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Hungary’s foreign investment screening landscape shifted decisively on 19 August 2025, when Act L of 2025 came into force and converted the country’s temporary Special FDI Regime into permanent legislation. For anyone planning or negotiating cross‑border acquisitions in Hungary, whether as a private‑equity sponsor, a strategic corporate buyer or an in‑house counsel advising the sell side, understanding the Hungary FDI regime M&A 2026 implications is now a gating item for every deal involving energy, telecoms or critical infrastructure. This guide sets out, in practical terms, exactly which transactions are caught, how the notification process works, what the review timelines look like, and how to draft deal documents that preserve commercial certainty while satisfying the new statutory requirements.
It is designed as a step‑by‑step compliance playbook that goes beyond the high‑level regulatory summaries available elsewhere.
Hungary has operated a dual foreign investment screening system for several years. The first pillar, Act LVII of 2018, establishes a permanent national‑security‑focused review mechanism administered by the Minister responsible for defence and national security. The second pillar originated as an emergency government decree (Government Decree 227/2020) introduced during the COVID‑19 pandemic. That decree created a broader, more interventionist “Special FDI Regime” covering a wider range of strategic sectors and applying to a larger pool of investors. Because the decree relied on emergency powers, it had to be periodically extended.
Act L of 2025, published in the official gazette (Nemzeti Jogszabálytár) and effective from 19 August 2025, ended that cycle of renewals by transitioning the Special FDI Regime into permanent statute. According to UNCTAD’s Investment Policy Monitor, the legislation codifies and broadens the scope of the temporary regime, making the screening obligation a standing feature of Hungary’s investment framework rather than an exceptional measure. The practical consequence for dealmakers is clear: foreign investment screening in Hungary is no longer a temporary overlay that might lapse, it is embedded in the regulatory architecture for the foreseeable future.
| Date | Event | Legal effect |
|---|---|---|
| 2018 | Act LVII of 2018 enacted | Established permanent national‑security FDI screening (first pillar) |
| 2020 | Government Decree 227/2020 issued | Created the Special FDI Regime as a temporary, broader screening mechanism |
| 2020–2025 | Repeated extensions of the emergency decree | Kept the Special FDI Regime in force on a rolling basis |
| 19 August 2025 | Act L of 2025 came into force | Transitioned the Special FDI Regime into permanent legislation; broadened scope |
The interplay between the two pillars matters. Act LVII of 2018 targets a narrower set of national‑security concerns (defence, dual‑use technologies, critical public services), whereas Act L of 2025 casts a wider net over strategic economic sectors. A single transaction can trigger notification obligations under both regimes, and practitioners need to conduct a parallel assessment at the earliest stage of deal planning.
The Special FDI Regime applies to a broad category of transactions involving “foreign investors” and Hungarian target companies operating in designated strategic sectors. Foreign investment screening in Hungary under Act L of 2025 is triggered by the acquisition of ownership, control or significant influence over such targets, regardless of whether the transaction is structured as a share deal, an asset deal or an indirect acquisition through a chain of holding companies.
The following comparison table summarises reporting obligations by entity type. Acquirers should assess their position against all three categories during preliminary due diligence.
| Entity type | When filing is triggered (example triggers) | Practical filing consequence |
|---|---|---|
| Foreign acquirer buying >50 % shares of a Hungarian target or obtaining control via board or veto rights | Acquisition conferring control of a strategic company (energy, telecoms, critical infrastructure) | Mandatory notification under Act L of 2025; possible ministerial review and conditions |
| Non‑EU / third‑country investor acquiring a minority stake in strategic assets | Minority acquisition that confers material influence over operations or access to security‑sensitive assets | Case‑by‑case assessment; filing may be required depending on nature of influence |
| Foreign‑owned buyer acquiring real estate tied to critical infrastructure | Purchase of land linked to defence installations, energy facilities or key logistics hubs | State pre‑emption right may apply; transfer may be blocked |
The definition of “foreign investor” under the Special FDI Regime is deliberately expansive. It encompasses not only non‑EEA natural and legal persons but also entities domiciled within the EEA that are ultimately owned or controlled by non‑EEA persons. This means that a Luxembourg holding company backed by a Middle Eastern sovereign wealth fund, or a Dutch SPV controlled by a Chinese industrial group, will typically be treated as a foreign investor for notification purposes.
Strategic sectors captured by the regime include, but are not limited to, energy production and distribution, electronic communications, financial services, defence and military technology, water supply and wastewater treatment, and certain categories of advanced manufacturing. Industry observers expect the Hungarian government to expand or refine these categories through implementing decrees as new security and economic policy priorities emerge.
Under the Hungary FDI regime M&A 2026 framework, notification is mandatory for covered transactions. Parties cannot close a notifiable deal without first obtaining clearance (or the expiry of the review period without a decision), because the regime has suspensory effect. Completing a transaction without the required clearance renders it null and void, and the competent minister may impose significant fines.
A complete filing typically includes the following elements:
The statutory review proceeds in phases. Practitioners should build the following planning buffers into their deal calendars:
| Step | Indicative statutory period | Practical buffer for deal planning |
|---|---|---|
| Initial ministerial review (Phase 1) | Up to 30 days from complete filing | Allow 45 days to account for information requests and resubmissions |
| Extended review (Phase 2, if triggered) | Additional period of up to 30 days (may vary based on complexity) | Allow a further 45 days; complex cases in energy or defence may take longer |
| Total end‑to‑end clearance window | Approximately 60 days in straightforward cases | Plan for 90–120 days in SPA long‑stop dates to preserve deal certainty |
Certain financing transactions have been carved out from the notification obligation following amendments to the regime. As noted in guidance published by Schoenherr, exemptions have been introduced for specific categories of financing arrangements, such as intra‑group loans and certain refinancing transactions, that do not involve a change of control or material influence. These exemptions are narrowly drawn, however, and should be confirmed on a case‑by‑case basis with Hungarian counsel before being relied upon.
| Date | Event | Practical implication for deals |
|---|---|---|
| 19 August 2025 | Act L of 2025 came into force | Special FDI Regime now statutory; all filings from this date must follow Act L |
| Late 2025 | Financing exemptions introduced | Narrow carve‑outs for certain lending and refinancing arrangements; verify applicability individually |
| 31 December 2026 | Transitional/applicability window noted in guidance | Monitor whether special provisions are extended, amended or supplemented by new implementing decrees |
The FDI review under Hungary’s regime directly impacts how cross‑border acquisitions in Hungary are structured, negotiated and documented. The suspensory nature of the regime, meaning a deal cannot close until clearance is obtained, shifts significant deal‑certainty risk onto both parties and demands careful contractual allocation of that risk.
The core challenge for buyers is the possibility that clearance is denied, delayed or granted subject to onerous conditions (such as divestiture of certain assets or restrictions on governance). Sellers, meanwhile, face the risk that a protracted review period leaves the target in operational limbo. Effective deal documentation should address the following mechanics:
The following illustrative drafting variants show how the FDI clearance condition can be tilted toward different commercial positions:
Indemnity language should address the scenario where a party’s failure to comply with FDI filing obligations causes loss. A typical clause will provide that if a Party fails to make a timely or accurate notification and, as a consequence, the transaction is unwound, declared void or subject to fines, that Party shall indemnify the other for all direct losses, costs and penalties incurred. Escrow release can be tied to confirmation from the competent ministry that all post‑closing FDI conditions have been satisfied.
Many cross‑border acquisitions in Hungary that trigger FDI review will also require merger control clearance from the Hungarian Competition Authority (GVH) and, in regulated sectors, separate approvals from the Hungarian Energy and Public Utility Regulatory Authority (MEKH) or the National Media and Infocommunications Authority (NMHH). The practical scheduling template below helps deal teams run these workstreams in parallel:
While the Hungary FDI regime M&A 2026 framework applies across all designated strategic sectors, certain industries face heightened scrutiny and additional regulatory overlays that materially increase deal complexity and timelines.
Energy transactions, including acquisitions of power‑generation assets, electricity and gas distribution networks, district heating systems and renewable‑energy project portfolios, sit at the top of the government’s sensitivity list. Deals in this sector should address the following additional considerations:
Acquisitions of telecommunications operators, data‑centre businesses and providers of critical digital infrastructure face a dual review: the FDI screening under Act L of 2025 and a security assessment increasingly influenced by EU‑level frameworks on 5G security and cybersecurity. Buyers should anticipate questions about the ultimate beneficial owner’s government affiliations, access to network‑level data, and the target’s role in national communications resilience.
Early indications suggest that deals involving non‑EU acquirers in the telecoms space are receiving longer Phase 2 reviews and more onerous conditions, including requirements to maintain data localisation, retain Hungarian senior management and submit to periodic post‑closing audits.
The following checklist distils the FDI review process into actionable items for both sides of a transaction, mapped against realistic timelines relative to signing.
This section provides a ready‑to‑use notification checklist and four sample contract clauses that address the key FDI‑related risks in cross‑border acquisitions in Hungary.
A comprehensive set of model FDI notification templates and contractual protections is being prepared as a companion resource to this guide.
The permanent codification of the Special FDI Regime through Act L of 2025 means that foreign investment screening is now a structural feature of every cross‑border deal involving a Hungarian target in a strategic sector. The compliance decision rule is straightforward: if the target operates in energy, telecoms or critical infrastructure, or if the buyer (or its ultimate beneficial owner) is a non‑EEA person, treat the transaction as caught until a formal assessment proves otherwise. Engage experienced Hungarian counsel at the pre‑signing stage, prepare the notification file in parallel with commercial due diligence, and build realistic review timelines into your SPA long‑stop dates.
In the current environment, proactive engagement with the competent ministry, including informal pre‑notification consultations where possible, consistently delivers faster and more predictable outcomes than a reactive approach.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Daniel Kaszas at DKKR Partners / ARCLIFFE, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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