Why That Bottle From Home Won't Get You Pfand Back in Germany
A reverse vending machine (Pfandautomat) rejects bottles and cans bought outside Germany, even ones that look identical to a German deposit container, because it's specifically scanning for the registered DPG logo and barcode, and that marking is only issued to packaging actually sold into Germany's own deposit system. The underlying logic is financial, not arbitrary: the 25-cent deposit only ever got paid into the system if you bought the container in Germany in the first place, so there's genuinely no deposit sitting there to refund on something bought or brought in from elsewhere. The correct move is simply to put it in your regular Wertstoffinsel or yellow recycling stream rather than trying the machine repeatedly. Worth knowing the one important exception: if a bottle genuinely does carry valid German Pfand marking but the machine still won't scan it, dirty, dented, or label torn, staff are legally required to accept it manually and refund you, that's a different situation entirely from a foreign bottle that was simply never part of the system. And a few drink categories, wine, sparkling wine, spirits, and most milk and milk-mixed drinks in traditional packaging, are exempt from Pfand entirely in Germany regardless of where you bought them, so a rejection there isn't about origin at all.
The Official Rule
If you’ve ever fed a bottle into a Pfandautomat that looked exactly like every other bottle around it, only to have the machine spit it back out, the frustration is understandable. It isn’t random, and it isn’t the machine malfunctioning, it’s checking for something specific that a foreign bottle genuinely doesn’t have.
DPG (Deutsche Pfandsystem GmbH), the company that manages Germany’s deposit system, marks eligible containers with a specific registered logo, the recognizable bottle-and-arrow symbol, printed alongside a barcode. Reverse vending machines use optical scanning to check for exactly this marking, not just any barcode. That logo and its accompanying article number are only ever issued to packaging that’s actually registered and sold into the German deposit system. A bottle purchased outside Germany, even a visually identical one, simply never carried that registration, so there’s nothing for the machine to recognize.
| Situation | What's happening | What to do |
|---|---|---|
| Bottle bought abroad | Never registered in Germany's DPG system, no deposit was ever collected | Recycle via Wertstoffinsel or yellow bin |
| Bottle has DPG marking but won't scan | Dirty, dented, or damaged label, genuine machine issue | Ask staff for manual acceptance, they're required to help |
| Wine, spirits, or sparkling wine | Legally exempt from Pfand under Section 31 VerpackG | Recycle via Wertstoffinsel or yellow bin |
| Milk drink in single-use plastic (since 2024) | Lost its exemption, now Pfand-liable | Return for deposit if bought in Germany |
The underlying reason is financial, not a technical restriction someone arbitrarily built in. The 25-cent deposit you pay on an Einweg container at the register is what actually funds the refund you get back later, and that transaction only happens when the bottle is sold through Germany’s registered system in the first place. A container bought abroad, or brought back from a trip, never had that transaction occur, so there’s genuinely no deposit sitting anywhere waiting to be returned to you. The correct disposal path is your regular packaging recycling stream. In Munich, AWM’s guidance points to the Wertstoffinsel network, over 900 collection points across the city, for glass, cans, plastic, and composite packaging generally, which is exactly where a foreign or otherwise non-deposit bottle belongs.

What Real People Say
This confusion shows up often enough, especially among people who’ve just moved internationally with household goods, or who regularly travel back to visit family and bring drinks along, that it’s a recurring question on German consumer forums, alongside travel forums where visitors ask some version of “why won’t this machine take my bottle.” The pattern in these questions is consistent: the bottle looks completely normal, sometimes even like a familiar German brand purchased somewhere else, and the rejection feels arbitrary until the DPG-registration logic is explained.
Worth knowing the one genuinely important exception before you give up on a bottle entirely: Verbraucherzentrale Hamburg’s official guidance is explicit that if a container does carry recognizable German Pfand marking but the machine still won’t accept it, because it’s dirty, crushed, or the label’s damaged, the store is required to take it back manually and refund you at the counter. That’s a completely different scenario from a foreign bottle that was never registered in the first place, and it’s worth distinguishing between the two rather than assuming every machine rejection means the same thing.
Step by Step
- Don’t keep re-feeding a rejected bottle into the machine hoping it’ll eventually scan, if it was bought outside Germany, no amount of retrying changes that it was never registered in the deposit system.
- Check whether the bottle actually has the DPG logo and barcode. If it does and the machine still won’t take it, ask a staff member for manual acceptance rather than giving up, they’re required to help in that specific case.
- If it’s genuinely a foreign or exempt bottle, recycle it through your nearest Wertstoffinsel rather than treating it as residual waste.
- Remember the exemption categories aren’t about origin at all. Wine, spirits, sparkling wine, and most milk drinks in traditional packaging are Pfand-exempt in Germany even when bought locally, so a rejection there isn’t a foreign-bottle issue.
- If you’re buying milk or milk-mixed drinks in single-use plastic bottles, expect a deposit now, that specific exemption ended January 1, 2024.
- If you’re moving internationally with household goods including drinks, don’t plan around getting Pfand back on anything you brought with you, budget for buying deposit-eligible drinks fresh once you’re actually in Germany if that matters to you.
Compliance Note
This page explains the general framework around Pfand eligibility for bottles and cans in Germany, current as of mid-2026. It is not legal advice. Specific exemption categories and packaging rules can change. Confirm current details with DPG or Verbraucherzentrale if a specific product’s Pfand status is unclear.
FAQ & Common Pitfalls
Is the machine broken, or is my bottle really just not eligible?
There's a real, useful distinction here. If a bottle genuinely carries valid German Pfand marking, the registered DPG logo and barcode, but the machine still won't scan it because it's dirty, dented, or the label is torn, the store is legally required to accept it manually and refund your deposit, according to German consumer protection guidance. If the bottle never had that marking in the first place, because it was bought outside Germany or falls into an exempt category, there's no deposit sitting in the system to refund, and the machine's rejection is accurate, not a malfunction. It's worth checking which situation you're actually in before assuming the machine is at fault.
What should I actually do with bottles or cans I brought from another country?
Put them in your regular packaging recycling stream. In Munich specifically, that means a Wertstoffinsel, one of the 900-plus recycling collection points across the city, for glass, cans, plastic, and composite packaging. There's no special separate process for foreign-origin containers, they just go into the same recycling stream any non-deposit packaging would, rather than residual waste (Restmüll).
Does this apply to bottles from other EU countries too, or just non-EU ones?
It applies regardless of which country the bottle came from, including other EU member states. What determines eligibility isn't the bottle's country of origin in a general sense, it's whether that specific unit was actually sold into Germany's own DPG-registered deposit system. A German-brand drink bought at a shop in another EU country, and a bottle that looks visually identical to a German one but was purchased abroad, both lack the transaction record that a German Pfandautomat is actually checking for.
Are all alcoholic and dairy drinks exempt from Pfand, or does that depend on the packaging too?
It depends specifically on the packaging, not just the drink category. Wine and wine-based drinks, sparkling wine, spirits-tax-liable products, and most milk and milk-mixed drinks are exempt from Pfand under Section 31 VerpackG, but this exemption is tied to traditional packaging like glass bottles and cartons. Since January 1, 2024, milk and milk-mixed drinks lost that exemption specifically when packaged in single-use plastic bottles, meaning those do require a deposit now. The same logic applies to alcoholic drinks sold in single-use plastic bottles or cans, they're generally not covered by the traditional exemption either. So the safest read is that the exemption follows the packaging format as much as it follows the drink itself.