Germany operates one of Europe's most structured disability employment systems, anchored in Book IX of the Social Code (SGB IX), a 5% employment quota, and a levy on non-compliant employers. This article explains the key institutions, obligations, and incentives.
Overview
Germany's disability employment law is anchored in Sozialgesetzbuch IX (SGB IX) — Book Nine of the Social Code, which consolidates rehabilitation and participation law for people with disabilities. The current version of SGB IX came into force in January 2018, replacing the previous Schwerbehindertengesetz and integrating the Bundesteilhabegesetz (BTHG — Federal Participation Act).
The framework combines:
An employment quota for severely disabled workers
A levy (Ausgleichsabgabe) on employers who fall below quota
State-level Inklusionsämter (Inclusion Offices) providing employer support and enforcement
Individual rehabilitation and participation rights
Anti-discrimination protections under the Allgemeines Gleichbehandlungsgesetz (AGG)
Who Is Covered: Schwerbehinderung
German disability employment law focuses specifically on people with Schwerbehinderung (severe disability) — defined as a degree of disability (Grad der Behinderung, GdB) of at least 50, or at least 30 with specific work-limiting characteristics (Gleichstellung — equalisation).
GdB is assessed by the responsible pension or social authority (Versorgungsamt) and ranges from 20 to 100 in increments of 10.
Approximately 7.9 million people in Germany hold a valid Schwerbehindertenausweis (severe disability ID card) as of 2023 (Statistisches Bundesamt).
The 5% Employment Quota (§ 154 SGB IX)
Private and public employers with 20 or more employees are legally required to fill at least 5% of their positions with severely disabled workers.
In practice, the quota is met through a tiered system:
Positions filled by severely disabled employees count toward the quota
Some positions (e.g., special apprenticeship places) count double or triple
Compliance statistics (2022, Bundesagentur für Arbeit):
Employer type
Average fill rate
Public sector
~6.5%
Private sector
~3.8%
All employers
~4.7%
Most private sector employers do not meet the 5% quota, triggering the Ausgleichsabgabe levy.
The Ausgleichsabgabe — Compensatory Levy
Employers who do not meet the 5% quota pay an annual Ausgleichsabgabe (compensatory levy) per unfilled mandatory position. The levy amount increases with the shortfall:
Quota fill rate
Annual levy per unfilled position (2024)
3% or more (but below 5%)
€140/month (€1,680/year)
2% to below 3%
€245/month (€2,940/year)
Below 2%
€360/month (€4,320/year)
0% (no severely disabled employees at all)
€720/month (€8,640/year)
Source: Bundesagentur für Arbeit 2024
Total levy revenue: approximately €750 million–€1 billion annually, all of which is channelled back into disability employment programmes through the Inklusionsämter.
Inklusionsämter — State Inclusion Offices
Each German federal state (Land) has an Inklusionsamt (formerly Integrationsamt), the primary state authority for disability employment matters. Functions include:
Employer support: Grants for workplace adaptations, technical aids, communication assistance
Special dismissal protection: Employers require the Inklusionsamt's consent to dismiss a severely disabled employee — a significant employment protection right
Workplace integration management (BEM): Inklusionsämter promote and support the Betriebliches Eingliederungsmanagement (BEM) process for long-absent employees
Funding from Ausgleichsabgabe: All levy revenue is redistributed through Inklusionsämter
Betriebliches Eingliederungsmanagement (BEM)
BEM is a statutory process (§ 167 SGB IX) requiring employers to offer structured reintegration support to employees who have been absent for more than 6 weeks (cumulatively) in a rolling 12-month period. BEM is voluntary for the employee but mandatory for the employer to initiate.
Integrationsfachdienste are specialist employment services for severely disabled jobseekers and employees, commissioned by the Inklusionsämter and Federal Employment Agency (Bundesagentur für Arbeit). IFDs provide:
Job placement and supported employment
On-the-job support and coaching
Employer advisory services
Support during the probation period and beyond
There are approximately 720 IFD locations across Germany (BMAS 2023).
Inklusionsbetriebe (inclusive enterprises, formerly Integrationsprojekte) are commercially operating businesses that permanently employ a proportion of severely disabled workers — typically 30–50% of their workforce. They operate in mainstream economic sectors (catering, manufacturing, IT, retail, etc.) and provide competitive working conditions.
There are approximately 870 Inklusionsbetriebe employing over 27,000 severely disabled workers (Bundesarbeitsgemeinschaft Inklusionsfirmen, 2023).
Inklusionsbetriebe are funded partly through Ausgleichsabgabe grants and are intended as a bridge between sheltered workshops (Werkstätten für behinderte Menschen — WfbM) and the open labour market.
Anti-Discrimination: The AGG
The Allgemeines Gleichbehandlungsgesetz (AGG) of 2006 implements the EU Employment Equality Directive 2000/78/EC. It prohibits discrimination on grounds of disability (Behinderung) in employment and provides a right to reasonable accommodation (angemessene Vorkehrungen) — failing which the employer may be liable for compensation.
The AGG is enforced by the courts (Arbeitsgerichte) and the Antidiskriminierungsstelle des Bundes (Federal Anti-Discrimination Agency), which provides free advice to complainants.
Key Statistics
Indicator
Value
Source
Severely disabled population (valid ID)
7.9 million
Destatis 2023
Severely disabled employment rate
~50%
Bundesagentur für Arbeit 2022
Employment gap vs non-disabled
~15–20 pp
OECD/Bundesagentur
Employers meeting 5% quota
~45%
Bundesagentur 2022
Total Ausgleichsabgabe revenue
~€800m/year
BMAS
Inklusionsbetriebe
~870
BAG IF 2023
Sources
Bundesministerium für Arbeit und Soziales (BMAS): bmas.de — SGB IX texts, statistics, programme information
Bundesagentur für Arbeit: statistik.arbeitsagentur.de — Schwerbehindertenstatistik