Germany

Explore Germany's leave and income replacement benefits, along with up-to-date information on average wages and the gender pay gap. See how these entitlements and wages work in practice with a detailed example.

Entitlements

Maternity leave and pay

14 weeks

Paid maternity leave

100%

Rate of maternity pay

"Mutterschutz" is 14 weeks (6 before, 8 after). This is then often combined with parental leave (Elternzeit) and pay (Elterngeld). Source The 14 weeks are paid at 100% of previous net salary (health insurance covers €13/day with employer topping up rest). Source

No shared leave, however both parents are entitled to parental leave (Elternzeit) and pay (Elterngeld). Source

Paternity leave and pay

0 weeks

Paid paternity leave

No paternity leave for non-birth parents, however in order to receive all 14 months of parental leave pay (Elterngeld), 2 months need to be taken by the partner. Non birthing parents are also enitled to Elternzeit (3 years). Source There is no specific policy for the non-birthgiver, however they can take Elternzeit. Source

Parental leave and pay

52.7 weeks
26.35 weeksper parent

Paid parental leave

66%
max/week€413.79

Rate of parental pay

156.5 weeks

Parental leave per parent

Both parents are entitled to 3 years of parental leave per child ("Elternzeit") up to the point the child turns 8 years old. Source Families can split a total of 14 months of paid parental leave ("Elterngeld") at a rate of 65%-67% of net pay with the maximum of €1800 per month. A single parent can only take up to 12 months. "Mutterschutz" supersedes Elterngeld for the birth parent. We assume the bith parent takes 12 months of "Elterngeld" (minus the 8 weeks of "Mutterschutz") and the non-birth parent takes 2 months of Elterngeld. Source

Statistics

€50,257.00

Average gross yearly wage

37.44%

Tax rate

17.3%

Gender wage gap

Thethe average gross yearly wage is €50,257.00. Source At this salary, the effective tax rate (including income tax and social security contributions, but excluding any benefits) is 37.44%. SourceHence, the average yearly take home (net) wage is €31,440.78.

The measured gender wage gap is 17.3%. Hence, with 52 week years, the net weekly wages are:

  • For a woman: €547.38.
  • For a man: €661.88.

Practical example

For the birth parent

162.5 weeks
14 weeks maternity156.5 weeks parental

Max protected leave available

€23,559.13

Income replacement

The birth parent is assumed to have taken 12 months of Elterngeld (there is also ElterngeldPlus, which can double the time off for half the compensation). Germany pays benefits based on net salary and there's no tax to be paid.

Note: Maternity leave will supercede available parental leave.

For the non-birth parent

156.5 weeks
0 weeks paternity156.5 weeks parental

Max protected leave available

€3,600.00

Income replacement

The non-birth parent is assumed to have taken 2 months of Elterngeld to provide the 14 months of support available to the couple. Germany pays benefits based on net salary and there's no tax to be paid.

Other countries: