Germany's Pfand System: Why Your Grocery Bill Has Deposits, and Where to Get Them Back
Almost every bottle or can of a drink you buy in Germany carries a small deposit, Pfand, added to the price, and you get it back when you return the empty container. Single-use containers (Einwegpfand), most plastic bottles and cans, carry a uniform 25 cents regardless of size or brand, and any store selling that same material type is required to take it back and refund you, usually through a reverse vending machine near the entrance. Reusable containers (Mehrwegpfand), refillable glass and some plastic bottles, aren't priced uniformly: bottles up to 0.5 liters, beer bottles being the classic example, carry 8 cents, while larger bottles like 1-liter juice containers carry 15 cents. For these, the store only has to take back bottles of the same type, shape, and size it actually sells, brand doesn't matter, but format does. What actually decides where you can return a bottle is the material, not the label, the shape, or what was originally inside it.
The Official Rule
Nearly every bottle or can of a beverage sold in Germany carries a Pfand, a deposit added to the purchase price that you get back when you return the empty container, and the system splits cleanly into two categories that work quite differently from each other.
Einwegpfand (single-use deposit) applies to most plastic bottles and cans, and the amount is deliberately simple: a flat 25 cents, regardless of the bottle’s size, brand, or what was inside it. Retailers who sell drinks in single-use packaging are legally required to take back empty single-use containers made of the same material and refund the deposit, free of charge, and critically, this obligation isn’t limited to the specific store where you bought the drink. Any store selling that same material type of single-use container has to accept your return. In practice, this happens through a reverse vending machine (Rücknahmeautomat), usually positioned near a supermarket’s entrance.
Mehrwegpfand (reusable deposit) works on a genuinely different logic, covering refillable glass bottles and some reusable plastic ones. There’s no single uniform marking system for these the way there is for Einweg, though bottles are commonly labeled directly with words like “Mehrweg,” “Leihflasche” (loaner bottle), or “Pfandflasche” (deposit bottle) on the bottle itself or its label. The deposit amount isn’t standardized either: bottles up to 0.5 liters, the classic beer bottle size, typically carry 8 cents, while larger bottles, a 1-liter juice bottle, for instance, carry 15 cents instead.
| Einweg (single-use) | Mehrweg (reusable) | |
|---|---|---|
| Deposit amount | Flat 25 cents | 8 cents (up to 0.5L) or 15 cents (larger) |
| Where you can return it | Any store selling the same material type | Only stores selling that type, shape, and size |
| How to identify it | Standard for most plastic bottles and cans | Often labeled "Mehrweg," "Leihflasche," or "Pfandflasche" |
The Mehrweg return rule is genuinely narrower than the Einweg one, and this is where newcomers most often get caught out. A store selling Mehrweg drinks only has to take back bottles matching the same type, shape, and size it actually sells itself, brand doesn’t matter, but format does. This means a Mehrweg bottle from a format or brand a particular store doesn’t carry can legitimately be refused there, even though the exact same bottle would be accepted without question at a store that does stock it. What decides whether an Einweg container gets accepted anywhere, meanwhile, is simply the material it’s made of, not its shape, its brand, or its original contents.
The reuse cycle behind Mehrweg bottles is substantial: glass Mehrweg bottles typically get refilled around 50 times and can stay in active circulation for up to 7 years, while reusable plastic bottles get refilled up to around 20 times before being retired.

What Real People Say
The detail that trips up newcomers most consistently is discovering that a Mehrweg bottle got rejected by a reverse vending machine at a store that simply doesn’t carry that particular brand or bottle shape, and mistaking this for a broken machine or an error, rather than recognizing it as the system working exactly as designed. The practical lesson people describe learning quickly: if a Mehrweg bottle gets rejected somewhere, it’s often worth trying a store that actually stocks that brand or drink type rather than assuming something’s wrong with the bottle or the machine.
The other common adjustment newcomers describe is simply building the habit of keeping empty bottles and cans around to return, rather than treating them as regular trash, since the deposits add up meaningfully over a household’s regular shopping, and Pfand collection points are genuinely part of the routine grocery run for most German households rather than an occasional errand.
Step by Step
- Check whether a bottle or can is Einweg or Mehrweg by looking for “Mehrweg,” “Leihflasche,” or “Pfandflasche” printed on it, if none of those appear, it’s likely a standard single-use container.
- For Einweg containers, return them at any store selling that same material type, not necessarily the store where you bought the drink.
- Use the reverse vending machine near the entrance of most supermarkets, it will scan and accept the container automatically if it’s a format that store handles.
- For Mehrweg bottles, return them specifically at a store that sells that type, shape, and size, rather than assuming any store will take any reusable bottle back.
- If a Mehrweg bottle gets rejected, try a different store that actually stocks that brand or drink type, rather than assuming the machine is broken.
- Keep your Pfand receipts if the machine issues them, they’re typically redeemed at the checkout for cash or credited toward your purchase.
Compliance Note
This page explains the general framework for Germany’s Pfand deposit system, but specific deposit amounts and store policies can vary or change over time. For anything specific to a particular product or retailer, check directly with that store or the product’s packaging.
FAQ & Common Pitfalls
I bought a drink at one supermarket, can I return the empty bottle at a different one?
For single-use (Einweg) bottles and cans, yes, any store that sells drinks in the same material type is legally required to accept your empty container and refund the 25-cent deposit, regardless of which store you originally bought it from or which brand it is. For reusable (Mehrweg) bottles, it's more specific: the store only has to take back bottles matching the type, shape, and size it actually sells itself, so a Mehrweg glass bottle from a brand or format that particular store doesn't carry might genuinely get turned away there, even though the same bottle would be accepted somewhere that does sell it.
How do I know if a bottle is Einweg or Mehrweg just by looking at it?
There's no single universal marking system the way there is for the flat 25-cent Einweg deposit, but Mehrweg bottles are commonly labeled directly on the bottle or its label with words like "Mehrweg," "Leihflasche," or "Pfandflasche." When in doubt, the reverse vending machine at any supermarket will tell you immediately when you feed a bottle in, rejecting it if it's not a format that store handles, which is often the fastest way to find out rather than trying to judge from the packaging alone.
Why does the deposit amount vary for Mehrweg bottles but not Einweg ones?
Einweg deposits were deliberately standardized at a flat 25 cents specifically so there's one simple, predictable number across every single-use format, which is part of what makes universal store acceptance practical. Mehrweg pricing wasn't standardized the same way, it varies by container size instead, with the common split being 8 cents for bottles up to 0.5 liters (like typical beer bottles) and 15 cents for larger bottles (like 1-liter juice bottles), reflecting that these bottles are a genuinely different system built around reuse rather than one-time recycling.