Germany Faces Shrinking, Aging Population: New Projections Show Dramatic Shifts by 2070

December 11, 2025
Germany Faces Shrinking, Aging Population: New Projections Show Dramatic Shifts by 2070
  • Long-term projections are conditional scenarios, not firm predictions, built on varying assumptions about life expectancy and birth rates.

  • Net immigration—arrivals minus departures—contributes to downward adjustments in the projections.

  • Policy discussions on pension reform continue, including ideas like counting credit years instead of fixed retirement ages and potentially including civil servants and politicians in contributions; a government pension commission will start addressing these issues next week.

  • Germany’s population is aging and is projected to shrink over time, with mid-2025 population around 83.5 million and a central scenario for 2070 near 74.7 million, though estimates range from about 63.9 to 86.5 million depending on fertility and migration.

  • Across projections, the share of people aged 67 and older rises to roughly 20.5–21.3 million by 2038, meaning up to 4.5 million more seniors than today.

  • The current ratio stands at about 33 retirees per 100 working-age people, with forecasts projecting 43 to 61 retirees per 100 workers by 2070 under different fertility and migration scenarios.

  • Regional differences are pronounced: eastern Germany is expected to shrink in all scenarios, western states may stay stable, and city-states like Berlin, Hamburg, and Bremen could grow with sustained migration.

  • Western metropolitan and rural areas may stabilize under higher migration, while eastern rural areas could shrink by 14–30% by 2070, with potential growth in city-states under higher migration.

  • Lower birth rates, inflation and recession uncertainty, housing affordability, and political uncertainty are dampening births, while immigration’s compensatory effect is waning.

  • Destatis’ updated projections incorporate scenarios for births, life expectancy, and migration and indicate an aging trend that is steeper than earlier forecasts.

  • The official population forecast was published by the Federal Statistical Office in Wiesbaden as part of the Bevölkerungs­vorausberechnung.

  • Key drivers include persistently low birth rates and reduced net migration, which slow population growth and accelerate aging.

Summary based on 6 sources


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