According to the Reuters, this was said by German Defence Minister Christine Lambrecht. She emphasised: "These Patriots are part of NATO's integrated air defence, meaning they are intended to be deployed on NATO territory."
"Any use outside NATO territory would require prior discussions with NATO and the allies," she added.
Read more: Ukraine Can Receive Patriot SAM from the United States – Media
Berlin offered Warsaw the Patriot missile defence system to help secure its airspace after a stray missile crashed and killed two people in Poland last week.
Polish Defence Minister Mariusz Blaszczak said on Wednesday he had asked Germany to send the Patriot fire units to Ukraine instead.
"After further Russian missile attacks, I asked Germany to have the Patriot batteries offered to Poland transferred to Ukraine and deployed at its western border," Blaszczak wrote on Twitter.
On Monday, Poland had said it would propose deploying the additional Patriot missile launchers near its border with Ukraine.
Ground-based air defence systems such as Raytheon's (RTX.N) Patriot are built to intercept incoming missiles.
But the systems are in short supply in NATO since, after the Cold War, many NATO allies scaled down their number to reflect the assessment that they would, from now on, only have to deal with a limited missile threat coming from countries such as Iran.
This perception changed drastically with Russia's invasion of Ukraine, which sent NATO allies scrambling to increase stocks of ammunition and tackle air defence system shortfalls.
Germany had 36 Patriot units when it was NATO's frontline state during the Cold War and even then it relied on support from NATO allies. Today, the German forces are down to 12 Patriot units, two of which are deployed to Slovakia.
Read more: US Sending Ukraine Another $400M in New Security Aid Providing anti-UAV Machine Guns, Ammunition for HIMARS, NASAMS and More