Germany plans to reduce subsidies for heat pumps

July 08, 2026 at 9:46 AM
Emiliano Bellini
PV Magazine (International) Solar_Renewables PV Modules ✓ Processed

Summary

<p>Germany is planning to reduce funding limits under its BEG efficient buildings subsidy scheme, while introducing stronger income-based support and new eligibility rules for heat pumps. The proposed changes include lower eligible costs and a planned “Made in Europe” incentive for heat pump production.</p> <p>The post <a href="https://www.pv-magazine.com/2026/07/08/germany-plans-to-reduce-subsidies-for-heat-pumps/">Germany plans to reduce subsidies for heat pumps</a> appeared first on <a href="https://www.pv-magazine.com">pv magazine Global</a>.</p>

<p>The German government is planning to reduce the Federal funding for efficient buildings (BEG), which includes conspicuous subsidies for the installation of residential heat pumps.</p>

<p>Under the planned changes, eligible costs would be reduced from €30,000 ($34,231) to €28,000 when the program is relaunched. The cap would then fall by a further €750 every six months, reaching €22,000 in the second half of 2030.</p>

<p>Eligible costs include the purchase, installation, and commissioning of heat pumps, as well as related measures such as necessary system upgrades, dismantling of old heating equipment, and associated planning and specialist services.</p>

<p>The proposals would also introduce a stronger income-based differentiation of subsidies. For households with a taxable income of up to €30,000, the bonus would increase from the current 30% to 40%. The subsidy rate would remain at 30% for incomes of up to €40,000 and fall to 10% for households earning €50,001 or more. Each minor child in a household would reduce the relevant income threshold by €10,000.</p>

<p>The planned reform would also remove the existing 5% bonus for heat pumps using natural refrigerants. Instead, the new BEG framework would require the use of natural refrigerants—or refrigerants meeting specified global warming potential (GWP) thresholds—as a condition for receiving funding.</p>

<p>The government also intends to introduce a “Made in Europe” bonus from the first quarter of next year. Under the proposed scheme, 15% of the value creation of heat pumps would need to take place within the European Union or associated markets.</p>

<p>Funding for the subsidy program would continue to come from the Climate and Transformation Fund (KTF) and repayments from the EU Climate Social Fund. The repayment grants for loans issued through the state development bank KfW could also be reduced by 10%.</p>

<p>According to the plans, subsidies would no longer apply to replacing district heating systems with other heating technologies. Instead, support would focus exclusively on switching from fossil fuel-based heating systems to climate-friendly alternatives.</p>

<p>The timeline for adopting the changes remains uncertain. The measures are expected to be introduced alongside the Building Modernization Act. However, that legislation has been removed from the agenda for the Parliament’s final session week before the summer recess, meaning discussions may not resume until September at the earliest.</p>

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<p>The post <a href="https://www.pv-magazine.com/2026/07/08/germany-plans-to-reduce-subsidies-for-heat-pumps/">Germany plans to reduce subsidies for heat pumps</a> appeared first on <a href="https://www.pv-magazine.com">pv magazine Global</a>.</p>

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Tags: Residential Heat pumps Markets & Policy Germany
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