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PENSIONS

EXPLAINED: How can my German employer contribute more to my pension?

Germany’s pension system rests on three pillars – a state pension, anything private you've set up for yourself, and extra contributions your employer might make as part of your company savings plan. Here’s how it works if your workplace is topping up your pension.

EXPLAINED: How can my German employer contribute more to my pension?
Employer pension plans in Germany - for those who have access - can give substantial benefits in retirement on top of a state pension. Photo: Pixabay

If you’re looking at taking a job in Germany, one of the benefit schemes to look into is the degree to which your would-be employer will top up your pension.

So called “occupational pensions” are an important element of Germany’s “three-pillar” pension system.

The first pillar – or a state pension – is financed mainly through mandatory joint employer and employee contributions that automatically come off your payslip every month. If you’ve worked in Germany for at least five years, you’re entitled to one once you reach retirement age.

The third pillar is entirely privately financed if someone chooses to put away extra money through such a fund.

The second pillar, however – or extra employer contributions to a separate occupational pension (betriebliche Altersvorsorge, or bAV) – can both provide you with more in your nest egg and some attractive tax benefits.

READ ALSO: Six things to know about Germany’s new pension reforms

How common is occupational pension insurance in Germany? How does it work?

About 18 million people working in Germany – just under 40 percent of the total labour force – are currently eligible to contribute to an occupational pension scheme. That’s on top of what they pay into their state pension and alongside any private pension provision they may have.

In these arrangements, employers typically make extra pension contributions into an account with an established pension insurance fund. Some employers may even run their own fund. The employer pays into the employee’s pension account with this fund until the employee either retires or leaves the company.

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Almost 40 percent of people working in Germany can make pension contributions on top of their state pension, through company plans. Photo: Markus Spikse/Unsplash

Almost all large companies in Germany have a relationship with an occupation pension fund or have their own plan, with more and more smaller SMEs coming onboard all the time.

READ ALSO: How long do you have to work to receive a German pension?

How much will the employer top my pension up by?

This varies.

That’s because management will typically agree to the terms of occupational pension contributions with the employee works council via a collective agreement – which requires both sides to negotiate and agree on the terms, including voluntary contribution amounts.

If the company doesn’t have a works council, management typically negotiates these terms with each employee individually. The company then in turn makes an agreement with the pension fund – if they have a relationship to one. Any agreement between a pension fund and a German company must also, by law, have a provision for what happens to the dependents of an occupational pension recipient – for example, if partners are entitled to a widow’s pension.

READ ALSO: How people in Germany will be able to check their pension contributions online

Are there tax benefits for me?

Employees also have the option of making an additional contribution on top of that made by their employers, typically to a maximum of €520 a month.

If you choose to do this, this money flows into the pension fund tax-free. You of course, pay tax on income you draw from the pension fund when you draw it out, either when you leave the company or reach retirement age.

What happens if and when I leave the company?

Occupational pension plans may not end up making sense for people who change jobs a lot, as any money that is saved ends up sitting around until you reach retirement age. You can request it to be returned to you – provided the amount is modest. However, if you do so, you’ll need to pay tax on what’s paid out to you.

EXPLAINED: Do your pension contributions abroad count in Germany?

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WORKING IN GERMANY

Germany’s Scholz calls for €15 per hour minimum wage

As the debate about the national minimum wage heats up, Germany's Chancellor has aired support for a gradual increase to €15 per hour.

Germany's Scholz calls for €15 per hour minimum wage

Speaking to German media outlet Stern on Tuesday, Olaf Scholz, of the Social Democrats (SPD), said he would support an initial hike in the minimum wage to €14 per hour, followed by an increase to €15 per hour for the lowest earners.

The SPD politician also slammed the recent decision of the minimum wage commission to raise the current floor by just €0.41 cents per year this year and next – a move he described as a “mini adjustment”.

At the last round of talks last year to determine the German minimum wage, the commission had decided on an initial increase from €12 per hour to €12.41 at the start of 2024 to €12.82 from 2025. Previously, the government had raised it from €10.45 per hour to €12 per hour in October 2022. 

However, this time around the commission’s decision was not unanimous, with representatives of workers and trade unions claiming to have been outvoted by the employers on the panel. 

“After the increase to €12 at the beginning of this legislative period, some members of the Minimum Wage Commission, which is supposed to carry out the annual increases, unfortunately broke with the social partnership tradition of deciding by mutual agreement,” said Scholz.

“The employers only insisted on a mini-adjustment. That was a major break with convention.”

READ ALSO: How millions of workers in Germany are earning less than €14 per hour

Scholz’ comments follow a number of statements by SPD politicians in favour of a further hike in the minimum wage in recent weeks.

Previously Saskia Esken, the co-leader of the party, had called for a reform of the Minimum Wage Commisison and a “significant increase” that would enable workers to escape poverty. 

Representatives from the Greens, Left Party, and the Verdi union have also advocated for a €15 minimum wage. Green politician Katrin Göring-Eckardt recently stated that a statutory minimum wage of €14 this year and €15 next year was necessary in light of the soaring cost of living in Germany. 

The debate over the minimum wage has also been fuelled by new statistics revealing that 8.4 million people – equivalent to roughly 10 percent of the population – currently earn less than €14 per hour. 

The minimum wage is typically determined by a commission consisting of representatives of both workers and employers.

German Chancellor Olaf Scholz

German Chancellor Olaf Scholz speaking in the German Bundestag. Photo: picture alliance/dpa | Michael Kappeler

READ ALSO: Five things to know about salaries in Germany

However, in 2022, the government stepped in to mandate a €12 per hour minimum wage, fulfilling one of the SPD’s key election pledges. 

“With this, we have created the biggest salary improvement for low-wage workers in years,” Scholz told Stern, adding that warnings about job losses had failed to come to fruition.

If the SPD does step in to mandate another wage increase, it is likely to face fierce opposition from both employers and its pro-business coalition partners, the Free Democrats (FDP).

Last December, Rainer Dulger, the president of the employers’ association, accused the centre-left party of preparing yet another politicial intervention into the national minimum wage. 

This would not only break the SPD’s promise that the €12 hike was a one-off, but also interfere with the autonomy of the commission, Dulger said. 

FDP politicians have also warned the SPD to avoid stepping in once again. 

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