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media investment obligation germany

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Germany's Medieninvestvg (2026): Practical Compliance Guide for Streamers, Broadcasters & Producers

By Global Law Experts
– posted 56 minutes ago

Last reviewed: 16 May 2026

Germany’s proposed MedienInvestVG, the Medieninvestitionsverpflichtungsgesetz, or media investment obligation Germany, represents the most consequential shift in German content-funding regulation in over a decade. Announced in February 2026, the draft law requires on-demand audiovisual media service providers and certain broadcasters to reinvest a defined percentage of their German-derived turnover in European and specifically German audiovisual content. This guide moves beyond the headline summaries already circulating in industry press and delivers the practical, step-by-step compliance playbook that in-house legal teams, licensing executives and production-finance leads need to act on now, covering coverage tests, revenue calculations, contract-drafting templates, reporting obligations and a downloadable compliance checklist for streamers.

Key takeaways for legal and business teams:

  • Investment baseline: The draft proposes an 8 % reinvestment obligation on qualifying German turnover, with platforms that voluntarily invest 12 % or more qualifying for certain regulatory exemptions.
  • Who is covered: VoD/streaming platforms, on-demand catalogue services and broadcasters operating on-demand tiers that generate revenue from German audiences above a de minimis threshold.
  • Immediate action: Within 30 days, convene a cross-functional task force (Legal, Finance, Business Affairs) to map current German-revenue exposure, audit existing production and licensing spend against qualifying-investment categories, and flag licence agreements that may require renegotiation.

Overview: What Is the MedienInvestVG, Germany’s Media Investment Obligation?

The MedienInvestVG is a draft German federal statute designed to implement and extend the investment-related options available to EU Member States under Article 13(2) of the revised Audiovisual Media Services Directive (AVMSD). While the AVMSD permits Member States to require media service providers targeting their territory to contribute financially to the production of European works, Germany had not previously exercised that option in binding legislation. The February 2026 government proposal changes that by creating a standalone German content funding law with quantified spending thresholds and an enforcement mechanism.

Legislative Status and Timeline

Milestone Date / Status Significance
Federal Government publishes draft bill (MedienInvestVG) 5 February 2026 Proposal enters public debate; industry consultation period opens.
Bundestag committee deliberations and Lobbyregister submissions March–May 2026 (ongoing) Comparative tables and stakeholder submissions lodged; amendments under discussion.
Anticipated Bundestag / Bundesrat passage and entry into force Industry observers expect late 2026 or early 2027 Subject to political dynamics; compliance teams should plan for a 2027 first reporting period.

High-Level Obligations: Investment Percentage and Eligible Spending

The draft law’s centrepiece is a mandatory investment obligation set at 8 % of qualifying German turnover. Platforms that can demonstrate they already invest at least 12 % of that turnover in qualifying European and German content may benefit from a streamlined compliance path, including exemptions from certain additional reporting and catalogue-prominence requirements. Qualifying expenditure is broadly defined to include commissioning of original productions, co-production investments, acquisition of pre-sale licences for European works, and contributions to recognised German and European film-funding bodies, although the precise list of eligible spend categories remains subject to ongoing parliamentary amendment.

Practitioner tip: Early indications suggest the 12 % threshold will function not as a blanket opt-out but as a trigger for a lighter regulatory touch, fewer granular reporting categories, reduced frequency of audit requests and no mandatory catalogue-prominence obligations. Platforms already spending at or near that level should document their spend now to secure the benefit from day one.

Who Is Covered by the Streaming Investment Obligation and How Is the Investment Percentage Calculated?

Entity Types: Streamer, Broadcaster, Aggregator

The draft MedienInvestVG captures three principal entity types:

  • On-demand audiovisual media service providers (VoD/streamers): Any provider offering a catalogue of audiovisual content on a subscription, transactional or advertising-funded basis to audiences in Germany. This includes global platforms such as Netflix, Amazon Prime Video, Disney+ and Apple TV+ as well as smaller niche services.
  • Broadcasters operating on-demand tiers: Traditional German broadcasters (both public-service and commercial) that also operate catch-up, replay or dedicated on-demand platforms fall within the obligation in respect of their on-demand revenue streams. Broadcaster obligations Germany therefore apply to the VoD component of their business, not to linear broadcast revenue.
  • Aggregators and platform intermediaries: Where an aggregator (e.g., a smart-TV interface or bundling platform) itself earns revenue from German audiences for providing access to audiovisual content, the likely practical effect will be that it, too, falls within scope, though parliamentary debate on this category is ongoing.

The territorial test hinges on whether the service is directed at, or generates material revenue from, audiences in Germany. This follows the AVMSD “country of destination” logic: if a platform offers German-language content, accepts German payment methods or runs German-targeted advertising, it is presumed to target the German market.

Revenue Base and Calculation: A Worked Example

The investment percentage is applied to the provider’s net German turnover, that is, total revenue derived from German audiences (subscription fees, advertising revenue, transactional rental/purchase income) after deduction of VAT and any platform fees passed through to third parties. Group consolidation rules are expected to apply where multiple entities in a corporate group jointly provide the service.

Worked example: A streaming platform generates €500 million in net German turnover. Under the 8 % obligation, qualifying investment must reach at least €40 million. If it aims for the 12 % exemption tier, it must demonstrate investment of at least €60 million in qualifying European/German content.

Watchout: Revenue allocation for multi-territory platforms will require defensible transfer-pricing documentation. Platforms should work with tax and finance teams now to establish consistent revenue-attribution methodologies that will withstand regulatory scrutiny.

Practical Compliance Steps for Streaming Compliance Germany: An Operational Playbook

30 / 60 / 90 Day Action Plan

Days 1–30, Immediate priorities:

  • Establish a cross-functional MedienInvestVG task force comprising Legal, Finance/CFO, Business Affairs, Content Commissioning and Government Relations.
  • Commission a baseline audit of current German-revenue exposure and existing spend on European/German content (commissions, co-productions, pre-sales, funding-body contributions).
  • Identify the gap between current qualifying spend and the 8 % (or 12 %) threshold.
  • Flag all active licence agreements and co-production contracts that may require renegotiation or amendment to align with qualifying-spend categories.

Days 31–60, Near-term governance:

  • Appoint a single compliance owner (typically General Counsel or VP of Business Affairs) accountable for MedienInvestVG compliance reporting.
  • Develop internal spend-tracking taxonomy: map each content-investment category (original commission, co-production equity, pre-sale licence, fund contribution) to draft-law eligible-spend definitions.
  • Engage external advisers (German media-law counsel and auditors) to validate the taxonomy and revenue-allocation methodology.
  • Begin renegotiation scoping for priority licence agreements where current contractual terms do not generate qualifying-spend credit.

Days 61–90, Medium-term readiness:

  • Build or configure compliance-monitoring dashboards within existing ERP/finance systems to track qualifying spend in real time against the applicable threshold.
  • Draft board-level policy memo (the “C-level 1-pager”) confirming the chosen compliance strategy: comply at 8 %, target 12 % exemption tier, or a hybrid approach.
  • Integrate MedienInvestVG compliance milestones into the annual content-commissioning and budgeting cycle.

Internal Control and Audit Documentation

Robust internal controls are essential not only for regulatory compliance but also for defending the company’s investment calculations during any future audit. Best-practice documentation includes:

  • Revenue-attribution methodology memo: A written policy explaining how German turnover is isolated from group revenue, including data sources, allocation keys and reconciliation procedures.
  • Spend-classification register: A live register mapping each content investment to its qualifying-spend category, with supporting documentation (contracts, invoices, co-production agreements, funding receipts).
  • Quarterly compliance snapshots: Internal reports benchmarking cumulative qualifying spend against the annualised target, flagged for the compliance owner and CFO.
  • Audit-trail file: A centralised, access-controlled repository containing all underlying contracts, payment records, chain-of-title documentation and correspondence with co-production partners or funding bodies.

Budgeting and Forecasting: P&L Treatment

From an accounting perspective, qualifying investments will generally flow through the content-cost or programme-cost line of the P&L. Platforms should work with their finance teams to determine whether MedienInvestVG-driven expenditure should be capitalised (where it represents a separable content asset) or expensed (where it constitutes a non-refundable fund contribution). Industry observers expect that commissioning and co-production investments will typically be capitalised and amortised over the exploitation window, while fund contributions may be treated as period costs.

Practitioner tip: Factor the MedienInvestVG obligation into content-budget planning from the next fiscal year onward. Failure to embed the obligation into the annual content-commissioning cycle will create a year-end scramble and may result in sub-optimal investment choices made purely to hit the threshold.

Impact on Content Licensing, Copyright and Media Investment Obligation Germany Deals

Licence Renegotiation Triggers

The MedienInvestVG will likely alter the commercial dynamics of content licensing across the German market. Streaming platforms subject to the obligation will seek to maximise the qualifying-spend credit attached to each transaction. The practical impact on content licensing includes the following renegotiation triggers:

  • Pricing adjustments: Licence fees for European works may rise as platforms bid up content that delivers compliance credit. Conversely, platforms may seek to restructure flat-fee licences as co-production investments or minimum-guarantee-plus-equity deals that carry a higher qualifying-spend classification.
  • Exclusivity and holdback windows: Platforms may demand longer exclusivity windows to justify larger per-title investments, particularly for original German-language productions where the compliance credit is clearest.
  • Delivery and certification requirements: Contracts will need to include producer obligations to deliver “European works” certification documentation, including chain-of-title confirmation, nationality-of-production declarations and production-spend breakdowns, that the platform requires for its compliance file.

Producer Negotiation Checklist

Independent producers and rights-holders selling to platforms subject to the streaming investment obligation should approach negotiations with a clear strategy:

  • Understand the platform’s compliance gap: the bigger the gap between current spend and the 8 % target, the stronger the producer’s negotiating position.
  • Offer “compliance-friendly” deal structures, co-production equity stakes, pre-sale commitments, or German-spend attestation packages, that maximise the qualifying-spend credit for the platform.
  • Negotiate a price premium for content that delivers clear compliance credit, especially for German-language originals and European co-productions.
  • Protect IP ownership: do not concede all worldwide rights merely because the platform frames its investment as compliance-driven. Retain derivative rights, sequel/prequel options and territory-specific exploitation rights wherever possible.
  • Insist on reversion clauses tied to the platform’s exploitation milestones, if the platform fails to release or adequately promote the content, rights should revert.

IP and Copyright Red Flags

Compliance-driven investment can distort standard copyright arrangements. Key risks to watch include:

  • Overreach on rights acquisition: Platforms may attempt to acquire broader rights bundles than commercially justified, citing MedienInvestVG compliance as justification for all-rights deals.
  • Moral-rights erosion: German copyright law (Urheberrechtsgesetz) provides strong moral-rights protections for creators. Compliance-driven production deals should not override an author’s right of attribution or right of integrity.
  • Tax attribution for co-productions: Where a platform co-invests in a production alongside a German producer, the allocation of tax credits (particularly the German DFFF II and regional fund incentives) must be documented with precision. Parties should address how to protect intellectual property across borders in every co-production term sheet.

Contract Drafting: Sample Clauses and Redlines for MedienInvestVG Compliance

Clause Library

The following template clauses are starting points for practitioners drafting or amending content-licensing and co-production agreements in the context of MedienInvestVG. Each clause should be adapted to the specifics of the deal and reviewed by German-qualified counsel. For broader guidance on international commercial contracts and licensing, consult the relevant practice guides.

  • 1. Compliance Cooperation Clause (Reporting & Audit Rights).
    “The Producer shall cooperate with the Platform in good faith to provide such information, documentation and certifications as the Platform may reasonably require to demonstrate compliance with the MedienInvestVG, including but not limited to production-spend breakdowns, nationality-of-production declarations and European-works certification. The Platform shall have the right, upon reasonable notice and no more than once per calendar year, to audit the Producer’s records relating to the qualifying investment.”

    Negotiation tip: Producers should cap audit frequency and require the platform to bear audit costs unless a material discrepancy is found. Benefits: Platform (compliance assurance) and Producer (limited disruption).
  • 2. Funding Credit Clause.
    “The Parties acknowledge that the Platform intends to treat its financial contribution under this Agreement as a qualifying investment for the purposes of the MedienInvestVG. The Producer shall deliver, within [30] days of completion of principal photography, a Qualifying Investment Certificate in the form set out in Schedule [X], confirming the amounts and categories of expenditure eligible for credit under the MedienInvestVG.”

    Negotiation tip: Producers should ensure the definition of “Qualifying Investment Certificate” is agreed upfront and does not impose unreasonable attestation burdens. Benefits: Platform.
  • 3. Production Co-Investment Clause.
    “The Platform shall co-invest [€ amount / percentage] in the Production, which amount shall be applied exclusively to production expenditure incurred in Germany and/or in other EU/EEA Member States, and shall constitute an equity participation entitling the Platform to [specified] exploitation rights in the territories set out in Schedule [Y].”

    Negotiation tip: Producers should resist granting worldwide rights for a co-investment that covers only a fraction of the total budget. Benefits: Both parties (platform secures compliance credit; producer retains residual rights).
  • 4. Price Adjustment Clause (Compliance-Cost Allocation).
    “In the event that the financial obligations imposed on the Platform by the MedienInvestVG (or any successor legislation) are materially increased during the term of this Agreement, the Parties shall negotiate in good faith an equitable adjustment to the Licence Fee to reflect the Platform’s increased compliance costs, provided that no adjustment shall reduce the Licence Fee below the Minimum Guarantee.”

    Negotiation tip: Producers should insist on a Minimum Guarantee floor and a cap on the magnitude of any downward adjustment. Benefits: Platform (cost sharing) vs. Producer (floor protection).
  • 5. Rights Reversion Clause (Compliance Spend Shortfall).
    “If, during any Compliance Year, the Platform fails to invest in the Production the amounts required to maintain qualifying-investment credit under the MedienInvestVG as set out in Schedule [Z], the Producer shall be entitled, upon [90] days’ written notice, to terminate this Agreement and all exploitation rights granted hereunder shall revert to the Producer.”

    Negotiation tip: Platforms will resist automatic reversion; a cure period and escalation mechanism offer a commercially pragmatic middle ground. Benefits: Producer.
  • 6. Confidentiality and Audit Data-Sharing Clause.
    “Any financial or operational information disclosed by either Party in connection with MedienInvestVG compliance (including revenue figures, spend breakdowns and audit reports) shall be treated as Confidential Information under Article [X] of this Agreement and shall not be disclosed to any third party other than the competent regulatory authority, the Party’s auditors or legal advisers, or as required by law.”

    Negotiation tip: Both parties should ensure carve-outs for regulatory reporting and that data-sharing obligations survive termination for the duration of any applicable retention period. Benefits: Both parties.

Template disclaimer: These clauses are illustrative templates and starting points only. They do not constitute legal advice and must be adapted to the specifics of each transaction by qualified German media-law counsel.

Reporting, Audit, Record-Keeping and Enforcement Under the MedienInvestVG

Audit Pack Checklist

Based on the draft legislation and early regulatory commentary, covered entities should prepare and maintain a compliance audit pack comprising the following documentation:

  • Audited German-revenue statement (annual, reconciled to group accounts).
  • Qualifying-investment register with supporting contracts, invoices and payment confirmations.
  • European-works certification for each qualifying production or acquisition.
  • Co-production agreements, including equity-split documentation and territory-rights schedules.
  • Evidence of contributions to recognised German/European film-funding bodies.
  • Revenue-attribution methodology memo (reviewed annually by external auditors).
  • Board or management-level sign-off on the annual compliance return.

Enforcement Risk Matrix

The draft law contemplates enforcement by the relevant German media regulatory authority, industry observers expect this to be the state media authorities (Landesmedienanstalten) acting through their coordinating body, the Medienanstalten, or potentially a newly created federal competence. Sanctions under discussion include administrative fines for non-compliance, corrective orders requiring remedial investment within a defined cure period, and, for persistent or material non-compliance, potential restrictions on the right to operate the on-demand service in Germany.

Entity Type Likely Reporting Frequency Key Records to Retain
Large international streamer (consolidated revenue above threshold) Annual return + quarterly internal monitoring Audited revenue statements, production-spend invoices, co-production agreements, distribution reports
National broadcaster (Germany-based, on-demand tier) Annual return P&L sheets for on-demand division, production contracts, funding logs
Independent producer / rights-holder (investment recipient) N/A (not obligated to report, but must support platform reporting) Production budgets, funding receipts, delivery memos, chain-of-title documentation

Watchout: Even entities not directly subject to the reporting obligation, such as independent producers, should build compliance documentation into their workflows. A platform partner may require full audit cooperation as a contractual condition, and the inability to provide timely documentation could jeopardise the commercial relationship.

Interaction with EU Law and Other National Regimes

AVMSD and European Works Rules

The MedienInvestVG draws its legal basis from Article 13 of the revised AVMSD (Directive 2018/1808), which allows Member States to impose financial contribution obligations on media service providers targeting their territory. Several EU Member States, including France, Italy and Spain, have already implemented similar investment obligations, each with different thresholds and eligible-spend definitions. Germany’s 8 % baseline sits in the mid-range by European comparison. The obligation to invest in European content under the AVMSD is separate from, but complementary to, the catalogue-prominence obligation (requiring at least 30 % European works in on-demand catalogues), which Germany already transposes through the Medienstaatsvertrag.

Cross-Border Revenue Allocation Approaches

Multi-territory platforms face a particular challenge: multiple Member States may simultaneously claim a share of the same global subscription revenue as the basis for their respective investment obligations. To avoid double-counting, platforms should develop a consistent, transfer-pricing-defensible revenue-allocation methodology that apportions global subscription revenue to each Member State based on transparent metrics such as subscriber counts, local advertising revenue or actual consumption data. Engaging transfer-pricing specialists alongside media-law counsel is essential to ensure that the allocation methodology is accepted by both the German regulator and the tax authorities of other jurisdictions. For more on protecting cross-border intellectual property rights in this context, see the international intellectual property guide.

Quick Compliance Checklist and Decision Matrix for the Media Investment Obligation Germany

Use the following decision matrix and checklist to determine your compliance path and track implementation progress. This section is designed to be printed as a one-page reference for compliance teams.

Decision matrix, 8 % compliance vs. 12 % exemption tier:

Factor 8 % Standard Compliance Path 12 % Exemption Tier
Minimum qualifying spend 8 % of net German turnover 12 % of net German turnover
Reporting burden Full annual return with granular spend categories Streamlined annual return
Catalogue-prominence obligations Applicable in full Expected exemption or reduced obligations
Regulatory audit frequency Standard (potential annual review) Reduced (likely triennial or risk-based)
Best suited for Platforms with lower German-content spend or limited German-originals pipeline Platforms already investing heavily in German/European content

One-page compliance checklist for streamers:

  1. Confirm whether your service falls within the scope of the MedienInvestVG (entity-type and territorial tests).
  2. Calculate net German turnover using a documented, auditable revenue-attribution methodology.
  3. Determine your current qualifying-spend level and the gap to 8 % (or 12 %).
  4. Choose your compliance path: standard 8 % or voluntary 12 % exemption tier.
  5. Appoint a compliance owner and establish a cross-functional task force.
  6. Build an internal spend-tracking taxonomy and configure monitoring dashboards.
  7. Audit and, where necessary, renegotiate existing content-licensing and co-production agreements.
  8. Prepare the compliance audit pack (revenue statement, spend register, European-works certifications, co-pro documentation).
  9. Schedule quarterly compliance snapshots and an annual board-level sign-off.
  10. Monitor legislative progress and amend the compliance programme as the final law is enacted.

Need Legal Advice?

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.

Sources

  1. Reuters, Germany to require streaming platforms to invest in local production
  2. Variety, Germany to Impose Investment Commitment on Streamers
  3. Morrison & Foerster, Germany’s New Media Investment Obligation Act
  4. Lobbyregister beim Deutschen Bundestag, Comparative Table (PDF)
  5. Screen Daily, Germany to introduce 8% investment obligation
  6. Cineuropa, Germany investment obligation coverage
  7. European Commission, Audiovisual Media Services Directive (AVMSD)

FAQs

What is the MedienInvestVG / media investment obligation in Germany?
The MedienInvestVG (Medieninvestitionsverpflichtungsgesetz) is a proposed German federal law requiring on-demand audiovisual media service providers and broadcasters with on-demand tiers to invest a percentage of their German-derived turnover in European and German audiovisual content. The draft proposes an 8 % baseline obligation, with a higher 12 % threshold unlocking certain regulatory exemptions.
VoD/streaming platforms, broadcasters operating on-demand services and certain aggregators that earn revenue from German audiences are covered. The investment percentage is calculated on net German turnover, total German-audience revenue less VAT and pass-through fees, with group consolidation rules applying where relevant.
Key steps include: (1) establishing a cross-functional compliance task force; (2) auditing current qualifying spend; (3) choosing the 8 % or 12 % compliance path; (4) building spend-tracking taxonomies and dashboards; and (5) preparing an audit-ready compliance pack with supporting contracts, revenue statements and European-works certifications.
Platforms will seek to maximise qualifying-spend credit in every deal, driving demand for compliance-friendly structures such as co-production equity, pre-sale commitments and German-spend attestation. Licence fees for qualifying European works may rise, and contracts will need new clauses covering compliance cooperation, audit rights, funding credits and rights reversion.
The 8 % threshold is the mandatory baseline: all covered platforms must invest at least 8 % of net German turnover. Platforms that voluntarily reach 12 % benefit from a lighter compliance regime, streamlined reporting, reduced audit frequency and expected exemption from certain catalogue-prominence obligations.
Enforcement is expected to rest with the German state media authorities (Landesmedienanstalten) or a coordinating federal body. Penalties under discussion include administrative fines, corrective investment orders and, for persistent non-compliance, potential restrictions on operating an on-demand service in Germany.
Renegotiation should begin as soon as a platform’s compliance gap analysis is complete, ideally within the first 60 days of the task-force formation. Priority should be given to high-value licence agreements where restructuring the deal (e.g., converting a flat fee into a co-production equity arrangement) could generate material qualifying-spend credit. Waiting until the law takes effect risks a compressed timeline and weaker negotiating leverage.

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Germany's Medieninvestvg (2026): Practical Compliance Guide for Streamers, Broadcasters & Producers

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