German health insurance 2026
Public or private health insurance in Germany?
A clear guide for expats and internationals: how GKV and PKV work, who can choose, what it costs, where the traps are and how to make a decision that still works years from now.
Quick overview
Germany has two main health insurance worlds.
Most people are insured in the statutory public system, called GKV. Some groups can choose private health insurance, called PKV. The best option is not simply the one with the lowest monthly price today.
Your decision should reflect income, job status, family plans, health history, expected time in Germany, retirement plans and how much flexibility you need later.
2026 key facts
The health insurance decision starts with status and income.
Employee threshold
Annual gross salary threshold for employees who may become voluntary members in GKV and may choose PKV.
Contribution ceiling
GKV and long-term care contributions are calculated only up to this annual income ceiling.
General GKV rate
The general statutory health contribution is combined with an individual supplementary contribution from your Krankenkasse.
Average add-on
The average supplementary GKV contribution for 2026 is an orientation value. Actual rates depend on the insurer.
GKV vs PKV
Public and private insurance follow different logic.
Public health insurance β GKV
GKV is based on solidarity. Contributions mainly depend on income, while core medical access is broadly standardized across statutory insurers.
Private health insurance β PKV
PKV is contract-based. Premiums depend on age at entry, health status, chosen benefits, deductible and tariff quality β not directly on your income.
Who can choose?
Not everyone can freely switch to private insurance.
In Germany, your access to GKV or PKV depends on employment status, income, student status, civil servant status, self-employment, previous insurance and sometimes timing.
Public insurance in practice
GKV is simple, family-friendly and income-based.
Public health insurance is often the most straightforward option for employees, families and people who value simplicity over premium-level customization.
Private insurance in practice
PKV can be powerful β if the contract fits your long-term plan.
Private insurance can offer broader benefits and faster access, but it is a long-term contract decision. The cheapest tariff is rarely the safest tariff.
Which system fits?
The right answer changes by life situation.
Single high earner
PKV may look attractive because there are no dependents and income is above the threshold.
Check: future family plans, health history, retirement and whether the tariff is strong enough.
Family with one income
GKV can be very strong because eligible family members may be covered without separate premiums.
Check: spouse income, child coverage, maternity, parental leave and employer subsidy limits.
Self-employed expat
Both systems can be relevant, but income volatility and lack of employer contribution make planning critical.
Check: minimum GKV contributions, private premium risk, sick pay, pregnancy and long-term residence plans.
Civil servant
PKV is often structurally attractive because Beihilfe can cover a large part of eligible costs.
Check: Beihilfe percentage, children, spouse status, state rules and long-term private premiums.
Avoid expensive mistakes
Do not switch based only on todayβs premium.
The wrong health insurance decision can become expensive because switching back, adding family members or correcting underinsured benefits may be difficult later.
Cost logic
Compare total cost, not just monthly premium.
A fair comparison includes health insurance, long-term care insurance, employer subsidy, deductibles, family members, tax effects, sick pay and retirement.
Expat checklist
Check these points before choosing GKV or PKV.
Confirm your status
Employee, self-employed, student, civil servant, job seeker or family member β status determines your options.
Think beyond Germany
If you may leave Germany, check portability, international coverage and what happens to your contract.
Review family plans
Marriage, children, parental leave and spouse income can completely change the comparison.
Check health history
Before applying for PKV, collect medical records and answer health questions accurately.
Compare benefits line by line
Dental, hospital, therapy, aids, sick pay, travel and reimbursement rules can differ massively.
Plan retirement
Your health insurance cost in retirement should be part of your pension planning, not an afterthought.
Common questions
Fast answers for expats.
Is private health insurance always better?
No. PKV can offer stronger benefits, but it is not automatically better. Family situation, health, income stability, retirement and long-term residence plans matter.
Can I switch back from PKV to GKV?
Sometimes, but not freely. You usually need a qualifying change in insurance status. Later in life, especially from age 55, returning to GKV can be very restricted.
Does GKV include my family?
Often yes, if the legal requirements for family insurance are met. This is one of the strongest advantages of GKV for families.
What should I check before applying for PKV?
Check eligibility, medical history, tariff quality, deductible, sick pay, dental limits, psychotherapy, aids, hospital benefits, premium development and family plans.
Next step
Choose the system your future self can still afford.
Start with your status, income, family plans, health history and time horizon in Germany. Then compare benefits and long-term costs instead of choosing only by todayβs premium.
