Friday, July 17, 2026 · 02:47 CEST · Berlin

Tag: Health

  • Care Home Costs Rise Again to €3,364 a Month

    Care Home Costs Rise Again to €3,364 a Month

    Anyone with a relative in a German nursing home is paying more this year: the average out-of-pocket share, called the Eigenanteil, has risen to €3,364 a month nationwide for a resident’s first year in care.

    The figure comes from an evaluation by the VDEK, the association of Germany’s substitute health insurers (including Techniker Krankenkasse, Barmer and DAK-Gesundheit), based on data collected up to 1 July 2026. That’s €119 more per month than at the start of the year, and €256 more than on 1 July 2025.

    This Eigenanteil covers only care and nursing itself. Germany’s long-term care insurance, the Pflegeversicherung, pays part of the cost but not all of it, unlike statutory health insurance. On top of that, residents also pay separately for room and board, building investment costs, and a training levy.

    Costs vary sharply by state. Bremen is the most expensive, at €3,761 a month, followed by Saarland (€3,695) and Baden-Württemberg (€3,657). Saxony-Anhalt is the cheapest at €2,891, with Lower Saxony (€3,008) and Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania (€3,032) also below average.

    VDEK chief executive Ulrike Elsner attributed the rise to high staffing costs, saying pay increases for care workers were overdue and justified, but that this should not keep piling costs onto people needing care. A planned care reform is meant to address this. Care recipients already receive relief surcharges that reduce their care-only share by 15% in year one, 30% in year two, 50% in year three, and 75% from year four onward. Under a Health Ministry draft, the gap between these steps would stretch from 12 to 18 months, saving €2.6 billion next year.

    What this means for you

    If you have a parent or relative moving into a German care home, budget for regional differences of over €800 a month between states, plus separate charges for accommodation and meals on top of the care fee itself.

  • Tobacco Tax in Germany to Rise Higher Than Planned

    Tobacco Tax in Germany to Rise Higher Than Planned

    Germany’s coalition government reportedly plans to raise the tobacco tax by more than originally planned, pushing the price of a pack of cigarettes to nearly €12 by 2030.

    According to a report by Redaktionsnetzwerk Deutschland, which cites a draft document (Formulierungshilfe) from the Federal Finance Ministry, the price of a pack of 20 cigarettes would climb step by step to almost €12 by 2030 — about 40 cents more than previously planned. Taxes on fine-cut tobacco (for rolling cigarettes), pipe tobacco, cigars and cigarillos would also rise every year under the draft. The tax on e-cigarette liquids would increase by one cent per milliliter annually. The news agency dpa also reported a higher tax rate than planned, citing coalition sources.

    The government points to a gap in the federal budget as the reason for the change. Officials also linked the increase to public health, saying it supports the goal of lowering smoking rates among young people and adults.

    The higher rates are expected to bring in an estimated €756 million in extra tax revenue in 2027, rising to €3.589 billion in 2030 as the step-by-step increases take full effect.

    What this means for you: If you smoke or vape in Germany, expect cigarettes, rolling tobacco, cigars and e-cigarette liquids to get more expensive gradually through 2030. This is still a draft plan from the finance ministry, not a passed law, so the exact amount and timeline of the expected rises is still unclear. But it’s worth budgeting for if you’re a regular buyer, as prices are about to rise to 12€ per package by 2030. This would mean an increase of about 20% over current prices of 10€ per package.

    Sources: tagesschau.de

    This news brief was prepared with automated tools and follows our editorial standards. Spotted an error? See our corrections policy.

  • Germany’s June Heatwave Killed an Estimated 5,100 People

    Germany’s June Heatwave Killed an Estimated 5,100 People

    The heatwave that pushed temperatures above 40°C across Germany in late June killed an estimated 5,100 people, according to the Robert Koch Institute (RKI), the country’s federal public health agency. That is already far more than Germany typically records in an entire year — and the summer is not over: the next heatwave is forecast for the coming days.
    The numbers at a glance
    • Estimated heat deaths since mid-June: about 5,100 (RKI; range 4,410–5,850 for April to June 28).
    • Deadliest week: June 22–28 alone accounted for roughly 4,310 deaths.
    • For comparison: Germany averaged about 2,900 heat-related deaths per whole year from 2023 to 2025.
    • Most affected: people over 75 — around 2,950 of the dead were 85 or older; more women than men.
    • June 2026: the second-warmest June ever recorded in Germany, with peaks above 41°C.

    More deaths in two weeks than in entire previous years

    The RKI’s latest heat-mortality reports show how exceptional the late-June heat was. In the same April-to-June period, the institute estimated 560 heat-related deaths in 2025, 470 in 2024 and 810 in 2023. This year’s figure of around 5,100 is roughly seven times the highest of those — and it was reached before July had even begun. The true toll may be higher still. The Federal Statistical Office counted 6,800 excess deaths in the week of June 22–28 alone, using a different method. The RKI itself notes that its model may understate the impact, and that figures for recent weeks can still rise as late death reports come in. Heat rarely appears on a death certificate. In most cases, extreme temperatures act together with existing conditions — heart disease, respiratory illness — which is why the death toll has to be estimated statistically, from mortality data and temperature readings at 52 weather stations.

    Who is most at risk

    The victims were overwhelmingly elderly. Of the estimated deaths up to June 28, around 2,950 were people aged 85 or older, 1,320 were between 75 and 84, 550 between 65 and 74, and about 300 were under 65. More women than men died — largely because women make up a larger share of the oldest age groups. Researchers stress that deaths are only part of the picture. “Heat is a relevant health risk factor, especially for older people, people with pre-existing conditions, pregnant women, but also for people working outdoors,” said Alexandra Schneider of Helmholtz Munich. Veronika Huber of the Spanish research council CSIC called the deaths “the tip of the iceberg,” pointing to overcrowded emergency rooms and overstretched ambulance services on hot days.

    A June of records

    June 2026 was Germany’s second-warmest June since records began, behind only 2019, according to the German Weather Service (DWD). The final week brought several extremes at once: temperatures above 41°C were measured repeatedly, 46 weather stations broke the 40°C mark on June 27, and the night of June 27–28 was provisionally the warmest night ever recorded in Germany. The nationwide mean temperature that week was 26.4°C — far above the threshold at which heat-related mortality rises sharply.

    Hospitals and care homes under pressure

    The German Foundation for Patient Protection criticised how poorly prepared hospitals and nursing homes are for extreme heat — many lack even basic external shading. Its chairman, Eugen Brysch, called for a €30 billion federal investment programme to make medical and care facilities heat-proof. “Heat protection plans end where patient protection costs money,” he said.

    What it means for people living in Germany

    If you are new to Germany, two things are worth knowing. First, air conditioning is rare here: most flats, offices, care homes and even hospitals do not have it, so buildings heat up and stay hot — especially top-floor flats under the roof. Second, forecasters already see the next heatwave arriving within days. The standard advice from German health authorities: drink water regularly before you feel thirsty, keep windows and blinds closed during the day and air the flat at night, avoid exertion in the midday heat, and never leave children or pets in a parked car. Check in on elderly neighbours or relatives — the people dying in these statistics are mostly over 75 and often live alone. Signs of heatstroke (confusion, hot dry skin, loss of consciousness) are a medical emergency: call 112.
    Reporting based on RKI heat-mortality reports and dpa reporting published by FAZ, t-online and Tagesspiegel. Understand Germany, in plain English. Sign up for The New German newsletter for the news that matters to internationals living here.