Habkirchen is the smallest village (Ortsteil) in the municipality of Mandelbachtal in Saarland, Federal Republic of Germany.
Already in the early Middle Ages, in 819 AD, Habkirchen is mentioned as a local center, with a church, royal estate, and residence of a count.
Until the French Revolution Habkirchen belonged to the Blieskastel administrative district of the Electorate of Trier.
Industrialization changed the living conditions, and the majority of the inhabitants now worked in the porcelain factory of Saargemünd and the Halberg foundry in Brebach.
Twice the population had to evacuate during the clearance of the "red zone", a 10 kilometres (6.2 mi)-wide area surrounding the Siegfried Line.
In September 1939, during the French Saar Offensive, the ancient Saint Anne's Chapel (Annakapelle) was destroyed and not rebuilt until 1947.