Partnership refers to a form of business in which two or more natural persons (or legal entities) join to carry on a trade or a liberal profession together. Under German law the term covers classic forms such as the civil-law partnership (Gesellschaft bürgerlichen Rechts, GbR), the general partnership (Offene Handelsgesellschaft, OHG), the limited partnership (Kommanditgesellschaft, KG) and the partnership of professionals (Partnerschaftsgesellschaft, PartG). For accounting and taxation the most important point is: partnerships are tax-transparent, i.e. profits are attributed to the partners and taxed under the Income Tax Act (EStG).

Partnerships differ materially in liability and registration requirements:

For tax purposes: the partnership itself is not subject to corporate income tax. Under the rules of the Income Tax Act (EStG) the partnership’s profits are determined and attributed to the partners. However, partnerships engaged in trade are subject to trade tax (Gewerbesteuergesetz). For sole proprietors and partnerships there is a trade tax allowance of EUR 24,500.

Impact on accounting and financial reporting

The legal form leads to concrete consequences for daily bookkeeping and the preparation of annual financial statements:

Typical journal entries (practical examples)

Common entries in a partnership:

Transaction Example entry
Partner contribution Bank to Partner capital
Private withdrawal Partner drawings to Bank
Profit allocation (at closing) Profit and loss to Partner capital (pro rata)

VAT, trade tax and income tax in practice

From an accounting perspective the three tax areas are particularly relevant:

Practical tips for accounting implementation

Concrete recommendations for freelancers and small businesses:

Partnerships offer flexibility but require a clear accounting separation between partnership assets and partners’ private assets. Structured bookkeeping, harmonised chart of accounts and regularly reviewed annual financial statements simplify tax treatment and reduce the risk of additional assessments by the tax office and trade tax authorities.

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Glossary Questions
What is meant by a partnership?

A partnership is an association of natural persons for the joint conduct of a commercial business or other purpose (e.g., GbR, OHG, KG) and is regulated in many respects by the HGB and BGB. For tax purposes it is considered a transparent partnership; the profits are attributed to the partners and taxed under the EStG.

How are the partners of a partnership liable?

Generally, partners are personally and unlimitedly liable with their private assets; in a GbR and OHG liability is usually joint and several; in a KG the general partner (Komplementär) is unlimitedly liable, while the limited partner (Kommanditist) is liable only up to the amount of their registered liability contribution. The exact liability depends on the partnership agreement and the provisions of the HGB/BGB.

Which taxes must partnerships pay?

The partnership itself is not subject to corporate income tax; the profits are attributed to the partners and are subject to income tax (EStG). In addition, trade tax liability (GewStG) and value-added tax (UStG) may apply. The specific tax burden depends on the type of business and the allocation of profits.

What are the advantages and disadvantages of a partnership compared with a GmbH?

Advantages are simple and low-cost formation, flexible structuring options in the partnership agreement, and tax transparency; disadvantages are the partners' personal liability and often more difficult capital raising compared with a GmbH. For many freelancers and small entrepreneurs, the partnership is attractive because of the low formalities.

Who manages the business and who represents the partnership externally?

In a GbR and an OHG, as a rule all partners jointly manage the business, unless the partnership agreement provides otherwise; in a KG the general partner (Komplementär) is responsible for management and entitled to represent the partnership, while the limited partner (Kommanditist) is generally excluded. The rules on management and representation are set out in the partnership agreement and in the German Commercial Code (HGB) and the German Civil Code (BGB).

History
Publication date:
11/14/2025
Modification date:
11/15/2025
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