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2025 in Germany

The following is a list of events from the year 2025 in Germany.

Incumbents

Events

January

February

  • February 12 – The government extends controls on Germany's borders until 15 September.
  • February 13 – 2025 Munich car attack: Two people are killed while at least 37 others are injured after a car rams through a street demonstration in Munich. The suspect, an Afghan with a valid residence and work permit, is arrested.
  • February 20 –
  • The Federal Court of Justice rejects a petition by Birkenstock to recognise its footwear products as copyright-protected artwork.
  • A Russian national is arrested at Berlin Brandenburg Airport on suspicion of plotting to attack the Israeli embassy in Berlin on behalf of Islamic State.
  • February 21 – One person is injured in a knife attack near the Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe in Berlin.
  • February 23
  • 2025 German federal election: The CDU/CSU wins a plurality in the Bundestag with about 28.6% of the vote, followed by the AfD with 20.8% and the SPD with 16.4%.
  • The AfD becomes the strongest party in the East, securing all five former East German states.
  • Christian Lindner resigns as leader of the FDP and announces his retirement from active politics after the party fails to win a seat in the Bundestag following the federal election.
  • February 25 – Maximilian Krah and Matthias Helferich are readmitted back into the AfD parliamentary group after a party meeting.
  • February 26 – Four people are injured in a shooting near a courthouse in Bielefeld.
  • February 27
  • A court in Jena sentences two Afghan residents to up to five years imprisonment for plotting to attack the Swedish Riksdag and assassinate lawmakers in response to the burning of copies of the Koran.
  • A two-day strike is launched at Munich Airport, resulting in disruptions to 80% of flights.

March

April

May

June

  • 1 June – Three people are killed in a fire at a hospital in Hamburg.
  • 2 June –
  • Former foreign minister Annalena Baerbock is elected as president of the United Nations General Assembly.
  • The Berlin Administrative Court rules against the German government's practice of rejecting asylum-seekers at border controls unless carried out under the Dublin Regulation.
  • 4 June –
  • In the largest evacuation in Cologne since 1945, more than 20,000 residents are ordered evacuated as part of efforts to defuse three unexploded bombs dropped during World War II.
  • A Ryanair aircraft flying from Berlin to Milan makes an emergency landing at Memmingen Airport after encountering turbulence that injures nine people on board.
  • 8 June – A spectator dies at the Allianz Arena in Munich while attending the 2025 UEFA Nations League Finals between Portugal and Spain.
  • 16 June – An Oberlandesgericht in Frankfurt convicts Syrian resident Alaa Mousa for crimes against humanity committed on behalf of the Assad regime during the Syrian Civil War.
  • 18–29 June – EuroBasket Women 2025 in Czech Republic, Germany, Greece and Italy.
  • 24 June –
  • The Federal Administrative Court strikes down a ban imposed in July 2024 by the federal government on the far-right magazine Compact and its publisher, Compact-Magazin GmbH, saying that the publication did not meet conditions that justified the prohibition.
  • Finance minister Lars Klingbeil announces that the government will raise its defense budget from 2.4% to 3.9% of its GDP by 2029, citing a NATO quota for member states to raise defense spending due to the Russian invasion of Ukraine.
  • 27 June – The Bundestag votes 444-135 to suspend family reunions for migrants with "subsidiary protection" until 2027.

July

  • 1 July –
  • One person is killed while two others are injured in a knife attack inside the offices of a local electricity supplier in Mellrichstadt. A suspect is arrested.
  • Two firefighters are injured in a wildfire in , on the border of Saxony and Brandenburg.
  • 3 July – Four people are injured in an axe attack inside an Intercity Express train traveling between Straubing and Plattling on its way to Vienna. A suspect is arrested.
  • 4 July – A bus traveling from Copenhagen to Vienna overturns near Röbel, injuring 23 of the 55 people on board.
  • 6 July – Poland imposes temporary border controls on crossings with Germany in Lithuania as part of efforts to curb the flow irregular asylum-seekers.
  • 12 July – Four royal residences belonging to King Ludwig II of Bavaria (Neuschwanstein, Linderhof, Schachen and Herrenchiemsee) are designated as World Heritage Sites by UNESCO.
  • 15 July – The Federal Constitutional Court dismisses a case brought about by Yemeni plaintiffs accusing the German government of failing to prevent deaths from US drone strikes on Yemen coordinated from Ramstein Air Base, citing the lack of a "sufficient connection" to the German state’s authority and "a serious danger of systematic violation" of international law.
  • 18 July –
  • Khaled Mohamed Ali El Hishri aka Al-Buti, a Libyan national and former prison official wanted by the International Criminal Court for war crimes and crimes against humanity committed on inmates in 2015, is arrested in Germany.
  • Germany launches its second repatriation flight to Afghanistan since the Taliban retook power in 2021, deporting 81 Afghan nationals.
  • Nineteen people are injured by the errant detonation of fireworks at a fair in Düsseldorf.
  • 23 July – A court in Berlin acquits satirist El Hotzo on charges of hate crimes and disturbing public peace over his social media posts relating to the attempted assassination of Donald Trump in Pennsylvania in 2024.
  • 27 July – A passenger train traveling from Sigmaringen to Ulm derails near Riedlingen, killing three people and injuring 50 others.
  • 29 July –
  • A court in Ingolstadt convicts three people for stealing 483 Celtic coins from a museum in Manching in 2022 and sentences them to up to 11 years' imprisonment.
  • A helicopter of the German Air Force crashes near Leipzig, killing two crew members and leaving a third missing.

August

September

October

  • 1 October
  • The annual Oktoberfest in Munich is shut down until 17:30 due to a bomb explosion at a nearby house which kills two people, including the perpetrator.
  • Three men are arrested in Berlin for preparing a terrorist attack allegedly on behalf of Hamas against Jewish institutions. Hamas denies involvement.
  • 2 October – Unidentified drones are seen flying over Munich Airport, resulting in major disruptions to aviation. A second wave of drones leads to the airport's closure the next day.
  • 7 October – The mayor-elect of Herdecke Iris Stalzer is critically injured in a stabbing attack.
  • 8 October – The Bundestag repeals a law that allowed highly qualified foreigners apply for citizenship after three years of residence instead of the standard five.
  • 28 October – The government culls 500,000 birds, including chickens, geese, and turkeys, as the Friedrich Loeffler Institute reports over 100 outbreaks of H5N1 avian influenza, including 30 outbreaks among poultry battery farms across the country.

November

  • 5 November – A court in Aachen sentences a palliative care nurse to life imprisonment for the murder of 10 patients and attempted murder of 27 others using sedative injections at a hospital in Würselen from 2023 to 2024.
  • 10 November – A dual German-Polish national is arrested in Dortmund on suspicion of inciting attacks on German politicians and fundraising rewards through cryptocurrency donations.
  • 17 November – Germany qualifies for the 2026 FIFA World Cup after defeating Slovakia 6-0 at the 2026 FIFA World Cup qualification in Leipzig.
  • 24 November – A parking inspector and his wife are arrested on suspicion of embezzling more than €1 million from parking meters in Kempten.
  • 27 November – A Ukrainian suspect in the 2022 Nord Stream pipelines sabotage is extradited from Italy to Germany.

December

  • 2 December –
  • Unidentified thieves steal at least 10,000 rounds of live ammunition from a delivery truck headed to a Bundeswehr barracks in Burg bei Magdeburg, Saxony-Anhalt.
  • Germany finishes second at the 2025 UEFA Women's Nations League after losing to Spain 3-0 at the final in Madrid.
  • 3 December – UEFA awards Germany the hosting rights for the UEFA Women's Euro 2029 championship.
  • 12 December —
  • The government summons the Russian ambassador following formal accusations of Russian involvement in disinformation, sabotage, cyberattacks and election interference against Germany in 2024.
  • Five foreign nationals from Morocco, Egypt and Syria are arrested on suspicion of plotting to attack a Christmas market in Bavaria.
  • 22 December – A man drives a car into two other vehicles and a bus stop before being apprehended in Giessen, injuring three people.
  • 23 December – The United States imposes sanctions on HateAid leaders Josephine Ballon and Anna-Lena von Hodenberg on charges of promoting online censorship against American interests.
  • 29 December – Thieves rob a bank vault in Gelsenkirchen, stealing about €30 million from safe deposit boxes.

Holidays

Art and entertainment

Deaths

January

February

March

April

May

June

July

  • 3 July – Anita Kupsch, 85, actress (b. 1940)
  • 16 July – Claus Peymann, 88, theatre director and manager (b. 1937)
  • 17 July – Udo Voigt, 73, politician, leader of the (NDP) (1996-2011), (b. 1952)
  • 25 July – Doris Gercke, 87, writer, (b. 1937)
  • 27 July – Horst Mahler, 89, Red Army Faction militant and convicted Holocaust denier (b. 1936)
  • 28 July – Laura Dahlmeier, 31, biathlete, double Olympic champion (2018) (b. 1993)

August

  • 3 August – Ulrich Potofski, 63, sport journalist (b. 1952)
  • 7 August – Heinz Hardt, 89, politician (b. 1936)
  • 18 August – , 87, politician (b. 1933)
  • 19 August – Herwig Schopper, 101, experimental physicist (b. 1924)
  • 21 August – Hans Feldmeier, 101, pharmacist. (b. 1924)
  • 22 August –
  • Rolf Seelmann-Eggebert, 88, journalist (b. 1937)
  • Johannes Helm, 98, psychologist, painter and writer. (b. 1927)
  • 30 August – Arthur Brauss, 89, actor (b. 1936)

September

October

November

December

See also

Notes

References

External links