German Mini-Jobbers Get One Shot at Pension Reversal Starting July 2026
06.06.2026 - 02:22:27 | boerse-global.de
A long-standing rule that locked mini-job workers out of the pension system after they opted for exemption is about to change. From 1 July 2026, anyone who initially chose to skip compulsory pension contributions can undo that decision — but only once, and the new election will be final.
The option applies to all mini-jobbers, whether they work in retail, hospitality, or private households. The German Pension Insurance and the Mini-Job Centre are already accepting applications, even though the change does not take effect for over a year. Once a worker revokes their exemption, the decision binds them for the future.
What Joining the Pension System Costs
Those who switch back will start paying contributions out of their own pocket. Since January 2026 the mini-job earnings threshold has stood at €603 per month, and the contribution rates are fixed:
- Commercial mini-jobs: employees pay 3.6 percent, capped at €21.71 a month; employers pay 15 percent
- Private household mini-jobs: employees pay 13.6 percent; employers pay just 5 percent
Anyone holding multiple mini-jobs can only revoke the exemption uniformly for all positions. The new status takes effect the month after the application is filed.
Why Opting In Can Pay Off
Re-entering compulsory insurance brings concrete advantages for retirement. Mini-jobbers build up mandatory contribution periods — essential for the standard old-age pension and for qualifying for the basic pension supplement. Additional benefits include:
- entitlement to rehabilitation measures
- protection in case of reduced earning capacity
- access to Riester pension subsidies
- the possibility of using salary conversion for company pension plans
How to Reverse the Exemption
The process is straightforward but differs by employment type.
- Commercial mini-jobs: download the form from the Mini-Job Centre website, complete it, and hand it to the employer
- Private households: submit the change via a so-called Änderungsscheck (change cheque)
The pension authorities typically do not send a written confirmation. The employer must adjust the payroll accordingly.
More Pressures Ahead in 2026
The pension reversal is only one of several shifts affecting mini-jobbers this year. Since January the statutory minimum wage rose to €13.90 per hour, pushing the mini-job limit to €603. The tax-free allowance for recipients of unemployment benefit I remains at €165 net, and the 15-hour weekly cap continues to apply.
A more significant burden may follow. A draft nursing care reform bill from Health Minister Nina Warken proposes that employers also pay nursing care insurance contributions on mini-jobs, starting in 2027. The measure is meant to stabilise the care system’s finances and is expected to generate roughly €1.2 billion in additional revenue.
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