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Understanding what is the drug advertising act in Germany is now mission-critical for every pharma, medtech and telehealth team operating in the country. The Heilmittelwerbegesetz (HWG) governs how medicines, medical devices and therapeutic treatments may be promoted, and 2026 has sharpened its teeth. On 26 March 2026, the Federal Court of Justice (BGH) confirmed that advertising medical cannabis treatments to consumers violates the HWG’s prescription-medicine advertising ban (Case I ZR 74/25). At the same time, regulators and competitors are scrutinising influencer marketing and social media disclosures in Germany with growing intensity, creating new enforcement risks for digital channels.
What this guide covers:
The Heilmittelwerbegesetz (HWG) is Germany’s primary statute regulating advertising of medicinal products, medical devices, cosmetics and therapeutic treatments. Its overriding purpose is consumer protection: preventing misleading or dangerous health claims from reaching the public and ensuring that promotional communications about medicines remain accurate, balanced and appropriately targeted.
The HWG applies to any person or entity that disseminates advertising for covered products, manufacturers, marketing-authorisation holders, distributors, healthcare providers, pharmacies and, critically, online platforms and influencers acting on their behalf. The statute distinguishes between two audiences:
The term “advertising” (Werbung) is interpreted broadly. It covers traditional media, digital channels, sponsored content, patient testimonials used in a promotional context, and, as the BGH confirmed in 2026, internet portals that market doctor-led treatments with named prescription products.
The HWG does not exist in isolation. At EU level, Directive 2001/83/EC on the advertising of medicinal products for human use sets baseline requirements that all member states must implement. Germany’s HWG transposes these EU provisions into national law, often with additional strictness. The German Medicinal Products Act (Arzneimittelgesetz, AMG) defines which substances qualify as medicinal products and thus fall within HWG scope. Where a product is classified as a medicinal product under the AMG, all HWG advertising restrictions automatically apply, a point the BGH underscored in its March 2026 cannabis ruling.
For companies operating across EU borders, the practical effect is that pharmaceutical advertising in Germany must satisfy both the EU-level restrictions and the more granular national HWG requirements. The EUR-Lex summary of Directive 2001/83/EC confirms that direct-to-consumer advertising of prescription medicines is prohibited across the EU; the HWG implements this ban through §10.
The most consequential distinction in the HWG is between prescription-only medicines (Rx) and over-the-counter products (OTC). For compliance teams, the rule is straightforward in principle but nuanced in practice: Rx products may never be advertised to the public; OTC products may be promoted to consumers provided the content is accurate, balanced and includes mandatory disclosures.
| Channel / Context | Prescription-Only (Rx) | Over-the-Counter (OTC) |
|---|---|---|
| TV / Radio / Public advertising | Forbidden, absolute ban under HWG §10 | Permitted with accuracy requirements and mandatory risk disclosures |
| Public social media posts targeting consumers | Forbidden, no brand-name mentions, no promotional claims | Allowed with balanced information, ad labelling and required disclaimers |
| Online platforms / telehealth portals (consumer-facing) | Forbidden when promoting specific Rx treatments (BGH I ZR 74/25) | Allowed with full product information and risk warnings |
| Professional communication (journals, congresses, Fachkreise media) | Allowed if content is compliant and not aimed at consumers | Allowed |
| Disease-awareness campaigns (unbranded) | Permitted if genuinely non-promotional and no product is named | Permitted if genuinely non-promotional |
A pharmaceutical company may run a television advertisement for an OTC cold remedy, provided it includes the mandatory disclaimer: “Zu Risiken und Nebenwirkungen lesen Sie die Packungsbeilage und fragen Sie Ihren Arzt oder Apotheker” (For risks and side effects, read the package leaflet and ask your doctor or pharmacist). The same company may not run a consumer-facing social media campaign naming a prescription antibiotic, even if the post also contains a risk disclosure.
For digital channels, the boundary between permissible informational content and prohibited advertising is often contested. Industry observers expect that borderline cases, such as telehealth platforms listing specific Rx treatments alongside appointment-booking functionality, will face increasing scrutiny following the BGH’s 2026 reasoning.
HWG §10 is the centrepiece of Germany’s prescription-medicine advertising regime. It prohibits advertising of prescription-only medicinal products outside professional circles. The provision targets any communication that is designed to promote the sale, prescription or use of an Rx product and that reaches the general public.
The ban covers explicit product promotion and extends to indirect methods: mentioning a prescription product by name in a consumer-facing context that is designed to generate demand can trigger a violation, even if the communication also contains factual or educational content. Claims must not be misleading, must reference only approved indications and must not suggest efficacy beyond what the Summary of Product Characteristics (SmPC) supports.
The Federal Court of Justice’s judgment of 26 March 2026 (Case I ZR 74/25) is the defining ruling on medical cannabis advertising in Germany 2026. The BGH clarified that advertising prescription-only medical cannabis treatments to consumers remains prohibited under the HWG, regardless of the partial legalisation of recreational cannabis under the Konsumcannabisgesetz (KCanG) that took effect on 1 April 2024.
The case concerned an internet portal that offered doctor-led telemedicine consultations for medical cannabis prescriptions and advertised these services directly to consumers. The portal promoted specific treatment pathways using prescription medical cannabis, including appointment booking and streamlined prescription processes. A competitor brought proceedings under unfair-competition law, arguing that the portal’s consumer-facing advertising violated the HWG §10 prohibition.
The BGH agreed. In its reasoning, the court held that medical cannabis, whether as dried flowers or extracts, remains a prescription-only medicinal product under the AMG. The partial recreational legalisation under the KCanG did not change the regulatory classification of medical cannabis for therapeutic purposes. Therefore, the HWG’s prohibition on advertising prescription medicines to the public applies in full.
The BGH’s decision draws a clear line:
The likely practical effect for telehealth platforms and online cannabis clinics will be significant. Early indications suggest that platforms will need to restructure their consumer-facing content to remove references to specific Rx treatments and instead limit public messaging to general service descriptions. The ruling also creates precedent that industry observers expect competitors and consumer-protection bodies to apply against other telemedicine portals advertising prescription treatments directly to patients.
The intersection of influencer marketing, pharma and Germany’s advertising laws creates one of the most active compliance risk areas in 2026. Social media disclosures in Germany must satisfy both the HWG and general advertising-transparency rules under the UWG and the Telemediengesetz (TMG). For pharmaceutical advertising in Germany, the stakes are particularly high: a single influencer post naming an Rx product can trigger competitor cease-and-desist proceedings within days.
The following templates illustrate compliance-safe approaches for common scenarios in influencer marketing pharma Germany:
Compliance does not stop at copy. Teams must implement platform-level controls:
Germany’s enforcement landscape for pharmaceutical advertising violations is distinctive because it relies heavily on private enforcement. Under the Gesetz gegen den unlauteren Wettbewerb (UWG), the Unfair Competition Act Germany, competitors, trade associations and qualified consumer-protection bodies can bring civil claims directly against advertisers. This means that HWG breaches are most commonly pursued through competitor-initiated cease-and-desist letters (Abmahnungen) and injunction proceedings, not through regulatory fines.
The typical enforcement sequence involves a formal warning letter demanding cessation and a penalty-backed undertaking (strafbewehrte Unterlassungserklärung), followed by court proceedings if the advertiser does not comply. Successful claims can result in injunctions, damages for lost revenue, and recovery of legal costs, all borne by the infringing party. In serious cases involving deliberate or reckless violations, criminal liability under the HWG or the AMG may also apply.
| Risk Category | Likelihood | Impact |
|---|---|---|
| Competitor cease-and-desist (Abmahnung) for HWG/UWG breach | High | Moderate, legal costs, mandatory undertaking, reputational exposure |
| Court injunction following failed settlement | Medium | High, ongoing compliance obligations, penalty payments per violation |
| Consumer-protection body action | Medium | Moderate, public proceedings, media attention |
| Criminal prosecution (HWG / AMG) | Low | Very high, fines, potential custodial sentences for responsible individuals |
The following nine-step checklist translates HWG and UWG obligations into a practical workflow that regulatory, legal and marketing teams can implement before any promotional content goes live.
Understanding what is the drug advertising act in Germany, and how its provisions interact with the UWG, EU directives and the BGH’s March 2026 medical cannabis decision, is essential for any organisation marketing health products in the German market. The rules are precise, enforcement is competitor-driven and consequences are immediate. Teams that invest in a structured compliance workflow, from product classification through influencer contract clauses to post-publication monitoring, can reduce legal risk while maintaining effective market presence. For tailored guidance on HWG compliance, find a Germany Life Sciences lawyer through our directory.
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.
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