Is Health Insurance Mandatory in Germany?
Yes — absolutely and without exception. Germany has had universal, mandatory health insurance (Krankenversicherungspflicht) since 2009. Every person residing in Germany must have either public (GKV) or private (PKV) health insurance. There are no exemptions, even for short-term stays. For EU citizens, the EHIC card provides emergency coverage but does not substitute for German health insurance after establishing residency.
For expats, the decision is rarely between GKV and PKV — it's made for you by your employment and income. If you earn below the threshold, GKV is legally mandatory. If you earn above the threshold or are self-employed, you have a choice. The threshold in 2026: €77,400 gross annual salary (€6,450/month).
GKV vs PKV — The Fundamental Split
- Mandatory if earning below €77,400/year
- Rate-based: % of gross salary (capped)
- Employer pays exactly half
- Children + non-earning spouse covered free
- Must accept you regardless of health status
- Standardized base coverage (legally defined)
- Easy to switch between providers
- 96 providers to choose from in 2026
- Optional if earning above €77,400/year
- Fixed premium based on age + health status
- Better coverage options (chief physicians, private rooms)
- Premiums rise with age — significantly
- Each family member pays separately
- Can be rejected based on health history
- Very difficult to switch back to GKV
- 41 private providers in 2026
Compare monthly costs across Germany's 4 biggest public insurers for your salary. Updates in real-time.
2026 GKV Rate Table — All Major Insurers
The base rate is fixed by law at 14.6% for all GKV providers. The only variable is the Zusatzbeitrag — an additional surcharge each provider sets independently. In 2026, this ranges from 2.18% (cheapest budget providers) to 4.39% (most expensive). For a gross salary of €4,000/month, the difference between cheapest and TK is approximately €20/month.
| Provider | Zusatzbeitrag 2026 | Total Rate | Your Share (~½) | English Support | Expat Rating | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| TK (Techniker Krankenkasse) | 2.69% | 17.29% | ~8.645% | ✓ Phone + App | ★★★★★ | Most expats — best balance |
| Barmer | 2.50% | 17.10% | ~8.55% | ✓ 24/7 Hotline | ★★★★☆ | Health-conscious; families |
| DAK-Gesundheit | 2.60% | 17.20% | ~8.60% | ⚡ Limited | ★★★★☆ | Fintiba bundle; good app |
| AOK Bayern | 2.69% | 17.29% | ~8.645% | ⚡ Some regions | ★★★★☆ | Bavaria-based expats |
| AOK Nordost | ~2.8–3.2% | ~17.4–17.8% | ~8.7–8.9% | ✗ German only | ★★★☆☆ | Berlin — if employer-assigned |
| hkk | 2.18% | 16.78% | ~8.39% | ✗ German only | ★★★☆☆ | Budget-focused; German speakers |
| BKK Firmus | 2.18% | 16.78% | ~8.39% | ✗ German only | ★★★☆☆ | Lowest cost — German speakers |
| Knappschaft | 4.39% | 18.99% | ~9.5% | ✗ | ★★☆☆☆ | Avoid — most expensive GKV |
Note: AOK has 11 independent regional branches with different rates. Rates listed are as of December 2025 and may change. The contribution ceiling is €5,812.50/month — above this, contributions do not increase.
Major GKV Providers — Who Should Choose What
The PKV Option — Should Expats Consider Private Insurance?
Private health insurance (PKV) offers undeniably superior coverage: shorter wait times, automatic "chief physician" treatment (Chefarzt), private hospital rooms, and broader dental/optical coverage. But for most expats in Germany, PKV is not the right choice. Here's why:
- Premiums are age-based: A healthy 30-year-old might pay €300–400/month in PKV. The same person at 50 may pay €700–1,000/month. GKV premiums rise with salary, not age.
- Family coverage is not free: Each family member pays their own PKV premium. With a spouse and 2 kids, PKV can cost €1,500+/month vs. zero extra for GKV.
- Switching back is nearly impossible: Once you leave GKV for PKV, returning is only possible if your income drops significantly below the threshold — and becoming increasingly difficult after age 55.
- Premium hikes are regular: Private insurers regularly raise premiums by 5–15% annually. In 2026, Hallesche announced ~12% increases in some plans.
- PKV works well if: You're young (<35), healthy, single without dependents, confident your income remains above €77,400/year, and planning a long-term Germany stay.
How to Enroll in German Health Insurance as an Expat
- Choose your provider — For most expats: start with TK. Apply online at tk.de (English enrollment available).
- Submit your application — Work contract, passport/ID, proof of address. For students: enrollment confirmation from university + proof of student blocked account.
- Receive Mitgliedsbescheinigung — Digital membership certificate. This is critical — your employer needs it to process payroll and register you with the pension system.
- Give Mitgliedsbescheinigung to HR immediately — Without it, you'll be taxed at Steuerklasse 6 (maximum) until the system is complete.
- Receive Gesundheitskarte (Health Card) — Arrives by post within 2–3 weeks. Present at every doctor visit. Without it, you pay upfront and get reimbursed later.
Frequently Asked Questions
-
Immediately upon starting employment in Germany. Your employer will ask for your Mitgliedsbescheinigung before or on your first day. If you don't submit one, you'll be automatically enrolled in your employer's default insurer — you can switch after that, but it's more paperwork. For students: enroll before your first semester begins. For freelancers: within 3 months of starting self-employment.
-
Only for EU citizens and only for the first 3 months of posted work. The EHIC card covers emergency medical treatment across the EU, but it is not a substitute for German health insurance once you establish residency. Non-EU citizens must enroll in German health insurance from day one. There are no exemptions.
-
Pflegeversicherung (long-term care insurance) is mandatory alongside health insurance and is automatically included. The rate in 2026 is 3.6% (split equally between employee and employer) — except childless employees who pay 4.2% (an additional 0.6% surcharge for not having children). You cannot opt out of Pflegeversicherung.
-
Since a 2021 reform, switching between public insurers became much simpler. Apply to your new insurer — they handle the cancellation of the old one automatically. The minimum membership period is 12 months. If your current insurer raised their Zusatzbeitrag in 2026, you received a Sonderkündigungsrecht (special termination right) allowing immediate switching regardless of how long you've been a member.
Complete Techniker Krankenkasse review with live cost calculator.
TK Full Review →Combine your blocked account with TK health insurance enrollment.
Blocked Account Guide →