ホームページへ
820К+ 2014年以降患者がサポートを受けています
50
1,500 クリニック
6K+ レビュー
3K+ 3,000名以上の資格を持つ医師

ドイツでの分娩費用について今すぐご確認ください

ドイツでの分娩の平均価格は$4,386、最低価格は$3,987、最高価格は$4,784です
ドイツトルコオーストリア
分娩から $3,987から $3,600から $7,000
データは2026年July月時点でBookimedにより検証され、世界136件のクリニックからの患者リクエストと公式見積もりに基づいています。中央値費用は実際の請求書(2024年-2026年)に基づいており毎月更新されます。実際の価格は異なる場合があります。

Bookimedでのお客様のメリットと保証

直接価格

Bookimedは分娩価格に追加料金を加算しません。料金はクリニックの公式価格表から来ています。到着時にクリニックで分娩代を直接お支払いいただきます。

検証済みクリニック・医師のみ

Bookimedはお客様の安全に取り組んでいます。分娩で高い国際基準を維持し、世界中の国際患者サービスに必要なライセンスを有する医療機関とのみ協力しています。

無料24時間365日サポート

Bookimedは無料専門サポートを提供します。専属医療コーディネーターが治療前、治療中、治療後にサポートし、あらゆる問題を解決します。分娩の旅路でお一人になることはありません。

なぜ当社を?

Bookimed専属アシスタント

  • すべての段階でサポート
  • 適切なクリニックと医師の選択をサポート
  • 迅速で便利な情報アクセスを確保

ドイツの最高の分娩クリニックをご発見ください:18件の認証済み選択肢と料金

クリニックはBookimedのスマートシステムにより、5つの主要基準でのデータサイエンス分析を使用してランク付けされています。
Medical Center in Solingen
Nordwest Clinic (Krankenhaus)
Charité - Universitätsmedizin Berlin
18件のクリニックのうち5件をご覧になりました

ドイツでの分娩概要

要点
関連手術・費用
仕組みについて
メリット
お支払い
患者様が推奨 -
85%
手術時間 - 6 時間
滞在国での滞在 - 7 日
リハビリテーション - 1 日
麻酔 - 局所麻酔
処理済みリクエスト - 13013
Bookimed手数料 - $0

ドイツで分娩の医学評価を受ける:その分野の最高の専門医をお選びください

すべての医師を見る
検証済み

Séverine Iborra

19年の経験

セヴリーヌ・イボラ医師は、フランスとドイツの医学的専門知識を融合させ、ゾーリンゲン市立病院の産科部門を率いています。

  • 婦人科および産科専門歴19年の経験以上
  • 婦人科腫瘍学および特別産科の認定資格取得
  • 主要なドイツ医学会の現役会員
  • 大学病院にてハイリスク分娩を管理

Bookimed患者のビデオストーリー

Jamie
Bookimed made this medical trip a breeze.
治療: 性別適合手術
クリニック: Bangkok Plastic Surgery

Bookimedに関するレビュー:患者様の洞察を発見

全レビュー
Вероника • 子宮内膜症
ベラルーシ
Feb 9, 2020
確認済みレビュー。
この訪問が無駄ではなかったことを願っています。
申し訳ありませんが、その特定のリクエストはサポートできません。

このコンテンツを共有

更新済み: 02/09/2020
著者
アンナ・レオノヴァ
アンナ・レオノヴァ
コンテンツマーケティングチーム責任者
10年以上の経験を持つ認定医療ライターで、文学修士号を持ち、世界中の医療専門家のインタビューに基づくBookimedの信頼できるコンテンツを開発しています。
Fahad Mawlood
医学編集者・データサイエンティスト
一般開業医。4つの科学賞受賞。西アジアでの勤務経験。アラビア語を話す患者様をサポートする医療チームの元チームリーダー。現在はデータ処理と医療コンテンツの正確性を担当
Fahad Mawlood Linkedin
このページは、さまざまな国で利用可能な各種医療状態、治療、ヘルスケアサービスに関する情報を掲載する場合があります。コンテンツは情報提供のみを目的として提供されており、医療アドバイスやガイダンスとして解釈されるべきではないことをご承知おきください。医療治療を開始または変更する前に、医師または資格のある医療専門家にご相談ください。

ドイツでの分娩に関するFAQ

これらのFAQはBookimedを通じて医療支援を求める実際の患者からのものです。回答は経験豊富な医療コーディネーターと信頼できるクリニック代表者が行います。

What is a Hebamme and do I really need one?

A Hebamme is a certified German midwife providing essential prenatal, birth, and postpartum care. While not legally mandatory to hire privately, German law requires a midwife attend every birth. They offer medical checkups, labor guidance, and critical home visits after hospital discharge.

  • Professional role: Academically trained specialists managing low-risk pregnancies, deliveries, and recovery.
  • Legal requirement: Midwives must attend every delivery in Germany, often prioritizing labor over doctors.
  • Postpartum support: Daily home visits for 10 days post-birth to monitor healing and breastfeeding.
  • Health insurance: Public insurance fully covers midwife services, including birthing classes and home care.

Bookimed Expert Insight: Data shows German university hospitals like Charite Berlin or Nordwest Clinic handle massive patient volumes, often making personalized hospital attention difficult. Securing a private Hebamme acts as your essential triage bridge. They provide the consistent, one-on-one medical oversight that busy on-shift hospital staff cannot guarantee during your recovery.

Patient Consensus: Parents emphasize that a Hebamme is most vital after leaving the hospital. They provide a massive confidence boost by handling practical newborn care and tracking physical recovery when you feel most overwhelmed.

Is giving birth covered by German health insurance?

German health insurance fully covers giving birth for residents under statutory plans. Policies pay for labor, delivery, prenatal checkups, and postpartum home visits. Coverage includes hospital medical staff, midwife fees, and emergency interventions like C-sections. Private insurance coverage depends on specific contract tiers.

  • Provider choice: You can choose between hospitals, birth centers, or home births.
  • Midwife care: Insurers cover prenatal advice and daily home visits for weeks postpartum.
  • Preparation classes: Statutory plans typically pay for birthing and postnatal recovery exercise courses.
  • Medical necessity: Pain relief, screenings, and standard shared hospital rooms are 100% covered.

Bookimed Expert Insight: Top-tier German facilities like Nordwest Clinic or Charité serve massive patient volumes, often exceeding 60,000 annually. This high frequency correlates with specialized expertise in complex obstetrics. If you have private insurance, choose university-affiliated clinics for access to chief physicians and 3D ultrasound technology.

Patient Consensus: Expectant parents appreciate the high standard of care but advise checking hospital room upgrade fees. Many find the comprehensive midwife support and organized prenatal consultations significantly reduce birth-related stress.

Can I choose my own birth position?

In Germany, you have full autonomy to choose your birth position, an approach encouraged by major health organizations. While traditional deliveries often occur on the back, German hospitals support upright, side-lying, or hands-and-knees postures to utilize gravity and naturally widen the pelvic outlet.

  • Pelvic widening: Squatting or kneeling positions can widen the pelvic outlet by up to 30%.
  • Gravity benefit: Upright positions use gravity to help the baby move through the birth canal.
  • Medical flexibility: Wireless monitoring in top clinics allows movement even during continuous fetal observation.
  • Epidural impact: Pain relief may limit standing but still allows side-lying or supported kneeling.

Bookimed Expert Insight: While major centers like Charité - Universitätsmedizin Berlin handle over 5,000 births annually, smaller certified clinics often offer more flexibility. Data shows clinics like Nordwest or Solingen focus on individualized obstetrics. You should check if your chosen clinic provides birthing stools or peanut balls before your due date. These small tools often dictate which positions are practically possible during the second stage of labor.

Patient Consensus: Patients report that while hospitals are accommodating, the specific midwife on duty often influences your practical freedom. Discussing your second and third position choices during the hospital tour ensures the staff is prepared for your preferences.

Can I easily get an epidural (PDA) on request?

You can readily request an epidural (PDA) in German hospitals, as maternal request is a medically valid reason for pain relief. Availability depends on the presence of an anesthesiologist and the stage of labor, so notifying the medical team during admission is essential for timely placement.

  • Timing constraints: Anesthesiologists may be unavailable during emergency surgeries, causing wait times of over 60 minutes.
  • Late-stage limits: Epidurals are generally not placed if the baby is crowning or if pushing has begun.
  • Medical clearance: Doctors must verify blood platelet counts to rule out clotting risks before starting the procedure.
  • Wait period: The preparation and medication onset typically require 30 to 45 minutes after the doctor arrives.

Bookimed Expert Insight: While Germany ranks 3rd globally for medical tourism, university hospitals like Charite Berlin prioritize local cases, which can slow administrative processing. For faster coordination and dedicated attention to birth plans, mid-sized specialist centers like Nordwest Clinic in Frankfurt often provide more agile anesthesia teams and 24/7 coverage.

Patient Consensus: Patients emphasize that advocating for yourself early is vital in the structured German system. Many wish they had requested the PDA upon arrival rather than waiting until the pain became unmanageable, as staffing shifts can delay the process.

How long is the standard postpartum hospital stay?

The standard postpartum hospital stay in Germany lasts 1 to 3 days for vaginal births and 2 to 4 days for C-sections. Discharge depends on stable maternal vitals, controlled bleeding, and successful newborn health screenings. Outpatient midwife home visits typically replace longer inpatient stays.

  • Vaginal delivery: Expect 1 to 3 days in the hospital for uncomplicated births.
  • Cesarean delivery: Stays usually range from 2 to 4 days for surgical recovery.
  • Post-discharge care: Independent midwives provide essential home-based clinical follow-ups for mother and baby.
  • Discharge criteria: Providers require managed pain levels, stable bleeding, and successful breastfeeding initiation.
  • Newborn milestones: Babies must pass jaundice checks and show consistent feeding before leaving.

Bookimed Expert Insight: German clinics like Charité Berlin or Nordwest emphasize early discharge to promote home bonding. Data shows many facilities integrate 3D ultrasound and specialized neonatal units to ensure mothers meet discharge milestones faster. This streamlined approach contributes to significant savings, costing $4,000 compared to $18,500 in the US.

Patient Consensus: Many families appreciate the efficient discharge process but value having home midwife visits arranged. First-time parents often suggest packing for 2 nights while preparing for neonatal observation shifts.

What is Mutterschutz and when does it start?

Mutterschutz is a German employment law protecting the health of pregnant and breastfeeding employees and their babies. It prohibits work durante high-risk periods while providing dismissal protection and financial support. This mandatory maternity leave period applies to all employees, including apprentices and part-time staff.

  • Start date: Protection officially begins 6 weeks before your calculated due date.
  • Mandatory duration: The period typically lasts until 8 weeks after the birth.
  • Post-birth extensions: Leave extends to 12 weeks for premature, multiple, or c-section births.
  • Voluntary work: You may work during the 6-week pre-birth phase by providing written consent.

Bookimed Expert Insight: While 14 weeks is standard, hospitals like Charité - Universitätsmedizin Berlin manage over 5,000 births annually and strictly document medical necessity for extensions. If your child is born early, the unused pre-birth days are added to your post-birth leave. This ensures you always receive the full 14-week protected period.

Patient Consensus: Parents emphasize keeping your expected-date certificate ready. Inaccurate due-date registration can delay your maternity benefits, so confirm these dates with HR early.

How early do I need to register at a hospital?

Register for childbirth in Germany between weeks 28 and 34 of your pregnancy. While many hospitals accept registrations start after the second trimester, securing a spot by early third trimester ensures access to top maternity units in busy cities like Berlin or Frankfurt.

  • Registration timing: Aim for weeks 28 to 30 to guarantee maternity ward availability.
  • Required documents: Present your ID, insurance card, and maternity record known as the Mutterpass.
  • Hospital tours: Attend a Kreissalbesichtigung or maternity info visit around weeks 30 to 34.
  • Expat coordination: Contact international offices at centers like Solingen for specialized registration support.

Bookimed Expert Insight: While major facilities like Charité Berlin deliver over 5,000 babies annually, they have significant international patient volumes. Choosing an academic hospital like Solingen can offer a more personalized experience, as they maintain high specialist-to-patient ratios with 400 doctors for 60,000 annual patients.

Patient Consensus: Patients emphasize that early registration reduces stress during labor, allowing you to bypass reception. Many travelers recommend confirming hotel bookings nearby well in advance to ensure a smooth transition to the clinic.

無料相談を受ける

最適な連絡方法をお選びください