Search
Contact
29.06.2021 | KPMG Law Insights

Admissibility of tattoos in civil service law

Admissibility of tattoos in civil service law

For many people, tattoos are an expression of their personal experiences and personality. Often, the colorful motifs also decorate the body of its wearer only as a fashion accessory. A 2019 survey shows that every fifth person in Germany has a tattoo. Especially among young people between 20 and 29 years tattoos are becoming more and more popular. However, especially large tattoos, which are often reluctantly hidden as body jewelry, can be a hindrance in the job search, since many people and especially employers are critical of tattoos.

Thus, visible tattoos can also be a problem in civil service law. Against the background of the duty of neutrality and the representative function of civil servants, German courts have often had to deal with the question of whether and to what extent tattoos are permitted on civil servants. For example, it was not a hindrance to hiring a police officer that he had a large lion’s head with bared teeth tattooed on his chest. In another case, a police officer was banned from having the words “Aloha” tattooed on his forearm as a reminder of his honeymoon in Hawaii. Often, judicial decisions have been based on whether the tattoos are visible while wearing the summer uniform or disappear under the service uniform.

However, there is no general ban on tattoos for civil servants. In the Federal Government and in some of the Länder, the appearance of civil servants has hitherto been regulated by administrative regulations or circulars based on the authority to regulate official uniforms. For federal civil servants, such a tattoo ban was based on § 74 BBG. § Section 74 of the BBG provides that the Federal President or a body designated by him shall make regulations concerning the official dress customary or necessary in the performance of the office.

The Federal Constitutional Court objected in a decision that these circulars and administrative regulations do not constitute a sufficient enabling basis for a tattoo ban, since such a ban would infringe on the general right of personality of civil servants under Article 2 (2) of the Basic Law. 1 GG in conjunction with Art. 1 para. 1 GG is interfered with. Such a ban would also be an intrusion into the private lives of civil servants.

On the basis of this, the Bundestag adopted the new version of Section 61 para. 2 BBG and of § 34 para. 2 BeamtStG resolved. In terms of content, § 61 para. 2 BBG and § 34 para. 2 BeamtStG with identical wording. They regulate that the visible wearing of certain items of clothing, jewelry, symbols and tattoos may be restricted or prohibited by the highest service authority. Such restriction or prohibition is possible if it is required by the functioning of the administration or by the duty of respectful and trustworthy behavior. This is assumed to be the case in particular if the tattooing goes beyond the usual extent and the official function of the civil servant is thereby pushed into the background.

With the amendment, however, not only tattoos, piercings and other types of body jewelry can be banned in public service, but also features with religious and ideological connotations, such as the headscarf or the yarmulke. However, such a prohibition is only possible if these features or symbols are objectively capable of impairing confidence in the neutral conduct of official duties.

The new version of the regulations creates enabling legislation to regulate the appearance of civil servants. The new regulation also empowers the Federal Ministry of the Interior, for Building and the Homeland to regulate details of the external appearance by statutory order.

Furthermore, both in § 7 para. 1 No. 4 BBG as well as in Section 7 para. 1 No. 4 BeamtStG that a person may not be appointed as a civil servant if he or she has unchangeable features of appearance that are incompatible with the fulfillment of duties pursuant to Section 61 (1) of the Civil Service Act (BeamtStG). 2 BBG are not compatible.

The approval of the Bundesrat thus created a basis for authorization that enables the employer to prohibit tattoos and other body adornment and thus to regulate the external appearance of civil servants. How this will be implemented in practice remains to be seen.

Explore #more

06.11.2025 | KPMG Law Insights

External personnel: authorities tighten checks with AI support

AI is a blessing for many companies, but it can also quickly become a curse, especially when authorities use the technology to uncover legal violations…

06.11.2025 | KPMG Law Insights

Deforestation regulation – simplification instead of postponement?

In September, the EU Commission wanted to postpone the EUDR deforestation regulation. On October 21, 2025, it published a comprehensive proposal to simplify the EUDR

05.11.2025 | KPMG Law Insights

Employer of Record now not subject to authorization after all – change of heart at BA

On October 1, 2025, the Federal Employment Agency (BA) updated its technical directives and made a U-turn with regard to the so-called employer-of-record model: In…

03.11.2025 | KPMG Law Insights

CO₂ contracts for difference: Participation in the preliminary procedure is a prerequisite for funding

Companies can apply for funding in the preliminary procedure for the climate protection contracts program until 1 December 2025. The funding from the Federal Ministry…

29.10.2025 | KPMG Law Insights

Fund Risk Limitation Act and Location Promotion Act create new scope for infrastructure funds

As the federal government’s special infrastructure fund of 500 billion euros will probably not be enough to finance Germany’s roads, networks and the energy transition,…

29.10.2025 | Deal Notifications

KPMG Law advises management board of Nürnberger Beteiligungs-AG on sale to Vienna Insurance Group

KPMG Law Rechtsanwaltsgesellschaft (KPMG Law) provided legal advice to the Management Board of Nürnberger Beteiligungs-AG throughout the entire public takeover process by Vienna Insurance Group…

29.10.2025 | KPMG Law Insights

BAG on pair comparison: How employers should deal with salary differences

The Federal Labor Court (BAG) has issued another landmark decision on equal pay. In its ruling of October 23, 2025 (Ref. 8 AZR 300/24),…

23.10.2025 | KPMG Law Insights

What the Federal Network Agency’s FAQs mean for storage system operators

On October 17, 2025, the Federal Network Agency published FAQs on the regulatory treatment of stationary battery storage systems (“BESS”). The FAQs are a guide…

23.10.2025 | KPMG Law Insights

What the “construction turbo” means for municipalities and building supervisory authorities

The Bundestag has passed the “construction turbo” and local authorities can now significantly accelerate certain construction projects. According to the law passed on October 9,…

22.10.2025 | In the media

KPMG Law guest article in Das Investment: Private debt for the masses: How the FRBG is turning the fund market upside down

Paradigm shift in the fund market: The new FRBG makes private debt retail-capable and creates citizen participation funds. In this article, KPMG Law expert Ulrich

Contact

Private: Kristina Knauber

Senior Manager

Luise-Straus-Ernst-Straße 2
50679 Köln

Tel.: +49 221 271 689 1498
kknauber@kpmg-law.com

© 2024 KPMG Law Rechtsanwaltsgesellschaft mbH, associated with KPMG AG Wirtschaftsprüfungsgesellschaft, a public limited company under German law and a member of the global KPMG organisation of independent member firms affiliated with KPMG International Limited, a Private English Company Limited by Guarantee. All rights reserved. For more details on the structure of KPMG’s global organisation, please visit https://home.kpmg/governance.

 KPMG International does not provide services to clients. No member firm is authorised to bind or contract KPMG International or any other member firm to any third party, just as KPMG International is not authorised to bind or contract any other member firm.

Scroll