Global Payroll in Germany — Fully Managed

Run accurate, compliant payroll services Germany trusts. Lohnsteuer, Sozialversicherung and monthly reporting — handled end-to-end by named local specialists.

TopSource rated 5/5 by our customers

EOR Banner

Every Payslip Filed. Every Question Answered.

German payroll demands precision. From mandatory social insurance contributions (Sozialversicherung) and progressive income tax, to monthly ELStAM reporting and strict works council requirements, compliance is detailed and unforgiving.

With our specialist-led services and purpose-built payroll platform, you can run accurate, compliant payroll in Germany with confidence. And if questions arise, your dedicated payroll experts are always available.

So you can focus on expanding your business, not wrestling with Germany’s payroll regulations.

UK payroll services

Germany payroll at a glance

12.82 /hr
Statutory minimum wage (Mindestlohn)
20 +%
Employer social security on top of gross
45 %
Top marginal Lohnsteuer rate
6 wks
Employer sick-pay obligation
Employment Cost Calculator
Germany
British Pound
  • British Pound
  • Euro
  • US Dollar
  • Indian Rupee
EUR
*Indicative figures only and not definitive legal advice. Local regulations change frequently. Consult an expert
Germany
British Pound Germany
Base Salary (per month)
Employer Contributions
Total Cost (Annual)
Total Cost (Monthly)
Hiring in (employer of record) Learn more Hiring in (global payroll) Learn more

Income tax (Lohnsteuer) brackets

German wage tax is progressive and calculated under § 32a EStG. Employers withhold monthly using each employee’s Steuerklasse and allowances pulled from the ELStAM electronic system. The current brackets for single filers (Grundtabelle) are shown to the right.

Additional levies: Solidaritätszuschlag (5.5% of income tax — only on high incomes), and Kirchensteuer (8–9% of income tax if the employee is registered with a recognised church). Married couples filing jointly double the thresholds via the Splittingtabelle.

Basic personal allowance — no income tax applies on the first €12,096 of annual taxable income for single filers.

Linear-progressive entry zone where the marginal rate rises from 14% to roughly 24%.

Main progressive zone. Marginal rate climbs smoothly from 24% to the top rate of 42%.

Flat top rate of 42% on income within this band — the standard ‘top tax’ bracket for higher earners.

Wealth-tax surcharge — an additional 3 percentage points on income above €277,825 per year.

Steuerklassen (tax classes) and ELStAM

Every employee in Germany is assigned one of six Steuerklassen, which determines monthly Lohnsteuer withholding via the electronic ELStAM register. Employers retrieve the class, allowances and child credits from the Bundeszentralamt für Steuern at hire.

Class I

Single, divorced, widowed (after first year) or permanently separated. The default class for employees without a spouse.

Class II

Single parents who qualify for the Entlastungsbetrag and receive Kindergeld for a child living in the household.

Class III

Married, higher-earning spouse when the partner is in class V. Lower monthly withholding, offset by the partner’s higher rate.

Class IV

Default class for newlyweds and couples earning similar amounts. Both spouses are taxed as if single.

Class IV + Faktor

Class IV with the Faktorverfahren modifier that evens out monthly withholding. Scheduled to replace the III/V combination.

Class V

Married, lower-earning spouse paired with class III. Higher withholding rate; household optimises overall via the III/V split.

Class VI

Any second or additional employment relationship. Withholding at the maximum rate with no allowances.

Social security contributions (Sozialversicherung)

8.55 %
Health · Krankenversicherung (employer share)
1.8 %
Long-term care · Pflegeversicherung (employer)
9.3 %
Pension · Rentenversicherung (employer)
1.3 %
Unemployment · Arbeitslosenversicherung (employer)
~ 1.3 %
Accident · Unfallversicherung (industry-rated, 100% employer)
~ 0.15 %
Insolvenzgeldumlage (100% employer)

Mini-jobs, midi-jobs and the Übergangsbereich

Germany applies a stepped contribution model for low-wage employment to reduce SV burden on entry-level workers. The current minimum wage of €12.82/hr places the mini-job ceiling at €556/month and the midi-job upper limit at €2,000/month.

Mini-job — up to €556 / month

Employer pays a flat 30% lump-sum (15% pension + 13% health + 2% wage tax) to the Minijob-Zentrale. Employee usually exempt from SV, with option to opt into full pension. Reported separately.

Midi-job — €556.01 to €2,000 / month

Reduced employee SV share via the sliding-scale Übergangsbereich formula — employer pays the full standard rate. Standard ELStAM and DEÜV reporting applies.

Regular employment — above €2,000 / month

Standard 50/50 split as per the Sozialversicherung percentages. ELStAM, DEÜV and monthly Lohnsteueranmeldung all apply normally.

Payroll reporting cycle and deadlines

German payroll is reporting-driven. Beyond the monthly wage-tax return, employers must transmit multiple electronic filings to the Finanzamt, the Krankenkassen and the Deutsche Rentenversicherung.

Missing any of these deadlines can trigger penalties, interest charges and — in repeat cases — full payroll audits. The accordion lists the recurring filings in chronological order.

Monthly wage-tax return to the Finanzamt. Quarterly filing allowed if prior-year Lohnsteuer was below €5,000; annual if below €1,080.

Estimated social-security declaration must reach the relevant health fund (Krankenkasse) by the 5th-to-last banking day of the wage month.

Actual contribution payment due to the health fund by the 3rd-to-last banking day of the wage month; final reconciliation in the following month.

Start-of-employment, end-of-employment and interruption reports must be transmitted via the SV-Meldeverfahren within 6 weeks of the triggering event.

Electronic year-end wage statement issued to each employee and transmitted to the tax office by the end of February of the following year.

Annual social-security statement (Feb 15) and annual accident-insurance report to the Berufsgenossenschaft (Feb 16).

Required for any employee temporarily posted to another EU/EEA country or Switzerland — even for a one-day business trip. Apply via the SV-Meldeverfahren.

Other payroll-specific items to plan for

Beyond the headline tax and contribution rates, German payroll has several recurring items that influence employer cost and the monthly run. Each of these has its own reporting or accounting treatment.

Employers pay 100% of salary for the first 6 weeks of sick leave per illness; thereafter Krankengeld (~70% of gross, capped) is paid by the health fund. Small employers (≤30 employees) can join the U1 Umlage and be reimbursed up to 80% of those costs.

All employers pay the U2 levy and are then reimbursed 100% of maternity pay during the 14-week Mutterschutz period. The U2 rate sits around 0.24% of gross.

Certain benefits (company events, gifts up to €60, sachbezug under €50/month) can be taxed at a flat 25% or 30% by the employer rather than through the employee’s normal Lohnsteuer — useful for events, branded merchandise and small monthly perks.

Non-cash benefits (company cars, meal allowances, BahnCard) must be valued and added to the employee’s gross for Lohnsteuer and SV. Company cars use either the 1%-of-list-price method or a driver’s log.

Employers must offer occupational pension and, since 2022, add a mandatory 15% subsidy on any salary-conversion contribution from the employee — applies to all new and existing arrangements.

Voluntary employer contribution (up to €40/month) towards employee savings products. Often required by collective bargaining agreements (Tarifverträge) in specific industries.

Wages must be paid into a SEPA-reachable IBAN by direct credit. Cash payments are exceptional and require explicit employee consent. Standard practice is one SEPA file per payroll run.

Need the full employment-law picture?

This page focuses on payroll mechanics. For contracts, notice periods, work visas, statutory leave, Betriebsrat and the rest, head to our Germany Hiring Guide — or explore Employer of Record if you don’t yet have a German entity.

Read the Germany Hiring Guide

More than a payroll platform

The German labor market is governed by comprehensive payroll laws that emphasize employee rights and benefits. TopSource offers expert guidance and solutions for businesses managing their workforce in Germany. We assist with payroll processing, legal compliance, and human resource management, ensuring that businesses can focus on their core operations while maintaining a compliant and efficient workforce in Germany.

HR Advisory

Simplified Payroll

Seamlessly run payroll in Germany and 130 other countries with guaranteed compliance to ever-changing local tax, labor, and reporting laws.

Dedicated Support

You’ll have a named account manager and access to local specialists for Germany, so every question, update or challenge gets a fast, informed response.

Global Payroll

Access to Expertise

Employment law query? Best practice for benefits? Our expertise and support goes beyond Payroll to ensure you have the tools you need to grow your organization.

Employer of Record (EOR)

Sync with your HR Systems

Effortlessly sync payroll with time tracking, leave, onboarding, and benefits systems via our dedicated API. Easily setup by our hands-on onboarding team.

Other services
Accelerating your growth in Germany and beyond

TopSource goes far beyond payroll, acting as your end-to-end partner in global workforce management. From Employer of Record (EOR) services and seamless entity setup to localized accountancy and fractional HR support, we cover every aspect of international employment.

Talent gap analysis for businesses

With our Global EOR services, you can hire talent in any country without establishing a legal entity. We handle employment contracts, payroll, benefits, and compliance on your behalf, enabling fast, risk-free global expansion.

On demand access to our fractional and regional HR professionals who understand local laws, cultures, and best practices. Bespoke talent intelligence including salary, business and talent market benchmarking.

Our global entity management team helps you establish and maintain your corporate entities worldwide. We ensure full compliance with local laws and regulations, streamline administrative processes, and minimize risk — so you can focus on growing your business.

We offer comprehensive accounting solutions tailored to meet your international needs. From bookkeeping and financial reporting to tax filings and audits, our services help you maintain transparency, accuracy, and compliance in every jurisdiction.

Meet our experts for Germany

Whether you’re entering the market or scaling operations, our specialists provide the insight and guidance you need to succeed in one of the world’s most dynamic and regulated employment landscapes. With TopSource, you’re backed by real experts, every step of the way.

Germany payroll: frequently asked questions

The questions our customers ask most often when setting up or switching their German payroll. For broader employment-law questions see our Germany Hiring Guide.

Payroll outsourcing in Germany means handing the full monthly run to a specialised provider — Lohnsteuer withholding via ELStAM, Sozialversicherung contributions across all five branches, DEÜV reporting, the year-end Lohnsteuerbescheinigung and A1 certificates for posted workers. A good provider also acts as your interface to the Finanzamt, the Krankenkassen, Deutsche Rentenversicherung and the relevant Berufsgenossenschaft, so you avoid late filings, miscalculated contributions and audit findings. TopSource runs payroll under your existing German entity, or pairs it with our EOR Germany service if you don’t have one.

Employers withhold Lohnsteuer monthly via the electronic ELStAM system, which provides each employee’s Steuerklasse (tax class I–VI), child allowances and church-tax status. Income tax follows the progressive § 32a EStG schedule: 0% up to €12,096; 14%–42% across the linear zone; 42% from €68,481; 45% above €277,825. A 5.5% solidarity surcharge applies on high incomes, plus 8–9% church tax if the employee is registered.

Employers pay roughly 20%–22% on top of gross salary. The split-equally branches are health insurance (≈8.55%), long-term care (1.8%), pension (9.3%) and unemployment (1.3%). On top, employers pay the full Unfallversicherung (industry-rated, typically ~1.3%) and the Insolvenzgeldumlage (~0.15%). Small employers can opt into U1/U2 levies (~1–3%) for sick-pay and maternity-pay reimbursement.

Lohnsteuer is due to the Finanzamt by the 10th of the month following payroll (or quarterly/annually for small employers below €5,000/€1,080 of prior-year tax). Social security contributions must be settled by the third-to-last banking day of the wage month, with the estimated Beitragsnachweis reaching the health fund by the fifth-to-last banking day.

ELStAM (Elektronische LohnSteuerAbzugsMerkmale) is Germany’s electronic tax-feature register. Employers register an employee at hire to retrieve their Steuerklasse, allowances, child credits and church-tax status from the Bundeszentralamt für Steuern. Updates push automatically to the employer monthly, and employees are de-registered at exit. ELStAM has replaced the old paper Lohnsteuerkarte since 2013.

A mini-job (geringfügige Beschäftigung) is regular employment paying up to €556/month — taxed via a 30% flat employer levy and exempt from most employee SV. A midi-job (Übergangsbereich) pays between €556.01 and €2,000/month, with a sliding-scale formula that reduces the employee SV share while the employer pays the standard rate. Above €2,000/month, normal SV splits apply.

Yes — to register with the Finanzamt, obtain a Betriebsnummer for SV reporting and act as the legal employer, you need a registered German entity, a Betriebsstätte (permanent establishment) or a partner who already holds these. A Global Payroll provider like TopSource can run compliant payroll under your existing entity. If you don’t have one, pair it with our EOR Germany service to employ in Germany with no entity setup.

The Lohnsteuerbescheinigung is the annual wage statement Germany requires every employer to issue. It summarises an employee’s yearly gross pay, withheld Lohnsteuer, Solidaritätszuschlag, Kirchensteuer and social security contributions. Employers must transmit it electronically to the tax office and provide a copy to the employee by the end of February of the following year.

An A1-Bescheinigung is required for any employee normally working under German social security who is temporarily posted to another EU/EEA country or Switzerland — even for a one-day business trip. It certifies that the employee remains subject to German SV and avoids double contributions. Employers apply via the SV-Meldeverfahren; checks at airports and borders have intensified since 2019.

The statutory Mindestlohn is €12.82 gross per hour. It applies to almost all employees aged 18 and over, regardless of sector, with limited exceptions for some apprentices and interns. The wage feeds directly into the €556/month mini-job and €2,000/month midi-job thresholds. The Minimum Wage Commission reviews the rate every two years.