German rescue services pulled a 15th body from the wreckage of a collapsed ice rink in Bad Reichenhall early today.
The chief fire officer identified the victim as a 40-year-old woman. "All those missing have now been recovered," he said.
The roof of the more than 30-year-old ice rink collapsed on Monday amid heavy snow. Some 50 people, mostly children enjoying the last days of their Christmas holidays, were inside at the time. Eighteen survivors required hospital treatment.
All the dead and injured came from the area around Bad Reichenhall, a Bavarian town close to the Austrian border.
Construction Minister Wolfgang Tiefensee said he would ask all 16 German states to discuss what steps should be taken to secure existing public buildings, some of which are decades old.
Questions about the causes of the accident swirled amid fears similar disasters could happen elsewhere in the harsh winter weather conditions. Other buildings in the area with flat roofs were closed as a precaution.
Bild, Germany's biggest newspaper, carried the headline: "The children could still be alive!" after suggestions that officials should have known the building was unsafe.
An ice hockey club training session scheduled for late Monday was cancelled just minutes before the disaster, apparently due to concerns about the snow on the roof.
But the mayor of Bad Reichenhall denied that the structure, built between 1971 and 1972, was a known risk.