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Severance Pay Calculator 2026

How much severance are you entitled to — and what's left after tax?

Updated for 2026
100% free
Instant results

Severance gross

€20,000

After taxes (fifth-part rule)

€12,875
Effective tax rate: 35.6%

How the Fifth-Part Rule Works

1

Tax on your regular income

(€48,000)

€10,152
2

Tax on income + 1/5 of severance

(€48,000 + €4,000)

€11,577
3

Difference (additional tax from 1/5)

€1,425
4

× 5 = Total tax on your severance

€7,125

Tax Comparison

You save with the fifth-part rule: €647

From Gross to Net

Optimization Tips

Summary

Monthly salary (gross)€4,000
Effective years of service10
Factor0.50
Severance gross€20,000
Income Tax (fifth-part rule)- €7,125
Solidarity Surcharge- €0
Net severance€12,875
Savings from fifth-part rule€647

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Guides

Latest articles about severance pay, employment protection and tax optimization

Severance Pay in Germany 2026: How Much Am I Entitled To — and What's Left After Tax?
Featured Guide

Severance Pay in Germany 2026: How Much Am I Entitled To — and What's Left After Tax?

The comprehensive guide to severance pay: standard formula, fifth-part rule, negotiation tips and tax optimization.

14 min read

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Frequently Asked Questions

The most common method is the standard formula (Faustformel): 0.5 gross monthly salaries per year of service. For a monthly salary of €4,000 and 10 years of employment, this results in €20,000 gross severance. The factor can range from 0.25 to 1.5 depending on age, length of service, and negotiating position.

The fifth-part rule (§ 34 EStG) is a tax benefit for extraordinary income like severance payments. Instead of taxing the full severance at the normal rate, only one-fifth is added to regular income, and the resulting additional tax is multiplied by five. This significantly reduces the tax burden because the progressive tax rate has less impact.

No. Genuine severance payments made as compensation for job loss are exempt from social security contributions. No deductions for health, pension, nursing care, or unemployment insurance apply. However, salary components disguised as severance may be subject to social security scrutiny.

There is generally no automatic legal right to severance pay in Germany. An exception is § 1a KSchG: in case of operational dismissal, the employer can offer severance if the employee waives their right to file an unfair dismissal claim. In practice, severance is often negotiated through termination agreements, social plans, or court settlements.

Severance pay is not deducted from unemployment benefits (ALG I) as long as the notice period was observed. However, a termination agreement can trigger a waiting period of up to 12 weeks for ALG I. The benefit duration may also be shortened if the employment ended before the regular notice period would have expired.

Yes, this is one of the most effective tax optimization strategies. Parts of the severance can be transferred tax-free into a direct insurance policy or pension fund. The exact tax-free amounts are governed by § 3 No. 63 EStG and depend on contribution assessment ceilings.

The choice of payment year can significantly affect the tax burden. The lower your other income in the payment year, the lower the tax on the severance. If your employment ends at year-end, payment in January of the following year can be advantageous if you initially receive only unemployment benefits.

During the probation period (maximum 6 months), employment protection under the KSchG generally does not apply. The notice period is only 2 weeks. There is no entitlement to severance — neither legally nor under the standard formula. In rare cases, small severance amounts are agreed upon in settlements.

Yes, the fifth-part rule applies to all severance payments made as compensation for job loss — regardless of whether they result from dismissal, termination agreement, or court settlement. The prerequisite is that the severance is paid as a lump sum or within a single tax assessment period.

The Employment Protection Act (KSchG) applies to businesses with more than 10 employees (full-time equivalents). Part-time workers are counted proportionally: up to 20 hours/week = 0.5, up to 30 hours/week = 0.75. In small businesses with fewer than 10 employees, only general dismissal protection applies — offering significantly less protection.