Key Takeaways
- Charité is commonly counted as Europe’s largest hospital. It has more than 3,000 beds. That number combines four separate Berlin campuses.
- Universitätsklinikum Hamburg-Eppendorf holds Germany’s largest single hospital campus. Its main site in Hamburg has 1,718 beds.
- University hospitals occupy every one of Germany’s 17 largest single hospital campuses.
- Universitätsklinikum Gießen und Marburg ranks 20th. It is Germany’s only university hospital under private ownership.
- Klinikum Chemnitz and Helios Klinikum Erfurt break the run of university-run hospitals at ranks 18 and 19. Both hold the same Maximalversorgung status as the university hospitals above them.
- German hospital planning law places the widest specialty requirement on hospitals in Maximalversorgung, the highest of four care tiers. That requirement, not university status itself, is why these hospitals need more beds than others.
Largest Hospitals in Germany by Bed Count
| Rank | Hospital | City | Beds |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Universitätsklinikum Hamburg-Eppendorf (UKE) | Hamburg | 1,718 |
| 2 | Universitätsklinikum Freiburg | Freiburg im Breisgau | 1,623 |
| 3 | Medizinische Hochschule Hannover | Hannover | 1,503 |
| 4 | Universitätsmedizin Mainz | Mainz | 1,486 |
| 5 | Universitätsmedizin Göttingen | Göttingen | 1,482 |
| 6 | Universitätsklinikum Dresden | Dresden | 1,480 |
| 7 | Universitätsklinikum Tübingen | Tübingen | 1,464 |
| 8 | Uniklinik Köln | Köln | 1,440 |
| 9 | Charité, Campus Virchow Klinikum | Berlin | 1,432 |
| 10 | Universitätsklinikum Leipzig | Leipzig | 1,417 |
| 11 | Uniklinikum Aachen | Aachen | 1,408 |
| 12 | Universitätsklinikum Heidelberg | Heidelberg | 1,402 |
| 13 | Universitätsklinikum Augsburg | Augsburg | 1,400 |
| 14 | Universitätsklinikum Würzburg | Würzburg | 1,385 |
| 15 | Universitätsklinikum Erlangen | Erlangen | 1,369 |
| 16 | Universitätsklinikum Bonn | Bonn | 1,337 |
| 17 | Universitätsklinikum des Saarlandes | Homburg | 1,293 |
| 18 | Klinikum Chemnitz (public, non-university) | Chemnitz | 1,285 |
| 19 | Helios Klinikum Erfurt (private, non-university) | Erfurt | 1,263 |
| 20 | Universitätsklinikum Gießen und Marburg | Gießen | 1,220 |
Source: Statistisches Bundesamt (2024)
Each row represents one physical hospital site, not a hospital operator. Hospitals with multiple campuses, including Charité, are counted separately by site. Beds refer to aufgestellte Betten. It is the total number of beds installed at each site. It does not measure occupancy or staffing levels.
Charité is commonly ranked as Europe’s biggest hospital. The figure behind that ranking is more than 3,000 beds. That count spans four separate campuses across Berlin. None of them individually holds Germany’s top spot. Universitätsklinikum Hamburg-Eppendorf holds it instead. Its main Hamburg campus has 1,718 beds. That is 286 more than Campus Virchow Klinikum. It is Charité’s largest single site with 1,432 beds.
Germany’s 17 Biggest Hospitals Are All University Hospitals
University hospitals occupy the entire top 17. German hospital planning law explains why. State hospital laws sort facilities into four care tiers, based on how many specialties a hospital must run and how complex the cases it treats. University hospitals sit in the top tier. It is called Maximalversorgung. This tier requires them to treat rare and severe conditions across the full range of medical specialties, from cardiology to oncology to neurosurgery, inside a single institution. Covering every specialty under one roof takes more total beds than a hospital running only one or two departments needs.
The 17 campuses span nine states, not one or two cities. They stretch from Hamburg in the north to Homburg in the Saarland.
Ownership Breaks the University Hospital Streak at Rank 18
Two separate systems classify German hospitals. Care tier decides how many medical specialties a hospital must run. Institutional type decides who legally organizes and runs it. That may be a university, a municipality, or a private company. The run of university-run hospitals breaks at rank 18. The run of Maximalversorgung hospitals does not end there.
Klinikum Chemnitz enters the list with 1,285 beds. The city of Chemnitz runs it as a public company, not a university. Saxony’s state hospital plan still confirms it as a Maximalversorger. It is also an academic teaching hospital for TU Dresden and TU Leipzig.
Helios Klinikum Erfurt follows at rank 19 with 1,263 beds. A private hospital chain called Helios owns it. It holds the same Maximalversorgung status as the public university hospitals ranked above it. It teaches at Universitätsklinikum Jena.
University status returns at rank 20. Universitätsklinikum Gießen und Marburg holds 1,220 beds and carries the Hochschulklinik designation. It is also the only university hospital in Germany under private ownership. Rhön-Klinikum AG has owned it since 2006.
Two more hospitals outside the university system sit just below the top 20. Both hold the same top care tier. Klinikum Nürnberg Nord ranks 21st with 1,194 beds. The city of Nuremberg runs it as a municipal enterprise. It is also a teaching partner of Paracelsus Medical University. Helios Klinikum Berlin-Buch ranks 22nd with 1,178 beds. Helios owns this site too. It taught for Charité for decades. It now partners with MSB Medical School Berlin.
Germany separates who runs a hospital from how much it is required to do. Maximalversorgung status requires the widest range of specialties, regardless of ownership. That requirement is what produces the country’s largest campuses. Most Maximalversorger are university hospitals. A state government can also promote a city-run or privately owned hospital to that same tier when a major region has no university hospital of its own.
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