Last updated: April 2026
Key Facts
- Lohnsteuer is income tax withheld directly from your salary by your employer
- Employee flat-rate deduction: €1,230 — no receipts needed
- Commuting deduction: €0.38/km
- Home office flat rate: €6 per day, max €1,260 per year
- Average employee tax refund in Germany: over €1,000
- Single parent relief: €4,260 for the first child (Tax Class II)
- Filing is mandatory if you used tax class III/V or received Elterngeld/Arbeitslosengeld
- Voluntary filing deadline: 4 years after the end of the tax year
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Introduction
Understanding employee taxes in Germany starts with one key concept: Lohnsteuer. If you work for a German employer, tax is deducted from your salary before you ever see it. This system — called Lohnsteuer — means most employees never have to think much about tax during the year.
But understanding how it works, which deductions you are entitled to, and when to file a tax return can put hundreds or even thousands of euros back in your pocket.
This guide explains the entire employee tax system in Germany in simple terms — from how your salary is taxed at source, to which expenses you can deduct, to what happens when you file your annual return.
What is Lohnsteuer?
Lohnsteuer is Germany’s payroll tax — the income tax withheld directly from your salary by your employer every month. It is not a separate tax from income tax (Einkommensteuer). It is simply income tax collected at source.
Your employer calculates and deducts Lohnsteuer based on your tax class, your registered allowances, and the official BMF tax tables. The amount withheld is paid directly to the tax office on your behalf.
At the end of the year, when you file your tax return, the Lohnsteuer you paid is credited against your final income tax bill. If you paid too much — which is common for employees who claim deductions — you get a refund.
Governed by: § 38 EStG (obligation to withhold), § 39b EStG (calculation method)
🧮 Try it yourself
See exactly how your tax class, salary and deductions affect your monthly take-home pay — based on official BMF formulas.
Open Net Wage Calculator →Employment income: what counts?
Under § 19 EStG, employment income is broadly defined. It is not just your base salary. It includes:
- Basic salary and wages
- Bonuses and commission — Christmas bonuses, performance bonuses, sales commission
- Benefits in kind (Sachbezüge) — company car, employer-provided accommodation, subsidised meals, gym membership contributions
- Severance payments — subject to special rules and potential tax reduction
- Director fees and supervisory board payments
- Stock options and equity grants — taxable at the point of exercise or vesting, not at grant
Certain employer contributions are tax-free or partially tax-free — for example, employer contributions to your pension (up to limits), job ticket subsidies for public transport, and childcare subsidies. These are covered in depth in the cluster posts under this pillar.
Governed by: § 19 EStG, § 19a EStG (stock options)
The seven tax classes (Steuerklassen)
Germany assigns every employee a tax class. Your tax class determines how much Lohnsteuer is withheld from your salary each month. It does not change your final tax liability — it only affects how much is withheld during the year.
| Tax class | Who it applies to |
|---|---|
| Class 0 | Non tax resident |
| Class I | Single, divorced, widowed or permanently separated |
| Class II | Single parents living alone with a child |
| Class III | Married — the higher-earning spouse (used with Class V) |
| Class IV | Married — both spouses earning roughly equally |
| Class V | Married — the lower-earning spouse (used with Class III) |
| Class VI | Second or additional job |
The III/V combination is popular among couples with very unequal incomes — it reduces monthly withholding for the higher earner significantly. However, this combination almost always requires a joint tax return at year end, as the combined withholding is typically less than the actual tax owed.
Class IV with factor (Faktorverfahren) is a less-known option that splits the tax burden more accurately between spouses during the year, reducing the year-end surprise.
Governed by: § 38b EStG (tax class definitions), § 39 EStG (tax class registration)
💡 Not sure which tax class is best for your household?
Compare III/V vs IV/IV vs IV+Faktor side by side — see monthly net pay per partner and the Elterngeld impact.
Open Tax Class Optimizer →How to register and change your tax class
Your tax class is registered electronically with the tax office (Finanzamt) via the ELStAM system — Germany’s electronic wage tax deduction database. Your employer retrieves your tax class from this system automatically.
When you start a new job in Germany, your employer will request your tax identification number (Steuer-ID) and retrieve your tax class from ELStAM. You do not need to provide a paper certificate anymore.
To change your tax class — for example after marriage, divorce or when your income situation changes — apply to your local Finanzamt. Changes can be made once per calendar year (with exceptions for life events such as marriage or separation).
Governed by: § 39 EStG, § 39a EStG (allowances in ELStAM)
The employee flat-rate deduction (Arbeitnehmer-Pauschbetrag)
Every employee in Germany automatically receives a flat-rate deduction of €1,230 per year (2026) for work-related expenses. This is deducted from your gross income before tax is calculated — you do not need to prove anything or submit any receipts to claim it.
If your actual work-related expenses exceed €1,230, you can claim the higher amount instead. This is where filing a tax return becomes very worthwhile.
Governed by: § 9a EStG
📋 Do your work expenses beat the €1,230 flat rate?
Add up your commuting, home office, equipment and other work costs — and see your estimated tax saving in seconds.
Open Werbungskosten Calculator →Work-related expenses (Werbungskosten): what can employees deduct?
Werbungskosten are expenses you incur in order to earn your employment income. They are deducted from your gross salary, reducing your taxable income. The most important categories are:
Commuting costs (Entfernungspauschale): You can deduct €0.38 per km for the one-way distance between your home and your workplace, for every day you actually commute. The maximum deduction is €4,500 per year unless you use a car, in which case there is no cap.
Home office flat rate (Homeoffice-Pauschale): If you work from home, you can deduct €6 per day, up to a maximum of €1,260 per year (210 days). You do not need a dedicated room — any day where you work primarily from home counts.
Work equipment and tools: Laptops, office chairs, headsets, professional books — anything you buy primarily for work can be deducted. Items costing up to €800 net can be deducted in full in the year of purchase.
Professional development and training: Courses, certifications and training directly related to your current job are fully deductible.
Union fees and professional membership fees: Fully deductible as Werbungskosten.
Double household costs (Doppelte Haushaltsführung): If you maintain a second home near your workplace because your main home is elsewhere, you can deduct rent (up to €1,000 per month), travel costs and certain setup costs.
Governed by: § 9 EStG
Special deductions (Sonderausgaben)
Beyond work-related expenses, employees can also deduct certain personal expenses under § 10 EStG — known as Sonderausgaben. The most relevant for most employees are:
Pension contributions: Employee contributions to the statutory pension scheme (Rentenversicherung) are deductible up to a high annual limit. For 2026, up to €30,826 (single) in pension contributions qualify.
Private pension contributions (Riester): Contributions to a certified Riester pension contract are deductible up to €2,100 per year, including the state bonus.
Health and care insurance premiums: Contributions to statutory health and long-term care insurance are fully deductible as Vorsorgeaufwendungen.
Childcare costs: Two-thirds of childcare costs for children under 14 are deductible, up to €4,800 per child per year.
Donations: Donations to recognised charitable organisations are deductible up to 20% of total income.
Governed by: § 10 EStG, § 10a EStG (Riester)
The single parent relief (Entlastungsbetrag für Alleinerziehende)
Single parents living alone with at least one child receive an additional tax-free allowance of €4,260 per year for the first child, plus €240 for each additional child. This is accessed via Tax Class II.
Governed by: § 24b EStG
Who must file a tax return as an employee?
Many employees in Germany are not required to file a tax return — their Lohnsteuer withholding is treated as final. However you must file if:
- You had income from multiple employers simultaneously
- You used tax class III/V or the factor method
- You received tax-free replacement income (Elterngeld, Arbeitslosengeld, Kurzarbeitergeld) exceeding €410
- Your non-employment income exceeded €410
- The tax office requests a return
You should voluntarily file if:
- Your actual Werbungskosten exceed €1,230
- You have significant Sonderausgaben to claim
- You worked only part of the year in Germany
- You had unusually high deductible expenses
The average employee tax refund in Germany is over €1,000. Filing voluntarily is almost always worth it.
Governed by: § 46 EStG
How your annual tax return works
When you file your Einkommensteuererklärung, the tax office:
- Takes your total gross employment income for the year
- Deducts your Werbungskosten (actual or flat rate)
- Deducts your Sonderausgaben
- Applies your personal allowances
- Calculates your actual income tax using the § 32a EStG formula
- Compares this to the Lohnsteuer already withheld
- Issues a refund or a demand for additional payment
Most employees receive a refund because the monthly withholding does not account for all the deductions they are entitled to claim.
Governed by: § 25 EStG, § 32a EStG
Key figures for employees in 2026
| Item | Amount |
|---|---|
| Basic tax-free allowance (Grundfreibetrag) | €12,348 |
| Employee flat-rate deduction (Arbeitnehmer-Pauschbetrag) | €1,230 |
| Commuting deduction | €0.38 per km |
| Maximum commuting deduction (non-car) | €4,500 per year |
| Home office flat rate | €6 per day / max €1,260 per year |
| Single parent relief (first child) | €4,260 per year |
| Maximum pension deduction (single) | €30,826 per year |
| Maximum Riester deduction | €2,100 per year |
| Maximum childcare deduction per child | €4,800 per year |
Frequently asked questions
My employer gives me a company car. How is it taxed?
A company car available for private use is treated as a benefit in kind. The standard method adds 1% of the car’s list price to your taxable income every month (the 1% rule). For electric vehicles the rate is reduced. Alternatively you can use a logbook to track actual private use.
I worked only part of the year in Germany. How does this affect my tax?
Germany taxes your worldwide income only for the period you were tax resident. If you arrived mid-year, your basic allowance is not reduced pro-rata — you get the full annual allowance, which often results in a significant refund.
Can I deduct my language course costs?
Yes, if the language is directly relevant to your job — for example, a German language course if you work in Germany and need German for your role. General hobby language learning is not deductible.
I work from home for a foreign employer. Am I subject to Lohnsteuer?
If you are tax resident in Germany, your income is taxable in Germany regardless of where your employer is based. However, a foreign employer has no obligation to withhold German Lohnsteuer — you will need to make advance tax payments (Vorauszahlungen) and file a return.
What is the difference between Lohnsteuer and Einkommensteuer?
Lohnsteuer is income tax collected at source from your salary. Einkommensteuer is the annual income tax assessed when you file your return. Lohnsteuer is an advance payment of Einkommensteuer — they are the same tax, just collected at different points.
Related Tax Guides
- German Tax Residency — are you taxable here at all?
- Capital Income & Investing — investment income alongside your salary
- Family Taxes — tax class changes, Kindergeld for employees with children
- Health & Disability — deductions available to employees
Related law pages on Taxbyte
- § 9 EStG — Work-related expenses: what employees can deduct
- § 10 EStG — Special deductions (Sonderausgaben)
- § 19 EStG — What counts as employment income?
- § 24b EStG — Single parent relief
- § 38 EStG — The obligation to withhold Lohnsteuer
- § 39 EStG — Tax class registration and ELStAM
- § 39b EStG — How Lohnsteuer is calculated
- § 40 EStG — Flat-rate taxation of certain benefits
- § 42 EStG — Annual Lohnsteuer reconciliation
- § 46 EStG — When employees must file a tax return
- Official sources: § 19 EStG · § 9 EStG · § 38 EStG
This page explains German tax law in plain English for general information purposes. It is not legal or tax advice. Tax rules change annually — always verify figures against official sources or consult a Steuerberater for your specific situation.
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