Following optimism ahead of the meeting, the Bundestag-Bundesrat conciliation committee has agreed on a compromise for Health Minister Nina Warken's savings law to stabilize health insurance contributions and avert hikes from 2026. States and federal government expect Bundesrat approval on Friday.
The conciliation committee, in its first meeting this legislative period, reached a compromise on clinic spending limits, clearing the path for Warken's (CDU) €2 billion savings package—previously blocked by the Bundesrat—with €1.8 billion from clinics. Remuneration increases will be capped at actual cost rises in 2026 to address health fund budget gaps.
Co-chair Manuela Schwesig (SPD, Mecklenburg-Vorpommern) hailed it as a «good compromise» and anticipates Bundesrat approval, given states' agreement. States secured confirmation that the €1.8 billion savings are one-time; from 2027, the remuneration base adjusts, as co-chair Hendrik Hoppenstedt (CDU) noted, backed by a federal protocol declaration.
Warken emphasized the short-term measure reduces pressure for 2026 contribution hikes but sets no precedent; a broader package is eyed for 2027. Greens' Janosch Dahmen criticized it as a «complicated shell game,» warning of potential hikes, clinic uncertainty—especially rural ones—and unfulfilled promises.
Health funds are setting 2026 additional contributions (average 2.9% atop 14.6%), with warnings of likely increases to rebuild reserves despite the package. Significant adjustments occurred in early 2025.