In Germany, patients can legally obtain prescriptions online through registered EU doctors via platforms offering remote consultations — and since January 2024, all GKV prescription medicines use the mandatory E-Rezept (electronic prescription) system, enabling fully digital workflows from consultation to pharmacy redemption. The process is regulated by the Bundesärztekammer, BfArM, and gematik, and applies to appropriate conditions where online assessment is clinically sufficient.
The German prescription system: an overview
Germany has one of the most structured prescription systems in the EU. Understanding its components helps patients navigate online prescription services effectively.
Prescription types in Germany:
- GKV-Rezept (gesetzliche Krankenversicherung): Prescription covered by statutory health insurance. Since January 2024, these must be issued as E-Rezepte (electronic prescriptions). Previously the pink “rosa Rezept.”
- Privatrezept: Private prescription for patients with private health insurance (PKV) or for medicines not covered by GKV. These may still be issued on paper, though digital formats are increasingly used.
- BtM-Rezept: Special yellow prescription for controlled substances under the Betäubungsmittelgesetz (narcotics law). These cannot be issued via online platforms.
- T-Rezept: Special pink prescription for teratogenic medicines (e.g., thalidomide derivatives). Also not available online.
Online prescription services in Germany primarily operate in the Privatrezept category — patients pay for both the consultation and the medicine privately, outside the GKV system.
The E-Rezept: Germany’s electronic prescription system
The E-Rezept (elektronisches Rezept) is Germany’s national electronic prescription infrastructure, operated by gematik GmbH — the state-owned digital health agency — and mandated for all GKV prescription medicines since 1 January 2024.
How the E-Rezept works:
- A registered doctor creates the prescription digitally in their practice management system
- The prescription is stored in the national E-Rezept infrastructure (a server certified by gematik)
- The patient accesses it via three possible channels:
- E-Rezept App (iOS and Android) — the gematik-certified app linked to the patient’s electronic health card
- Electronic health card (eGK) — held near the pharmacy’s card reader to transmit the prescription
- Paper printout — a QR code that can be printed and taken to any pharmacy
- The patient redeems the prescription at a pharmacy — including certified online pharmacies
E-Rezept and online consultations: When an online consultation results in a GKV-covered prescription, the E-Rezept system is used for the digital handoff to the pharmacy. For privately paid prescriptions (Privatrezepte), the digital infrastructure is less standardised, though many services use their own secure digital transmission systems.
Legal framework for online doctor consultations in Germany
Bundesärztekammer position
The German Medical Association (Bundesärztekammer) updated the model professional code (Musterberufsordnung) at its 2018 national congress to permit “exclusive remote treatment” — i.e., consultations conducted entirely online without in-person contact — where this is clinically justifiable.
The key legal standard is: “Die ausschließliche Beratung oder Behandlung über Kommunikationsmedien ist zulässig, wenn dies ärztlich vertretbar ist und die erforderliche ärztliche Sorgfalt […] gewahrt wird.” (Exclusive consultation or treatment via communication media is permissible where this is medically justifiable and the required standard of medical care is maintained.)
Individual Landesärztekammern (state medical councils) implement this standard. By 2026, all 17 Landesärztekammern have adopted provisions permitting remote-only treatment under appropriate conditions.
BfArM and medicine regulation
The Bundesinstitut für Arzneimittel und Medizinprodukte (BfArM) regulates medicines in Germany. Medicines dispensed following an online consultation must:
- Be approved by BfArM or the EMA (European Medicines Agency)
- Be dispensed by a pharmacy registered with the ABDA (German pharmacy association)
- Comply with the Arzneimittelgesetz (AMG — German Medicines Act)
GDPR and patient data
Medical data collected during an online consultation in Germany is subject to GDPR as special category data, as well as additional requirements under the German Federal Data Protection Act (Bundesdatenschutzgesetz, BDSG). Online services operating in Germany must:
- Obtain explicit patient consent for processing medical data
- Maintain strict data security standards
- Not share medical data for commercial purposes without explicit consent
- Retain medical records for the legally mandated period (typically 10 years)
How online prescription services work for German patients
The typical process for a German patient using an online prescription service:
Step 1 — Selecting a service and condition
Choose a service that operates within Germany and covers your condition. Verify that the service uses doctors registered with a recognised medical council (German or EU member state) and works with a pharmacy partner registered with ABDA.
Step 2 — Completing the medical assessment
Complete the structured medical questionnaire in German. The questionnaire should ask about your medical history, current medications, allergies, and condition-specific factors. For common conditions (erectile dysfunction, hair loss, weight management, contraception), this typically takes 10–20 minutes.
Step 3 — Doctor review
An independent doctor reviews your assessment. For online services operating in Germany, the reviewing doctor should be registered with a German Landesärztekammer or, for EU-based services operating cross-border, with a recognised EU medical council. The doctor makes an independent clinical decision.
Step 4 — Prescription and dispensing
If the treatment is clinically appropriate, a prescription is issued — typically as a Privatrezept in the case of online services. The prescription is transmitted to the service’s pharmacy partner. The pharmacist reviews and dispenses the medicine.
Step 5 — Delivery
Medicine is delivered to your German address, typically within 2–5 working days. Packaging must comply with German pharmaceutical labelling requirements, with product information in German.
What conditions can German patients access online prescriptions for?
The following conditions are generally accessible through legitimate online prescription services in Germany:
Männergesundheit / Men’s health
- Erektile Dysfunktion (erectile dysfunction) — Sildenafil, Tadalafil, Vardenafil
- Haarausfall (androgenetic alopecia) — Finasterid, Minoxidil
- Vorzeitiger Samenerguss (premature ejaculation)
Frauengesundheit / Women’s health
- Verhütung (contraception) — oral contraceptives
- Haarausfall bei Frauen (female pattern hair loss)
Gewichtsmanagement / Weight management
- Assessment for GLP-1 receptor agonists where clinically appropriate (subject to German prescribing guidelines)
Hauterkrankungen / Skin conditions
- Akne (acne) — topical and oral treatments
- Rosazea (rosacea) management
Conditions generally NOT available online in Germany:
- BtM-regulated controlled substances
- T-Rezept medicines
- Specialist-only medicines requiring specialist assessment
- Conditions requiring physical examination, blood tests, or imaging
- Acute or emergency conditions
German regulations and private vs. statutory health insurance
A key practical consideration for German patients is the distinction between statutory health insurance (GKV) and private health insurance (PKV):
| Factor | GKV patients | PKV patients |
|---|---|---|
| Prescription coverage | GKV covers medicine cost if prescribed | PKV typically reimburses — check policy |
| Consultation coverage | Generally NOT covered for online services | May be covered — check policy |
| E-Rezept | Mandatory for covered medicines | Less standardised — check service |
| Co-payment | Standard GKV co-payment applies to medicine | No co-payment — full private pricing |
| Out-of-pocket cost | Consultation fee (private) + co-payment | Consultation + full medicine cost (before reimbursement) |
Most German patients using online prescription services pay for the consultation privately (Selbstzahlerleistung), regardless of their insurance type. The consultation fee is not a GKV-covered benefit except where a Krankenkasse explicitly offers its own telemedicine service.
German pharmacy regulation and online pharmacies
Pharmacies in Germany — including online pharmacies — are regulated by the Apothekerkammer (regional pharmacy chambers) and must be listed with the ABDA. Since 2004, EU law has permitted licensed EU pharmacies to ship prescription medicines to German customers, subject to German import rules.
Versandapotheken (mail-order pharmacies): German law (§11a Apothekengesetz) permits licensed pharmacies to operate as mail-order pharmacies (Versandapotheken). These must:
- Be licensed as a conventional pharmacy in Germany or another EU member state
- Display the EU Common Logo (linking to the national registry entry)
- Comply with German pharmaceutical packaging and labelling requirements
- Not dispense prescription medicines without a valid prescription
When evaluating an online prescription service for use in Germany, confirm that its pharmacy partner is either a licensed German Versandapotheke or an EU pharmacy authorised to supply German patients.
Comparison: online prescription services vs. German GP vs. Bereitschaftsdienst
| Factor | Online prescription service | German Hausarzt (GP) | Kassenärztlicher Bereitschaftsdienst |
|---|---|---|---|
| Appointment needed | No — start anytime | Yes — often 1–2 week wait | Evenings/weekends only |
| Cost | Consultation fee (private) | Free for GKV patients | Free for GKV patients |
| Languages | German (on reputable services) | German | German |
| Conditions | Common, specific, non-urgent | All conditions | Urgent, non-emergency |
| Prescription type | Privatrezept (usually) | GKV-Rezept (E-Rezept) | GKV-Rezept (E-Rezept) |
| Medicine cost | Full price (no GKV subsidy) | GKV co-payment | GKV co-payment |
| Speed | Same-day decision | Appointment + pharmacy visit | Same-day |
| Follow-up | Depends on platform | Integrated with medical record | Limited |
| Emergency | Not appropriate | Appropriate | Appropriate for urgent care |
For GKV patients, the out-of-pocket cost difference between seeing a Hausarzt (free consultation + GKV co-payment on medicine) and using an online service (consultation fee + full medicine cost) is significant for ongoing conditions. Online services are particularly valuable for patients with long GP waiting times, those seeking privacy for sensitive conditions, or those with private insurance for whom reimbursement applies.
What German patients should look for in an online prescription service
When choosing an online prescription service as a patient in Germany:
Verification checklist:
- Service provides consultations in German
- Reviewing doctors are registered with a German Landesärztekammer or recognised EU medical council
- Pharmacy partner is an ABDA-registered Versandapotheke
- EU Common Logo is displayed and links to verifiable registry entry
- Service uses E-Rezept for GKV-eligible medicines (if applicable)
- GDPR compliance explicitly stated, with German data processing standards
- Service explicitly states that prescriptions are not guaranteed before assessment
- Pricing is fully transparent: consultation, medicine, and delivery itemised separately
- German-language patient support is available
- Formal complaints process is described
Intermediary services such as Prescrivia that connect German patients with independent EU-registered doctors operate within this framework — providing the technology infrastructure while leaving clinical decisions to independent doctors and dispensing to registered pharmacy partners.
Sources and further reading
- gematik GmbH — E-Rezept in Germany
- Bundesärztekammer — Fernbehandlung (remote treatment)
- BfArM — Arzneimittelzulassung und -überwachung
- ABDA — German pharmacy association — online pharmacy registration
- Bundesministerium für Gesundheit — E-Rezept
- EU Directive 2011/62/EU — Falsified Medicines Directive
- European Commission — EU Common Logo
How can we help you?
- Can I get a prescription online in Germany?
- Yes. German regulations permit online medical consultations and the issuance of prescriptions through online channels for appropriate conditions. Since 2023, the E-Rezept (electronic prescription) system is mandatory for statutory health insurance (GKV) prescriptions in Germany, enabling digital prescription workflows.
- What is the E-Rezept (electronic prescription) in Germany?
- The E-Rezept is Germany's electronic prescription system, introduced as mandatory for GKV-covered prescription medicines in January 2024. Instead of a paper pink slip (rosa Rezept), prescriptions are stored digitally — accessible via the gematik-certified E-Rezept app, the electronic health card (eGK), or a printed QR code — and can be redeemed at any participating pharmacy in Germany.
- Can I use the E-Rezept at an online pharmacy in Germany?
- Yes. E-Rezepte (electronic prescriptions) can be redeemed at any pharmacy registered with the German pharmacy association (ABDA) that has connected to the E-Rezept infrastructure — including certified online pharmacies. The prescription is transmitted digitally to the pharmacy of your choice.
- Are online doctor consultations legal in Germany?
- Yes. The German Medical Association (Bundesärztekammer) revised its model professional code in 2018 to permit exclusive remote treatment — including online-only consultations — where it is clinically justifiable and the standard of care can be maintained. Individual state medical councils (Landesärztekammern) implement this within their jurisdiction.
- Does German statutory health insurance (GKV) cover online prescriptions?
- GKV covers prescription medicines regardless of whether the prescription was issued online or in person, provided the prescription is clinically indicated and issued by a registered doctor on an E-Rezept. The consultation itself (the online doctor service fee) is generally not covered by GKV and must be paid privately (Selbstzahler). Some Krankenkassen offer telemedicine services directly to their members.
- What types of conditions can I get a prescription for online in Germany?
- Common, non-controlled conditions suitable for online assessment include erectile dysfunction, hair loss (androgenetic alopecia), contraception, mild skin conditions, and weight management. Controlled substances (BtMG-regulated medicines), hospital-only medicines, and conditions requiring physical examination are generally not available through online prescription services.
- How do I find a legitimate online prescription service operating in Germany?
- Look for services that: (1) list doctors registered with a German or other EU member state medical council, (2) are transparent about which pharmacy partner fulfils prescriptions and confirm it is ABDA-registered, (3) use the E-Rezept system for GKV-covered medicines, (4) comply with GDPR, and (5) never guarantee a prescription before assessment.
- Can I use an online prescription service based outside Germany to get medicine delivered to Germany?
- EU online pharmacies registered in other member states can legally deliver medicines to Germany under certain conditions. The prescription must be valid, the medicine must be authorised in Germany, and the pharmacy must comply with German import rules. Many patients find it simpler to use services with German-registered pharmacy partners to avoid cross-border complexity.