Health Insurance for Retirees in Germany

Your coverage in retirement depends on your entire working history. This guide explains your options, costs, and what to watch out for — clearly.

~7.3% Your share of pension (GKV)
50% Paid by pension fund
8.75% PKV subsidy cap

Public or Private — Which Are You In?

Germany has two parallel health insurance systems. Which you belong to in retirement is largely determined by what you were in during your working life.

Private (PKV)

Private Insurance

Premiums based on age and health when you joined. Broader benefits possible, but cannot switch back to public after age 55.


KVdR — The Best Deal in Public Insurance

Krankenversicherung der Rentner (KVdR) is not a separate insurer — it’s a special status within the public system that significantly lowers your costs by having the pension fund automatically cover half your contributions.

9/10

To qualify for KVdR, you must have been in the public system for at least 9/10ths of the second half of your working life — and be receiving a statutory German pension.

Under KVdR status, contributions are only calculated on your statutory pension and company pension. Rental income, dividends, and private pension payouts are not counted.

Didn’t Qualify for KVdR?

If you don’t meet the 9/10ths rule — common for expats who moved to Germany later — you can still join the public system as a voluntary member. The key difference:

  • Contributions are calculated on all worldwide income — pension, rent, dividends, private schemes
  • You still receive the 50% subsidy from the pension fund on your statutory German pension
  • But you bear the full rate (14.6% + ~2.9%) on any other income streams

Staying Private — What Changes After You Retire

If you were privately insured during your career, you remain privately insured. Your pension fund will pay a subsidy equal to what it would have paid into the public system.

!

Switching from private to public insurance after age 55 is nearly impossible. If you are in PKV past this point, plan to stay there for life. Choosing the right tariff early is critical.

German PKV providers use two mechanisms to keep premiums stable in old age:

1

Aging reserves (Altersrückstellungen)

A portion of your working-life premiums is legally set aside and invested, then drawn down to reduce your premiums in retirement.

2

Premium relief component

You can pay an optional extra monthly amount during younger years to lock in a specific premium reduction after retirement.

3

Basic tariff (Basistarif) safety net

If premiums become unmanageable, you have a legal right to switch to the Basistarif, which caps costs at the max public rate and provides equivalent benefits.


Public vs. Private at a Glance

Feature Public (GKV / KVdR) Private (PKV)
Premium basis % of pension income Age + health at entry
Pension fund subsidy 50% of contribution Up to 8.75% of pension
Spouse coverage Free (if low income) Separate paid policy
Rental / investment income Taxed (voluntary only) No extra premium impact
Private hospital room Standard only Available
Premium stability Very predictable Risk of increases with age
Can switch later? Yes (to private) No (after age 55)

What You’ll Actually Pay

14.6% Base contribution rate
+2.9% Avg. supplemental rate
3.4–4.0% Nursing care (Pflege)

Long-term nursing care insurance (Pflegeversicherung) is mandatory for everyone — public and private. Retirees bear the full cost: 3.4% if you have children, 4.0% if childless. This is on top of health insurance contributions.

Mandatory income threshold: €69,750 / year PKV opt-in threshold: €77,400 / year

Expat Retirees — A Stricter Set of Rules

EU / EEA / Swiss citizens

You can use your home country’s public insurance via an S1 Form and join a German GKV provider. Costs are settled between member states.

Non-EU citizens

Cannot join GKV. Must secure German private health insurance. Arriving at 65+ makes PKV coverage extremely expensive — often €1,000–€1,150/month including care.

!

“Expat” or travel insurance almost never includes Pflegeversicherung and is typically rejected by the immigration office for long-term residence permit applications.


How to Claim the Pension Fund Subsidy

Whether you are in the public or private system, apply for the pension fund subsidy at the same time you apply for your pension. Don’t wait.

1

Apply with Deutsche Rentenversicherung

Submit your application when you claim your pension, ideally within 3 months of your pension start date.

2

PKV holders: get a certificate

Request a confirmation document from your private insurer showing your current premium. This is required alongside your pension application.

3

GKV holders: it’s automatic (KVdR)

If you qualify for KVdR, the pension fund pays its share directly to your public insurer — no extra action needed after the initial application.