When Germany’s federal government approved a sweeping reform of its basic income support system in March 2026, the debate was anything but measured. Polls taken that same month showed broad public backing for tougher penalties on people receiving the benefit, even though official figures tell a strikingly different story: out of 5.2 million recipients, just 14,000 individuals – a mere 0.27 percent – were classified as total work refusers.
The changes, which begin to take effect in phases, will rename the current “Bürgergeld” (citizen’s benefit) to “Grundsicherungsgeld” (basic income support) as of July 1, 2026. Alongside the new name come stricter obligations for beneficiaries – especially around reporting illness.
Paper Sick Notes Stay, MDK Scrutiny Rises
Unlike private-sector employees, who since 2024 have used an electronic sick-note system (eAU), people receiving Grundsicherungsgeld must continue to submit a paper doctor’s certificate. The deadline remains the fourth calendar day of illness. Proper notification suspends all appointment and cooperation duties, and the benefit itself continues to be paid even after six weeks of sickness – a difference from statutory health insurance, which switches to Krankengeld (sick pay).
The new rules give job centers more room to involve the Medical Review Board (MDK) when they doubt a beneficiary’s inability to work, especially in cases of repeated sick notes. Harald Thomé, a social-law expert, described this as a “structural blanket suspicion” against ill welfare recipients.
From Warning to Full Cut in Three Steps
The first elements of the reform were enacted in April 2026. Central to the new system is a mandatory “cooperation plan” offering counselling, training, and job placement. The accompanying sanctions ramp up quickly:
- A first missed appointment triggers no cut.
- A second missed appointment reduces the standard monthly payment by 30 percent for one month.
- A third missed appointment cancels the entire benefit – including the allowances for housing and heating.
Germany’s Federal Ministry of Labour and Social Affairs defends the rules as constitutional. For those who outright refuse work, housing costs will continue to be covered under certain conditions, but the complete withdrawal for non-availability is, the ministry says, a consistent measure.
A Billion-Euro Fight Over Who Pays for Health Care
Running parallel to the rule changes is a simmering dispute over financing. Statutory health-insurance funds spend roughly €10 billion per year on medical care for Grundsicherungsgeld recipients. The per-capita state payments fall well short of actual expenses.
An expert commission appointed by Health Minister Nina Warken has called for full tax funding of these costs – a move that would relieve the statutory health-insurance system by around €12 billion starting in 2027. Finance Minister Lars Klingbeil has so far rejected the proposal. Florian Lanz, head of the GKV-Spitzenverband (the association of statutory health insurers), labelled the current situation socially unjust and said his organisation has filed a lawsuit.
From 2027, the federal government plans a gradual increase in subsidies through a dynamic per-head rate linked to a general reference value. At the same time, the general federal contribution to the health fund is set to drop from €14.5 billion to €12.5 billion. That combination is likely to keep the debate over long-term health-system financing alive for months to come.











