CFO Succession in Germany: Why Waiting is the Biggest Risk

FinanceSuccessionFinance OfficersC-Suite Succession
min Article
Portrait of Daniela Nienstedt, leadership advisor at Russell Reynolds Associates
Daniela Nienstedt
May 12, 2026
6 min
FinanceSuccessionFinance OfficersC-Suite Succession
Executive Summary
Germany CFO succession is uniquely complex: rising turnover, scarce talent and cultural barriers make proactive internal planning essential.
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This article is part of our CFO succession series, examining the distinct succession challenges facing boards and finance leaders across EMEA and APAC.

CFO succession in Germany is unlike any other major market. The role demands deep cultural fluency, an instinct for consensus and the ability to navigate a governance system that few outsiders fully understand. When a CFO leaves, the options are far narrower than most boards anticipate.

According to RRA’s Global CFO Turnover Index, turnover across the DAX40 has reached a seven-year high. But in Germany, the challenge is not simply that CFOs are leaving. It is that replacing them is uniquely difficult.

We spoke with Daniela Nienstedt, RRA’s Co-Head of our European Financial Officers Practice and Head of Financial Services Germany, about what is making CFO succession in Germany so demanding, and why internal development and succession plans are no longer optional.

 

A shrinking talent pool

German CFOs are operating under sustained strain. Macroeconomic uncertainty, geopolitical tensions, tariff pressures and increasingly vocal shareholders have reshaped the intensity of the role.

“All of the ongoing uncertainty and turbulence in the market means that CFOs are under immense pressure from unhappy shareholders.”

Daniela Nienstedt


 

As a result, some experienced CFOs are looking to manage their own exit. Daniela and her team have had CFOs reach out proactively, asking for help finding their own successor, not because of performance concerns, but because the cumulative demands of the role have become unsustainable.

At the same time, the opportunities outside the CFO role are drawing experienced leaders away. In Germany, the need for women board members is particularly strong, and many women CFOs are choosing portfolio board careers over the intensity of a full-time executive position.

“There’s a huge demand for women board members in Germany at present, and many women CFOs are going plural. They’ve realized they can take on several mandates and still enjoy a healthier work-life balance than they would as CFO.”

Daniela Nienstedt


 

More women on German boards is good for expanding governance perspectives at the director level. But it also means fewer experienced CFOs in the market when organizations need to hire.

The result is a tightening market of proven German CFOs, particularly those with a track record of value creation in portfolio environments or complex listed businesses.

 

Why the international market can’t fill the gap

With experienced German CFOs in short supply, some companies may consider broadening their search internationally. In most markets, that would be the logical response.

In Germany, it is far more difficult than it appears.

The German governance model is shaped by codetermination, influential works councils and strong employee representation. Leadership credibility is built not only through technical capability, but through the ability to operate effectively within this framework.

Language proficiency, familiarity with regulatory structures, and an instinct for consensus-building across diverse stakeholder groups are often decisive. Cultural misalignment can shorten tenures, regardless of technical excellence.

“The German system —with our strong unions and works councils —is nuanced and unique. You can’t simply hire internationally and expect success unless there is a strong understanding of how business is conducted here.”

Daniela Nienstedt


 

Boards that have seen an international appointment struggle to navigate the realities of the German system are often reluctant to take that chance again.

The external market is constrained not just by supply, but by culture, making internal development not just valuable, but essential.

 

Succession planning as a continuous discipline

Against this backdrop, CFO succession cannot be reactive—it must be ongoing.

The starting point is internal development. In a market where experienced external candidates are scarce, organizations should define a future success profile for the role—one that may look quite different from the incumbent’s—and assess their finance leadership against it to identify two to three credible successors.

In practice, this means being explicit about the capabilities the next CFO will need.

The profile itself is broadening. Beyond financial control, boards increasingly expect the CFO to strategically partner with the CEO, display investor-facing confidence, drive transformation leadership and navigate heightened scrutiny.

Preparing credible successors against this profile requires structured investment: including cross-functional rotations, exposure to supervisory boards, mentoring and targeted coaching. This can take up to five years. With the average tenure of departing DAX40 CFOs at 6.9 years, succession planning should begin the day a new CFO starts. Where internal bench strength is limited, hiring externally for a strategic number two is always an option.

But whether the successor is internal or external, one factor that is equally important and too often overlooked is chemistry. Cultural fit extends beyond national context. The CFO must operate as a trusted partner at the center of complex relationships with the CEO, supervisory board, investors and the senior leadership team.

While financial and technical skills are table stakes, the true differentiator is the ability to build trust, influence effectively and manage sensitive stakeholder dynamics. Boards that fail to test for this relational dimension risk appointments that look right on paper but do not endure.

 

Planning for tomorrow, not today

The success profile must reflect where the business is heading, not just where it is today. A CFO succession plan built around the current needs of the organization risks producing a successor who is ready for a role that no longer exists by the time they step into it. The board should define the profile against the company’s anticipated trajectory, whether that involves international expansion, digital transformation, a shift in capital structure or a change in ownership, and revisit it regularly as the business evolves.

 

Why waiting is the biggest risk

With such intense competition for experienced German CFOs, starting succession planning early is essential. It could take years for the right person to develop the skills, relationships and cultural fluency the role demands.

“Whether your next CFO is internal or external, experienced or a first-timer, they’re going to need support to succeed during that early transition period, especially if they’re new to the company or industry. This is where coaching and mentoring can make all the difference.”

Daniela Nienstedt


 

CFO turnover in Germany is rising. The pool of culturally fluent, experienced leaders is limited, and the international market offers less than many boards assume.

For German boards, the question is not whether change will come, but whether the organization is prepared when it does.

In a market where cultural alignment and leadership depth are decisive, preparation is not simply prudent. It is a strategic differentiator.


Frequently Asked Questions

What makes CFO succession in Germany more complex than in other markets?

Germany's governance model emphasizes codetermination, works councils and stakeholder consensus, so the CFO role demands cultural fluency and language capability alongside technical expertise. The talent pool is also shrinking: DAX40 CFO turnover has reached a seven-year high, and many experienced women CFOs are choosing portfolio board careers over full-time executive roles.

Source: Global CFO Turnover Index, Russell Reynolds Associates (2025)

Why can't international candidates easily fill Germany's CFO gap?

Broadening the search internationally rarely solves the problem. Operating within Germany's system requires language proficiency, regulatory familiarity and consensus-building across works councils and employee representatives. Cultural misalignment can shorten tenures regardless of technical excellence, and boards that have seen an international appointment struggle are often reluctant to take that risk again.

Source: Russell Reynolds Associates

When should CFO succession planning begin in Germany?

Succession planning should begin the day a new CFO starts. Preparing a credible successor — through cross-functional rotations, supervisory board exposure, mentoring and coaching — can take up to five years. With the average tenure of departing DAX40 CFOs at 6.9 years, waiting until a transition is imminent usually leaves organizations without a ready internal candidate.

Source: Global CFO Turnover Index, Russell Reynolds Associates (2025)

What capabilities define a successful CFO in Germany today?

Financial and technical expertise are table stakes. Today's German CFO is expected to partner strategically with the CEO, display investor-facing confidence, lead transformation and navigate heightened shareholder scrutiny. The true differentiator is relational: the ability to build trust, influence effectively and manage complex stakeholder dynamics across the CEO, supervisory board, investors and senior leadership team.

Source: Russell Reynolds Associates

What do boards most often get wrong about CFO succession?

Two mistakes recur. The first is under-testing for chemistry and cultural fit, producing appointments that look right on paper but fail to endure. The second is defining the successor profile around today's needs rather than where the business is heading. The profile should reflect the company's anticipated trajectory — and be revisited as the business evolves.

Source: Russell Reynolds Associates

Speak to Daniela Nienstedt