Henry Harvin Education, the multinational edtech has announced the launch of the Indo-Berlin German Language School, its latest evolution from the 2013-founded School of Languages. This dedicated German institute arrives as Indian enrollments in European universities spike 25% yearly, with Germany leading at over 40,000 Indian students last academic year.
Indo-Berlin German Language School offers a tiered diploma structure covering all levels of German from A1 to C2 allowing learners to progress through a clear academic pathway. Each level concludes with an internal assessment and a recognised diploma certificate issued by Indo-Berlin and backed by Henry Harvin Education’s global affiliations. The diplomas are designed to help students demonstrate verified proficiency when applying to universities, employers, or migration authorities in Germany and the broader DACH region.
Speaking on the launch, Kounal Gupta, CEO, Henry Harvin Education, underscored the strategic importance of the venture. “The launch of Indo-Berlin is a direct response to a major skills gap. German proficiency is no longer a niche asset, it’s a prerequisite for accessing some of the most respected career and research ecosystems globally. We are not simply teaching a language, we are opening the doors to one of the world’s strongest economies and preparing our students to embody the precision and quality that Germany represents.”
The focus of Indo-Berlin German Language school is to ensure that learners don’t only meet language benchmarks, but also understand the conduct, clarity and discipline associated with German academic and professional environments. It marks an important addition to India’s language-learning and mobility ecosystem at a time when German proficiency is increasingly tied to education access, skilled migration and cross-border employment.
With its diploma-based structure, cultural orientation modules and alignment with international certification standards, the institution positions itself to support a growing cohort of Indian learners preparing for academic and professional transitions to Germany.




