DON’T MISS
IamExpat FairIamExpat Job BoardIamExpat Webinars
Newsletters
EXPAT INFO
CAREER
HOUSING
EDUCATION
LIFESTYLE
EXPAT SERVICES
NEWS & ARTICLES
Home
Expat Info
German news & articles
Berlin to scrap priority list for COVID-19 vaccinations from Monday
Never miss a thing!Sign up for our weekly newsletters with important news stories, expat events and special offers.
Keep me updated with exclusive offers from partner companies
By signing up, you agree that we may process your information in accordance with our privacy policy

Berlin to scrap priority list for COVID-19 vaccinations from Monday

Never miss a thing!Sign up for our weekly newsletters with important news stories, expat events and special offers.
Keep me updated with exclusive offers from partner companies
By signing up, you agree that we may process your information in accordance with our privacy policy
or
follow us for regular updates:



Related Stories

Berlin offers walk-in COVID jabs in three vaccination centresBerlin offers walk-in COVID jabs in three vaccination centres
Berlin suspends use of AstraZeneca vaccine for young people under 60Berlin suspends use of AstraZeneca vaccine for young people under 60
Coronavirus: Berlin Carnival of Cultures, Myfest & Hamburg DOM cancelledCoronavirus: Berlin Carnival of Cultures, Myfest & Hamburg DOM cancelled
STIKO recommends COVID boosters for over-12s in Germany: What you need to knowSTIKO recommends COVID boosters for over-12s in Germany: What you need to know
October 2022: 12 changes affecting expats in GermanyOctober 2022: 12 changes affecting expats in Germany
Second Omicron booster jab gets green light from European Medicines AgencySecond Omicron booster jab gets green light from European Medicines Agency
September 2022: 9 changes affecting expats in GermanySeptember 2022: 9 changes affecting expats in Germany
July 2022: 15 changes affecting expats in GermanyJuly 2022: 15 changes affecting expats in Germany
For expats of all colours, shapes and sizes

Explore
Expat infoCareerHousingEducationLifestyleExpat servicesNews & articles
About us
IamExpat MediaAdvertisePost a jobContact usImpressumSitemap
More IamExpat
IamExpat Job BoardIamExpat HousingIamExpat FairWebinarsNewsletters
Privacy
Terms of usePrivacy policyCookiesAvoiding scams

Never miss a thing!Sign up for expat events, news & offers, delivered once a week.
Keep me updated with exclusive offers from partner companies
By signing up, you agree that we may process your information in accordance with our privacy policy


© 2025 IamExpat Media B.V.
© 2025 IamExpat Media B.V.
May 13, 2021
Abi Carter

Editor in chief at IamExpat Media

Abi studied German and History at the University of Manchester and has since lived in Berlin, Hamburg and Utrecht, working since 2017 as a writer, editor and content marketeer. Although she's happily taken on some German and Dutch quirks, she keeps a stash of Yorkshire Tea on hand, because nowhere does a brew quite like home.Read more

The prioritisation of vaccine doses according to age, preexisting health conditions, or jobs, is set to be scrapped in Berlin, leaving general practitioners and company doctors free to distribute the vaccines to all adults. 

Berlin makes coronavirus vaccine available to all adults

Berlin will lift the vaccine priority list from Monday, meaning that, in principle, anyone who wants to get vaccinated against COVID-19 can do so from next week. The same step has been taken in other federal states, including Bavaria, Baden-Württemberg and Brandenburg. 

However - and this applies to the whole of Germany - the lifting of the priority list does not mean that everyone will be able to get vaccinated immediately. There simply aren’t enough available doses. 

Appointments given according to GPs’ discretion

Instead, doctors in Berlin will apportion vaccine appointments at their own discretion, or on a first-come, first-served basis. However, if a patient belongs to one of the three priority groups and has not yet been vaccinated, they should still have priority over others. 

From June, Germany is expecting to receive significantly more vaccine doses - as many as five to six million per week. 

By Abi Carter