

The German Federal Cabinet approved the GKV Premium Rate Stabilisation Act (GKV-Beitragssatzstabilisierungsgesetz, BStabG) on 29 April 2026. The Act is currently passing through the parliamentary process. Final figures for 2027 – in particular the contribution assessment ceiling (Beitragsbemessungsgrenze, BBG) and the annual earnings threshold (Jahresarbeitsentgeltgrenze, JAEG) – will be set by statutory order in autumn 2026. All figures cited are based on the cabinet draft.
What gets more expensive:
What gets cut or restricted:
Germany's statutory health insurance system (GKV – gesetzliche Krankenversicherung) is under structural pressure. Expenditure has been growing at nearly 8 per cent per year – twice the rate of the 2010s and significantly faster than wage growth, which drives revenues. The average supplementary contribution rate (Zusatzbeitrag) has more than doubled since 2022: from 1.3 % (2021/2022) to 2.9 % today (2026). For someone earning €3,500 gross per month, that increase alone represents around €350 more per year compared with 2022.
The FinanzKommission Gesundheit (Health Finance Commission) estimates the financing gap for 2027 at around €15 billion – rising to as much as €40 billion by 2030. The BStabG treats symptoms, not root causes. The structural problem – a pay-as-you-go system in an ageing society with persistently rising healthcare costs – remains unsolved.
The BBG (Beitragsbemessungsgrenze) is the monthly ceiling up to which GKV contributions are calculated. Earnings above it are not subject to contributions.
What this means in practice:
The JAEG (Jahresarbeitsentgeltgrenze) is the income threshold above which employed people are free to choose between statutory and private health insurance. Only those whose regular annual earnings consistently exceed the JAEG are exempt from mandatory GKV membership (versicherungsfrei) and may switch to PKV (private Krankenversicherung).
Someone currently earning, say, €80,000 per year sits above the 2026 JAEG and can choose PKV. If the JAEG rises to ~€81,000–84,000 in 2027, that same person may fall below the new threshold and lose the right to switch.
Important: Exemption from mandatory insurance (Versicherungsfreiheit) requires that the regular annual salary – not bonuses or one-off payments – consistently exceeds the JAEG. Already privately insured? You keep your PKV status even if your income later falls below the new, higher threshold.
From 1 January 2028 (not 2027), non-working spouses and civil partners who are currently covered free of charge under the family insurance (Familienversicherung) will face a contribution of 2.5 % of the working partner's gross income – unless an exemption applies.
Exemptions (remain free of charge): Children; parents of children under 7; caring relatives; those above state retirement age.
Example: €6,000 gross/month → €150/month extra for the partner's coverage.
The flat-rate employer contribution to health insurance for mini-job workers rises from 13 % to 17.5 %, increasing payroll costs for all employers with mini-job staff.
These treatments are removed from the GKV benefit catalogue entirely. Anyone wishing to continue using them pays out of pocket – or needs a supplementary private insurance policy.
For certain planned surgical procedures, obtaining a specialist second opinion becomes compulsory. For patients this means: additional time and effort, and potentially longer waiting times before the procedure.
Adult preventive screening programmes are explicitly on the table. Specific cuts have not yet been finalised – the parliamentary process is still ongoing.
The BStabG caps permissible expenditure growth in individual benefit areas at the basic wage rate (Grundlohnrate). When medical costs rise faster than wages – as they have done consistently in recent years – structural budget shortfalls arise. These may manifest as lower doctor remuneration, slower uptake of new treatments, or de facto narrower benefit coverage, without any explicit cut being formally enacted.
The annual federal subsidy to the GKV is reduced from €14.5bn to €12.5bn per year for the entire 2027–2030 period. The gap must be covered through contribution increases or spending cuts.
Not everyone currently in the GKV should switch to PKV. The decision depends on income, health, family situation, employment status and long-term outlook. Those who benefit from free dependant cover under the family insurance – for example, because a partner is not working and there are children under 7 in the household – have a genuine financial advantage in the GKV that PKV cannot replicate.
For others, 2027 changes the picture materially:
The BStabG is not a turning point – but it accelerates a trend that has been building for years: the GKV is getting more expensive while its coverage narrows. This is not cause for alarm. The GKV remains a solid baseline – and for many people, including families with children or a non-working partner, it remains the better option.
For a specific group, however, a window is closing in concrete terms: anyone employed and currently earning between approximately €77,400 and €84,000 per year may lose the right to choose after the 2027 JAEG increase. Anyone who still has the choice will be paying more from 2027 into a system that provides less.
If you are unsure whether you are eligible to switch, whether you would be insurable, or what any of this means for your specific situation – that is exactly what I clarify as an independent broker specialising in expats in Germany: in German, English, French, Dutch or Spanish, with no product ties and no sales pressure.
Legal notice: All figures are based on the BStabG cabinet draft (Federal Cabinet approval 29.04.2026). The Act is currently in the parliamentary process; final figures will be set by statutory order in autumn 2026. This article is for general information only and does not constitute individual legal, tax or insurance advice. Sources: Federal Ministry of Health (BMG), FinanzKommission Gesundheit, GKV-Spitzenverband.


