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Germany 2026: How New Pricing & Reimbursement Reforms Change Market Access for Medicines, Medtech and Digital Health

By Global Law Experts
– posted 3 hours ago

Last updated: 12 May 2026

Executive Summary, What This Means for Market Access and Reimbursement in Germany

Germany’s market access and reimbursement landscape is undergoing its most significant overhaul since the original AMNOG legislation, with the federal government’s 2026 pricing and reimbursement reform package reaching adoption stage in late April 2026. The reforms compress free-pricing periods, tighten early benefit assessment (AMNOG) evidence thresholds, restructure DiGA reimbursement in Germany, and introduce new transparency and reporting obligations for pharmaceutical and MedTech manufacturers. Simultaneously, the EU Pharma Package is reshaping data-exclusivity timelines and regulatory-protection periods at the supranational level, with direct consequences for German launch strategies. For in-house counsel, market-access leads and commercial directors, the combined effect is a fundamental reset of how products are priced, assessed and reimbursed within the statutory health insurance (GKV) system.

Industry observers expect the practical effect to be threefold. Companies that act immediately, before implementing regulations are finalised in Q3 2026, can shape their dossier strategy, renegotiate price positions and secure more favourable comparator designations. Those that wait risk entering negotiations at a structural disadvantage. The three most urgent actions for every life-sciences team operating in Germany are:

  • Audit your current pricing models and AMNOG dossier timelines against the new free-pricing-period caps and evidence requirements announced via the Pharma & MedTech Dialogue process (January–April 2026).
  • Review DiGA evidence-generation plans for alignment with BfArM’s updated fast-track guidance on real-world evidence (RWE) endpoints and reimbursement duration changes.
  • Map new reporting and transparency obligations, including sales-volume disclosures and price-component reporting to the G-BA, and assign internal ownership before the Q3 2026 compliance deadline.

What Changed in 2026, Headline Reforms and Legal Instruments

The reimbursement changes in Germany adopted in the spring of 2026 represent the culmination of a multi-year reform effort driven by the German Federal Ministry of Health (Bundesministerium für Gesundheit, BMG). The package addresses drug pricing in Germany, device reimbursement pathways, digital-health reimbursement and manufacturer transparency in a single, interconnected legislative instrument. Early indications suggest the reforms will accelerate cost containment while simultaneously raising the bar for evidence quality across all product categories.

The headline changes fall into five categories:

  • Compressed free-pricing period. The period during which manufacturers can set their own price for new medicines before the AMNOG-negotiated price takes effect has been shortened, reducing the revenue runway available during the initial launch window.
  • Stricter AMNOG early benefit assessment criteria. The Federal Joint Committee (G-BA) has updated its procedural guidance to require more robust comparative evidence, including pre-specified real-world data plans, at the point of dossier submission.
  • DiGA reimbursement restructuring. BfArM’s fast-track pathway for digital health applications now mandates interim evidence milestones and caps provisional reimbursement amounts, reflecting concerns about cost escalation in the DiGA directory.
  • New reporting and transparency obligations. Manufacturers must now provide granular sales-volume, discount and pricing-component data to the G-BA and GKV-Spitzenverband on a regular reporting cycle.
  • EU Pharma Package alignment. National implementation measures are required to reconcile Germany’s AMNOG framework with the EU-level HTA Regulation (which enters application in 2025–2026) and the revised data-exclusivity periods under the EU Pharma Package.

Timeline of 2026 Milestones

Date Event Action for Companies
January–April 2026 Pharma & MedTech Dialogue, national consultation rounds between BMG, industry associations, GKV-Spitzenverband, G-BA and BfArM Review published consultation outcomes; update launch plans and market-access strategy for Germany based on signalled regulatory positions
29 April 2026 (reported) Government adoption activity for the pricing and reimbursement reform package Immediately review final legislative text (once published in the Bundesgesetzblatt); map changes to existing pricing models and reporting processes
Q3 2026 (expected) Publication of implementing regulations and updated G-BA/BfArM procedural guidance Finalise AMNOG dossiers under new rules; update DiGA evidence-generation programmes; activate internal compliance processes for new reporting obligations
Q4 2026–Q1 2027 (expected) First AMNOG assessments and price negotiations conducted entirely under the reformed framework Monitor early G-BA decisions for signals on comparator selection, evidence thresholds and negotiated-price outcomes

The Pharma & MedTech Dialogue, which ran from January to April 2026, served as the primary consultative mechanism shaping the final reform text. Industry observers expect the outcomes of this dialogue, particularly the positions taken by the GKV-Spitzenverband on pricing caps and by the G-BA on evidence standards, to define the operational reality of market access and reimbursement in Germany for the next legislative cycle.

Pricing Mechanics, Free-Pricing Period, IRP, Negotiated Prices and New Formulas

Drug pricing in Germany has historically offered manufacturers an unusually generous launch window: the free-pricing period allowed companies to set their own price from day one, with the AMNOG-negotiated reimbursement amount applying only after the G-BA’s benefit assessment and subsequent arbitration or agreement with the GKV-Spitzenverband. The 2026 reforms fundamentally alter this dynamic.

Before vs. After 2026, Pricing Comparison

Pricing Element Pre-2026 Framework Post-2026 Framework
Free-pricing period for new active substances 12 months from market launch (with limited exceptions under GKV-FKG amendments) Shortened to a reduced window, early indications suggest a cap of six months, with the negotiated price backdated to launch date in certain therapeutic areas (final implementing regulation pending)
Price cap during free-pricing period No statutory cap, manufacturer-set price applied in full Provisional reimbursement ceiling linked to European reference-price basket and therapeutic-area benchmarks
Negotiated reimbursement amount (Erstattungsbetrag) Agreed between manufacturer and GKV-Spitzenverband within 6 months of G-BA resolution; arbitration available Negotiation window tightened; new procedural requirement for manufacturers to submit health-economic models alongside the G-BA dossier
International reference pricing (IRP) influence Informal benchmarking, German price often served as reference for other EU markets Formal IRP basket codified in regulation; German launch price must be disclosed alongside comparator-country price data
Orphan-drug pricing Automatic additional benefit assumed for orphan drugs with annual GKV expenditure below €50 million threshold Threshold under review, early indications suggest it may be lowered, requiring more orphan drugs to undergo full comparative assessment

Sample Pricing Scenario

Consider a manufacturer launching a new oncology medicine in Germany at a manufacturer-set price of €10,000 per treatment course. Under the pre-2026 rules, that price would apply unchallenged for 12 months. Under the reformed framework, the likely practical effect is that a provisional ceiling, derived from the European reference-price basket, could cap the reimbursable amount at, for example, €7,500 during a six-month free-pricing window. If the subsequent AMNOG negotiation yields a reimbursement amount of €6,800, the manufacturer may face clawback provisions retroactive to launch. The financial exposure during the free-pricing period is therefore significantly higher under the new rules, making pre-launch price modelling and payer engagement critical.

These reimbursement changes in Germany also carry implications for international reference pricing. Because Germany has historically been a high-price market and is included in the IRP baskets of multiple EU member states, any downward pressure on German launch prices will cascade across Europe. Market-access teams should model the cross-border pricing impact before setting German launch prices under the new formula.

AMNOG and Early Benefit Assessment, Practical Implications and Timetable

The AMNOG early benefit assessment process remains the gateway to reimbursement for new medicines in Germany, but the 2026 reforms raise evidence expectations and compress procedural timelines. The G-BA’s updated procedural rules, signalled through the Pharma & MedTech Dialogue and expected to be formalised in Q3 2026 implementing guidance, introduce several operational changes that market-access teams must plan for now.

Key changes to the AMNOG process include:

  • Comparator selection. The G-BA is expected to apply stricter criteria for appropriate comparator therapy (zweckmäßige Vergleichstherapie), with earlier publication of comparator designations and reduced scope for manufacturer-initiated challenges.
  • Evidence thresholds. Dossiers must now include pre-specified real-world evidence generation plans alongside randomised controlled trial (RCT) data, reflecting the G-BA’s increasing emphasis on post-marketing evidence.
  • IQWiG assessment timeline. The Institute for Quality and Efficiency in Health Care (IQWiG) will operate under a tighter assessment calendar, with the likely practical effect of reducing the time available for manufacturer-IQWiG dialogue during the assessment phase.
  • Subgroup analysis requirements. More granular patient-subgroup analyses are expected, requiring manufacturers to present benefit data stratified by clinically relevant populations at the point of initial dossier submission.

Dossier Checklist for Successful Early Benefit Assessment

  • Confirm comparator designation early. Engage with the G-BA on comparator therapy at least 6–9 months before anticipated launch; document any disagreements in writing.
  • Pre-specify RWE endpoints. Include a structured RWE generation protocol in Module 4 of the dossier, aligned with G-BA evidence expectations.
  • Prepare subgroup stratifications. Ensure clinical data supports at least three pre-defined patient subgroups with independent efficacy and safety analyses.
  • Submit health-economic models. Under the new rules, a budget-impact analysis and, where requested, a cost-effectiveness model should accompany the dossier, even though Germany does not formally require cost-effectiveness analysis for the benefit rating.
  • Build the payer value story. Prepare a concise, data-driven value dossier for price negotiations with the GKV-Spitzenverband that can be submitted immediately after the G-BA resolution.

Timetable for Launches Under the Reformed AMNOG Framework

The compressed free-pricing period means launch teams can no longer rely on a 12-month revenue buffer. The practical timetable now looks approximately as follows: comparator engagement at nine months pre-launch; dossier submission at launch; IQWiG assessment within three months of dossier receipt; G-BA resolution within six months; price negotiation immediately thereafter. Companies launching in Q4 2026 or later should assume the full reformed process will apply and plan resourcing accordingly.

DiGA and Digital Health, New Reimbursement Pathway Post-2026

DiGA reimbursement in Germany has been one of the most watched market-access innovations globally since the Digital Healthcare Act (DVG) created the fast-track pathway in 2020. The 2026 reforms recalibrate this pathway in response to concerns about evidence quality and cost escalation in the BfArM DiGA directory.

The key changes affecting digital health applications include:

  • Provisional reimbursement caps. DiGA listed on a provisional basis (pending final evidence submission) will now be subject to maximum reimbursement amounts set by the GKV-Spitzenverband, rather than the manufacturer-set prices that prevailed during the initial provisional listing period.
  • Interim evidence milestones. Manufacturers must demonstrate pre-specified evidence milestones, such as patient recruitment targets and interim endpoint data, at defined intervals during the provisional listing period. Failure to meet milestones may trigger suspension of the listing.
  • Permanent listing evidence bar. The threshold for transitioning from provisional to permanent listing has been raised, with BfArM now requiring at least one adequately powered RCT or, where justified, a rigorous quasi-experimental design with pre-registered protocols.
  • Integration with care pathways. New guidance encourages (and in some therapeutic areas may require) DiGA manufacturers to demonstrate integration with established clinical care pathways, including prescriber feedback loops and outcome tracking.

DiGA Dossier Practical Checklist

  • Map endpoints to BfArM template. Ensure primary and secondary endpoints are drawn from BfArM’s published list of acceptable positive care effects (positive Versorgungseffekte) and medical benefits.
  • Design RWE collection from day one. Embed real-world evidence capture into the app’s architecture, including patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs), adherence data and clinical integration metrics.
  • Budget for interim reporting. Allocate resources for milestone evidence submissions every 6–12 months during the provisional period; assign a dedicated regulatory lead.
  • Model reimbursement under caps. Run financial projections assuming the new GKV-set provisional reimbursement ceiling rather than manufacturer-preferred pricing.
  • Prepare a permanent-listing transition plan. Begin planning the pivotal study required for permanent listing no later than three months after provisional approval.

MedTech and Devices, Reimbursement, Coding and Hospital Procurement

Medical-device and MedTech reimbursement in Germany operates through a different set of mechanisms than pharmaceutical reimbursement, primarily through the DRG (Diagnosis-Related Group) system for inpatient care and the EBM (Einheitlicher Bewertungsmaßstab) catalogue for outpatient procedures. The 2026 reforms introduce several changes relevant to MedTech market access.

  • New HTA triggers for high-risk devices. Devices in certain risk classes will now face mandatory benefit assessments by the G-BA before achieving full reimbursement coverage, a significant departure from the previous system, where many devices entered the market without formal HTA review.
  • Updated NUB (Neue Untersuchungs- und Behandlungsmethoden) process. The process for obtaining temporary funding for new treatment methods in hospitals is being streamlined, but with higher evidence requirements attached to the initial application.
  • Coding and DRG implications. Where new devices require new procedure codes (OPS codes) or adjustments to DRG weightings, the timeline for code creation and adoption by the InEK (Institut für das Entgeltsystem im Krankenhaus) is being tightened to reduce lag between market launch and adequate hospital reimbursement.
  • Procurement and tendering transparency. Hospital procurement of medical devices is subject to new transparency requirements, including the disclosure of volume-based rebate structures to the relevant GKV body.

Practical Steps for MedTech Teams

  • Assess HTA exposure. Determine whether your product falls within the new mandatory benefit-assessment categories; if so, begin evidence-generation planning immediately.
  • Engage with InEK on coding. If a new OPS code or DRG adjustment is required, initiate the application process at least 12 months before the intended hospital launch date.
  • Build hospital KOL (key opinion leader) support. Secure clinical champions who can advocate for NUB status applications and support evidence generation through investigator-initiated studies.
  • Model procurement under transparency rules. Ensure existing rebate and discount structures comply with the new disclosure requirements before the compliance deadline.

Negotiations and Engagement, Pricing Talks with GKV and Insurers

Price negotiation with the GKV-Spitzenverband remains the decisive step in determining the final reimbursement amount for new medicines in Germany. The 2026 reforms do not fundamentally change who sits at the negotiation table, but they alter the leverage dynamics, procedural requirements and tactical playbook available to manufacturers.

Under the reformed framework, the GKV-Spitzenverband enters negotiations armed with more data, including mandatory manufacturer disclosures on international pricing, sales volumes and discount structures. Manufacturers must therefore be prepared to defend their price positions with greater transparency and more sophisticated health-economic argumentation.

Negotiation Playbook, Five Tactical Priorities

  • Lead with the value story, not the price. Frame the opening negotiation position around unmet medical need, patient outcomes and avoidance of downstream costs. The G-BA’s benefit rating is the anchor, build the economic narrative around it.
  • Pre-empt the IRP argument. Prepare a detailed cross-border price analysis showing how the proposed German price compares to the European reference basket. Anticipate the GKV-Spitzenverband using lower-price markets as benchmarks.
  • Offer structured risk-sharing agreements. Where the benefit rating is uncertain (e.g. “non-quantifiable additional benefit”), propose outcomes-based contracts, volume caps or conditional rebates that reduce payer risk while preserving headline price.
  • Use the arbitration threat strategically. If negotiations stall, the arbitration board (Schiedsstelle) remains available, but early indications suggest the reformed process may constrain arbitration outcomes more tightly to evidence-based benchmarks.
  • Engage early and informally. Begin pre-negotiation dialogue with the GKV-Spitzenverband during the AMNOG assessment phase. While formal negotiations cannot start until after the G-BA resolution, establishing a constructive relationship early can accelerate the formal process.

Reporting, Transparency and Compliance Obligations

The 2026 reforms introduce new reporting and transparency requirements for pharmaceutical and MedTech manufacturers, distributors and marketing-authorisation holders operating in Germany. These obligations are designed to give the G-BA, GKV-Spitzenverband and BMG greater visibility into pricing structures, sales volumes and discount arrangements.

Obligated Actor Obligation Deadline / Frequency
Pharmaceutical manufacturers (marketing-authorisation holders) Report ex-factory prices, volume discounts, rebate structures and international reference-price data to the GKV-Spitzenverband Quarterly, commencing from Q3 2026 (exact start date per implementing regulation)
DiGA manufacturers Submit interim evidence milestone reports to BfArM; report prescription volumes and reimbursement claims to the GKV-Spitzenverband Every 6–12 months during provisional listing period; quarterly for volume data
MedTech manufacturers (high-risk device categories) Disclose hospital procurement pricing, volume-based rebates and NUB application outcomes to the G-BA Annually, with initial filing expected by end of Q4 2026
Distributors and wholesalers Confirm distribution-chain pricing and margin data upon request by BMG or GKV-Spitzenverband Upon request, with a 30-day response window

Non-compliance carries regulatory consequences. While the final penalty framework is subject to the implementing regulations expected in Q3 2026, early indications suggest that persistent failure to report may result in suspension of reimbursement eligibility, a severe commercial sanction. Companies should assign a dedicated compliance lead, establish internal data-collection processes and conduct a dry run of the first quarterly report before the go-live date.

EU Pharma Package, National Impacts and Interplay with Market Access Reimbursement in Germany

The EU Pharma Package, advanced by the European Commission as part of its broader pharmaceutical strategy, adds a supranational dimension to market access and reimbursement in Germany. Two elements of the EU package are particularly relevant for German launch planning.

  • Revised data-exclusivity and market-protection periods. The EU Pharma Package proposes changes to the regulatory-protection periods for innovative medicines, including potential reductions in the standard data-exclusivity period. For Germany, this means that the window of market exclusivity during which generics and biosimilars cannot enter may shrink, compressing the commercial life cycle and increasing the urgency of securing a favourable AMNOG reimbursement amount early.
  • EU-level joint clinical assessments. Under the EU HTA Regulation, which enters application for oncology and advanced-therapy medicinal products in 2025, and for other products progressively thereafter, joint clinical assessments will be conducted at the EU level. Germany must integrate these assessments into its national AMNOG process. The likely practical effect is that the G-BA will have less discretion over the clinical component of the benefit assessment, while retaining full authority over the comparative and pricing elements.

For companies managing pan-European launches, the interplay between EU-level HTA and national AMNOG procedures creates both opportunities and risks. A favourable EU joint clinical assessment could strengthen the manufacturer’s position in German price negotiations; conversely, an unfavourable EU assessment could constrain the G-BA’s ability to grant a positive benefit rating at the national level.

Operational 90/180-Day Action Plan for Market Access Strategy in Germany

The following phased checklist translates the 2026 reforms into concrete actions across the four key functions, legal, market access, medical affairs and commercial, within the critical first 180 days.

Phase 1: Immediate actions (0–30 days)

  • Convene a cross-functional reform-response team (legal, market access, medical, commercial, regulatory).
  • Obtain and analyse the final legislative text from the Bundesgesetzblatt once published.
  • Audit all products currently in the AMNOG pipeline for comparator-therapy alignment under the new rules.
  • Review DiGA evidence-generation plans for compliance with interim-milestone requirements.

Phase 2: Short-term actions (30–90 days)

  • Model financial impact of compressed free-pricing period and provisional reimbursement caps across the product portfolio.
  • Engage external health-economics consultants to prepare or update budget-impact analyses and IRP models.
  • Establish internal data-collection processes for new quarterly reporting obligations.
  • Initiate early dialogue with the G-BA on comparator designations for upcoming launches.

Phase 3: Medium-term actions (90–180 days)

  • Submit updated AMNOG dossiers incorporating RWE generation plans and subgroup stratifications.
  • Conduct a dry run of the first quarterly transparency report.
  • Develop or update negotiation playbooks for forthcoming GKV-Spitzenverband price discussions.
  • Assess EU Pharma Package timeline for products approaching EU-level joint clinical assessment.

Conclusion and Next Steps

Germany’s 2026 pricing and reimbursement reforms represent a step change in market access and reimbursement in Germany, not merely incremental adjustments, but a structural recalibration of how medicines, devices and digital-health products are priced, assessed and reimbursed. The compressed timelines, higher evidence thresholds and new transparency obligations demand immediate attention from every life-sciences company with German market exposure. The three most important next steps are: secure and analyse the final legislative text, audit all pipeline products against the new AMNOG and DiGA requirements, and establish internal compliance processes for the forthcoming reporting obligations. Companies that move quickly will be best positioned to protect pricing, secure favourable benefit ratings and maintain uninterrupted patient access.

This article is intended for general informational purposes and does not constitute legal advice. Companies should consult qualified German health-care and life-sciences counsel for tailored guidance on the 2026 reforms.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Dr. Christian Rybak at Greenberg Traurig Germany, LLP, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. German Federal Ministry of Health (BMG)
  2. Federal Joint Committee (G-BA)
  3. BfArM, Federal Institute for Drugs and Medical Devices
  4. European Commission, EU Pharmaceutical Strategy
  5. Inside EU Life Sciences, Germany 2026 Pricing Reforms Coverage
  6. IGES Institute, Reimbursement of Pharmaceuticals in Germany
  7. Prova Health, DiGA Reimbursement Germany Guide
  8. Bundesgesetzblatt, Federal Law Gazette

FAQs

Q: What will change for drug pricing and reimbursement in Germany in 2026?
The 2026 reforms compress the free-pricing period for new medicines, tighten AMNOG evidence requirements, introduce provisional reimbursement caps for DiGA, and impose new quarterly transparency-reporting obligations on manufacturers. The legislative package was adopted in late April 2026 (BMG).
The EU Pharma Package revises data-exclusivity periods and introduces EU-level joint clinical assessments that Germany must integrate into its national AMNOG process. Companies should monitor European Commission guidance for implementation timelines (European Commission).
Manufacturers should engage the G-BA on comparator designations earlier, include pre-specified RWE generation plans in dossiers, prepare detailed patient-subgroup analyses, and budget for health-economic modelling alongside the benefit dossier (G-BA).
Yes. Provisional DiGA listings will be subject to GKV-set reimbursement caps rather than manufacturer pricing. Interim evidence milestones are now mandatory, and the evidence bar for permanent listing has been raised to require at least one adequately powered RCT (BfArM).
Pharmaceutical manufacturers must submit quarterly reports on ex-factory prices, volume discounts, rebate structures and international reference-price data to the GKV-Spitzenverband. DiGA and high-risk MedTech manufacturers face additional milestone and procurement-pricing disclosures (G-BA; BMG).
Immediately. Companies with products in the AMNOG pipeline or approaching German launch should begin internal pricing reviews now and prepare to enter formal negotiations as soon as the implementing regulations are published, which is expected in Q3 2026 (BMG).
High-risk devices face new mandatory G-BA benefit assessments before achieving full reimbursement. The NUB process for hospital funding carries higher evidence requirements, and procurement transparency rules require disclosure of volume-based rebate structures (G-BA).
The Pharma & MedTech Dialogue was a national consultation process conducted between January and April 2026, involving the BMG, industry associations, GKV-Spitzenverband, G-BA and BfArM. Its outcomes directly shaped the final reform text and signal how the reformed rules will be interpreted in practice (BMG).
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Germany 2026: How New Pricing & Reimbursement Reforms Change Market Access for Medicines, Medtech and Digital Health

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