🧾 Self-employed in Germany β€” updated for 2026

Self-employed in Germany?

Freelancing or running a business in Germany means more freedom β€” and more responsibility. This guide helps you understand registration, taxes, health insurance, invoices, pension questions and risk protection.

Quick answer

As a self-employed person, you are responsible for your own setup.

Unlike employees, you usually need to actively manage registration, invoices, taxes, health insurance, pension planning, income protection and cash reserves yourself.

πŸš€Business setup

Clarify whether you are freelance, commercial or need a specific permission.

🧾Taxes & invoices

Invoices, bookkeeping, advance payments and VAT topics need structure from day one.

πŸ₯Health insurance

Public or private health insurance can be a major financial decision.

πŸ›‘οΈProtection

No employer safety net means income protection and liability risks matter more.

Self-employed checklist

What to check before you fully start.

Use this checklist if you are freelancing, becoming self-employed, starting a side business or switching from employment to independent work.

1

Clarify your self-employed status

Germany distinguishes between different types of self-employment. Some activities are treated as freelance professions, others as commercial businesses. Some activities require licenses, chamber registration or additional approval.

Setup
2

Register correctly before sending invoices

Depending on your activity, you may need tax registration, business registration or professional registration. Keep copies of all confirmations and official letters.

Registration
3

Set up bookkeeping and invoice rules

Create a clean system for invoices, receipts, business expenses, bank transactions and tax documents. Good bookkeeping from day one prevents stress later.

Bookkeeping
4

Plan taxes and cash reserves

Self-employed income is not the same as spendable income. Set money aside for income tax, possible VAT, insurance, pension planning and slower months.

Cashflow
5

Choose a health insurance setup carefully

Self-employed people often need to evaluate public and private health insurance differently from employees. Income, family situation, health history and long-term plans can all matter.

Health
6

Review liability, income protection and pension

Without an employer, you may need a stronger personal safety net. Review professional liability, private liability, income protection, pension planning and emergency reserves.

Protection
Money reality

Your invoice amount is not your income.

Self-employed expats often underestimate how much of their revenue must be reserved for taxes, insurance, pension, unpaid vacation, sick days and business costs.

Separate business money: use a dedicated account or clear tracking system.
Reserve for taxes: do not spend all incoming revenue.
Calculate real monthly income: include unpaid vacation, sick days and quiet months.
Review long-term planning: pension and protection are not automatically solved by an employer.
Common mistakes

Avoid these self-employed mistakes.

Starting without registration clarity: your activity may need tax, business or professional registration.
Confusing revenue with profit: invoices are not take-home income.
Ignoring VAT and tax payments: advance payments and deadlines can create cashflow pressure.
Choosing insurance only by price: health insurance, liability and income protection require long-term thinking.
You are on track if…

Your setup is becoming professional.

You know whether your work is freelance, commercial or permission-based.
You have a system for invoices, receipts and tax documents.
You understand your health insurance options and obligations.
You keep reserves for taxes, insurance and slow months.
You have started reviewing pension, liability and income protection.

Need personal orientation?

Self-employment makes financial planning more important.

If you want to understand health insurance, pension, income protection and long-term financial planning as a self-employed expat in Germany, German Sherpa offers a free 20-minute Financial Check.

Book 20-min Financial Check β†’ Free orientation. No tax or legal advice.
Related guides

Continue with these topics.

Important: GermanWiki provides general educational information. This page does not provide legal, tax, immigration, insurance or financial advice. Self-employment rules, tax duties, registration requirements and insurance options can vary by activity, location, nationality and personal situation. For individual decisions, speak with a qualified professional who can review your case.