When Does the Forschungszulage Get Paid Out — and How Long Does It Really Take?
TL;DR – Summary
Process Overview
- 1Payout usually as tax offset, not immediately
- 2Actual cash payout when funding exceeds tax (e.g. start-ups)
- 3Duration: 6–9 months (preparation to assessment)
- 4BSFZ certification is the key to speed
- 5From 2026 up to 4.2 million euros possible
The Forschungszulage payout generally occurs through an offset against the next tax assessment. An actual bank transfer usually only happens when the funding amount exceeds the tax liability (e.g. for start-ups). The entire process from preparation to assessment typically takes 6 to 9 months.
Everything at a Glance: Forschungszulage Payout
- The Forschungszulage payout does not happen automatically and not immediately: as a rule, the Forschungszulage is offset against the next income or corporate tax assessment.
- An actual cash payout (bank transfer from the tax office) typically occurs when the Forschungszulage is higher than the assessed tax — this frequently applies to start-ups or companies in loss-making phases.
- Realistic timeline from practice: 6–9 months from preparation to assessment are common, sometimes longer (e.g. with follow-up questions or complex tax assessments).
- The most important lever for speed: apply for the BSFZ certification early and prepare the documentation cleanly — otherwise the Forschungszulage payout is often pushed back by months.
- From 2026 (depending on company size) up to 4.2 million euros per year is possible — making a plannable process and timely application even more important.
Why This Article Matters
Many companies apply for the Forschungszulage, are pleased with a positive technical assessment — and are then surprised that the Forschungszulage payout still takes a long time or arrives "only" as a tax offset. In practice, the question is less about whether the funding works and more about:
- When does the Forschungszulage arrive (offset vs. payout)?
- How long does it typically really take?
- Which steps are critical to prevent unnecessary delays?
- How do you plan for liquidity, budget, and growth — especially as an SME, start-up, or scale-up?
This article explains the process clearly, shares typical real-world experience values, and shows how to avoid delays.
What Does "Forschungszulage Payout" Actually Mean?
The term Forschungszulage payout is often understood as though the tax office simply transfers the funding amount. In reality there are two possible "end states":
1. Offset Against Tax Liability (Most Common Case)
The Forschungszulage is credited against the assessed income or corporate tax. This reduces the tax payment.
2. Actual Cash Payout (Bank Transfer)
A genuine Forschungszulage cash payout occurs primarily when the funding amount is higher than the assessed tax — the difference is refunded.
Important: the technical review (whether the project is R&D) is carried out by the BSFZ. The payout/offset is ultimately decided by the tax office as part of the tax assessment.
The Process to the Forschungszulage Payout: Two Stages and Often Underestimated
Stage 1: BSFZ Certification (Technical Eligibility)
Before there can be any Forschungszulage payout, you need a certification from the Bescheinigungsstelle Forschungszulage (BSFZ). This verifies whether your project meets the R&D criteria (e.g. novelty/uncertainty/systematic approach and classification as basic research, industrial research, or experimental development).
Important for practice: Even though many steps are digital, the quality of the project description is decisive. Unclear delimitations or descriptions that are too "product-close" frequently lead to follow-up questions — and follow-up questions cost time.
Stage 2: Assessment at the Tax Office (Tax Implementation)
With the BSFZ certification you submit the application for assessment to the tax office (typically via ELSTER or as part of the tax return/assessment). Only then is it decided:
- Offset against assessed tax, or
- Forschungszulage cash payout as a refund (when a surplus arises)
How Long Does the Forschungszulage Payout Typically Take? (Real-World Values)
The honest answer: it depends less on "the Forschungszulage" itself and more on preparation, BSFZ review, tax assessment, and follow-up questions.
Realistic Timeline (Typical)
Many companies land in practice at roughly:
-
Preparation & assembly of information: approx. 2–3 months (often longer for the first application, significantly faster for subsequent ones)
-
BSFZ review through to certification: approx. 2–3 months
-
Assessment/offset/payout by the tax office: approx. 1–3 months (depends on assessment, workload, follow-up questions, tax audit context)
In total this frequently amounts to 6–9 months until the actual effect (offset or Forschungszulage payout).
Why It Sometimes Takes Longer
Typical "time thieves" from practice:
- Incomplete or unclear project description → follow-up questions from BSFZ
- Cost delimitation not traceable (personnel hours, contract research, capital assets) → follow-up questions or evidence requests
- Tax assessment is delayed (missing documents, financial statements/return not yet submitted, follow-up questions from the tax office)
- Complex constellations (fiscal unities, restructurings, group structures, multiple fiscal years simultaneously)
- Depth of review: in individual cases, more intensive follow-up questions through to audits can occur — this noticeably delays the Forschungszulage payout.
Why You Should Apply for the BSFZ Certification in Good Time
The BSFZ certification is the "bottleneck" because without it no assessment is possible. And without assessment there is no Forschungszulage payout and no offset.
Three reasons why "in good time" is decisive in practice:
1. Liquidity Planning
The Forschungszulage is not an advance payment. You initially front the R&D expenditures. The later you apply for the certification, the later the funding takes effect.
2. Buffer for Follow-Up Questions
Even good applications occasionally receive follow-up questions. If you only start just before the planned tax assessment, everything shifts.
3. Multiple Years & Recurring Applications
Many companies apply annually. Once you have built a clean structure (project documentation, timesheets/delimitation, responsibilities), the Forschungszulage payout in subsequent years is significantly faster.
When Does an Actual Cash Payout Occur — and Why Do Start-Ups Benefit Particularly?
An actual Forschungszulage cash payout (rather than a pure offset) frequently occurs when:
- the assessed tax is low, or
- the company has no assessed income tax (e.g. loss-making phase) and thereby the allowance is paid out.
This is one of the reasons why the Forschungszulage is particularly relevant for:
- Start-ups (frequently loss-making, low tax burden),
- Scale-ups (high R&D burn rate, break-even in sight),
- SMEs (plannable relief and annual structure)
Simple Example (Offset vs. Forschungszulage Cash Payout)
- Assessed corporate tax: 800,000 €
- Assessed Forschungszulage: 1,200,000 €
→ Offset up to 800,000 € and cash payout of the difference: 400,000 €
How High Can the Forschungszulage Be? (and Why 2026 Matters)
The question of how high the Forschungszulage can be is central to liquidity planning. The maximum funding has been substantially expanded in recent years. From 2026, depending on company size and the assessment base, up to 4.2 million euros per year may be possible (particularly relevant for SMEs).
For many companies this means: The Forschungszulage payout (or offset) is no longer a "nice to have" but a central variable in:
- R&D budget planning
- Personnel expansion (development teams, data/AI, engineering)
- Financing (runway, equity requirements)
- Make-or-buy decisions (contract research vs. internal team)
Why the Payout Often Comes Later Than Expected (and How to Avoid That)
1) The Forschungszulage Is Tied to the Tax Process
Even when the BSFZ works quickly: the actual Forschungszulage payout/offset only happens once the tax office can "grasp" the matter in the tax context — typically as part of the next assessment.
Practical tip: Do not plan for "money arriving next week" — plan with a realistic time window and build clear expectations internally.
2) Documentation Determines Speed
Even when not all evidence needs to be submitted immediately: at the latest when follow-up questions arise, it must be solid.
Practical tip: Define early how you document:
- project objectives, state of the art, technical uncertainties
- work packages and iterations
- personnel deployment (roles, hours, allocation)
- external R&D contracts (agreements, service descriptions, EEA residence topic)
- financial allocation (fiscal year, cost centres)
3) Unclear Responsibilities Cost Weeks
When nobody internally is the "owner", communication with BSFZ/tax advisors/tax office often moves slowly.
Practical tip: Appoint a responsible person (project lead) and a deputy — especially in growing teams.
Forschungszulage Payout in Context: Not a Loan, Not a Grant Requiring Repayment (Usually)
The Forschungszulage is not repayable, provided everything was correctly applied for and delimited. Repayment demands are possible but are rather exceptional cases — typically in cases of incorrect delimitation or findings during audits. In such cases, interest may additionally become relevant. This underlines one thing above all: cleanliness in the application is not only "for approval", but also decisive for security after the Forschungszulage payout.
Who Is This Particularly Relevant For? SMEs, Start-Ups, and Scale-Ups
SMEs
- frequently benefit from higher funding rates
- can build recurring, plannable relief with the Forschungszulage
- often use the funding to finance personnel expansion and development
Start-Ups
- often have low/no tax burden → this increases the likelihood of an actual Forschungszulage cash payout
- can use the funding as part of their runway and financing story
Scale-Ups
- combine high R&D costs with increasing tax burden
- benefit through offset or payout and can professionalise processes (annual application)
Conclusion: The Forschungszulage Payout Is Plannable — If You Set Up the Process Correctly
The Forschungszulage payout (or offset) is a powerful instrument — but not an "instant grant". Those who apply for the BSFZ certification early, document cleanly, and schedule the tax assessment in good time can reliably use the funding as a financing building block.
Given the possible up to 4.2 million euros from 2026, it applies all the more: The higher the amount, the more important timing, structure, and quality in the application become — so that the Forschungszulage payout does not itself become a bottleneck.