Category
page 1German awards
Charlemagne Prize
prize for work done in the service of European unification
Bambi Award
German TV and movie award
Spiel des Jahres
yearly award for offline games in Germany
Red Dot
award
Karl Schwarzschild Medal
German award for astronomy and astrophysics
Humboldt Prize
science award
Goethe Medal
German award conferred by the Goethe-Institut (1955-)
Echo Music Prize
former German music award in three categories: pop, classical and jazz, each with different subcategories (1992–2018)
Herder Prize
award
Cantor medal
award

Iffland-Ring
thumb|August Wilhelm Iffland and [[Franz Labes in Molière's Der Geizige, Berlin, 1810.]]
Theodor W. Adorno Award
award
Quadriga
annual German award sponsored by Netzwerk Quadriga gGmbH
Deutscher Spielepreis
award for board games
Otto Hahn Peace Medal
German peace prize
Paul Ehrlich and Ludwig Darmstaedter Prize
award
Goethe Medal for Art and Science
Nazi German award
German Future Prize
award
German Design Award
award
Otto Warburg Medal
German biochemistry award
Dr. Erich Salomon Prize
lifetime achievement award for photojournalists given by the Deutsche Gesellschaft für Photographie
Buber-Rosenzweig-Medal
The Buber-Rosenzweig-Medaille is an annual prize awarded since 1968 by the Deutscher Koordinierungsrat der Gesellschaften für Christlich-Jüdische Zusammenarbeit
(DKR; German Coordinating Council of Societies for Christian-Jewish Cooperation) to individuals, initiatives, or institutions, which have actively contributed to Christian–Jewish understanding. Forty-four different societies belong to the DKR. The name of the prize honors the memory of the Austrian-Jewish philosopher, translator, and educator Martin Buber (1878–1965) and the German-Jewish theologian Franz Rosenzweig (1886–1929). In its
Miss Germany
national beauty pageant in Germany
Heinrich Tessenow Medal
German architecture prize
Aby Warburg Prize
award
Werner von Siemens Ring
natural scientific and technical award
Stern–Gerlach Medal
award
Rudolf-Diesel-Medaille
The Rudolf-Diesel-Medaille is an award by the German Institute for Inventions (, D.I.E.) in memory of Rudolf Diesel for inventions and the entrepreneurial and economical implications accounting to the laureate. Since 1953 the award has been presented yearly until 1969 and then irregularly every two or three years.
Körber European Science Prize
German science award

Shakespeare Prize
20th-century award for artistic achievements
Käthe Kollwitz Prize
German art award
Capital Top 40 unter 40
German business ranking for young professionals
Adenauer-de Gaulle Prize
peace prize
Ritter-von-Spix-Medal
thumb|Ritter-von-Spix-Medal
Sofia Kovalevskaya Award
German science award
Goethe Plaque of the City of Frankfurt
culture prize
Deutscher Lehrerpreis
German award in several categories (2009–)
Das Goldene Lenkrad
German automotive award
Miss Universe Germany
beauty contest
Orden wider den tierischen Ernst
Prize of the Aachen Carnival Association
Alfred Stock Memorial Prize
award
Heinz Maier-Leibnitz Prize
award for young researchers, conferred by the German Research Foundation
Alma Seidler Ring
The Alma-Seidler-Ring was created in 1978 by the Austrian government as the female counterpart of the Iffland-Ring. Similar to that ring, the holder, or bearer, of the Alma-Seidler-Ring is considered to be the "most significant and most worthy actress of the German-speaking theatre", in the opinion of the previous holder who has passed it to her by will.
Friedrich Wilhelm Bessel Research Award
German award for academic research
Deutscher Computerspielpreis
annual German video game awards ceremony
Steiger Award
German media award
Reinhold Schneider Prize
The Reinhold-Schneider-Preis (Reinhold Schneider Prize) is the cultural prize awarded by the German town of Freiburg im Breisgau. It has been awarded biennially since 1960, alternating between literature, music and art. In addition to the main prize of €15,000, a Förderpreis (scholarship) of €6,000 is awarded. A connection of the recipient to Freiburg is essential, as was the case for the writer Reinhold Schneider, after whom the prize is named.