Germany Proposes Unified Welfare System: Streamlining Benefits with Digital Modernization

January 26, 2026
Germany Proposes Unified Welfare System: Streamlining Benefits with Digital Modernization
  • A single intake and eligibility framework would govern Grundsicherung, Wohngeld, Sozialhilfe, and Kinderzuschlag, administered via two hubs and supported by a streamlined digital infrastructure.

  • The draft is not yet final and awaits further updates and publication.

  • Implementation targets initial legislation by mid-2027, followed by subsequent laws, aligning with prior coalition commitments between Union and SPD.

  • Digital modernization is central, including a centralized service portal to eliminate repeated data entry, longer approval periods, flat-rate rules, and simplified documentation to improve public finances and the labor market.

  • The plan envisions consolidating four existing authorities into two main contact points—Jobcenters for employable individuals and municipal social welfare offices for non-working people—potentially requiring a constitutional change for full consolidation.

  • A German government commission proposes a sweeping social-state reform that merges Bürgergeld, Wohngeld, and Kinderzuschlag into one unified welfare system, with a simplified administration and faster access to benefits.

  • The final report to Federal Labour Minister outlines structural changes, anticipated administrative benefits, and political hurdles.

  • The reform process emphasizes rapid digitalization and legal simplification within six months to produce a detailed concept, followed by parliamentary processing, with a goal to finish the overall reform by the end of 2027.

  • Automatic, non-application-based payments of Kindergeld to eligible parents are proposed, leveraging data and requiring broader digital infrastructure and relaxed data-protection rules.

  • Income reporting would be adjusted to incentivize work, with very low incomes receiving stronger transfers, higher incomes receiving less offset, and the non-taxable allowance reduced from 100 to 50 euros.

  • Data coherence and streamlined verification aim to reduce multiple applications, extend benefit eligibility, and improve efficiency across benefits.

  • The commission traces its formation to a CDU/CSU–SPD coalition agreement, with involvement from eight federal ministries and major regional and municipal bodies; leadership is associated with Bärbel Bas and other party figures.

Summary based on 7 sources


Get a daily email with more EU News stories

Sources

More Stories