Germany starts new €3 billion ‘E-Auto Booster’ subsidy scheme

Germany has launched applications for its new electrified vehicle subsidy program. Backed by a €3 billion budget, the scheme aims to support around 800,000 battery-electric vehicles, plug-in hybrids, and range extenders by 2029 through income-based grants of up to €6,000.

Germany has officially opened applications for its new electric vehicle subsidy scheme after the program cleared its final legislative hurdle with approval from the Bundesrat earlier this month. This program, first presented in January, provides €3 billion in funding through to 2029 and aims to support the purchase or lease of around 800,000 electrified vehicles, including battery-electric cars, plug-in hybrids, and range extenders.

Social component

Unlike Germany’s previous EV purchase incentives, the new program introduces a social component by linking funding levels to taxable household income and the number of dependent children. Buyers of new battery-electric vehicles can receive between €3,000 and €6,000, while plug-in hybrids and range extenders qualify for grants of between €1,500 and €4,500.

The maximum €6,000 subsidy only applies to households with a taxable annual income of up to €45,000 and at least two minor children. Households with taxable income of up to €90,000 and two children remain eligible for the minimum €3,000 grant.

Only new vehicles, no production location requirements

The program applies exclusively to newly registered vehicles. Used cars, dealer registrations, and pre-registered vehicles are excluded. There is currently no vehicle price cap and no domestic-content requirement linked to production location.

Applications can only be submitted after the vehicle has been registered. However, the scheme applies retroactively to vehicles registered on or after 1 January 2026. According to the German Environment Ministry, this could affect around 50,000 privately owned vehicles that have already been delivered this year. Buyers will have up to twelve months after first registration to apply.

No commercial use

The Environment Ministry also clarified that two members of the same household may each apply separately for support if both purchase eligible vehicles during the program period between 2026 and 2029.

Self-employed applicants face an additional restriction: they may only claim the subsidy if the vehicle is registered privately rather than added to business assets, as the program excludes commercial use.

The government stated that funding availability will depend on demand and warned that the program could potentially end before 2029 if the allocated budget is exhausted earlier.

You Might Also Like

Create a free account, or log in.

Gain access to read this article, plus limited free content.

Yes! I would like to receive new content and updates.