From Antigua and Barbuda to Germany
When travelling from Antigua and Barbuda to Germany: None of your Antigua and Barbuda plug types fit in Germany. You will need a travel adapter. Voltage is different (110V / 220V → 230V). Check your charger label; if it doesn’t list 230V you’ll also need a voltage converter. Frequency differs (60Hz → 50Hz). Modern phone and laptop chargers are usually fine, but some clocks, motors, and appliances may behave incorrectly.
Your plugs
Type A
No fit
Type B
No fit
Accepted in Germany
Type C
Type F
0 of 2 plug type(s) match
You: A, B • Germany: C, F
No fit for: A, B
Voltage: 110V / 220V → 230V
Different voltage
You may need a voltage converter.
Frequency: 60Hz → 50Hz
Different frequency
Check device supports both 50/60 Hz.
Adapters you may need
Your plug shape does not fully match. Voltage differs; check for 100–240V support.
About electricity in Germany
Germany uses 230V/50Hz with Type C and F (Schuko) sockets, the standard across continental Europe.
Grid & history
Germany is in the middle of the Energiewende, a long-running shift from coal and nuclear to wind and solar. The last three nuclear reactors closed in 2023; renewables now cover roughly half of generation, with the rest split between natural gas and (still) coal.
Availability
Highly reliable power in cities and along major routes. Rural outages are unusual.
Sockets & hotels
Type F (Schuko) is standard everywhere; Type C Europlugs fit Schuko sockets without an adapter.
Energy mix
Coal still in the mix; gas filling the gap from nuclear phase-out.
Practical tips
- A small Type C/F European adapter covers Germany and 25+ neighbouring countries.
- Voltage is 230V. Phone and laptop chargers handle it; older 110V US-only appliances do not.