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Employers planning workforce reductions in Germany must understand how to notify collective redundancies in Germany correctly, or risk having every single termination declared void. The Kündigungsschutzgesetz (KSchG) §17 imposes mandatory notification and consultation obligations on any employer whose planned dismissals exceed specified thresholds within a 30-calendar-day window. Getting the procedure wrong is not merely an administrative inconvenience: German labour courts routinely invalidate terminations where the notification to the Bundesagentur für Arbeit (Federal Employment Agency) was late, incomplete, or filed before works council consultation concluded. Following the European Court of Justice’s continued strict stance on collective redundancies in early 2026, the procedural risks for employers have intensified, making a disciplined step-by-step approach more important than ever.
A collective redundancy, Massenentlassung in German, arises when an employer intends to dismiss a significant number of employees at a single establishment within a short period. The concept originates in EU law, specifically Council Directive 98/59/EC, which requires member states to ensure that employers contemplating collective redundancies consult worker representatives and notify the competent public authority in advance. Germany implements these obligations primarily through KSchG §17 (notification to the employment agency) and §17(2) (works council consultation).
The rules apply to every employer operating an establishment (Betrieb) in Germany, regardless of the employer’s nationality or legal form. Both domestic companies and foreign businesses with a German branch or subsidiary are covered. The obligations attach at the establishment level, not the company level, so a multinational with three German sites must assess thresholds and file notifications separately for each site.
For employers navigating restructuring scenarios, including those involving insolvency proceedings under the StaRUG framework, the collective redundancy rules apply in parallel and cannot be displaced by insolvency-specific timelines.
The mass dismissal procedure in Germany is triggered when the number of planned dismissals within a single establishment reaches the thresholds prescribed by KSchG §17(1). These thresholds are scaled according to establishment size, measured by the total number of employees regularly employed at the site.
| Establishment size (regularly employed) | Minimum dismissals within 30 calendar days to trigger notification |
|---|---|
| 21–59 employees | More than 5 employees |
| 60–499 employees | 10% of employees or more than 25 employees |
| 500 or more employees | At least 30 employees |
Establishments with 20 or fewer employees are not subject to the mass dismissal notification requirements under KSchG §17, though individual dismissal protection rules still apply.
When determining establishment size, all employees regularly working at the site are counted, including part-time workers (each counted as one person, not as a fraction of full-time equivalent). Fixed-term employees, employees on parental leave, and employees on long-term sick leave are included in the headcount. Temporary agency workers (Leiharbeitnehmer) are generally not counted as employees of the user establishment for threshold purposes, though this remains an area of evolving case law.
Only employer-initiated terminations by notice count towards the dismissal threshold. Terminations by mutual consent, expiry of fixed-term contracts, and employee resignations are ordinarily excluded. However, employers should exercise caution: where an employer initiates a wave of mutual termination agreements to avoid triggering the thresholds, courts may reclassify those agreements as dismissals for counting purposes.
Where the StaRUG preventive restructuring framework or formal insolvency proceedings apply, the notification obligations remain fully in force. The insolvency administrator steps into the employer’s shoes and must comply with the same procedural requirements.
The following six steps describe the complete mass dismissal procedure in Germany, from internal planning through to post-notice documentation. Each step must be completed in sequence, skipping or reordering steps is the single most common cause of procedural invalidity.
| Step | Who does it | Typical duration |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Internal planning and impact assessment | Employer (HR / Legal / Finance) | 1–3 weeks |
| 2. Works council information and consultation | Employer → Works council | 2–4 weeks |
| 3. Notify the Regional Employment Agency | Employer | 1–2 days (preparation and filing) |
| 4. Waiting period and agency response | Employment Agency | 30 calendar days (extendable to 60 days) |
| 5. Issue individual termination notices | Employer | 1–5 days after waiting period begins or expires |
| 6. Post-notice obligations and documentation | Employer (HR / Legal) | Ongoing, retain records for duration of any challenge period |
Before any external communication, the employer must make a binding internal decision on the scope and rationale for the planned redundancies. This step involves HR, legal counsel, and finance working together to determine the number of affected positions, the business justification, the proposed timeline, and any mitigation measures (redeployment, retraining, early retirement offers).
At this stage, the employer should prepare a preliminary list of affected employees with their personal data (age, tenure, dependants, disability status) to support the social selection analysis required under KSchG §1(3). Failure to document social selection criteria contemporaneously is a frequent ground for successful unfair dismissal claims. The employer should also identify whether a works council exists at the affected establishment, this determines whether Step 2 is mandatory.
If a works council (Betriebsrat) exists at the establishment, the employer must inform it in writing and consult with it before filing the notification with the employment agency. This obligation arises from KSchG §17(2) and is one of the most tightly enforced works council consultation steps in German labour law.
The employer must provide the works council with the following information in writing:
The works council must be given a genuine opportunity to discuss alternatives, such as redeployment, reduced working hours, or voluntary redundancy programmes, before the consultation is considered complete. The consultation typically concludes with a written statement (Stellungnahme) from the works council, which must be forwarded to the employment agency as part of the notification package. If the works council does not issue a statement, the employer must wait at least two weeks from the date the works council was informed before filing the notification, and must document that the consultation took place.
Where no works council exists at the establishment, this step is not required, and the employer may proceed directly to Step 3.
The employer must submit a written mass dismissal notification (Massenentlassungsanzeige) to the regional employment agency (Agentur für Arbeit) responsible for the district in which the establishment is located. This is the core statutory obligation under KSchG §17(1) and must be completed before the employer issues any individual termination notices.
The notification must be in writing, electronic submission alone is not sufficient unless the relevant regional agency expressly permits it. The notification must be addressed to the correct local agency office; filing with the wrong office renders it ineffective. The Bundesagentur für Arbeit provides contact details for each regional office on its website.
The redundancy notification requirements are precise. The notification must include all information previously provided to the works council under KSchG §17(2), plus a copy of the works council’s written statement (or, where no statement was issued, evidence that consultation took place and at least two weeks have elapsed). The employer must also attach a copy of the written information provided to the works council.
Once the employment agency receives a valid notification, a statutory waiting period (Sperrfrist) of one month (30 calendar days) begins. During this period, individual termination notices may be issued, but the terminations cannot take effect, meaning no employment may end, until the waiting period has expired. The agency may, at its discretion, shorten this period or extend it to a maximum of two months (60 calendar days) from receipt of the notification.
The employment agency will typically use the waiting period to prepare labour market support measures for the affected employees, including outplacement counselling and retraining programmes. The agency may also contact the employer with queries about the notification content; the employer should respond promptly, as delays in providing requested information may lead the agency to treat the notification as incomplete.
Industry observers expect that, following the 2026 ECJ enforcement developments, employment agencies will scrutinise notifications more closely and request supplementary documentation more frequently. Employers should plan for the possibility of a two-month extended waiting period, particularly for large-scale redundancies.
Individual notices of termination may be issued after the notification has been received by the employment agency, but the termination may not take effect before the waiting period expires. In practice, most employers issue notices shortly after filing the notification, setting the termination date to fall after the one-month (or extended) waiting period.
Each individual termination must comply with general German dismissal protection requirements, including:
Issuing termination notices before the notification is received by the employment agency is a critical error that renders the dismissals void.
After individual termination notices have been delivered, the employer must retain comprehensive records of the entire collective redundancy process. This includes the original notification and all attachments, the works council’s written statement, minutes of consultation meetings, social selection documentation, and copies of each individual termination notice with proof of delivery.
Employees have three weeks from receipt of their termination notice to file an unfair dismissal claim (Kündigungsschutzklage) with the labour court. The employer should therefore maintain immediate access to all procedural records during and beyond this period. Where an employee challenges the dismissal, the employer bears the burden of proving that the collective redundancy notification was valid and that proper consultation took place.
The documents needed for mass dismissal notification are prescribed by KSchG §17. The following table lists each required element, its format, and key content details that the employment agency expects to find in a compliant filing.
| Document | Notes |
|---|---|
| Written mass dismissal notification (Massenentlassungsanzeige) | Issued by employer; written format (original signature); addressed to the competent regional employment agency. Must state the employer’s name, address, establishment location, and contact person. |
| Statement of reasons for the planned redundancies | Part of the notification; details the business justification and economic context for the workforce reduction. |
| Number and categories of employees to be dismissed | Broken down by occupational group, department, or category; must also state the total number of employees regularly employed at the establishment. |
| Proposed period for the dismissals | Start and end dates for the planned termination window; must fall within the 30-calendar-day measurement period. |
| Selection criteria applied | Description of the social selection criteria (tenure, age, maintenance obligations, disability) and their weighting. |
| Mitigation measures envisaged | Any steps planned to reduce the impact (redeployment, retraining, voluntary redundancy, transfer company / Transfergesellschaft). |
| Severance calculation method | If severance is offered, the calculation formula or range; may reference a social plan if applicable. |
| Works council written statement (Stellungnahme) | Attached as an annex. If the works council did not issue a statement, the employer must include proof that consultation took place and at least two weeks elapsed since the works council was informed. |
| Copy of information provided to the works council | The written document provided to the works council under KSchG §17(2); must be attached to the notification. |
Incomplete notifications are a leading cause of procedural invalidity. The employment agency may accept a notification provisionally while requesting supplementary information, but any termination notices issued before the notification is considered complete carry significant legal risk. Employers should treat the redundancy notification requirements as a formal legal filing and have it reviewed by employment law counsel before submission.
The notification timeline of 30 days is the most critical deadline in the entire process. The following table consolidates all key time limits and their statutory basis.
| Event | Deadline / Duration | Statutory basis |
|---|---|---|
| Works council consultation begins | Must occur before notification is filed | KSchG §17(2) |
| Minimum period before filing if works council does not respond | At least 2 weeks after works council was informed | KSchG §17(3) sentence 3 |
| Notification received by employment agency | Must be received before any termination notice is issued | KSchG §17(1) |
| Default waiting period (Sperrfrist) | 30 calendar days from receipt of notification by the agency | KSchG §18(1) |
| Maximum extended waiting period | Up to 60 calendar days (agency discretion) | KSchG §18(2) |
| Earliest date a termination may take effect | Day after the waiting period expires | KSchG §18(1) |
| Employee deadline to file unfair dismissal claim | 3 weeks from receipt of termination notice | KSchG §4 |
| Notification validity window | Dismissals must be effected within 90 days of the notification; otherwise a new notification is required | KSchG §17(1) in conjunction with §18(4) |
Calendar days, not business days, are used for all calculations. The day the employment agency receives the notification is day one. If the last day of the waiting period falls on a Saturday, Sunday, or public holiday, the period does not extend, the termination may take effect on the next business day.
Employers must not issue individual termination notices before the mass dismissal notification has been received by the employment agency. Notices issued prematurely are void and cannot be “cured” by a subsequent notification. Where the agency extends the waiting period to 60 days, the employer must adjust all planned termination dates accordingly.
There is no government filing fee for submitting a collective redundancy notification to the Bundesagentur für Arbeit. However, the overall cost of the mass dismissal procedure involves several categories of expenditure that employers should budget for in advance.
| Item | Typical range | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Employment agency filing fee | €0 | No government fee for the notification itself. |
| External legal advisory fees | €15,000–€100,000+ | Depends on the number of affected employees, complexity of social selection, and whether a social plan must be negotiated. Hourly rates for specialist lawyers in Germany typically range from €250–€600. |
| Social plan / severance payments | Variable (often 0.5–1.5 × monthly gross salary per year of service) | Negotiated with the works council. No statutory minimum, but common practice and conciliation board awards establish benchmarks. |
| Transfer company (Transfergesellschaft) costs | €1,000–€3,000 per affected employee | Employer typically bears part of the cost; the employment agency co-funds short-time allowance (Transferkurzarbeitergeld) for eligible employees. |
| Cost of procedural error (reinstatement, back-pay) | €10,000–€50,000+ per employee | If the notification is defective and a termination is declared void, the employer must pay back wages from the termination date until reinstatement or settlement. Costs escalate rapidly for large headcounts. |
Severance payments are subject to income tax in the hands of the employee. Employers may apply favourable five-year averaging (Fünftelregelung) when calculating wage tax withholding, reducing the immediate tax burden for departing employees. Documentation of severance tax treatment should be retained as part of the overall redundancy file.
The European Court of Justice’s continued strict approach to collective redundancies, as reported in February 2026, has reinforced that procedural compliance is not merely formal, it is a substantive condition for the validity of each individual dismissal. Industry observers expect this ruling to have lasting effects on how German employers and employment agencies handle the notification process.
The ECJ has maintained that national rules implementing Directive 98/59/EC must ensure effective protection for workers. In practice, this means that German courts will continue to treat defective notifications, including notifications that are incomplete, filed with the wrong agency, or submitted before works council consultation has concluded, as grounds for declaring all resulting terminations void. The court declined to relieve employers from these consequences, even where the procedural error was technical rather than substantive.
Early indications suggest that the likely practical effects for employers include:
Employers planning collective redundancies in 2026 and beyond should treat the sanctions for defective notification as a business-critical risk and invest in procedural rigour. The cost of getting the process right is a fraction of the exposure created by a single void termination multiplied across dozens or hundreds of employees.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Dr. Anja Dachner at Kliemt.HR Lawyers, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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