In Germany, pregnant employees can receive Mutterschaftsgeld (maternity pay) before and after birth, and then Elterngeld (parental allowance) after the baby arrives. These two benefits are connected but serve different purposes. Mutterschaftsgeld comes first — Elterngeld follows. In this article, we explain both, show how they interact, and help you plan the best way to use them together. We also share tips for non-German citizens and those moving to Germany soon.
💡 On our website, you can use free tools to:
- Check your Elterngeld eligibility
- Estimate your Elterngeld amount
- Get help with the documents for your application form
- Receive a custom guide with your info
What Is Mutterschaftsgeld?
Mutterschaftsgeld is a payment you receive from your health insurance and your employer during your protection period, usually:
- 6 weeks before the due date, and
- 8 weeks after the birth (or 12 weeks for premature or multiple births)
However, in certain professions — especially in chemistry-related fields such as dental practices, laboratories, or other workplaces with exposure to hazardous substances — an immediate employment ban (Beschäftigungsverbot) can apply from the moment the pregnancy is reported. This is based on the Maternity Protection Act (Mutterschutzgesetz, MuSchG), which mandates that no pregnant worker may be exposed to dangerous chemicals, infectious agents, ionizing radiation, or physical stress.
In such cases:
- The woman must stop working immediately once the pregnancy is known and the risk is assessed.
- The employer must conduct a risk assessment and offer alternative, non-hazardous work. If that’s not possible
- During this extended Mutterschutz, the employee receives her full salary (average net income) under the “Mutterschutzlohn” rules, without needing to work.
🧾 Who gets it?
- Employed women with public health insurance (gesetzlich versichert)
- Some private-insured or unemployed women may receive smaller amounts
💰 How much?
- Your health insurance pays up to €13/day
- Your employer pays the rest to cover your full average net salary
📌 Important: These first 8 weeks after birth are not counted as Elterngeld months, because your income is already being replaced.
What Is Elterngeld?
Elterngeld is financial support from the government for parents who reduce or stop working to care for their newborn.
You can choose:
| Type | Monthly | Duration |
|---|---|---|
| Basic Elterngeld | €300–€1,800 | Up to 14 months |
| ElterngeldPlus | Half of Basic | Up to 28 months |
| Partnership Bonus | Variable | +2–4 months |
You must apply after your child is born, and you can start receiving it after the Mutterschaftsgeld period ends.
💡 Use our Elterngeld calculator quiz to find your best option!
How Do They Work Together?
🧮 Example: Lisa earns €2,000 net per month.
| Time | Benefit | Amount |
|---|---|---|
| 6 weeks before birth | Mutterschaftsgeld | €2,000/month (fully covered) |
| 8 weeks after birth | Mutterschaftsgeld | €2,000/month (fully covered) |
| From 3rd month | Elterngeld | ~€1,300/month for 10–12 months |
📌 Her first 2 months after the birth are covered by Mutterschaftsgeld, so her Elterngeld begins in the 3rd month.
📝 The months of Mutterschaftsgeld are still counted as Elterngeld months used by the mother, but are fully replaced by other income, so no extra Elterngeld is paid during that time.
Key Differences
| Feature | Mutterschaftsgeld | Elterngeld |
|---|---|---|
| Who pays? | Health insurance + employer | German government |
| When? | 6 weeks before – 8 weeks after birth | After that |
| Amount | 100% of net salary | 65% (usually) of net salary |
| Must apply? | Yes (via employer and insurance) | Yes (Elterngeldstelle) |
| Paid to | Only the mother | Both parents (or just one) |
What About Foreigners?
✅ You can receive both Mutterschaftsgeld and Elterngeld if:
- You live in Germany
- You have a residence permit that allows work
- You’re insured in the German public system (for Mutterschaftsgeld)
🌍 Still abroad but planning to move to Germany?
- You must register your address in Germany and give birth here to qualify
- Income earned abroad does not count for Elterngeld
🛂 Use our free eligibility quiz to check your status before moving.
What Do I Need to Apply?
For Mutterschaftsgeld:
- A certificate from your doctor stating your expected due date
- Employer’s form for the health insurance company
- Public health insurance number
For Elterngeld:
- Child’s birth certificate
- Proof of income (12 months before birth)
- ID/residence permit
- Mutterschaftsgeld statement (important for correct timing!)
💡 Our application assistant quiz prepares everything for you, including a ready-to-use checklist!
Final Checklist: Using Both Benefits
✅ Inform your employer and health insurance about your pregnancy
✅ Apply for Mutterschaftsgeld at week 34
✅ Collect income proof for Elterngeld
✅ Apply for Elterngeld after birth (retroactive up to 3 months)
✅ Choose Basic or Plus, and whether to share months with a partner
✅ Use our free quizzes to simplify the process
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