Minijob Coast Calculator Germany

Employer Minijob Cost Calculator

Calculate your total costs as an employer (monthly & annual) incl. flat-rate levies to the Minijob-Zentrale – with a clean breakdown, warnings regarding the Minijob limit, and optional costs per hour.

📌Data status: 01/01/2026

Inputs

Statutory Health Insurance (GKV)? Only then does the flat-rate HI contribution apply (Commercial 13%, Household 5%).
⚙️ Advanced Settings (Adjust Rates)
Tip: Accident insurance is paid separately to the responsible Employers' Liability Insurance Association (Berufsgenossenschaft) and varies greatly by industry.
✅ Result updates automatically with every input

Result

Total Costs / Month Annual costs: – Costs per hour: –
0%
Levies
Share of levies in total costs (incl. accident insurance estimate).
Position
Rate
$/Month
Gross Wage
Flat-rate HI
Flat-rate PI
U1 (Sick Pay)
U2 (Maternity)
Insolvency Levy
Flat Tax
Accident Ins. (Estimate)
Total Levies
Enter gross earnings to see the costs.
Note: "Individual Income Tax" is intentionally not estimated here ($0) because it is personal (tax class, allowances, church tax, other jobs). For planning: Flat tax 2% is the typical standard for Minijobs via the Minijob-Zentrale.

Explanation & FAQ for the Employer Minijob Cost Calculator

This Employer Minijob Cost Calculator shows you in seconds what a Minijob really costs you as an employer monthly and annually – including the most important flat-rate levies to the Minijob-Zentrale. You enter the monthly gross earnings (up to the current Minijob limit) and choose whether it is a commercial Minijob or a Minijob in a private household (Household Cheque Procedure). Optionally, you can specify whether the employed person has statutory health insurance and provide a realistic estimate for accident insurance.

Why is this important? Many underestimate Minijob costs because they only look at the gross wage. In practice, depending on the type of employment, several percentage points of levies are added. For commercial Minijobs, flat-rate contributions of 13% (health insurance) and 15% (pension insurance) typically apply; in private households, the flat-rate contributions are lower (5% each). Additionally, levies (U1 for sickness, U2 for maternity) and the insolvency levy are collected. You pay accident insurance separately to the responsible accident insurance carrier – that is why it is implemented here as a freely editable estimate.

How to use this calculator optimally:

  1. Enter the gross earnings per month. If you plan with hours instead, fill in "Hours per month" – then the calculator also shows the costs per hour.
  2. Choose the type of employment: Commercial or Private Household.
  3. Check "GKV" if the person has statutory health insurance – only then does the flat-rate HI contribution apply. (With private health insurance or family insurance, the HI flat-rate contribution may be waived.)
  4. Decide on "Flat tax 2%" if you want to tax the Minijob at a flat rate via the Minijob-Zentrale. With individual income tax, the actual taxes depend on tax class, allowances, church tax liability, and other jobs – an online calculator cannot reliably estimate this without personal data.
  5. Pay attention to the warnings near the Minijob limit. Even small fluctuations (holiday pay, bonuses, back payments, one-off payments) can break the limit. Then it may no longer be a Minijob, but employment subject to social security contributions – with completely different contributions.

Planning Tip: Calculate not only monthly but also annually. The average monthly earnings over the year (annual earnings limit) are often decisive. If you give more hours seasonally, you can balance this out with quieter months – as long as the average remains within the frame. Also important: Several Minijobs of the same person can be added together; if the sum exceeds the limit, at least one job becomes subject to social security contributions.

Note on data status: The default rates are pre-filled as of 01/01/2026 (U1 0.8%, U2 0.22%, Insolvency Levy 0.15%, Flat Tax 2%). Statutory changes are possible. For maximum security, you can adjust the percentages in the settings area at any time and thus also map special cases (e.g., other accident insurance values, individual levy scenarios, or different tax choices).

What does "Minijob Limit" mean?
This is the maximum average monthly earnings up to which employment is considered a Minijob. If earnings are permanently above this, the employment is generally subject to social security contributions.
Are employer levies always the same amount?
No. In private households, the flat-rate contributions are lower. In addition, the HI flat-rate contribution depends on whether the person is statutorily insured. Accident insurance is always individual.
Does the employer pay more if the Minijobber pays pension insurance?
No. The flat-rate employer contribution to pension insurance remains the same. Only the employee tops up their share if they remain subject to pension insurance (otherwise they can be exempted).
Why is "Accident Insurance" not fixed?
Because it is not paid via the Minijob-Zentrale and varies greatly depending on the industry/accident insurance fund. The calculator therefore offers a freely editable field so that you can store realistic values.
Can I opt out of the flat tax?
Yes. Some employers pay the tax individually to the tax office. Then the taxes are personal; the calculator intentionally sets them to $0 and shows a note so that you do not plan with fantasy values.
Is this a binding payslip?
No. The calculator is a planning aid. For billing, the specifications of the Minijob-Zentrale, the tax administration, and possibly a tax office apply.
Legal Note: All information without guarantee. This calculator does not replace individual advice or payroll accounting.

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