Mortgage Glossary
German mortgage terminology explained in plain language
The upfront fee charged when opening a Bausparvertrag, typically 1-1.6% of the Bausparsumme. One-time cost at contract signing.
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Depreciation tax deduction for rental property. 2% annual depreciation on the building value (not land) for properties built after 1924, or 2.5% for older buildings.
Annual AfA = Building value × 2% (or 2.5% for pre-1925)
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The initial repayment rate at the start of the loan. As you pay down the balance, the effective repayment rate increases because more of each payment goes to principal.
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A fixed-payment mortgage where the monthly payment stays constant, but the proportion of interest vs. principal changes over time. Early payments are mostly interest; later payments are mostly principal repayment.
Payment = L × (r × (1+r)^n) / ((1+r)^n - 1)
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Follow-up financing needed when your fixed interest period ends. You'll refinance the Restschuld at then-current market rates.
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The loan portion of a Bausparvertrag, available after Zuteilung at the guaranteed interest rate locked in when you signed the contract.
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The accumulated savings balance in your Bausparvertrag, earning interest (typically 0.1-1%) during the savings phase.
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The target contract sum of a Bausparvertrag, split between your savings (40-50%) and the loan portion (50-60%).
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A building savings contract combining a savings plan with a guaranteed low-interest loan. You save for 7-10 years, then receive a loan at a fixed rate locked in when you signed.
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A processing or origination fee charged by some banks. Must be included in the Effektivzins calculation.
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The maximum loan-to-value (LTV) ratio a bank will lend. Typically 60-80% of Beleihungswert, with better rates for lower LTV.
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The lending value of a property as assessed by the bank, typically 80-90% of market value. Banks use this conservative estimate to limit their risk.
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Standby or commitment interest charged by banks if you don't draw down the loan within a specified period (typically 3-12 months after approval). Usually 0.25% per month.
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A guarantee or surety where someone (typically a family member) co-signs to secure your loan if you have insufficient income or collateral.
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The total loan amount borrowed from the bank. This is the principal that must be repaid plus interest over the loan term.
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The loan interest rate for the Bauspardarlehen, fixed at contract signing. Historical contracts may have very low rates (1-2%).
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An upfront discount or fee that reduces the loan amount you receive in exchange for a lower interest rate. Effectively prepaid interest.
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The effective annual rate (APR) that includes all fees and compounding, giving you the true cost of the loan. Required by law to be disclosed for comparison shopping.
Includes: nominal rate + processing fees + compounding frequency
Your own contribution to receive maximum Riester subsidies, at least 4% of your previous year's gross income minus subsidies.
Min contribution = max(4% of income - subsidies, €60)
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Your equity or down payment – the cash you bring to the purchase. Minimum 10-20% is typical, plus enough to cover Nebenkosten. More equity = better rates.
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German income tax with progressive rates from 14% to 45%. Rental income is added to your other income and taxed at your marginal rate.
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Energy renovation of existing buildings – improving insulation, windows, heating systems to reduce energy consumption and qualify for KfW support.
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Energy efficiency standards for KfW programs, measured in Effizienzhaus levels (40, 55, 70, etc.). Lower numbers = better efficiency = more subsidies.
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A forward loan that locks in today's interest rate for a mortgage starting up to 5 years in the future. Useful when your current fixed period is ending and you want to secure current rates.
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Your marginal tax rate – the rate applied to your next euro of income. Important for calculating the actual tax benefit of rental deductions.
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Land registry fees for registering the property transfer and mortgage lien (Grundschuld). Usually around 0.5% of purchase price.
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Property transfer tax paid to the state when buying real estate. Rates vary by Bundesland from 3.5% (Bavaria, Saxony) to 6.5% (Brandenburg, NRW).
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A land charge registered against your property as collateral for the mortgage. Unlike a Hypothek, it's not automatically tied to the loan amount and can be reused for future borrowing.
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The basic annual government subsidy for Wohn-Riester, currently €175 per person if you contribute at least 4% of your income.
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The savings interest rate earned on your Bausparguthaben during the savings phase. Typically low (0.1-1%) but provides stability.
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A mortgage lien directly tied to the loan amount. Less commonly used than Grundschuld because it cannot be reused for additional borrowing.
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The purchase price of the property before closing costs. This is the base amount for calculating Nebenkosten and determining your financing need.
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Home Ownership Program providing up to €100,000 for purchasing or building owner-occupied residential property, with attractive interest rates.
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Bauspar Combination program providing up to €50,000 to complement a Bauspar loan for home ownership.
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Climate-Friendly New Construction program offering up to €150,000 in subsidized loans for energy-efficient new buildings meeting QNG certification standards.
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Energy-Efficient Renovation program with up to €60,000 per unit for single measures (windows, insulation, heating) that improve energy efficiency.
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Government-backed loans from KfW (Kreditanstalt für Wiederaufbau) offering below-market rates and/or repayment grants for energy-efficient construction and renovation.
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The child bonus for Wohn-Riester, €300 per child (born after 2008) or €185 per child (born before 2008) per year.
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Church tax of 8% (Bavaria, Baden-Württemberg) or 9% (other states) of your income tax, if you're a registered member of a tax-collecting church.
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The total duration until the loan is fully repaid. Not to be confused with Zinsbindung (fixed interest period), which is typically shorter.
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Life insurance that can be used as collateral for a mortgage or to pay off the loan at maturity (Tilgungsaussetzung model).
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Real estate broker commission. Since 2020, sellers must pay at least half of the commission when selling to private buyers. Typically 3-6% total.
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Rental income from letting property, subject to income tax after deducting Werbungskosten.
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Blended financing combining a regular bank loan with KfW subsidized loans. The weighted average rate (Mischzins) is often significantly below market rates.
Mischzins = (Bank loan × Bank rate + KfW loan × KfW rate) / Total loan
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The fixed monthly payment you make to the bank, consisting of both interest and principal repayment portions.
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Deferred taxation of Wohn-Riester benefits – you save taxes now but pay taxes on the Wohnförderkonto balance in retirement.
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Closing costs or ancillary costs when buying property in Germany. Typically 10-15% of purchase price, including transfer tax, notary fees, and broker fees.
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Notary fees for handling the property purchase and mortgage registration. Required by law in Germany, typically around 1.5-2% of purchase price.
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A benchmark rate used as a reference for variable-rate loans, such as EURIBOR. When the reference rate changes, your loan rate changes accordingly.
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The remaining debt at the end of the fixed interest period. This is the amount you'll need to refinance or pay off when your current mortgage term ends.
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Interest expense on your rental property mortgage, fully deductible against rental income as Werbungskosten.
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A 5.5% surcharge on income tax, largely phased out for most taxpayers since 2021 but still applies to high earners.
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The nominal or base interest rate charged by the bank, excluding fees and compounding effects. Always lower than the Effektivzins.
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Special or extra repayments beyond your regular monthly payment. Most German mortgages allow 5-10% annual Sondertilgung without prepayment penalties.
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The savings phase of a Bausparvertrag where you accumulate your minimum savings amount (typically 40-50% of Bausparsumme) to qualify for the loan.
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The repayment or amortization portion of your monthly payment that reduces the principal balance. In German mortgages, you choose an initial repayment rate (typically 2-3%).
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A deferred repayment mortgage where you pay interest-only during the loan term, with principal repaid at maturity (often via life insurance or investment).
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A loan with constant principal payments and decreasing total payments over time. Unlike Annuitätendarlehen, payments decrease because the interest portion shrinks as the balance reduces.
Principal payment = L / n (constant), Interest = remaining balance × r
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The amortization schedule showing how each payment is split between interest and principal over the life of the loan.
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The repayment rate expressed as a percentage of the original loan amount. Higher rates mean faster payoff but higher monthly payments.
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A repayment grant from KfW that reduces your loan balance – essentially free money if you meet the program requirements.
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Debt restructuring or refinancing to a different lender, often to get better terms. May incur Vorfälligkeitsentschädigung (prepayment penalty).
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Tax loss carry-forward allowing rental losses to offset other income (employment income) in the same or future years.
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Renting or letting property to tenants. Rental income (Mieteinnahmen) minus deductible expenses (Werbungskosten) equals taxable rental profit.
Employer capital formation contributions that can be invested in a Bausparvertrag. Up to €40/month with additional government bonus possible.
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A full repayment mortgage where the loan is completely paid off within the fixed interest period, leaving zero Restschuld. Requires higher monthly payments but provides certainty.
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Prepayment penalty charged if you pay off your mortgage early or refinance before the fixed period ends. Compensates the bank for lost interest.
Based on: remaining debt × rate differential × remaining term
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Deductible expenses that can offset rental income, including mortgage interest, maintenance, insurance, property management, and depreciation (AfA).
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A housing subsidy scheme allowing Riester pension savings to be used for home purchase or mortgage repayment, with government bonuses and tax benefits.
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A notional account tracking Wohn-Riester usage for deferred taxation. The balance grows 2% annually and is taxed in retirement.
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A government housing bonus for Bauspar savers meeting income limits. Up to 10% bonus on savings up to €700/year (single) or €1,400 (married).
Bonus = min(savings, €700/€1,400) × 10% = max €70/€140 per year
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The fixed interest period during which your rate is locked. After this period ends, you'll need to refinance at prevailing market rates (Anschlussfinanzierung).
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The interest rate charged on your loan, expressed as a percentage per year. Can refer to either Sollzins or Effektivzins depending on context.
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A graduated interest rate structure where the rate changes at predetermined intervals. Less common than fixed rates in German mortgages.
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The allocation or maturity point when your Bausparvertrag becomes eligible for the loan portion, after meeting minimum savings and waiting period requirements.
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