Ladenschlussgesetz


In the Federal Republic of Germany, the Ladenschlussgesetz or "Shop Closing Law" is the federal law regulating at which times retail stores were forced to be closed to the public. The Ladenschlussgesetz in its current form was first enacted on 28 November 1956 following pressure from Germany's trade unions; in its last revision, points of sale must be closed at any of the following times:
  1. On Sundays and public holidays;
  2. On working days before 06:00 and after 20:00;
  3. On December 24 before 06:00 and after 14:00 if that date falls on a working day
The law provides differing regulations for pharmacies, petrol stations, shops at train stations and airports, etc.
On 30 June 2006, as part of the Föderalismusreform, the regulatory responsibility for this area was devolved to the German states. The net effect, although the Federal law technically remains in force, the states are free to determine the opening hours of retail stores in their areas. All states – with the exception of the more conservative Bavaria – have made use of that option.

German states with varying shop opening hours

The states have each adopted individual regulations concerning opening hours on Sundays and public holidays. Some continue to observe the existing Federal rules, while others have liberalized them somewhat, although the general Federal ban concerning opening on Sundays and holidays remains in effect, owing to a provision in the German constitution recognizing Sunday as a day of rest and a corresponding decision of the Federal Constitutional Court on 9 June 2004.

24/6 scheme


'
  • Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania Effective date: 2 July 2007
Shops may be open until 10 pm on Saturdays.
Shops may be open until 8 pm on Saturdays; rules for Sundays and holidays follow the existing Federal law.''

Other schemes

Shops may be open Monday through Saturday from 6 am to 10 pm each day.

(Existing) Federal shop-opening scheme