1. Skip to content
  2. Skip to main menu
  3. Skip to more DW sites
Cars and Transportation

VW to pay €830m settlement to German consumers

February 28, 2020

Five years after the Volkswagen emissions scandal began, the automaker has reached a settlement with Germany's consumer federation. The amount is a fraction of what the company was ordered to pay American consumers.

https://p.dw.com/p/3YaS1
Volkswagen
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/S. Schuldt

Volkswagen reached a "comprehensive agreement" with the German consumer federation VZBV regarding a compensation settlement over the company's 2015 emission's scandal, a court in the central German city of Braunschweig announced on Friday.

Some 260,000 German customers who were affected by the affair will receive between €1,350 and €6,257 ($1,484 and $6,879), depending on the model and age of the car. VW plans to pay a total of €830 million in compensation — significantly less than the $15.3 billion a United States judge ordered the company to pay American consumers.

The consumers can then decide to either accept the settlement or continue to fight for more money in individual lawsuits. People who bought their cars after December 31, 2015 — months after the scandal began — will not be compensated.

In addition, Volkswagen will take on the full costs for the settlement and the legal advisers for the consumers. An ombudsman office will be set up to settle possible disputes.

The VZBV, who filed the class action lawsuit against VW in September, said after the settlement was announced that its action for declaratory judgment will now be terminated.

"The VZBV has argued for more. But in the context of the difficult negotiations, the result is the maximum achievable," said VZBV board member Klaus Müller. 

What is Dieselgate?

The 2015 Volkswagen emissions scandal, dubbed "Dieselgate," was one of the biggest car scandals in history, affecting the automotive industry on a global scale.

In September 2015, Volkswagen shared with the United States Environment Protection Agency behind closed doors that they had installed software in 11 million vehicles worldwide that allowed it to cheat emissions tests. Volkswagen's then-CEO Martin Winterkorn tendered his resignation days later, though he retained other positions within Volkswagen Group.

dv/rc (AFP, dpa, Reuters)

DW sends out a daily selection of hard news and quality feature journalism. Sign up here.