World Cup winner Toni Kroos announced his return to the German national team on Thursday ahead of Euro 2024 on home soil.
Kroos, 34, will be eligible for selection in the upcoming March international friendlies against France and the Netherlands.
“Hey folks, short and sweet, I’ll be playing for Germany again from March,” Kroos said in an Instagram post.
“Why? Because I was asked by the coach and I’m up for it.
“I’m sure that much more is possible with the team at the European Championship than most people think right now.”
The Real Madrid midfielder, who has 106 caps for Germany, stepped down from international duty after the Euro 2020 last-16 elimination at the hands of eventual finalists England.
The four-time world champions have struggled in recent years, having been dumped out at the group stage in the past two World Cups.
Germany have won just three of their 11 matches since the 2022 Qatar World Cup, a run which led to Hansi Flick becoming the first Germany coach to be sacked.
His replacement Julian Nagelsmann, who has a contract until the end of Euro 2024, has won just one of four games since taking over, including defeats by Turkey and Austria.
Kroos has missed just two out of a possible 32 matches in La Liga and the Champions League for Real Madrid this season amid an ongoing injury crisis for the Spanish league leaders.
“His pass rate is the same as 10 years ago. He’s always top class,” Real coach Carlo Ancelotti said of Kroos earlier this month.
Kroos admitted at the same press conference that he “had not made a decision” on a prospective international return, joking that the decision was so difficult that he wanted someone else to make it for him.
Nagelsmann had previously described a Kroos comeback as “an interesting thought”.
Germany will play a friendly against France in Lyon on March 23 before hosting the Netherlands four days later in Frankfurt.
Kroos would likely fit into Germany’s brilliant but inexperienced midfield, which includes Jamal Musiala and Florian Wirtz, both of whom are only 20 years old.
The hosts will play Scotland in Munich on June 14, followed by Hungary in Stuttgart on June 19 and Switzerland in Frankfurt on June 23 in Group A.