Baden-Württemberg , Baden-Württemberg. Viral throat swabs are taken in a tent outside to avoid contaminating the laboratory.|alt= On 25 February, a 25-year-old man from
Göppingen, Baden-Württemberg, who had recently returned from
Milan, Italy, tested positive and was treated in Klinik am Eichert. On 26 February, Baden-Württemberg confirmed three new cases. The 24-year-old girlfriend of the 25-year-old man from Göppingen and her 60-year-old father, who worked as a chief physician at University Hospital Tübingen, tested positive and were admitted to the same hospital in
Tübingen. A 32-year-old man from
Rottweil, Baden-Württemberg, who had visited
Codogno, Italy with his family on 23 February, tested positive and was admitted to a hospital for isolation. On 27 February, Baden-Württemberg confirmed four new cases, for a total of eight cases in the region. Two women and a man from
Breisgau-Hochschwarzwald and
Freiburg, respectively, tested positive. They had had contact with an Italian participant at a business meeting in
Munich; he was subsequently tested positive in Italy. A man from the district of
Böblingen, who had had contact with the travel companion of the patient from Göppingen, also tested positive. On 28 February, Baden-Württemberg confirmed five new cases, bringing the total number of cases in the state to thirteen. A man from
Ludwigsburg with flu symptoms who had tested negative for
influenza virus was automatically tested for SARS-CoV-2 and confirmed positive. A man from
Rhine-Neckar returning from a short ski holiday with mild cold symptoms checked himself in to the emergency department of the
University Hospital Heidelberg and tested positive. A 32-year-old man in
Heilbronn tested positive and was admitted to a hospital. He had been in Milan on 21 February and fallen ill with flu symptoms on 23 February. A man from
Nuremberg who was in
Karlsruhe on business was admitted to the Karlsruhe City Hospital after testing positive. His family in Nuremberg was also ill with respiratory symptoms. A man from
Breisgau who had travelled to
Bergamo, Italy also tested positive and underwent isolation.
Bavaria On 27 January 2020, the
Bavarian Ministry of Health announced that a 52-year-old employee of
Webasto, a German car parts supplier at
Starnberg, Bavaria had tested positive for
SARS-CoV-2. His was the first known case of a person contracting the virus outside of China from a non-relative – the first known transmission of the virus outside China being father to son in Vietnam. On 28 January, three more cases were confirmed, a 27-year-old and a 40-year-old man as well as a 33-year-old woman. All three were also employees of Webasto. They were monitored and quarantined at the München Hospital in
Schwabing. On 30 January, a man from
Siegsdorf who worked for the same company tested positive; on 31 January and 3 February respectively, both his children tested positive. His wife also tested positive on 6 February. A 52-year-old Webasto employee from
Fürstenfeldbruck tested positive. On 1 February, a 33-year-old Webasto employee living in
Munich tested positive. On 7 February, the wife of a previously diagnosed man tested positive. On 11 February, a 49-year-old Webasto employee tested positive, as did a family member of a previously diagnosed employee. According to reconstruction analysis published in September 2020, the outbreak at Webasto had not seeded the
COVID-19 outbreak in Italy, with the evidence pointing instead to the latter outbreak having been initiated by cases imported directly from China. On 27 February, Bavaria confirmed that a man from
Middle Franconia tested positive after he had contact with an Italian man who later tested positive as well. On 8 March, an 83-year-old resident of the St. Nikolaus home of the elderly in
Würzburg was brought into hospital and died four days later diagnosed with COVID-19, becoming the first reported death of the virus in Bavaria. By 27 March, ten more residents of the St. Nikolaus home of the elderly had also died of the virus and 44 residents and 32 employees tested positive. The residency complained about a lack of personnel and protective equipment. On 12 August 2020, Bavarian health authorities admitted that they had not yet informed over 44,000 returning travellers about the results of their COVID-19 tests, mostly taken at mobile testing centres at highways. It was believed that there had been over 900 positive cases among these. The government explained the glitch with missing software and an unexpected large number of volunteers tested. Health Minister
Melanie Huml reportedly offered her resignation to premier Soeder, whose decision to leave her in office was met with sharp criticism by the parliamentary opposition. In January 2021, Huml was moved to a position in the Bavarian State Chancellery. From 18 January 2021, pursuant to a 12 January decision, Bavaria made the wearing of
FFP2 masks mandatory on public transport and in supermarkets, excepting bus drivers, ticket inspectors, and children aged up to 14 years. The new rule would not be policed until 24 January. The Bavarian government said it would provide masks free of charge to low-income groups and social welfare recipients. Due to the number of occupied intensive care beds reaching 609 on 8 November 2021, thereby exceeding the threshold of 600, the
Corona-Ampel (corona traffic light) jumped to red in the state, triggering a tightening of pandemic restrictions. It had been green just days earlier. With immediate effect, access to gyms and sports facilities, as well as museums and cultural facilities, was reduced from that under the 3G rule, covering the fully vaccinated, the recovered, or those who had recently tested negative, to the 2G rule, which excluded the third mentioned group. Only to those under the age of 12, for which age group no COVID-19 vaccine had been approved, would the 3G rule still applied, as well as to discretionary cases on medical grounds. Restaurants, hairdressers, universities and libraries were to continue to apply the 3G rule.
Berlin , Berlin The first case detected in the capital,
Berlin, was reported on 2 March 2020. The hospital opened on 11 May 2020. On November 15, 2021, Berlin banned unvaccinated citizens from restaurants, bars, cinemas and other entertainment venues, and now require them to present a negative COVID test to travel by bus or train. The measures have been implemented due to the largest increase in case counts to date. In January 2022, a spokesman of the Berlin government told
Reuters that public services including transportation, police and child care were reshuffling operations to cope with an increasing number of staff in quarantine.
Hamburg in Hamburg on 17 March
Hamburg's first case, a male paediatric member of staff at the
University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf, was confirmed on 27 February. , there are 196 active cases. After the ease of lockdown for religious groups on 1 May, a church service on 10 May in
Frankfurt led to a cluster that grew to 112 cases by 25 May. The service was later determined to have breached several regulations, including those that the major churches had given themselves. The church evaded penalties through participation in a study by the RKI, whose scientists had expressed great interest in studying the outbreak in detail. All of the infected had recovered by 24 June.
Lower Saxony On 1 March 2020,
Lower Saxony reported its first case. On 31 May 2020, a new cluster with 36 confirmed infections was reported in
Göttingen. The local authorities checked
Hookah lounges to find the source of the infections. Mayor Rolf-Georg Köhler informed the public on 2 June that the cluster originated in
Eid al-Fitr celebrations by several families on 23 May where social distancing rules had been ignored. On 4 June 2020, the city reported 86 infections from the cluster and some 216 people had been ordered in quarantine. All schools were closed again and all contact and team sports were prohibited for 2 weeks.
North Rhine-Westphalia On 25 February, a 47-year-old man tested positive in
Erkelenz,
Heinsberg at
North Rhine-Westphalia. He had been previously treated at University Hospital of Cologne on 13 and 19 February for a pre-existing medical condition. 41 medical staff members and patients were identified to have had contact with him at the hospital; one person from medical staff showed symptoms and tested positive for SARS-CoV-2. On 26 February, the man's wife, a kindergarten teacher, tested positive; both were isolated at
University Hospital of Düsseldorf. His colleague and her partner also tested positive. On 27 February, Heinsberg confirmed fourteen new cases: nine from
Gangelt, two from
Selfkant, one from the city of Heinsberg, one from
Düsseldorf and one from
Herzogenrath. Multiple cases were linked to the Gangelter Carnival. All of them were placed in home isolation. This brought the current total to twenty in the district. A medical doctor in
Mönchengladbach tested positive and was quarantined at home. He had attended the same carnival event in Gangelt. On 28 February,
Aachen confirmed the first COVID-19 case in the region, a woman from Herzogenrath (
Aachen district), who had attended the carnival event in Gangelt on 15 February and underwent home isolation. Heinsberg confirmed 17 new cases, bringing the current total to 37 cases in the district. On 29 February, the number of confirmed cases in Heinsberg rose to sixty. Additionally, one case was confirmed in
Bonn, three more in the Aachen district (one in Aachen and two in
Würselen), and one in
Lüdenscheid.
Cologne, Mönchengladbach and
Duisburg also each reported two cases. The first cases in
Münster were confirmed. On 1 March, cases in Heinsberg rose to 68. A case was confirmed in
Rheinisch-Bergischer Kreis, affecting a woman from
Overath. On 2 March, the number of positive cases in Heinsberg increased to 79. The
Unna district reported its first case, a 61-year-old woman. On 3 March, cases in Heinsberg rose to 84. Two more cases were confirmed in Münster. on 21 March to allow admission only to people who want to pray. On 4 March, the first case in
Bochum was confirmed when a 68-year-old man returning from holiday in Italy tested positive. On 5 March 195 cases were confirmed by laboratory test in Heinsberg. The local authorities announced that all schools, kindergartens, daycare facilities and interdisciplinary early intervention centres would remain closed until at least 15 March 2020. On 7 March, three cases were confirmed in
Remscheid and one in
Wermelskirchen. Bochum reported its third case, a 58-year-old man from Weitmar who had returned from a holiday in Italy. On 8 March, the count of cases in the state rose to 484. Of these, 277 were in Heinsberg. Bochum recorded its fourth case after a woman tested positive after returning from a holiday in
South Tyrol, Italy. She went into quarantine at home. A 44-year-old Münster resident tested positive and underwent quarantine with his family. There were six new infections in
Erkrath,
Mettmann district. An additional three people were infected with the virus in
Bergkamen,
Unna district. They are believed to have come into contact with an infected person during a visit to
Hamburg. On 11 March, the number of positive cases in North Rhine-Westphalia increased to 801, including three deaths. On 13 March, all schools and kindergartens were closed by the government of North Rhine-Westphalia. In September, the city of
Hamm became a hotspot after the obligation to wear masks and to keep distance had been ignored at three events with some 500 guests surrounding a Turkish wedding in early September. By 24 September, some 179 individuals from that wedding were described as "acute infected" by the local government. The number of infections per 100,000 citizens rose to 100 and new restrictions were introduced: Masks would have to be worn in schools for upper secondary education, events with more than 25 people would have to file an application and with 50 up to 150 participants, a concept for infection prevention would be required. On 6 October some 300 infected were linked to the wedding. In October, the city of
Cologne presented its #diesmalnicht (English: #notthistime) campaign discouraging gatherings, parades and similar hazardous behaviour for the commencement of the
Cologne Carnival at 11:11 a.m. on 11 November 2020.
Mayor of Cologne Henriette Reker announced that there would be a ban on the sale and consumption of alcohol outside of restaurants and pubs on 11 November 2020, with many establishments voluntarily remaining closed or not selling alcohol on that date.
Rhineland-Palatinate On 26 February, a 41-year-old soldier who worked in Cologne-Wahn military airport and had attended a carnival event in
Gangelt with the 47-year-old patient from North Rhine-Westphalia was admitted to Bundeswehr Central Hospital,
Koblenz, the first case in
Rhineland-Palatinate. On 27 February, a 32-year-old man from
Kaiserslautern, who had been in Iran, tested positive and was admitted to Westpfalz-Klinikum. On 4 March, a woman and a child from
Wachenheim tested positive and were quarantined.
Saxony-Anhalt On 10 March 2020,
Saxony-Anhalt reported eight confirmed cases of COVID-19, making it the last federal state to be affected by the disease. As of 26 March, the subdivisions of Jessen and Schweinitz in the municipality of
Jessen (Elster) are under quarantine, with no one apart from emergency workers allowed in or out. The cause is reported to be an increased number of COVID-19 infections in a
retirement home there.
Other In late March 2020, a group of patients from
Lombardy in Italy and the border region of
Alsace in France were treated in Germany.
Repatriated German citizens On 1 February 2020, around 90 German citizens left
Wuhan on a flight arranged by the German government. Upon arrival, they were quarantined in
Rhineland-Palatinate for 14 days. On 2 February, two of the arrivals from China tested positive and were moved from the quarantine location in
Germersheim to an isolation unit at the University Hospital Frankfurt. ==Virus variants==