ETF Partial Exemption 30% — How It Works and Which ETFs Benefit (2026)

TAX · ETF PARTIAL EXEMPTION 2026

ETF Partial Exemption 30% — How It Works and Which ETFs Benefit (2026)

The German Teilfreistellung is the single most important tax break for ETF investors since the 2018 Investment Tax Reform. It means: a portion of fund income stays completely tax-free. The percentage depends on what the fund predominantly holds: 30% for equity ETFs, 15% for mixed funds, 60–80% for real-estate funds. This guide explains the rules, shows the impact in €-amounts, and lists concrete ETFs in each category. Applies to investors with German tax residency.

THE PARTIAL-EXEMPTION FORMULA
Taxable = Gross income × (1 − Partial Exemption)

Equity-ETF example: 1,000 € gross income × (1 − 0.30) = 700 € taxable. On those 700 €, German capital-gains tax of 26.375% (incl. solidarity surcharge) applies = 184.63 € tax. Without partial exemption it would be 263.75 €. Savings: about 30%.

The Four Partial-Exemption Categories

ETF TypeRequirementPartial ExemptionEffective Rate
Equity ETF ≥ 51% equity allocation 30% ~18.5%
Mixed ETF ≥ 25% but < 51% equity 15% ~22.4%
Real-Estate ETF ≥ 51% real estate (mostly domestic) 60% ~10.6%
Foreign Real-Estate ETF ≥ 51% foreign real estate 80% ~5.3%
Bond / Fixed-Income ETF < 25% equity, no real estate 0% 26.375%

Effective rate = (1 − partial exemption) × 26.375% German capital gains tax + solidarity surcharge, excluding church tax and tax-free allowance offset.

Equity ETFs — 30% Tax-Free

By far the most relevant category for 95% of retail investors. Requirement: the ETF must continuously hold ≥ 51% equity. For an MSCI World or S&P 500, the allocation is permanently above 99%, so there is no risk of falling below the 51% threshold.

iShares Core MSCI World UCITSIE00B4L5Y983
Vanguard FTSE All-World UCITSIE00BK5BQT80
iShares Core S&P 500 UCITSIE00B5BMR087
Xtrackers MSCI Emerging Markets UCITSIE00BTJRMP35
Invesco S&P 500 UCITSIE00B3YCGJ38
iShares STOXX Europe 600 UCITSDE0002635307
Lyxor MSCI World Information TechnologyLU0533033667

On 5,000 € gross gain per year (e.g. realized capital gain on sale), an equity-ETF holder pays roughly 923 € tax — a bond-ETF holder would pay 1,319 €. Difference: 396 € per 5,000 € gain.

Mixed ETFs — 15% Tax-Free

Mixed funds must continuously hold at least 25% equity — the equity allocation must be locked in the fund prospectus to qualify. Pure 50/50 stock-bond ETFs typically fall here, as do “LifeStrategy”-style products with 40–60% equity allocation.

Vanguard LifeStrategy 40% Equity UCITSIE00BMVB5K05
Vanguard LifeStrategy 60% Equity UCITSIE00BMVB5R75
BlackRock ESG Multi-Asset ModerateIE00BLLZQ759
Xtrackers Portfolio UCITS ETFLU0397221945

Heads up: Vanguard LifeStrategy 80% Equity at 80% stocks counts as an equity ETF and gets the full 30% partial exemption. LifeStrategy 20% Equity falls below the 25% threshold and is not a mixed ETF either — zero partial exemption.

Real-Estate ETFs — 60% or 80% Tax-Free

Here it gets interesting: pure real-estate funds (≥ 51% real estate) get 60% partial exemption — if the fund predominantly invests abroad (≥ 51% foreign real estate), the rate jumps to 80%. Practical caveat: true “real-estate ETFs” in the InvStG sense are rare — most REIT-ETFs on the market hold shares of real-estate companies and therefore count as equity ETFs (30%).

iShares Developed Markets Property Yield UCITSIE00B1FZS350
SPDR Dow Jones Global Real Estate UCITSIE00B8GF1M35
VanEck Global Real Estate UCITSNL0009690239
HSBC FTSE EPRA NAREIT Developed UCITSIE00B5L01S80

Important: The German tax authority typically classifies these REIT-ETFs as equity ETFs (30%) — they hold shares of real-estate companies, not real estate directly. True 60/80% rates apply mainly to open-ended real-estate funds (not exchange-traded) such as hausInvest or UniImmo Deutschland.

Who Benefits How Much? Concrete €-Examples

Assumption: 10,000 € gross income per year (realized gains + distributions), tax-free allowance already used.

Bond ETF (0% PE)2,638 € tax
Mixed ETF (15% PE)2,242 € tax
Equity ETF (30% PE)1,846 € tax
Real-Estate ETF (60% PE)1,055 € tax
Foreign Real-Estate ETF (80% PE)528 € tax

Difference equity ETF vs. bond ETF: ~792 € per year tax savings on 10,000 € gross gain — over 20 years and with compounding at 7% reinvested return, this becomes a final advantage of over 32,000 €.

Things to Watch Out For

KEY POINTS
  • Partial exemption is applied automatically by your broker — no application needed.
  • It works on distributions, on realized capital gains, and on the annual advance lump-sum tax (Vorabpauschale).
  • The classification appears in the fund prospectus or the investment terms.
  • If you use a foreign broker, you must claim partial exemption yourself in the German Anlage KAP (lines 27 ff.).
PITFALLS
  • If equity allocation drops below 51% (e.g. after a market crash), the fund can be downgraded from equity to mixed — rare but possible.
  • REIT-ETFs are usually classified as equity ETFs, not real-estate ETFs.
  • Closed-end funds and private equity are not investment funds under the InvStG — no partial exemption.
  • Fund manager changes or mergers can retroactively change the classification — check the new status during reorganizations.

Related Topics

FAQ

Do ETFs get partial exemption automatically?

Yes, as long as they qualify as “investment funds” under the German InvStG — which applies to virtually all UCITS-ETFs sold in Germany. The broker recognizes the classification by ISIN and applies partial exemption automatically. You don’t need to do anything.

What about crypto ETFs / ETPs?

Crypto-ETPs are not investment funds — they are debt securities (ETN). They are subject to full capital-gains tax with no partial exemption — regardless of whether they track Bitcoin, Ethereum, or a basket. Holding period over 1 year does not make them tax-free like direct crypto purchases.

Can the partial-exemption rates change?

Theoretically yes — the rates are codified in InvStG § 20. Any change would require legislation with long lead time. As of 2026, the 30/15/60/80 rates have been stable since 2018, and no reform is announced for the current legislative period.

Does partial exemption also apply to losses?

Yes, in parallel: with an equity ETF, only 70% of a loss enters the loss-offset bucket — 30% of the loss is “lost” for tax purposes. Practical consequence: losses in equity ETFs are worth less than losses in bond ETFs (where 100% are offsettable).

What happens if a fund gets reclassified?

A reclassification (e.g. from equity to mixed due to strategy change) counts as a sale and repurchase — you must immediately tax the previous unrealized gains. This is rare in practice and usually avoided by fund houses because it spooks investors.

Does a Bitcoin-strategy ETF (e.g. holding MicroStrategy) get partial exemption?

Yes — if the ETF holds shares of MicroStrategy or similar Bitcoin-treasury companies, it qualifies as an equity ETF with 30% partial exemption. The underlying Bitcoin exposure is tax-irrelevant — what matters is that the fund directly holds equity shares.

CALCULATOR

Tax Optimization Calculator

How much tax do you actually save with your equity ETF? Plug in your numbers and see the exact 2026 burden including partial exemption.

Open Tax Calculator →
Note: Tax rates valid for 2026; verify all ISINs are tradable at your broker. Individual fund classifications may deviate in edge cases — check broker tax statements or fund prospectuses for certainty. Not individual tax advice.
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