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Elterngeld Germania 2026 — guida completa: Bemessungszeitraum, scala scorrevole, Geschwisterbonus, ElterngeldPlus, tetto €175k

Germany's Elterngeld pays 65-67% of pre-birth net for 12-14 months, capped €1,800/month. We explain the sliding scale exactly, the €175k joint-income cap (in force since April 2024), the Geschwisterbonus, the Mehrlingszuschlag, and the ElterngeldPlus alternative for parents returning to part-time work.

Autore: WorkDaten Editorial TeamPubblicato: 2026-04-28Ultima revisione: 2026-04-28

Cosa imparerai

  • How the Bemessungszeitraum works
  • The sliding scale, step by step
  • The €175k income cap (April 2024 change)
  • ElterngeldPlus: when to use it

How the Bemessungszeitraum works

The Elterngeldstelle takes your gross salary from the 12 calendar months before the month of birth (excluding the month of birth itself). For self-employed parents, the reference is the last completed tax year. For employees with periods of sick leave, parental leave for an older child, partial activity, etc., these months can be excluded and the reference shifted backward — but the maximum shift is 12 months total.

From the gross, the Elterngeldstelle applies a STANDARDIZED deduction (not your actual one): around 21% for SV contributions plus a flat-rate income tax based on your Steuerklasse at the reference period. The result is the 'maßgebliches Nettoeinkommen' — usually 5-15% lower than your real take-home.

Important strategy point: Steuerklasse change matters. If you'll receive Elterngeld and your spouse won't, switching to Steuerklasse III (best tax class) at least 7 months before the start of the Bemessungszeitraum can boost your Elterngeld by 15-25%. Switching later doesn't help.

The sliding scale, step by step

Once your maßgebliches Nettoeinkommen is computed, the rate applies as follows: net €1,000-€1,200 → flat 67%. Net €1,200-€1,240 → sliding from 67% down to 65% (every €2 above €1,200 reduces rate by 0.01%). Net above €1,240 → flat 65%.

BELOW €1,000 the rate slides UP from 67% — every €20 below €1,000 raises the rate by 0.1 percentage points, capped at 100%. So someone with net €600 receives 67% + 20 × 0.1% = 87% of their net.

After the percentage is applied, the result is bounded: minimum €300/month (the 'Mindestelterngeld', paid even to non-working parents), maximum €1,800/month (the cap that hits everyone earning more than ~€2,770 net).

Geschwisterbonus: +10% of the Elterngeld amount (minimum €75) if you have at least one older child under age 3 (or two older children under age 6, or a disabled older child). Capped Geschwisterbonus = €180/month.

Mehrlingszuschlag: +€300/month per additional child for twins, triplets etc. So twins triple the family floor: €300 + €300 = €600 minimum even for a non-working parent.

The €175k income cap (April 2024 change)

Since 1 April 2024, parents whose JOINT taxable annual income (zu versteuerndes Einkommen) exceeds €175,000 in the relevant reference year receive ZERO Elterngeld. This is a HARD cliff — even €175,001 disqualifies you fully, with no sliding scale. Single parents have a separate cap of €150,000 (raised from previous lower thresholds).

The relevant reference year is usually the year BEFORE the year of birth. So a baby born in 2026 → reference year is 2025 → the joint income on your 2025 tax return (Einkommensteuerbescheid) determines eligibility.

Strategy point: if you're near the threshold and can shift income (bonus timing, year-end self-employed billing, charitable deductions), the gain from preserving Elterngeld can be large. Maximum Elterngeld over 14 months = €25,200 — sometimes worth restructuring income to stay below.

ElterngeldPlus: when to use it

Basiselterngeld pays the full monthly amount for 12 months (14 with Partnermonate, where each parent must take at least 2 of the 14 months). ElterngeldPlus pays HALF the monthly amount for DOUBLE the duration. You can mix: e.g. 8 months Basis + 8 months Plus + 2 Partnermonate.

The Plus variant is designed for parents returning to part-time work (max 32h/week). Working part-time during Basiselterngeld already reduces the benefit — Plus reduces the monthly hit AND extends the duration, smoothing income across longer time.

Practical rule of thumb: if you plan to work 0h during the leave, take 12-14 months Basis. If you'll work 15-30h/week from month 4 or 5, switch to ElterngeldPlus from that point — the monthly amount drops less, and the total cumulative benefit usually exceeds Basiselterngeld+offset.

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