Every producer, platform owner, or creative director commissioning work in Germany faces the same threshold question: should you engage a freelancer or hire an employee, and who will own the copyright in what gets created? The answer to the freelancer vs employee copyright Germany question determines not just your intellectual-property position but also your cost base, social-security exposure, and misclassification risk. Unlike the United States, Germany has no “work for hire” doctrine: under §7 of the Urheberrechtsgesetz (UrhG), the author is always the natural person who created the work, and that status cannot be contracted away. What can be arranged by contract are the economic exploitation rights, but only if the contract is drafted correctly.
Before you can decide who will own exploitation rights, you need to understand the two engagement models and what separates them under German law. The distinction is not a matter of labelling; it is determined by the real-world circumstances of the working relationship.
A freelancer (freier Mitarbeiter) is an independent contractor who typically serves multiple clients, controls the method and timing of work, uses their own equipment, bears the economic risk of their activity, and is engaged on a project or deliverable basis. Freelancers in the liberal professions (Freiberufler, journalists, artists, writers, designers) register directly with the tax office; those running a trade register as Gewerbetreibende. All freelancers are personally liable for their own income tax. For 2026, the basic personal tax-free allowance (Grundfreibetrag) stands at €12,348.
An employee (Arbeitnehmer) is integrated into the employer’s organisation, subject to the employer’s right of direction (Weisungsrecht) regarding time, place, and manner of work, paid a regular salary, and covered by mandatory social insurance. The Deutsche Rentenversicherung applies an overall assessment of the relationship, no single factor is decisive, to determine whether someone is genuinely self-employed or a disguised employee (Scheinselbständigkeit).
Freelance engagements in Germany are generally structured as one of two civil-law contracts:
Under UrhG §7, the freelancer who creates the work is the author and the initial holder of all copyright, economic and moral. The commissioning client receives nothing automatically. To exploit the work (reproduce, distribute, stream, adapt), the client must obtain an explicit grant of exploitation rights (Nutzungsrechte) in the contract. Without that grant, using the work infringes the freelancer’s copyright, regardless of how much was paid for the project.
This makes the contract the single most important document in any freelancer engagement. A vague “all rights transferred” clause is likely insufficient under German law; exploitation rights must be specified by type of use, scope, territory, and duration (UrhG §31).
Hiring an employee gives you organisational integration, ongoing editorial control, and, with proper contract drafting, a reliable framework for securing exploitation rights in everything created during the employment relationship. It also comes with higher fixed costs: the employer must pay wage-side social insurance contributions (pension, health, unemployment, long-term care) and withhold income tax at source.
A well-drafted German employment contract for a creative role should contain an explicit clause granting the employer exclusive exploitation rights in all works created in the course of employment, specifying the types of use, territory (typically worldwide), and duration (typically unlimited). Standard practice in the media sector is to include a broad scope clause covering known and, subject to the requirements of UrhG §31a, future types of use, along with a reasonable remuneration framework where required.
No. German law does not recognise a US-style “work made for hire” doctrine. Even when a work is created by an employee within the scope of employment, the employee remains the author under UrhG §7. The employer secures exploitation rights through the employment contract, either by express clause or, where the contract is silent, through an implied licence derived from the purpose of the employment relationship (Zweckübertragungslehre). However, relying on implied rights is risky; explicit contractual clauses are strongly recommended.
For patentable inventions made by employees, a separate statutory regime applies: the Arbeitnehmererfindungsgesetz (Employee Inventions Act) gives the employer the right to claim the invention, subject to statutory compensation. This regime does not apply to copyright works, making contract drafting even more critical for creative output.
Moral rights, the right to attribution and the right to protect the work’s integrity, remain with the employee-author and cannot be fully waived. Contracts should address moral rights pragmatically (for example, specifying how and where credit will be given) rather than attempting blanket waivers that would be unenforceable.
The table below is the anchor comparison for this decision. Each dimension is analysed in detail in the sections that follow.
| Dimension | Freelancer (Option A) | Employee (Option B) |
|---|---|---|
| Legal status / eligibility | Independent contractor; multiple clients, controls method and timing; must register for tax. | Integrated into employer’s organisation; subject to direction (Weisungsrecht); social insurance and employment protection apply. |
| Who is the author (copyright) | Author = freelancer (natural person) under UrhG §7; default copyright owner. | Author = employee (natural person) under UrhG §7; employer is not automatically the author. |
| Economic exploitation rights | Client must obtain explicit licence or exclusive licence in writing, contract is critical. | Employer secures exploitation via employment contract clauses; implied licence possible but risky. |
| Moral / personal rights | Remain with creator; cannot be fully waived under UrhG. | Same: moral rights remain with the employee and survive all contractual arrangements. |
| Tax & social security cost | Freelancer pays own income tax (Grundfreibetrag 2026: €12,348); client generally pays no employer social contributions. | Employer withholds wage tax and pays employer-side social contributions (approximately 20 %+ of gross salary). |
| Liability & compliance risk | Lower direct cost but higher misclassification risk (Scheinselbständigkeit); audits by Deutsche Rentenversicherung possible. | Higher fixed cost but lower misclassification risk; employment law protections and termination rules apply. |
| Enforceability & disputes | Depends on contract clarity; UrhG §97 remedies (injunctions, damages) available for infringement. | Employment clauses generally enforceable but subject to labour-law constraints; some protections cannot be contracted away. |
| Timing & flexibility | Fast onboarding; flexible scaling for projects. | Slower hiring; higher fixed cost; longer-term commitment. |
| Typical media use cases | Project-based creatives: editing, VFX, photography, composing, voice-over. | In-house editorial, ongoing production management, long-term IP accumulation. |
The foundational rule is non-negotiable: under UrhG §7, the author is always the natural person whose creative effort produced the work. Copyright ownership in Germany cannot be transferred during the author’s lifetime (unlike, for example, the UK or the US). What can be transferred are the economic exploitation rights (Nutzungsrechte), the right to reproduce, distribute, exhibit, broadcast, make available online, or adapt the work.
Moral rights (Urheberpersönlichkeitsrechte), including the right of attribution (§13 UrhG) and the right of integrity (§14 UrhG), remain with the author in both scenarios. Any contract clause purporting to extinguish moral rights entirely is unenforceable. Production companies should instead address moral rights pragmatically: agree on credit format, specify permissible modifications, and build approval workflows into the contract.
German copyright law distinguishes between a simple licence (einfaches Nutzungsrecht), which is non-exclusive, and an exclusive licence (ausschließliches Nutzungsrecht), which gives the licensee the sole right to exploit the work in the specified manner. Under UrhG §31, licences must specify the types of use covered. Broad, catch-all formulations risk being narrowed by a court applying the Zweckübertragungslehre (purpose-of-transfer rule), which presumes that only the rights necessary for the contractual purpose are granted.
Every contract commissioning creative work in Germany should include the following clauses:
The cost dimension often drives the initial instinct to engage freelancers rather than hire staff. The following table summarises the key differences.
| Item | Freelancer (Option A) | Employee (Option B) |
|---|---|---|
| Income tax basis | Freelancer pays income tax on net profits; 2026 Grundfreibetrag: €12,348. | Employee taxed at source; employer withholds wage tax (Lohnsteuer) and solidarity surcharge. |
| VAT | Standard rate 19 % (or reduced 7 % for certain creative services); small-business exemption (Kleinunternehmerregelung) may apply below statutory thresholds. | Payroll is not subject to VAT; employer’s purchase of external services may carry input VAT. |
| Employer social contributions | Not payable by the client, but misclassification can trigger retrospective employer contributions (pension employer share: 9.3 % of gross; total employer social burden approximately 20 %+ of gross). | Employer pays pension, health, unemployment, and long-term care contributions; total employer share approximately 20 %+ of gross salary (exact rates vary by health insurer). |
| Illustrative cost example | A project fee of €5,000, client pays the gross fee with no payroll administration. | To deliver the same economic value, the employer typically budgets the gross salary plus approximately 20 %+ in employer contributions and ancillary costs. |
The apparent savings from freelancer engagement can be reversed overnight if the Deutsche Rentenversicherung reclassifies the relationship. Retrospective social-security contributions, interest, and penalties can exceed four years of back-payments in serious cases.
Scheinselbständigkeit (false self-employment) is the single largest compliance risk when commissioning creatives Germany-wide. The Deutsche Rentenversicherung assesses the relationship holistically, considering factors such as:
If the overall picture points to disguised employment, the consequences are severe: the client becomes liable for employer and employee social-security contributions retrospectively, typically for the most recent four calendar years. Criminal liability for withholding social contributions is possible in intentional cases. The BMAS provides detailed guidance on the criteria and consequences.
Freelancer copyright disputes are resolved before the ordinary civil courts. UrhG §97 provides robust remedies: injunctions, damages (including account of profits), and destruction of infringing copies. For employee disputes involving IP clauses, the labour courts (Arbeitsgerichte) have jurisdiction over employment-law questions, while copyright infringement claims may still fall to the civil courts.
Two developments affect the freelancer vs employee copyright Germany analysis this year:
Use the triggers below to determine which engagement model fits your project. The freelancer vs employee copyright Germany choice is not one-size-fits-all, it depends on three variables: project duration, the level of creative and editorial control you need, and your risk appetite for classification issues.
Choose a freelancer when:
Choose an employee when:
| If your priority is… | Choose |
|---|---|
| Short-term / single-project delivery | Freelancer |
| Long-term product-line control and IP accumulation | Employee |
| Minimising payroll administration (accepting classification risk) | Freelancer, with legal review of contract and status |
| Eliminating misclassification and social-security risk | Employee, safer when the role is integrated |
| Maximum flexibility to scale creative teams | Freelancer |
| Editorial direction and daily creative control | Employee |
Not every freelancer booking requires a lawyer. But several specific situations push the decision into territory where professional advice pays for itself many times over. Engage a Media & Entertainment lawyer when:
A typical legal workflow for commissioning creatives in Germany follows five steps: (1) legal intake and project scoping; (2) classification check, reviewing the contract and working-relationship facts against Scheinselbständigkeit criteria; (3) drafting the clause set (exploitation licence or employment IP clause, moral-rights provisions, indemnities); (4) compliance check (payroll classification, social-insurance registration if applicable); and (5) execution, with the lawyer retained for post-signature queries and audit support.
Find a Media & Entertainment lawyer in Germany to start this process.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Eva Vonau at VC LEGAL, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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