Any buyer or seller entering a cross‑border M&A transaction that touches German operations faces a single, unavoidable compliance question: how do works council obligations in cross‑border M&A in Germany interact with automatic employee‑transfer rules, and what happens if the deal team gets the sequence wrong? In 2026, rising deal volumes and heightened regulatory scrutiny have elevated employee‑side risks, from Betriebsübergang liability to works council injunctions, to the top of every transaction checklist. This guide delivers a practical, deal‑stage framework covering the statutes, timelines, comparison tables and template language that in‑house counsel, HR directors and PE teams need to structure, negotiate and close German acquisitions compliantly.
The core compliance question in every German M&A deal is twofold: do employment contracts transfer automatically to the buyer, and when must the works council be consulted? The answer depends on deal structure (share deal versus asset deal), the scope of operations being transferred, and whether the transaction triggers operational changes that affect employees. Getting either answer wrong can result in injunctions, delayed closings and seven‑figure liability exposure.
Quick‑reference checklist, Buyers:
Quick‑reference checklist, Sellers:
Decision box: If the transaction involves any transfer of a German business unit, division or operational function, even as part of a broader cross‑border deal, assume that both §613a BGB and the Works Constitution Act (BetrVG) apply until local counsel confirms otherwise.
Three layers of law govern employee rights and works council obligations when a cross‑border M&A transaction affects German operations: German statutory law, EU directive frameworks and the evolving case law of the Bundesarbeitsgericht (Federal Labour Court). Understanding how these layers interact is essential for structuring any compliant deal.
Section 613a of the German Civil Code (Bürgerliches Gesetzbuch) is the primary statute governing the automatic transfer of employment relationships when a business or an identifiable part of a business changes hands. Under §613a(1) BGB, the new owner steps into all rights and obligations arising from existing employment contracts at the moment of transfer. Crucially, this transfer is mandatory and cannot be contracted away, any agreement between buyer and seller purporting to exclude §613a is void as against the employees concerned.
Key provisions practitioners must track:
The Works Constitution Act (Betriebsverfassungsgesetz, BetrVG) establishes the works council’s rights to information, consultation and, in certain circumstances, co‑determination in operational changes. The provisions most relevant to M&A transactions include:
Directive 2001/23/EC harmonises member‑state protections on transfers of undertakings across the EU, and §613a BGB is Germany’s implementation of that directive. For cross‑border mergers specifically, Directive 2005/56/EC (now consolidated in Directive 2017/1132) requires employee participation arrangements and information/consultation procedures that may supplement domestic works council obligations. Industry observers note that 2026 enforcement trends indicate increased regulatory attention to cross‑border restructuring, particularly where acquirers attempt to relocate functions post‑closing to jurisdictions with weaker employee protections.
The choice between a share deal and an asset deal has profound consequences for employee transfer obligations, works council consultation requirements and the allocation of employment liabilities in cross‑border M&A transactions in Germany. The comparison table below maps the key differences practitioners must evaluate during structuring.
| Issue | Share Deal | Asset Deal |
|---|---|---|
| Employee contract transfer | No automatic transfer, the employing company continues to exist; employees remain employed by the same legal entity; ownership of the entity changes at the shareholder level | §613a BGB applies if a business or identifiable business unit is transferred, employment contracts transfer automatically to the buyer by operation of law |
| Buyer assumption of liabilities | Buyer acquires the company including its balance sheet, all employment liabilities (pensions, accrued leave, pending disputes) remain with the company; SPA indemnities can limit economic exposure but do not discharge the company’s obligations | Buyer takes on employment‑related liabilities only for transferred employees; §613a(2) BGB imposes joint liability of transferor and transferee for obligations arising before the transfer date for a period of one year |
| Works council involvement | Works council consultation required if the transaction leads to operational changes (restructuring, site closures, headcount changes); pure change of shareholder may not trigger §111 BetrVG unless accompanied by operational measures | Works council consultation typically required, asset transfers involving a business unit almost always constitute operational changes triggering §111 BetrVG obligations and potential social‑plan negotiations |
| Collective agreements | Existing collective agreements continue to bind the company unchanged | Under §613a(1) sentence 2 BGB, collective agreement terms are incorporated into individual contracts and cannot be changed to the employee’s detriment for one year after transfer |
| Termination protection | Standard dismissal protection applies; no §613a(4) prohibition because no transfer occurs at employee level | §613a(4) BGB prohibits dismissals solely because of the transfer; dismissals for independent operational, personal or conduct‑related reasons remain permissible |
| Pension exposure | All pension obligations remain with the target company, buyer inherits them via the balance sheet | Pension obligations for transferred employees pass to the buyer; careful actuarial analysis required during due diligence |
When structuring a cross‑border acquisition of German operations, buyers should follow this six‑point structuring checklist:
Under §613a BGB, employment contracts transfer automatically when a business or an operationally identifiable part of a business passes from one employer to another by legal transaction. The transfer happens by operation of law, neither buyer nor seller consent is required, and neither party can prevent it by contractual arrangement once the statutory conditions are met.
The practical mechanics operate as follows: on the date of transfer, the buyer (Erwerber) replaces the seller (Veräußerer) as employer. All contractual terms, salary, working hours, benefits, notice periods, accrued entitlements, carry over unchanged. The seller and buyer are jointly and severally liable for obligations that arose before the transfer date, with the seller’s liability limited to a one‑year window following the transfer under §613a(2) BGB.
Employees must be notified in writing about the transfer, its reasons, and its consequences under §613a(5) BGB. The notification must be accurate and complete; deficient notices can restart the one‑month objection period under §613a(6) BGB, creating significant deal uncertainty even after closing.
Buyers sometimes attempt to structure transactions to avoid triggering §613a BGB, for example, by cherry‑picking assets while declining to take on the workforce. The Bundesarbeitsgericht has consistently held that the test is substantive, not formal: if the acquired assets, taken together, constitute an economic entity that retains its identity in the hands of the buyer, §613a BGB applies regardless of the parties’ stated intention. Deal teams should treat any attempt to circumvent employee transfer rules as a significant litigation and reputational risk.
Works council consultation is mandatory, not optional, whenever a cross‑border M&A transaction triggers operational changes affecting employees at a German establishment. Failure to consult, or consulting too late, can delay or derail a transaction.
Step‑by‑step timeline for works council consultation in M&A:
Not all establishments have a works council. Under the BetrVG, works councils are formed by employee initiative, not by employer mandate. However, where a works council exists, its rights cannot be bypassed. In establishments with more than 20 employees, §111 BetrVG obligations apply to operational changes. In establishments with more than 300 employees, the works council may engage external advisers at the employer’s expense under §111 sentence 2 BetrVG. Buyers unfamiliar with the German system should map works council presence establishment by establishment during due diligence.
The consequences of failing to meet works council obligations in cross‑border M&A in Germany are serious:
Thorough labour‑law due diligence is the buyer’s primary tool for identifying, quantifying and allocating employee‑related risks before signing. In Germany, due diligence must go well beyond reviewing standard employment contracts.
The first 90 days after closing determine whether the workforce risks identified during due diligence materialise or are managed successfully. The following integration checklist organises buyer actions into three phases.
| Phase | Timeframe | Key Actions |
|---|---|---|
| Immediate stabilisation | Days 1–7 | Issue Day‑1 employee communication (joint buyer/seller letter); confirm all §613a(5) notices have been delivered; hold introductory meeting with works council; confirm payroll continuity and benefits administration handover |
| Operational alignment | Days 8–30 | Complete works council consultation on any planned operational changes; begin reconciliation‑of‑interests discussions if restructuring is anticipated; harmonise reporting lines; confirm collective agreement application; assess key‑person retention risks and deploy retention instruments |
| Strategic integration | Days 31–90 | Negotiate social plan if redundancies are planned; begin harmonisation of employment terms (respecting §613a one‑year protection for collective agreement terms); integrate HR systems and data; conduct cultural‑integration workshops; finalise updated works agreements with works council |
Under §613a(1) sentence 2 BGB, terms derived from collective agreements or works agreements cannot be modified to the employee’s detriment for one year following the transfer. This one‑year “freeze” is a critical constraint on post‑acquisition integration. Buyers planning to harmonise compensation, benefits or working conditions across the combined organisation must sequence those changes to fall outside the statutory protection period, or negotiate equivalent replacement terms with the works council that the workforce accepts.
Where redundancies are unavoidable, the employer must negotiate a social plan with the works council under §112 BetrVG. Social plans typically include severance payments (commonly calculated as 0.5 to 1.0 monthly salary per year of service, though amounts vary by industry and negotiation), outplacement support, retraining budgets and extended notice periods. The costs can be significant, and buyers should model them into their post‑closing budget during due diligence.
The SPA is the primary contractual tool for allocating employee liabilities in cross‑border M&A in Germany. Well‑drafted employment representations and indemnities can shift defined risks to the party best positioned to manage them.
Essential drafting checklist for employment‑related SPA provisions:
Seller employment representation (summary):
“The Seller represents and warrants that Schedule [X] contains a complete and accurate list of all employees, their material terms of employment, applicable collective agreements and works agreements, and all pending or threatened employment‑related claims as of the date hereof.”
Betriebsübergang indemnity (summary):
“The Seller shall indemnify and hold harmless the Buyer against all losses, costs and liabilities arising from or in connection with (i) any failure to comply with the notification requirements of §613a(5) BGB prior to Closing, and (ii) any employee claims attributable to acts, omissions or conditions occurring prior to the Closing Date.”
Works council compliance covenant (summary):
“The Seller shall, prior to Closing, have initiated and conducted in good faith all works council information and consultation procedures required under §§111–112 BetrVG in respect of the Transaction and any related operational changes, and shall provide the Buyer with evidence of such compliance.”
The following templates provide starting‑point language that deal teams can adapt to specific transaction requirements. Each template should be reviewed and localised by German‑qualified labour counsel before use.
Template 1, Works council information letter (§111 BetrVG):
“Dear Members of the Works Council,
Pursuant to §111 BetrVG, we hereby inform you that [Company] has entered into a [share/asset] purchase agreement with [Buyer] dated [Date]. The transaction involves [brief description of operational changes]. We wish to consult with you regarding the planned measures and their consequences for employees. We propose an initial consultation meeting on [Date] and will provide the following documentation: [list of enclosures, transaction summary, organisational chart, affected employee list, proposed timeline]. We look forward to a constructive dialogue.”
Template 2, Employee notification under §613a(5) BGB:
“Dear [Employee Name],
We wish to inform you that the business unit in which you are employed will transfer to [Buyer Name] with effect from [Transfer Date]. The reasons for this transfer are [brief description]. Following the transfer, your employment relationship will continue with [Buyer Name] on the same terms and conditions. [Description of legal, economic and social consequences and any planned measures]. You have the right to object to this transfer in writing within one month of receipt of this notification, pursuant to §613a(6) BGB. An objection will result in your employment relationship remaining with [Seller Name].”
Template 3, SPA representation and indemnity clause (employment):
“The Seller represents that (a) all material employment relationships are set out in Schedule [X]; (b) no works council consultation obligations remain outstanding in connection with the Transaction; and (c) all employee notifications required under §613a(5) BGB have been or will be delivered prior to Closing in the form set out in Schedule [Y]. The Seller shall indemnify the Buyer against any and all losses arising from a breach of the foregoing representations.”
Navigating works council obligations in cross‑border M&A in Germany requires deal teams to engage early, structure carefully and document thoroughly. The interplay between §613a BGB, the BetrVG and EU directive frameworks creates a compliance environment where procedural missteps, a late notification, an incomplete information pack, a skipped consultation round, can translate directly into injunctions, cost escalation and deal delay. Buyers and sellers who build employee‑side compliance into their transaction timeline from the letter‑of‑intent stage, rather than treating it as a post‑signing afterthought, consistently achieve faster closings and smoother integrations. For jurisdiction‑specific guidance on cross‑border M&A involving German operations, consult a qualified specialist through the Global Law Experts lawyer directory.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Tim Schwarzburg at KUNZ.law, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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