is a four-year private, state-recognized primary school in München-Pasing that follows the Bavarian curriculum with a German-English bilingual program. Ages 6 to 10. The school adds a dedicated Europa subject that explores family origins and broader European contexts. In every classroom three adults—one German-speaking teacher, one English-speaking teacher, and a Ganztagsbetreuung paraprofessional—support learning, with English instruction delivered through immersion; English instruction becomes formal in Grade 3, and the same teacher speaks English or German throughout the lesson. JACG is part of Münchner Schulstiftung – Ernst von Borries. Facilities include an extended day from 8:30 to 16:00, with before-school care from 7:30 and after-school care until 18:30; a warm noonday meal and recess snacks. GTB offers a rotating program with sports, theatre, music, and creative projects. On-site mother-tongue instruction in languages such as French, Spanish and Greek supports language and culture. A pupil leadership program, called Paten, fosters mentoring of younger students.
International Bilingual School Munich offers a full-day program and IB World School status since 2017. It combines the IB Primary Years Programme with the Bavarian LehrplanPLUS curriculum for ages 6 to 11 inclusive, delivering core subjects in a bilingual English–German environment. In classes 1 to 4, English-speaking and German-speaking teachers work together under a one language model, with families able to choose a focus language and receive extra instruction. Assessments rely on performance-based methods—PYP portfolios, conferences, and ongoing feedback—alongside periodic standardised tests. IBSM has been state-approved since 2010 and runs four classes, normally up to 25 pupils per class, with all-day sessions from 9:00 to 16:00. The Lerchenauerstraße campus is complemented by a planned Feldmochinger Campus featuring a bilingual library, an auditorium, a roof terrace, and spaces for movement and sport; a Mensa serves meals. After-school activities include breakdance, yoga, swimming and art workshops; social-emotional learning is central to PYP.
Phorms Campus München is a private bilingual full-day school in Munich-Bogenhausen, teaching German-English across Crèche, Kindergarten, Grundschule and Gymnasium. The school offers a German curriculum alongside the International Baccalaureate Diploma, and provides both Bavarian Abitur and IB Diploma programs, with Abitur examinations possible in English for English-taught subjects. It serves ages 2 to 18 and operates a day-long concept with a bilingual learning environment. Approximately 60% of lessons are in English and 40% in German. The campus at Maria-Theresia-Straße 35 features large grounds, a football pitch, climbing frames, and outdoor play equipment; Crèche and Kindergarten occupy a separate villa with a dedicated playground. Modern IT infrastructure and high-speed Wi-Fi enable digital learning, and Phorms Munich holds Digital School status. Notably, Phorms Primary School was recognised as a STEM-Friendly School in 2025. The campus emphasises mentoring, work experience in Year 9, career guidance, and active parental involvement within an all-day community today.
Jules Verne Campus Munich is a state-approved, non-profit gGmbH offering Kindergarten, Elementary School and Grammar School under a single educational concept. The Bavarian curriculum forms the foundation, with English instruction and immersion. In Elementary School, two guides, German- and English-speaking, support bilingual learning, often with parallel lessons. In Grammar School, subjects are taught in English immersion, with German used as appropriate. The campus emphasizes movement and sport as part of daily learning, guided by a Sports Coordinator, and a designed environment with rooms named after Jules Verne books. Facilities include a tree house library, an art studio, learning studios and the Oasis dining hall. Outdoor spaces feature a football field, climbing frame and bouldering wall. After-school Hort runs to 5:30 pm with options such as créAktiva. Distinctive programs include Curiosology and créAktiva, with Future Skills and coaching to foster independent learning and social-emotional development. Abitur follows the Bavarian Gymnasium standard.
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