Your Newborn's Steuer-ID: Why It Takes Months and What to Do About Kindergeld While You Wait
Every child born in Germany automatically gets a Steuerliche Identifikationsnummer (Steuer-ID) from the Bundeszentralamt für Steuern (BZSt), and you don't apply for it, it's triggered by the Standesamt transmitting your baby's registration data. In practice, families are told to expect it within about 3 months of the birth, since the data transfer itself takes only 2 to 3 working days but the letter with the number can trail behind. The genuinely reassuring part: you can submit your Kindergeld application before the Steuer-ID arrives, the Familienkasse just won't finalize or pay out the claim until the number is on file, and once it is, payment is made retroactively, so waiting doesn't cost you money. If your family has moved abroad and back, or if your child somehow ends up with two IDs on file (Mehrfacherfassung), neither is a real crisis: the original number stays valid for life either way.
The Official Rule
Every person in Germany, including a newborn, gets a Steuerliche Identifikationsnummer (Steuer-ID) from the Bundeszentralamt für Steuern (BZSt), a permanent 11-digit number used across tax and benefit administration for life. For a baby, this isn’t something you apply for. It’s triggered automatically once the Standesamt (registry office) transmits the birth registration data to the BZSt, which happens as a routine part of registering the birth, not a separate errand for parents.
The timing is the part worth understanding clearly, because it’s slower than most families expect. The data transfer from the Standesamt to the BZSt itself only takes about 2 to 3 working days, and once the BZSt has it, the Steuer-ID letter typically follows within about a week. The gap between those two facts and the commonly cited “budget around 3 months” guidance comes down to everything that has to happen first: your baby’s birth registration itself needs to be fully complete at the Standesamt before any of this can start, and that process has its own timeline. If your Geburtsurkunde is taking a while, the Steuer-ID clock hasn’t really started yet either.
- Standesamt birth registrationMust be fully complete before anything else starts, timeline varies by case.
- Data transfer to BZStAbout 2 to 3 working days once registration is complete.
- Steuer-ID letter arrivesTypically within about a week of the BZSt receiving the data.
- Whole chain from birthCommonly around 3 months in total, budget for it.
This becomes practically important the moment you go to apply for Kindergeld. You’re allowed to submit a Kindergeld application without the child’s Steuer-ID already in hand, the Familienkasse accepts it, but the claim genuinely can’t be finalized, and no payment goes out, until the number is on file. The reassuring part: once the Steuer-ID arrives and the claim is finalized, payment is made retroactively to your original eligibility date, so waiting for the number rather than chasing it aggressively doesn’t cost your family money, it just delays when the first payment lands in your account.
A duplicate ID, called Mehrfacherfassung, sounds more alarming than it is. German law (§ 139a AO) intends for every person to have exactly one Steuer-ID for life, but data occasionally gets registered and transmitted more than once for the same person, resulting in two numbers existing briefly. When the BZSt catches this, the number originally assigned stays the valid, permanent one, the duplicate is deactivated, and the two records are linked internally so no history of taxes or benefits tied to either number is lost. Families who’ve moved a child abroad and back describe a related, equally non-alarming pattern: the Steuer-ID doesn’t get used or needed while you’re abroad, it’s effectively dormant, but it reactivates automatically once you’re back in Germany’s system, and it never actually changes, the same permanent number follows the child for life regardless of time spent outside the country.

What Real People Say
The most common frustration described by parents isn’t the wait itself, it’s the uncertainty of not knowing whether something has gone wrong versus simply being early in a process that’s genuinely supposed to take a few months. Forum threads on this topic consistently converge on the same practical anchor point: check whether the birth registration at the Standesamt is actually fully finished first, since a surprising number of “the Steuer-ID never came” situations trace back to a registration step that was still pending, not a problem with the BZSt itself.
On the Kindergeld side, the recurring piece of advice from people who’ve been through it is to treat gathering the rest of your application documents as the productive use of the waiting period, rather than repeatedly calling to check on the Steuer-ID’s status. Since the retroactive payment rule means the exact submission date doesn’t cost you money either way, most families describe simply submitting everything, Steuer-ID included, once it naturally arrives rather than trying to force an earlier resolution.
Step by Step
- Confirm your baby’s Standesamt birth registration is fully complete first. The Steuer-ID process can’t meaningfully start until this is finished, and a stalled registration is the most common hidden cause of a longer-than-expected wait.
- Expect the Steuer-ID letter within roughly 3 months of the birth, understanding that the underlying data transfer is fast, most of the window is downstream of registration completing and the letter being generated and mailed.
- Gather the rest of your Kindergeld application documents while you wait, rather than treating the Steuer-ID as a blocker to starting anything else.
- Submit your Kindergeld application whenever your other paperwork is ready, with or without the Steuer-ID already in hand, since payment backdates regardless of exactly when you file.
- If you’re well past 3 months with no letter, verify the birth registration status before contacting the BZSt directly.
- If you discover two Steuer-IDs for your child, don’t panic or try to pick one yourself. The originally assigned number is the valid one; raise any specific confusion directly with the office requesting the number.
- If your family relocates abroad and later returns to Germany, don’t expect or request a new Steuer-ID. The original number reactivates and stays valid for life.
Compliance Note
This page explains the general framework for how a newborn’s Steuer-ID is issued and how it interacts with Kindergeld timing, but it is not tax or legal advice. Processing times can vary by region and season, and specific benefit applications may have their own documentation requirements beyond the Steuer-ID itself. For anything specific to your situation, confirm directly with the BZSt or your Familienkasse.
FAQ & Common Pitfalls
Should we submit our Kindergeld application before the Steuer-ID arrives, or wait?
You're allowed to submit without it, the Familienkasse accepts an application missing the child's Steuer-ID, but it genuinely can't be finalized or paid until the number is on file, so filing early doesn't speed up your first payment. What it does do is get your paperwork queued and your other documents reviewed in the meantime, so many families submit as soon as they have everything else ready rather than waiting purely for the ID. Either way, payment backdates to when you were first eligible, so there's no financial downside to whichever order you choose.
It's been more than 3 months and we still don't have the Steuer-ID. What now?
First, double-check that your newborn's Standesamt registration is actually complete, since the BZSt can't transmit an ID for a birth that hasn't been fully registered yet, and this is the most common hidden cause of a longer wait. If registration is confirmed complete and you're still past the typical window, you can contact the BZSt directly to check on the status rather than continuing to wait indefinitely, particularly if a Kindergeld or Elterngeld application is stuck behind it.
Our child somehow has two different Steuer-IDs. Is this a serious problem?
No, this is a known, handled situation called Mehrfacherfassung, and it happens when the same person's data gets registered and transmitted more than once. The BZSt's process is straightforward: whichever ID was assigned first stays the valid, permanent one, the duplicate gets deactivated, and the two records are linked in their system so nothing about taxes paid or benefits tied to either number gets lost. You don't need to choose which one to use, just use the original once you know which it is, and any confusion on a specific form is worth raising directly with that office rather than guessing.