Early, Retirement

Early Retirement Under Fire: German Study Puts €9.5 Billion Price Tag on ‘Rente mit 63’ — Political Clash Over Costs and Worker Welfare

15.06.2026 - 02:12:08 | boerse-global.de

A study finds ending penalty-free early retirement could save €9.5B per cohort and add 125k workers, fueling political splits—while a separate pension reform introduces a new savings depot and expanded child-rearing credits.

Germany's Early Pension Debate: €9.5B Savings at Stake with Rente mit 63
Early - Early Retirement Under Fire: German Study Puts €9.5 Billion Price Tag on ‘Rente mit 63’ — Political Clash Over Costs and Worker Welfare 15.06.2026 - Bild: ĂŒber boerse-global.de

A new analysis commissioned by the Bertelsmann Stiftung and conducted by the German Institute for Economic Research (DIW) has thrown fuel on the long-simmering debate over early retirement. According to the study, scrapping the penalty-free early pension option would save the system roughly €9.5 billion per retirement cohort and add around 125,000 full-time workers to the labour market each year.

The figures stem from the so-called “Rente mit 63” — a popular pathway that allows workers with 45 contribution years to retire at 63 without cuts. Roughly 250,000 to 280,000 employees use this option annually, representing about 30 percent of all new pension claims. Critics argue the programme drains both pension finances and the skilled workforce at a time when Germany faces acute demographic pressures.

But who actually qualifies for a penalty-free exit? For workers born in 1964 or later, the standard retirement age is 67. The “pension after 45 contribution years” permits retirement at 65 — but only with full benefits. Anyone retiring earlier faces a permanent reduction of 0.3 percent per month, accumulating up to 14.4 percent over the entire pension period. Not all periods count toward the 45?year threshold: receipt of unemployment benefit II (BĂŒrgergeld), university semesters, and time credited due to pension equalisation or illness are excluded.

The political battle lines are clearly drawn. Federal Minister of Economic Affairs Katherina Reiche has openly called for an end to early-retirement subsidies. Steffen Kampeter, managing director of the Confederation of German Employers’ Associations (BDA), echoes that demand. On the other side, SPD deputy parliamentary group leader Dagmar Schmidt rejects the repeal. As a middle ground, the DIW suggests alternative models: individual health checks, an income cap set at 60 percent of average earnings for early retirees, or an expansion of the basic pension (Grundrente).

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Separately from this dispute, the Bundestag and Bundesrat passed a major pension reform package in spring 2026. Its centrepiece is a new state?subsidised retirement savings depot (Altersvorsorgedepot), scheduled to launch in 2027. Another change, the “MĂŒtterrente III,” will take effect on 1 January 2027, with payouts beginning a year later. For children born before 1992, the creditable child?rearing period will increase from 30 to 36 months — equivalent to three pension points per child. With a half point currently valued at €20.40, as many as 10 million retirees could see higher monthly benefits.

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Looking further ahead, rising life expectancy continues to push the debate toward a higher retirement age. Men in Germany now average 78 years, women 83. In 1970, a retiree typically drew a pension for 12 to 15 years; today the figure is about 20 years. Calculations suggest that for those born in 1970, the retirement age may already rise to 68. For younger cohorts, even a retirement age of 70 is being discussed as a necessary step to keep the system stable.

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