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Check Broadcasting Fee Exemption

In 5 questions, find out if you qualify for an exemption or reduction of the German broadcasting fee — with application guide and document checklist.

100% FreeNo Data StoredUpdated for 2026
Question 1 of 5

Do you receive any of the following social benefits?

Guide: Broadcasting Fee & Exemption

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German Broadcasting Fee Exemption 2026: Who Qualifies and How to ApplyFeatured

German Broadcasting Fee Exemption 2026: Who Qualifies and How to Apply

The complete guide to broadcasting fee exemption: Who qualifies, what documents are needed, and how to apply.

2026-03-1512 min read

Frequently Asked Questions

The German broadcasting fee (formerly GEZ fee) funds public broadcasting in Germany. Since 2021, it is €18.36 per month per household (€55.08 per quarter, €220.32 per year). This amount remains unchanged in 2025 and 2026. The fee applies regardless of whether you own a TV, radio, or have internet access.

Full exemption is available for recipients of: Citizen's Benefit (ALG II), basic income support, social welfare, asylum seeker benefits, BAföG (full grant), and vocational training allowance. Also deafblind persons and those with severe sensory impairment. Persons with Marker RF in their disability ID receive a reduction to one third (€6.12/month).

Yes. Since the reform in 2013, the broadcasting fee is charged per household, not per device. It doesn't matter if you own a TV, radio, or computer. Every household must pay — unless an exemption reason exists.

Marker RF ("broadcasting fee exemption") is entered in the disability ID card. It's granted to persons who cannot participate in public events due to their disability — typically with a degree of disability (GdB) of at least 80 plus additional conditions. Blind and deaf persons usually receive it automatically. With Marker RF, you pay only one third: €6.12 instead of €18.36 per month.

Submit the application to the ARD ZDF Deutschlandradio Beitragsservice. You can fill out the form online at rundfunkbeitrag.de or send it by mail. You need: your contribution number (on every invoice), current proof (e.g., approval notice, not older than 3 months), and a copy of your ID card. Processing usually takes 4 to 6 weeks.

Yes, the exemption can be applied retroactively for up to 3 years if the exemption reason already existed at that time. You must prove that you were eligible at the time in question. Already paid fees will be refunded. Important: The exemption reason must have existed continuously.

In a shared flat (WG), only one broadcasting fee is due per household. One person registers as the fee payer, the other roommates are automatically covered. Internally, costs can be split equally: with 2 people €9.18 each, with 3 people €6.12 each, with 4 people €4.59 each per month. There's no obligation to split — it's a private arrangement.

No. Since the Constitutional Court ruling of 2018, no additional broadcasting fee is charged for a secondary residence. Requirement: A fee is already registered for the primary residence. You need to apply for exemption for the secondary residence and provide the contribution number of your primary residence.

Non-payment triggers a multi-step process: First a payment reminder, then a formal notice with late payment surcharge (1% of overdue amount, minimum €8). If still unpaid, enforcement follows — the fee service can enforce directly without a court judgment. This can lead to bank account seizure, bailiff visits, or an entry in the debtor register.

Yes, you can appeal a formal notice within one month. The appeal must be submitted in writing to the fee service and must be justified. If rejected, you can file a lawsuit at the administrative court. However, lawsuits against the broadcasting fee itself have not been successful — the Constitutional Court confirmed its constitutionality in 2018.