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The Czech competition law reform 2026 represents the most ambitious overhaul of the country’s antitrust framework in over two decades, and every business operating in the Czech market needs to act now. In April 2026, the Czech Competition Authority (Úřad pro ochranu hospodářské soutěže, or ÚOHS) submitted a landmark draft amendment to the Act on the Protection of Competition to the Chamber of Deputies, proposing sweeping new powers that span merger control, personal liability for managers, and a novel market intervention instrument. The draft targets an effective date of 1 January 2027, a timeline that industry observers consider highly ambitious given the scope and complexity of the reforms.
With the legislative clock ticking, compliance officers, in-house counsel and M&A teams must begin preparing immediately.
Top 5 immediate actions for Czech businesses:
The ÚOHS draft amendment introduces fundamental changes across six interconnected areas. Taken together, these proposals would equip the Czech regulator with a substantially expanded enforcement toolkit, aligning Czech competition law more closely with EU-level instruments and the enforcement models seen in jurisdictions such as the United Kingdom and Germany.
| Area | Current Position | Proposed Change Under 2026 Draft |
|---|---|---|
| Merger control thresholds | Fixed monetary turnover thresholds set over 20 years ago; no call-in mechanism | Raised turnover thresholds reflecting current market values; new call-in model allowing ÚOHS to require notification of below-threshold concentrations |
| Manager liability | Limited administrative exposure; sanctions directed primarily at the undertaking | Explicit personal liability for managers directly responsible for specific competition breaches |
| Restrictive agreements | National notification and exemption system | Abolition of notification system; self-assessment model aligned with EU approach |
| Market intervention | Traditional enforcement tools (fines, injunctions) triggered by proven infringements | New market intervention instrument with power to impose structural or behavioural remedies where market failure is identified |
| Fines for cartels | Existing caps on administrative fines | Increased maximum fines; eased evidentiary standards for certain infringement types |
| Sectoral investigations | Limited formal powers for market studies | Full sectoral investigation competence with binding information requests |
The Czech Competition Act amendment 2026 will apply to all undertakings active on the Czech market, regardless of their place of incorporation. This includes domestic companies, foreign companies operating through branches or subsidiaries, joint ventures with a Czech nexus, and, critically for deal teams, any entity involved in a concentration that produces effects in the Czech Republic. The proposed manager liability provisions will extend to statutory directors, board members and senior officers who bear direct responsibility for the relevant conduct.
While the draft targets an effective date of 1 January 2027, the legislative timetable is widely regarded as ambitious. The bill must pass three readings in the Chamber of Deputies and then be approved by the Senate before presidential signature. Early indications suggest that the realistic window for full enactment may extend into mid-2027, depending on the pace of parliamentary debate and the volume of proposed amendments.
| Date / Period | Event | Action for Business |
|---|---|---|
| April 2026 | ÚOHS submits draft amendment to the Chamber of Deputies | Begin internal impact assessment; brief leadership team |
| Q2–Q3 2026 | First and second readings; committee review and public commentary period | Monitor amendments; update merger-control policies and deal playbooks |
| Q4 2026 | Third reading and Senate consideration (if on schedule) | Finalise compliance programme updates; conduct training |
| 1 January 2027 (target) | Proposed effective date | All new processes live; ensure filing readiness for transactions |
| Mid-2027 (likely practical effect) | Realistic effective date if parliamentary schedule slips | Continue monitoring; treat compliance updates as urgent regardless |
The practical advice for businesses is clear: do not wait for final enactment. The scope of changes is significant enough that antitrust compliance in the Czech Republic must be updated now, in parallel with the legislative process.
The merger control provisions represent one of the most consequential elements of the Czech competition law reform 2026. The existing monetary turnover thresholds, which have remained static for over two decades, will be raised to better reflect current market conditions. The practical effect will be to reduce the number of minor transactions requiring mandatory notification, while ensuring that the ÚOHS retains oversight of genuinely significant deals.
However, the introduction of a call-in model is the critical innovation. Under the proposed regime, the ÚOHS will have the power to require notification of concentrations that fall below the revised thresholds but that could, in the authority’s assessment, significantly affect competition in the Czech market. This mechanism mirrors similar instruments in jurisdictions such as Germany and Sweden and represents a paradigm shift for Czech merger control 2026: even “small” deals will no longer be automatically safe.
The interplay with EU merger rules should also be considered carefully. Transactions with an EU dimension remain subject to the European Commission’s exclusive jurisdiction under the EU Merger Regulation. However, deals that do not meet EU thresholds but produce effects in the Czech Republic will be squarely within the scope of the new national call-in power. Cross-border M&A teams must therefore coordinate multi-jurisdictional filings even more carefully than before.
| Stage of Deal | Required Competition Action | Recommended Document / Evidence to Retain |
|---|---|---|
| Pre-signing / due diligence | Assess whether revised thresholds are met; evaluate call-in risk | Turnover calculations for all parties; internal market-share assessments; correspondence with advisers on competitive overlaps |
| Signing / exchange | Include competition-clearance closing condition; consider break-fee allocation for call-in scenarios | SPA drafts with competition conditions; board minutes approving deal structure |
| Pre-notification / filing | Prepare merger notification form; gather market data required by ÚOHS | Notification dossier; supporting market analyses; third-party correspondence |
| Review period | Respond to ÚOHS information requests; do not implement the transaction pending clearance | All ÚOHS correspondence; remedies proposals (if applicable) |
| Post-clearance / closing | Verify all conditions satisfied; integrate compliance obligations | Clearance decision; evidence of condition compliance; integration plan with competition-law carve-outs |
M&A advisers should now build call-in risk into every deal involving Czech market effects. The likely practical effect will be an increase in the use of competition-clearance conditions precedent, and deal teams should expect longer timetables for transactions that fall near, but technically below, the revised thresholds. Warranties and indemnities related to competition exposure should be reviewed and, where necessary, expanded to cover the new call-in scenario. Break fees should explicitly address the possibility that a transaction is called in after signing but before closing, allocating the commercial risk between buyer and seller with appropriate clarity.
The ÚOHS draft amendment proposes a significant upgrade to the authority’s enforcement toolkit. Maximum fines for cartel conduct and abuse of dominance in the Czech Republic are set to increase, and the evidence standards for certain infringement types may be relaxed. The combined effect is that the cost of non-compliance will rise substantially.
For businesses engaged in distribution agreements, joint purchasing, information exchanges or other horizontal or vertical cooperation, the shift to a self-assessment model for restrictive agreements adds a further layer of risk. Without the safety net of a national notification and exemption system, companies must be confident that their agreements comply with both Czech and EU competition law, or risk fines after the fact.
The personal liability provisions are among the most closely watched elements of the reform. Under the proposed rules, statutory directors, board members and senior officers could face individual sanctions where they bear direct responsibility for a competition law breach. This is a fundamental shift from the current position, where enforcement action is directed primarily at the undertaking itself.
Industry observers expect the following practical consequences:
The proposed market intervention instrument is arguably the most novel feature of the Czech competition law reform 2026. It would allow the ÚOHS to intervene in markets that exhibit signs of failure, such as persistently high concentration, barriers to entry, or unexplained pricing patterns, even where no individual undertaking has committed a proven infringement.
Possible remedies under this power could include structural measures (for example, requiring divestitures) or behavioural obligations (such as mandated access to essential facilities or data). The instrument draws on precedents from UK competition law, where the Competition and Markets Authority holds similar market investigation powers.
Sectors most likely to attract early attention include digital markets, energy, telecommunications and financial services, where market concentration and consumer detriment concerns are already prominent. Businesses in these sectors should take preparatory steps now:
Antitrust compliance in the Czech Republic demands a structured response to the draft amendment. The following checklist is designed for in-house counsel and compliance officers and is organised by time horizon. Treat these as minimum actions, sector-specific risks may require additional steps.
| Time Horizon | Action | Owner |
|---|---|---|
| 0–14 days | Board briefing memo | General counsel / compliance officer |
| 0–14 days | Transaction audit | M&A team / deal counsel |
| 0–14 days | Document-hold notice | Legal / IT |
| 0–14 days | Engage external counsel | General counsel |
| 30–90 days | Update merger-control policies | Compliance officer / M&A team |
| 30–90 days | Compliance training | HR / legal |
| 30–90 days | Deal playbook revision | Legal / external counsel |
| 30–90 days | Vendor due diligence pack | Corporate development / legal |
| 3–12 months | Full compliance audit | Compliance officer / external counsel |
| 3–12 months | Contract updates | Commercial / legal teams |
| 3–12 months | Board reporting and KPIs | General counsel / board secretary |
The following worked examples illustrate how the proposed rules may apply in practice. These are indicative, final obligations will depend on the enacted text, but they offer a useful framework for planning.
A German manufacturer agrees to acquire a Czech distributor. Combined turnover falls below the revised thresholds, but the target holds a significant share of the Czech market in a concentrated sector.
ÚOHS officers arrive at the company’s premises with an inspection authorisation, requesting access to documents, emails and mobile phones.
The company operates a selective distribution network with fixed resale prices and territorial restrictions.
The Czech competition law reform 2026 will reshape the regulatory landscape for every business with a Czech market presence. The combination of expanded enforcement powers, personal liability for managers, a new market intervention instrument and overhauled merger control thresholds creates a fundamentally different compliance environment. Businesses that prepare now, by updating policies, training leadership and revising deal processes, will be best positioned to navigate the transition. For specialist guidance, explore the competition practice area or browse the Czech Republic lawyer directory on Global Law Experts.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact LENKA ČÍŽKOVÁ at Havlík Švorčík and Partners, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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