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
SPD parliamentary group pushes to legalise abortion in Germany
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

SPD parliamentary group pushes to legalise abortion in Germany

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

June 2025: 8 changes affecting expats in GermanyJune 2025: 8 changes affecting expats in Germany
2025 in Germany: All the changes you need to know about2025 in Germany: All the changes you need to know about
Abortion should be legal in first trimester, German government commission saysAbortion should be legal in first trimester, German government commission says
March 2024: 10 changes affecting expats in GermanyMarch 2024: 10 changes affecting expats in Germany
2024 in Germany: All of the changes you need to know about2024 in Germany: All of the changes you need to know about
German budget 2024: Record funding for defence and cuts to ElterngeldGerman budget 2024: Record funding for defence and cuts to Elterngeld
July 2023: 9 changes affecting expats in GermanyJuly 2023: 9 changes affecting expats in Germany
April 2023: 9 changes affecting expats in GermanyApril 2023: 9 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.
Jun 27, 2024
Olivia Logan

Editor at IamExpat Media

Editor for Germany at IamExpat Media. Olivia first came to Germany in 2013 to work as an Au Pair. Since studying English Literature and German in Scotland, Freiburg and Berlin she has worked as a features journalist and news editor.Read more

A parliamentary group of SPD politicians is campaigning for the Bundestag to legalise abortion in the early weeks of pregnancy but beyond the existing, tolerated 12-week cut-off.

SPD parliamentary group push for abortion legalisation

A group of SPD politicians in the German Bundestag are campaigning for the coalition government, which the party runs alongside the Greens and FDP, to legalise abortion.

"We want to strengthen women's right to self-determination and lay down different regulations for pregnancy termination which are outside of the penal code," faction member Maria Klein-Schmeink (Greens) explained.

Currently, abortion is illegal in Germany except for in specific circumstances; if it can be proven that carrying to term would be life-threatening for the pregnant person or if the pregnancy is a result of rape. Anyone in Germany who meets these criteria must undergo compulsory counselling with a state-recognised body. Once these boxes have been ticked an abortion can be carried out legally, but only within the first 12 weeks of pregnancy.

However, if abortion-seekers do not meet these requirements, a termination is tolerated - but not technically legal - following counselling consultation and before the 12th week of pregnancy. According to pro familia, 96,4 percent of abortions in Germany are carried out according to these regulations.

The parliamentary group campaign launch comes after an SPD-appointed expert panel concluded in May that Germany should bring its abortion law in line with international standards. While few people are currently penalised, the commission concluded that since the strict law remains in the penal code, a government could easily instigate punishments should it decide to.

How does Germany’s abortion law compare to other EU countries?

The parliamentary group has yet to announce until which week of pregnancy it believes abortion should be legal in Germany. 

In its 600-page report, the expert commission suggested that abortion be legal at least within the first 12 weeks of pregnancy and that the government examine whether a new law should make abortion legal in the first 22 weeks of pregnancy, since it is after 22 weeks that a foetus can survive outside of the womb. They concluded that abortion should be forbidden, but not criminalised, in the following weeks of pregnancy.

If these suggestions became legislation, Germany would have a later term limit than most countries in Europe, but still behind the UK, where a termination is generally permitted during the first 24 weeks of pregnancy. In France, which recently enshrined abortion as a constitutional right, termination is allowed until the 14th week of pregnancy, and in Italy, until the 12th week - though access to termination is becoming harder since Georgia Meloni’s national-conservative Brothers of Italy party took office in 2022.

Thumb image credit: Thanumporn Thongkongkaew / Shutterstock.com

By Olivia Logan