Last updated: March 2026
Reviewed by Matthias Wolf, Licensed Insurance Broker (§34d GewO), Founder of Stay Insured
If you searched "bAV for expats" or "company pension Germany" — you're in the right place. At Stay., we say "international resident" because Germany is your home, not a posting. This guide covers the Betriebliche Altersvorsorge (employer pension) from every angle — with real math, not vague advice.
TL;DR — Is bAV in Germany Worth It?
If your employer pays 100% of contributions → always opt in. Free money. No discussion.
If your employer co-funds (e.g. matches your contribution) → usually yes. The mandatory 15% subsidy plus any additional match typically beats solo investing.
If it's pure salary sacrifice with only the 15% minimum → do the math. You save on tax and social contributions now, but lose Rentenpunkte, reduce disability and unemployment benefits, and pay full tax in retirement.
The break-even point: When your employer contributes at least 20-25% on top of your sacrifice, bAV almost always wins over investing on your own. Below that? It depends on your salary, tax bracket, and how long you'll stay in Germany.
In This Guide
Your HR department hands you a form about betriebliche Altersvorsorge — the company pension in Germany. You sign it. Money disappears from your payslip. But what exactly is happening?
The core mechanism is called Entgeltumwandlung (salary conversion). Instead of receiving part of your gross salary as cash, that portion goes directly into a pension contract. The money never hits your bank account — it's redirected before tax and social contributions are calculated.
Here's the 2026 math for a quick picture:
| 2026 Limits | Monthly | Yearly |
|---|---|---|
| Tax-free (8% of BBG, §3 Nr. 63 EStG) | EUR 676 | EUR 8,112 |
| Social-insurance-free (4% of BBG) | EUR 338 | EUR 4,056 |
| BBG Rentenversicherung 2026 | EUR 8,450 | EUR 101,400 |
Translation: You can put up to EUR 8,112/year into bAV tax-free. The first EUR 4,056 is also free from social insurance contributions (pension, health, unemployment, long-term care). That's the sweet spot — contributions up to EUR 338/month save you both tax and social contributions.
Example: You earn EUR 60,000 gross and convert EUR 200/month into bAV. Your taxable income drops to EUR 57,600. At a 35% marginal tax rate, you save ~EUR 70/month in income tax + ~EUR 40/month in social contributions. Your EUR 200 contribution only costs you ~EUR 90 in take-home pay.
Sounds like a no-brainer. But there's a catch — and it's hidden in the details.
Not all bAV offers are equal. Your decision depends entirely on who's paying.
Your employer contributes to a pension for you. Nothing comes out of your salary. Zero impact on your take-home pay.
Verdict: Always opt in. This is free money. There's no downside. You keep your full salary and get an extra retirement benefit.
You contribute EUR 200/month, employer adds EUR 100/month on top (50% match). Plus the mandatory 15% subsidy (EUR 30) on your portion.
| Co-Funded bAV (EUR 200/mo sacrifice) | Amount |
|---|---|
| Your salary sacrifice | EUR 200 |
| Mandatory 15% employer subsidy | EUR 30 |
| Additional employer match (50%) | EUR 100 |
| Total monthly contribution | EUR 330 |
| Your actual net cost (after tax/SV savings) | ~EUR 90 |
You pay ~EUR 90 net. EUR 330 goes into your pension. That's a 267% return before any investment gains. Even accounting for hidden costs, this is almost always a win.
Verdict: Usually yes. The employer match plus tax savings overwhelm the downsides.
You contribute EUR 200/month. Employer adds only the mandatory 15% subsidy (EUR 30). No additional match.
Total going in: EUR 230/month. Your net cost: ~EUR 90. That's still a 156% ratio — but now the hidden costs matter more.
⚠️ Verdict: Do the math carefully. With only the 15% minimum, you need to weigh the tax savings against lost Rentenpunkte, reduced disability insurance base, and full taxation in retirement. For high earners above the Beitragsbemessungsgrenze, the social insurance impact disappears — making bAV more attractive. For mid-range earners (EUR 40,000–65,000), it's a close call.
Not sure which scenario applies to you?
A 15-minute call with a pension expert can clarify whether your bAV offer is genuinely worth it — or costing you money.
Book a free pension check Try our pension planning toolSince January 2022, every employer in Germany must add at least 15% on top of your Entgeltumwandlung contribution — but only if they save on social insurance contributions because of your sacrifice.
The legal basis: §1a Abs. 1a Betriebsrentengesetz (BetrAVG). This applies to Direktversicherung, Pensionskasse, and Pensionsfonds contracts.
Here's what it looks like in practice:
| Your Monthly Sacrifice | 15% Subsidy | Total Going In |
|---|---|---|
| EUR 100 | EUR 15 | EUR 115 |
| EUR 200 | EUR 30 | EUR 230 |
| EUR 338 (SV-free max) | EUR 50.70 | EUR 388.70 |
⚠️ Check your payslip. Some employers still haven't implemented this for older contracts. If your bAV started before 2019 and you don't see the 15% subsidy, raise it with HR. It's been mandatory for all contracts since January 2022.
Here's where most bAV guides stop: "You save tax! Great!" But salary sacrifice has real trade-offs.
Your state pension (gesetzliche Rente) is calculated on your gross salary after Entgeltumwandlung. Less gross salary = fewer Rentenpunkte = lower state pension for life.
Example: EUR 200/month sacrifice on a EUR 60,000 salary.
Your Krankengeld (sick pay) and Erwerbsminderungsrente (disability pension) are based on your gross salary after Entgeltumwandlung. Lower gross = lower safety net if you can't work.
Arbeitslosengeld I is calculated on your net salary — which is already reduced by bAV contributions. Lose your job? Your unemployment benefit is lower too.
bAV payouts are taxed as regular income in retirement (sonstige Einkünfte, §22 Nr. 5 EStG). On top of income tax, you'll owe health insurance and long-term care contributions. For members of the Krankenversicherung der Rentner (KVdR), that's the full employer + employee rate (~14.6% + Zusatzbeitrag + ~3.4% Pflegeversicherung) on bAV income above the Freibetrag of EUR 176.75/month (2026). That's roughly 19% of your bAV payout going to health/care insurance alone.
"The tax break going in is real. But people forget that the tax break going out disappears. You're not avoiding tax — you're deferring it. The question is whether your marginal rate in retirement is lower than today. For most international residents, it is. But not always."
— Matthias Wolf, Licensed Insurance Broker (§34d GewO), Founder of Stay Insured
The internet is full of "just invest in ETFs" advice. Here's when that's right — and when it's wrong.
| Employer Match | bAV vs. ETF Verdict |
|---|---|
| 100% employer-funded | bAV wins — always. Take it, invest separately too. |
| 50%+ match | bAV wins — the match overwhelms ETF's flexibility advantage. |
| 20–50% match | bAV usually wins, but check fund costs inside the contract. |
| 15% only (mandatory minimum) | Depends on salary, tax bracket, and bAV contract costs. Close call. |
| 0% (no subsidy passed on) | ETF likely wins — but check if employer is violating §1a BetrAVG. |
The math behind the threshold:
At a 35% tax rate and 20% social contribution rate, your EUR 200 sacrifice costs you ~EUR 90 net. With only the 15% minimum (EUR 30 employer subsidy), EUR 230 enters the bAV. An ETF with the same EUR 90 invested grows tax-efficiently (26.375% Abgeltungsteuer on gains, with 30% partial exemption for equity ETFs).
Over 30 years at 6% return: The bAV wins when the employer contributes at least 20–25% total, because the extra capital compounds and overcomes the tax disadvantage at payout. Below 20%? The ETF's tax efficiency and flexibility often win.
The smart move: Don't pick one. Max out bAV up to the employer match threshold, then invest the rest in a global ETF portfolio. Diversification beats ideology. For a broader look at building wealth in Germany as an international resident, see our complete health insurance guide — because your insurance choice directly affects your pension math.
Want the exact bAV vs. ETF comparison for your salary?
Our pension experts model both scenarios with your real numbers — employer match, tax bracket, and timeline.
Talk to a pension expert — free Explore our pension calculatorGermany has five legal forms of bAV. You don't get to choose — your employer decides. But knowing which one you have matters for portability, flexibility, and what happens when you leave.
| Vehicle | How Common | Portable? | Key Feature |
|---|---|---|---|
| Direktversicherung | Very common (SMEs) | Yes — easiest to transfer | Insurance contract can be put in your name |
| Pensionskasse | Common (large employers) | Yes — similar to Direktversicherung | Separate legal entity, regulated by BaFin |
| Pensionsfonds | Less common | Yes — transferable | More investment flexibility, higher risk/reward |
| Unterstützungskasse | Medium (executives) | Limited | No BBG cap on tax-free contributions |
| Direktzusage | Common (DAX companies) | Not portable | Employer books pension as liability. Generous, but tied to that employer. |
If you work at a typical German SME or mid-size company, you almost certainly have a Direktversicherung. This is the most portable and most common vehicle for Entgeltumwandlung.
If you work at a large corporation (DAX, MDAX), you might have a Direktzusage or Pensionskasse — often with generous employer contributions. Check your contract or ask HR.
Under §4 BetrAVG, you have the right to transfer your bAV to your new employer's scheme — if it's a Direktversicherung, Pensionskasse, or Pensionsfonds. The new employer must agree, but cannot unreasonably refuse.
In practice:
⚠️ Vesting rules: Your bAV benefits become non-forfeitable (unverfallbar) after you leave, provided you've been in the scheme for at least 3 years (since 2018 reform) and the contributions were made after your 21st birthday. Employer-funded portions vest under the same rules.
This is the question every international resident asks — and the answer depends on your vehicle:
Bottom line for international residents: If you might leave Germany, bAV isn't lost — but it's frozen. You can't access it early, and the payout may be taxed in both Germany and your new country (check your DTA). Factor this illiquidity into your decision, especially if you're unsure about staying long-term.
Should you opt into the employer pension in Germany? Walk through these questions in order:
Step 1: Does your employer pay 100% of bAV contributions?
→ YES: Opt in. Always. Stop here.
→ NO: Continue.
Step 2: Does your employer match ≥20% beyond the mandatory 15%?
→ YES: Opt in. The match makes it worthwhile for most people.
→ NO (only 15% mandatory): Continue.
Step 3: Is your gross salary above the Beitragsbemessungsgrenze (EUR 101,400 in 2026)?
→ YES: Opt in up to the SV-free limit. No impact on Rentenpunkte since you're already above the BBG.
→ NO: Continue.
Step 4: Are you planning to stay in Germany long-term (10+ years)?
→ NO: Consider skipping bAV. Frozen pension in Germany with complex cross-border taxation. Invest in a portable ETF portfolio instead.
→ YES: Continue.
Step 5: Check the contract costs. Are annual fees below 1%?
→ YES: Opt in — the tax deferral plus 15% subsidy likely beats a solo ETF.
→ NO (fees above 1.5%): Probably skip it. High fees eat the tax advantage. Invest the net difference in a low-cost ETF.
Why International Residents Trust Stay.
If your employer contributes on top of your salary sacrifice: yes, almost always. The free employer money plus tax savings make it worthwhile. If it's purely salary sacrifice with only the mandatory 15% minimum, run the numbers with a pension advisor. The answer depends on your salary, tax bracket, how long you'll stay in Germany, and the contract's internal fees.
Your bAV stays in Germany. You cannot withdraw it early. The contract continues as paid-up (beitragsfrei) and pays out at retirement age (62 or 67). Payments can be transferred to a foreign bank account. You'll owe German income tax on the payout, potentially offset by a double taxation agreement between Germany and your new country of residence. It's not lost — but it's illiquid.
Neither is universally better. bAV wins when the employer match is 20%+ because you're getting free money that compounds for decades. ETFs win on flexibility, low fees (0.1–0.2% vs. 0.5–1.5% in many bAV contracts), favorable capital gains taxation (26.375% with 30% partial exemption for equity ETFs), and portability. The smart approach: max out bAV up to your employer match, then invest the rest in ETFs.
Yes. Entgeltumwandlung requires your consent. You can stop contributing at any time — just inform HR in writing. The existing contract becomes paid-up. Your vested benefits are preserved.
Yes, since January 2022 for all Entgeltumwandlung contracts via Direktversicherung, Pensionskasse, or Pensionsfonds (§1a Abs. 1a BetrAVG). The employer must pass on at least 15% of your converted salary — if they save social insurance contributions as a result. For salaries above the BBG, the employer doesn't save on SV, so the subsidy may not apply.
Contribute up to the amount your employer matches. Beyond that, the SV-free limit of EUR 338/month (EUR 4,056/year in 2026) is a reasonable cap for most people. Going above that still saves income tax but no longer saves social contributions — and increases the hidden costs to your state pension and safety net.
bAV is not a yes-or-no question. It's a math question. And the math depends on your employer's contribution, your salary, your tax bracket, your timeline in Germany, and your contract's costs.
You've read the guide. Now get numbers that are actually yours.
bAV decisions shouldn't be based on guesswork.
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Book a free 15-min consultation Explore our pension calculatorDisclaimer: This guide is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial, tax, or legal advice. Individual circumstances vary — always consult a licensed advisor for decisions about your pension and retirement planning. Stay Insured operates under §34d GewO as a licensed insurance broker. We do not guarantee specific financial outcomes. All figures reflect 2026 thresholds and may change annually.