Just days ahead of a pivotal parliamentary vote on 26 June 2026, Germany’s statutory health insurance (GKV) system is staring at a projected deficit of roughly €15 billion next year. That shortfall has pushed lawmakers toward a controversial reform that could raise monthly contributions for high earners by as much as €122 – and it is already reshaping how companies recruit.
Under the planned GKV-Beitragssatzstabilisierungsgesetz, the government wants to lift the contribution assessment ceiling and impose higher prescription-drug and physiotherapy copayments. A proposal to make spousal coverage fee-based from 2028, which the Bundesrat voted against in mid-June, is expected to generate €2.8 billion in additional revenue. The final reading in the Bundestag is set for 26 June.
From Company Pensions to Health Coverage
A growing number of firms are responding by expanding betriebliche Krankenversicherung (bKV) – company-funded private health insurance. According to the private health insurance association PKV, 60.600 employers now offer bKV, covering roughly 2.8 million workers. That is a 16% jump from last year.
The surge is not accidental. “The persistent shortage of skilled labour forces employers to think creatively,” the association notes. In the Mittelstand, bKV is increasingly viewed as a replacement for the betriebliche Altersversorgung (bAV) – the company pension scheme – which has largely saturated its market.
Dirk Ehlers of consultancy DECON reports a sharp rise in advisory sessions on bKV implementation. Companies with 50 or more employees, he says, often see it as a simpler alternative to bAV because modular insurance packages require less administrative burden. Under the Betriebsrentengesetz, employers must navigate complex subsidy duties for pensions; bKV sidesteps most of that.
Making Benefits Tangible Day-to-Day
For workers to embrace bKV, the coverage must feel useful in everyday life. Sascha Schürings, an executive board member at MLP, recommends pairing inpatient tariffs with budget-based solutions. Employees receive a fixed annual allowance – for dental cleaning, eyeglasses, or medication – and choose how to spend it.
Digital platforms such as “pxtra” bundle perks from preventive care to non-cash benefits. Insurers including SDK, HanseMerkur and the Hallesche are weaving telemedicine and mental-health services into their plans. The aim, they say, is holistic care that goes beyond reimbursement and cuts waiting times for specialist appointments.
Distribution is also professionalising. JP Consulting GmbH, via a network of more than 170 brokers, closed over 3.100 private health insurance contracts in 2025 – all from pre-qualified leads.
Real Cost Differences
The reform effort underscores the widening gap between the cheapest and priciest statutory funds. A current Stiftung Warentest study shows that for high-income employees, the annual savings potential between the lowest- and highest-cost GKV provider can reach €660. Against that backdrop, private add-ons that fill holes in statutory coverage are gaining appeal – and employers are betting that offering them will tip the balance in a tight labour market.










