Decision of the Federal Administrative Court on Advance Maintenance Payments in Cases of Separation Due to Residency Laws
In a recent decision, the Federal Administrative Court addressed the question of under what conditions spouses are considered “permanently separated” within the meaning of the Advance Maintenance Payments Act (UVG), when joint cohabitation fails solely due to residency-related entry barriers. The issue was distinguishing between an actual separation of the partnership and a merely legally imposed spatial distance.
Legal Background: Eligibility Requirements under the Advance Maintenance Payments Act
Purpose and Systematics of the UVG
The Advance Maintenance Payments Act provides government benefits for children when one parent does not provide any or adequate cash maintenance. The benefits are tied to certain family and actual circumstances, particularly the child’s life in a household run by only one parent.
Significance of the Criterion “Permanently Separated”
For married parents, whether they are “permanently separated” is central. This factual element serves as a distinction: A claim is regularly only considered when the marital partnership no longer exists and the child lives with one parent who runs the household alone. The court had to clarify whether the mere absence of a spouse due to residency-related entry barriers is sufficient for this purpose.
Key Statements of the Decision: No “Permanent Separation” Due to Mere Residency-Related Spatial Separation
Spatial Separation Does Not Necessarily Replace the Separation of the Partnership
According to the decision of the Federal Administrative Court, mere spatial separation does not automatically equate to “permanently separated.” What matters is whether the marital partnership is actually dissolved or if it – despite the distance – is intended to continue and is still supported by the spouses.
Residency-Related Entry Barriers as External Compulsion
If spouses are not separated because they want to end the partnership, but because one spouse cannot enter or reside in the country due to residency regulations, the court’s evaluation does not readily consider this “permanently separated” under the UVG. It is decisive that in such cases, the spatial separation does not stem from a decision to separate but from a legally based hurdle.
Distinction from a Long-Term Intended Separation
The court also clarifies that “permanently separated” is to be assumed when the marital partnership clearly no longer exists and its restoration is no longer intended. An involuntary spatial separation due to residency restrictions is therefore not sufficient to substantiate this factual element alone.
Implications for Practice and Administration
Consequences for Claim Verification under the UVG
The decision highlights that differentiated consideration is necessary for married parents. The legal evaluation depends not solely on whether a spouse is physically present in the household, but on whether the marital partnership is ended or – despite spatial distance – is intended to continue and can only not be realized due to external reasons.
Interface Between Family and Residency Law
The case demonstrates the interaction between advance maintenance law and residency-related situations: Residency restrictions can factually lead to a separation without it simultaneously meaning the significant legal dissolution of the partnership. The Federal Administrative Court connects this with an interpretation oriented towards the purpose of the UVG.
Source
The above explanations are based on reporting of the Federal Administrative Court’s ruling published on 02.04.2026 on urteile.news:
https://urteile.news/BVerwG_BVerwG-5-C-724_Kein-dauerndes-Getrenntleben-von-Ehegatten-im-Sinne-des-Unterhaltsvorschussgesetzes-bei-aufenthaltsrechtlichen-Einreisehindernissen~N35884
Advisory Assessment by MTR Legal Attorneys
Situations at the intersection of advance maintenance, separation status, and residency-related conditions regularly require precise determination of the actual and legal prerequisites. If clarification is needed, individual Legal Advice in Family Law by MTR Legal Attorneys may be considered.