A techie who recently relocated to Bengaluru from Germany says the shift in lifestyle was far bigger than he had expected. In a post on social media, the software engineer listed seven major differences between life in the two places.
“Moving from Germany to Bengaluru changed my daily routine more than I imagined,” the techie, who identified himself as Tanuj, wrote on X.
Here’s how he compared the two lifestyles:
Bengaluru:
Commenting on the post, an X user wrote, “I’ve realised there’s no universally ‘better’ life. Every lifestyle comes with its own gains and trade-offs. At one stage of life, you may crave silence, structure, and space. At another, you may need energy, chaos, people, and a sense of belonging. A lot also depends on your situation in life — age, children, career phase, health, support system, parents, relationships, and even what you are emotionally or spiritually seeking at that moment. Different environments feed different parts of us. So be where you find joy and feel the most alive, depending on your phase of life. And be happy.”
Another user wrote, “As someone working in Bengaluru’s tech industry, this hits hard. Germany sounds like ‘deep work, clean air, and logging off at 6 PM’.
“Bengaluru, on the other hand, is noise, chaos, traffic — but also energy, community, and late-night Zoom calls. For building a career and network, I’d pick Bengaluru for now. But one day, I’d love German-style work-life balance with Indian-style people and food. Maybe the real dream is: earn like Germany, chill like Germany, vibes like Bengaluru.”
A third user commented, “You should have worked in Bengaluru before moving to Germany and then returning. Except for staying close to family, I don’t miss much, and that feels like a fair compromise because I can still see them regularly, even if less often. Also, Bengaluru is just about a 10-hour journey away, so it’s manageable even during emergencies.”
“Moving from Germany to Bengaluru changed my daily routine more than I imagined,” the techie, who identified himself as Tanuj, wrote on X.
Here’s how he compared the two lifestyles:
Bengaluru:
- Wake up to the sound of cars and trucks
- Morning walks/runs inside a gated society
- Spend 1.5 hours in traffic to reach office
- More meetings and brainstorming, less actual work
- Lunch with coworkers
- Tea breaks, game breaks, constant chatter
- Back home, but office meetings continue till 10 PM
- Wake up in complete silence
- Run amidst nature and clean air
- Commute using public transport
- More work, less talking
- Lunch alone most days
- No random breaks, silence almost everywhere
- Never opened the laptop after work
Commenting on the post, an X user wrote, “I’ve realised there’s no universally ‘better’ life. Every lifestyle comes with its own gains and trade-offs. At one stage of life, you may crave silence, structure, and space. At another, you may need energy, chaos, people, and a sense of belonging. A lot also depends on your situation in life — age, children, career phase, health, support system, parents, relationships, and even what you are emotionally or spiritually seeking at that moment. Different environments feed different parts of us. So be where you find joy and feel the most alive, depending on your phase of life. And be happy.”
Another user wrote, “As someone working in Bengaluru’s tech industry, this hits hard. Germany sounds like ‘deep work, clean air, and logging off at 6 PM’.
“Bengaluru, on the other hand, is noise, chaos, traffic — but also energy, community, and late-night Zoom calls. For building a career and network, I’d pick Bengaluru for now. But one day, I’d love German-style work-life balance with Indian-style people and food. Maybe the real dream is: earn like Germany, chill like Germany, vibes like Bengaluru.”
A third user commented, “You should have worked in Bengaluru before moving to Germany and then returning. Except for staying close to family, I don’t miss much, and that feels like a fair compromise because I can still see them regularly, even if less often. Also, Bengaluru is just about a 10-hour journey away, so it’s manageable even during emergencies.”




