Freelance or self-employed? Sounds the same. It is not. And this small difference decides whether you pay trade tax, register with the trade office and have to keep double-entry books. Many people lump the two together, then pay for it later.
The good news up front: the classification follows clear rules that you can check in advance. In this guide you will find the definitions, the tax consequences and a checklist for a first self-assessment, all up to date for 2026. Let us get started.
The key points at a glance:
- Self-employed is the umbrella term: every freelancer (Freiberufler) is self-employed, but not every self-employed person is a freelancer.
- Freelancers practise a liberal profession under § 18 EStG. They register only with the tax office and pay no trade tax.
- All other self-employed people count as trade business owners (Gewerbetreibende), with trade registration and IHK membership.
- The tax office makes the classification based on what you actually do. You don’t get to choose it yourself.
What does self-employment mean? Definition and basics
Self-employment is the umbrella term for everyone who works for their own account. It covers freelancers just as much as trade business owners. Why does the distinction still matter? Because it decides registration, taxes and obligations.
Definition of self-employment
You are self-employed if you work at your own expense and responsibility. You decide which projects you take on and carry the entrepreneurial risk. Nobody gives you instructions. That is exactly what separates you from dependent employment.
Within self-employment, German income tax law knows two forms: freelance work under § 18 EStG and commercial activity under § 15 EStG. The legal form is independent of this. Most people start as a sole proprietorship (Einzelunternehmen); later a GmbH for trade businesses or a partnership company (PartG) for liberal professions may come into play.
Characteristics of self-employment
Whether an activity really counts as self-employed is checked by the tax office and social insurance against fixed criteria:
And the difference between a freelancer and self-employed in everyday English? In German tax law the word “freelancer” settles nothing. A freelancer can work as a liberal professional or run a trade, depending entirely on the activity.
What does freelancing mean? Definition and catalogue professions
Freelance self-employment is a special form with the most perks. Those who qualify skip trade registration, trade tax and the IHK fee. Accordingly, the tax office checks closely who may call themselves a freelancer.
Definition of a freelancer under § 18 EStG
If you work as a freelancer in the legal sense, you practise a so-called liberal profession. That means scientific, artistic, literary, teaching or educational work. The legal basis sits in § 18 EStG. A special qualification is typical, often a degree or comparable training. You deliver your work personally, on your own responsibility and with professional independence.
In a liberal profession your expertise is the core, in a trade it is the business itself. The status pays off: you register only with the tax office, use simple cash-basis accounting (Einnahmen-Überschuss-Rechnung) and pay no trade tax.
Catalogue professions: which jobs are freelance?
The law names a whole list of professions explicitly. These so-called catalogue professions count as freelance without further checks, as long as the qualification fits. An overview by category:
Alongside them sit the catalogue-like professions. They are not in the law but resemble a catalogue profession in training and substance. That often applies to IT consultants, programmers or graphic designers. The tax office reviews each case individually, and a comparable qualification is the strongest argument.
Freelancer vs self-employed: the key differences
Are freelancers self-employed? Yes, always. The reverse does not hold, because freelancers are only a subgroup of the self-employed. The real comparison therefore runs between liberal professions and trade businesses. The table shows the differences at a glance; the details follow below.
| Criterion | Freelancer (Freiberufler) | Trade business owner |
|---|---|---|
| Legal basis | § 18 EStG (liberal professions) | § 15 EStG (trade business) |
| Registration | tax office only | trade office and tax office |
| Trade tax | none | yes, above €24,500 in trade earnings |
| IHK membership | no, possibly a professional chamber | yes, mandatory |
| Bookkeeping | always cash-basis accounting (EÜR) | EÜR, double-entry above thresholds |
| Typical activities | consulting, health, arts, teaching | retail, production, crafts, brokering |
Trade registration: who needs it, who doesn’t?
Registration is where the difference between self-employed and freelance shows first. Trade business owners register their activity with the trade office (Gewerbeamt) before they start. Depending on the municipality this costs between €20 and €60, and you usually receive the trade licence on the spot. The office then automatically informs the tax office, the IHK and the employers’ liability insurance association.
Freelancers skip this route entirely and deal with the tax office directly. Anyone who delays registration risks fines and awkward questions. When exactly the obligation kicks in is covered in our guide on when to register a business in Germany.
Tax differences
Money is where the difference between freelance and commercial self-employment becomes clearest. Both groups pay income tax, progressively from 14% to 45% on profit. The same rules apply to VAT. Up to €25,000 of previous-year revenue and €100,000 in the current year, you can use the small business scheme (Kleinunternehmerregelung) and charge no VAT.
The big difference is trade tax. It only affects trade businesses. Sole proprietorships and partnerships get an allowance of €24,500 in trade earnings. Only above that does the tax apply, and the rate depends on your municipality’s multiplier. Freelancers stay out of it completely. Business expenses such as equipment, software or training are deductible for both groups. For a full overview of the tax duties of self-employed people, see our guide to taxes for the self-employed in Germany.
IHK membership and bookkeeping
With trade registration you automatically become a member of the Chamber of Industry and Commerce. IHK membership is mandatory and costs annual fees, often starting at around €100. Freelancers pay no IHK fee. Some liberal professions belong to their own professional chamber instead, for example doctors or lawyers.
Bookkeeping also differs. Freelancers always use cash-basis accounting, regardless of revenue. Trade businesses may only use the EÜR up to €800,000 in revenue or €80,000 in profit per year. Above that, double-entry bookkeeping with a balance sheet becomes mandatory. Clean bookkeeping with digitally matched receipts saves you a lot of work in both cases.
Am I a freelancer or a trade business owner? How to find out
Self-employed or freelance? In the end the tax office answers that question based on what you actually do. You can still prepare the classification well. Two things help: an honest self-assessment and a look at the typical risks.
Self-assessment: a checklist for classification
These questions give you a first direction. The more often you answer yes to the first five, the more likely you are freelance. If the last three apply, a trade is the probable answer.
The difference between freelancers and self-employed trade owners often only shows in the details. If you do both at once, you need separate records. Otherwise the tax office may classify everything as commercial. How the line is drawn in practice is covered in our guide freelancer or trade business.
False self-employment: risks and prevention
False self-employment (Scheinselbstständigkeit) means working as self-employed on paper but like an employee in practice. The authorities look for clear signals: a single client, tight integration into their processes, instructions on time and place. If that is the case, retroactive social security contributions for several years are on the table.
Prevention is very doable. Work for several clients, use your own equipment and be visible in the market. If you are unsure, the status determination procedure (Statusfeststellungsverfahren) of the German pension insurance brings clarity before it gets expensive.
Registering as a freelancer or self-employed person
Whether you start out freelance or self-employed with a trade: there is no way around registration. The process differs noticeably, though. Here is how to proceed in both cases.
Registering as a freelancer
Report your activity to the tax office within one month of starting. You complete the questionnaire (Fragebogen zur steuerlichen Erfassung) digitally via ELSTER.
Describe your work as concretely as possible so the tax office recognises the liberal profession. You also estimate your income and opt for or against the small business scheme.
After a few weeks you receive your tax number. With it you can write invoices and officially get going. No trade registration is needed.
You will find more detail on the process in our guide on registering as a freelancer.
Registering as a trade business owner
As a self-employed trade owner you start at the trade office of your city or municipality, online or in person. You state your activity, legal form and business address and pay the fee. You usually receive the trade licence right away. The tax office, IHK and the employers’ liability insurance association are then informed automatically, and the tax registration questionnaire follows here as well. Timing matters: registration belongs at the start of your activity, not at the end of the year.
Taxes and social insurance at a glance
Taxes are one side, your personal cover the other. When it comes to social insurance, the two groups are more alike than many think. The key points at a glance.
Income tax and trade tax
Income tax affects all self-employed people. It is based on your profit, with a progressive rate from 14% to 45%. Up to the basic allowance of €12,348 in 2026, income stays tax-free. The tax office usually sets quarterly prepayments.
Trade tax remains a topic for trade businesses only. After the €24,500 allowance, the amount depends on your municipality’s multiplier. A GmbH gets no allowance and pays from the first euro of trade earnings. Freelancers are fully exempt. Set money aside for both taxes early.
Health insurance and pension insurance
Health insurance is mandatory for everyone. You choose between voluntary statutory cover and private health insurance. The statutory option starts at around €278 per month in 2026; private plans depend on age and benefits.
Pension insurance is voluntary for most self-employed people. There are exceptions though: teachers and educators without employed staff are compulsorily insured, and artists and writers run through the artists’ social fund (Künstlersozialkasse). Chambered professions pay into professional pension schemes. Depending on the job, professional liability insurance is the next essential. Which policies are worth it is covered in our guide to insurance for the self-employed.
Managing your finances with Vivid Money
Freelance or commercial: as soon as money starts flowing, your finances need structure. A separate account for your self-employment makes bookkeeping easier, keeps private spending out and satisfies the tax office when questions come. When choosing one, look for digital receipt management, sub-accounts and a connection to your accounting software.
The Vivid business account brings exactly that. You categorise expenses in real time, create sub-accounts and park tax reserves there. That way the money for prepayments is ready when the tax office calls. Team cards and the accounting connection are included as well.
A business account for your self-employment
Freelance or commercial: with the Vivid business account you separate private and business money from day one. Including sub-accounts for tax reserves, cards and an accounting connection.

Typical mistakes and how to avoid them
Most problems come not from bad intent but from putting things off. These are the mistakes we see most often:
Frequently asked questions (FAQ)
What is the difference between freelancers and self-employed people?
Self-employed is the umbrella term for everyone working for their own account. Freelancers are the subgroup with a liberal profession under § 18 EStG, such as doctors or journalists. They register no trade and pay no trade tax. All other self-employed people count as trade business owners with trade registration and IHK membership.
How do you register a freelance activity?
You register directly with the tax office; no trade registration is needed. You fill in the tax registration questionnaire via ELSTER within one month of starting. After that you receive your tax number and can write invoices.
How much can you earn tax-free as a freelancer?
Up to the basic allowance of €12,348 in profit in 2026, no income tax applies. Everything above that is taxed progressively at 14% to 45%. VAT works separately: it depends not on profit but on revenue and the small business scheme.
Do freelancers have to charge VAT?
In principle, yes. Invoices carry VAT, which you pass on to the tax office. The exception is the small business scheme under § 19 UStG: up to €25,000 of previous-year revenue and €100,000 in the current year you charge no VAT. You make that choice in the tax registration questionnaire.
Why do freelancers pay no trade tax?
Because their activity is not a trade business in the sense of German tax law. Liberal professions under § 18 EStG do not count as commercial, so trade tax does not apply at all. The exemption only holds as long as the activity actually stays freelance. If commercial parts creep in, the tax office reassesses.
Conclusion: making the right choice
The difference between freelance and commercial self-employment sits in the details, but ignoring it costs real money. Liberal professions under § 18 EStG save trade tax, IHK fees and bookkeeping effort. For everyone else, trade registration belongs at the very start.
You cannot choose your status, but you can shape it. Describe your activity precisely to the tax office and bring in tax advice for borderline cases. Whatever your status, organise your finances cleanly from day one. A business account for the self-employed lays the foundation for that.
Note: The contents of this blog are for general information only and do not constitute legal, financial, investment or tax advice. They are not a recommendation or a basis for financial decisions. All information refers to the status as of July 2026 and may change. Before taking any action based on the information provided, always seek advice from qualified professionals who can take your individual circumstances into account.