Interior Minister Horst Seehofer said he has asked Germany's Federal police to "intensify" the checks for the next "eight to 14 days".
"Regardless where you're arriving from, from Poland, France, or Denmark, everyone should expect to be checked, especially with regard to producing a negative test," Seehofer told reporters.
The checks would occur in a 30-kilometre (19-mile) zone on German territory after vehicles have already crossed from neighbouring nations, Seehofer said, meaning nobody will be sent back if they don't comply.
But police can impose fines on anyone who fails to show a negative test or did not complete an online registration form before entry.
Anyone coming from a "high-risk" area such as France must also quarantine upon arrival.
The only systematic border checks, where each car is stopped and can be denied entry, are taking place at Germany's frontier with the hard-hit Czech Republic.
Seehofer announced that the strict checks would be extended for another 14 days given the Czech Republic's high infection rate and the prevalence of virus variants.
But Germany will no longer systematically stop each vehicle coming from Austria's Tyrol region, he added, saying the pandemic situation in Tyrol "has significantly improved".
Also from Tuesday, anyone arriving in Germany by plane must show a negative test before boarding, regardless of whether they are coming from a risk area or not.
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