Since April 8, 2026, corporate criminal liability in Belgium operates under a fundamentally different legal framework. The New Belgian Criminal Code replaces the 1867 code with a modernised architecture that broadens the organisational-fault test, introduces an eight-level sanctions grid, and dramatically increases the financial and operational penalties that prosecutors can seek against legal entities. For general counsel, compliance officers, and board directors of companies operating in or with exposure to Belgium, the reform demands immediate action, from reviewing internal compliance programmes to stress-testing investigation-response protocols against the standards that OLAF, EPPO, FSMA, and national prosecutors will now apply.
The new regime is already in force. Companies that delay their compliance response risk criminal prosecution under standards that are materially stricter than those that applied before April 2026. Below are the priority takeaways every board and general counsel should internalise this quarter.
The New Belgian Criminal Code, published in the Moniteur belge and entering into force on April 8, 2026, represents the most significant overhaul of Belgian criminal law in over 150 years. For companies, the most consequential changes concern how corporate liability Belgium is established, how penalties are calculated, and how the new sanctions architecture interacts with the Belgian Companies and Associations Code (CAC).
| Date | Event | Practical Implication for Companies |
|---|---|---|
| October 2018 – 2024 | Drafting and parliamentary process; expert commissions prepare the new Code text | Early notice to compliance teams, scope of reform anticipated; companies with proactive programmes began gap analyses |
| January 1, 2026 | Certain statutory multiplier changes and administrative fine calibrations take effect across multiple codes | Companies should verify that penalty multipliers used in financial calculations (including those under the CAC) have been updated in internal risk assessments |
| April 8, 2026 | New Belgian Criminal Code enters into force in its entirety | Full organisational-fault test and eight-level sanctions grid now applicable, immediate compliance review required for every company with Belgian operations or exposure |
Under the previous regime, corporate criminal liability Belgium was subject to important restrictions: certain offences could only be prosecuted against natural persons, and the so-called “decumulation rule” prevented the simultaneous conviction of a company and the natural person who acted on its behalf where the fault was exclusively attributable to that individual. The New Belgian Criminal Code removes these constraints. Key changes include:
The New Belgian Criminal Code introduces a unified sanctions grid comprising eight levels, each corresponding to a range of penalties calibrated by offence severity. For legal entities, penalties at each level include criminal fines (often with statutory multipliers), confiscation of proceeds and instrumentalities of the offence, and, at the higher levels, dissolution of the entity, prohibition from public procurement, and temporary or permanent closure of establishments.
The grid operates in parallel for natural persons and legal entities, but the applicable penalties differ. Where a natural person faces imprisonment, the legal entity faces an equivalent fine within the prescribed range for that grid level. The conversion mechanism ensures that the severity of the corporate penalty mirrors what a natural person would face for the same offence, but translated into financial and operational consequences. Industry observers expect that prosecutors will increasingly seek the higher-end penalties permitted under each level to establish deterrent precedent during the early enforcement period of the new Code.
| Grid Level | Typical Offences | Corporate Penalty Range & Operational Impact |
|---|---|---|
| Level 1 (lowest) | Minor regulatory infractions, low-harm offences | Criminal fine at the lowest statutory range; limited operational disruption |
| Level 2 | Simple fraud, minor environmental violations | Moderate fines; possible confiscation of direct proceeds |
| Level 3 | Tax fraud (non-aggravated), breach of professional obligations | Substantial fines with multiplier effect; confiscation likely |
| Level 4 | Aggravated fraud, corruption without public-sector element | Significant fines; potential temporary exclusion from public procurement |
| Level 5 | Public corruption, serious insider trading, large-scale environmental offences | High fines; confiscation of assets; possible closure of specific establishments |
| Level 6 | Organised fraud, serious money laundering | Very high fines; mandatory confiscation; possible prohibition from specified activities |
| Level 7 | Terrorism financing, large-scale organised crime facilitation | Maximum-range fines; dissolution of the entity becomes available as a sanction |
| Level 8 (highest) | Offences of exceptional gravity with irreparable societal harm | Full penalty range including dissolution, permanent prohibitions, and confiscation of all assets related to the offence |
Belgian criminal fines are subject to statutory multipliers (opdecimes/décimes additionnels) that significantly increase the nominal amounts stated in the Code. Following the multiplier calibrations that took effect on January 1, 2026, the practical effect is that a stated fine of €1,000 may translate into an actually payable fine many times that amount. Companies must factor these multipliers into any risk quantification exercise. Confiscation, of proceeds, assets used in the offence, and equivalent value, is now systematically available at every grid level and is mandatory at the higher levels, making it a material threat to corporate balance sheets.
The organisational-fault test is the doctrinal cornerstone of corporate criminal liability Belgium under the new Code. It determines when a company, as distinct from its individual officers, bears criminal responsibility. The test is broader than its predecessor and draws on principles familiar from Dutch and French corporate criminal law, while incorporating distinctly Belgian features.
A legal entity is criminally liable where the offence has an intrinsic connection to the realisation of the entity’s purpose or the protection of its interests, or where the facts demonstrate that the offence was committed on behalf of the entity. Critically, the new Code establishes that liability can arise from:
Prosecutors building a case for corporate liability Belgium under the organisational-fault test will typically focus on the following categories of evidence:
Under the new Code, the actions or omissions of directors and senior managers are imputed to the legal entity where those persons acted within the scope of their authority or in the course of the entity’s activities. The abolition of the decumulation rule means there is no “either/or” analysis: the company is liable for the structural or governance failure that made the offence possible, and the director is personally liable for the decision or omission attributable to them. Early indications suggest that prosecutors will routinely pursue both tracks in parallel for serious white-collar crime Belgium cases.
Individual directors face direct criminal exposure under the new Code for offences committed in the course of corporate activities. This exposure is not limited to executive directors; non-executive board members and members of audit committees can face prosecution where the evidence shows a failure in their oversight duties that contributed to the offence.
The principal defences available to directors include:
When a board discovers, or is alerted to, potential criminal conduct within the organisation, the following steps should be taken immediately and documented in formal board minutes:
Directors’ and Officers’ (D&O) insurance policies typically exclude cover for criminal fines and penalties, and many Belgian policies contain exclusions for deliberate or fraudulent conduct. Boards should review their D&O coverage in light of the new Code to understand the limits of indemnification, particularly where investigation costs, which may be covered, are concerned. The likely practical effect of the reform will be increased D&O premiums and narrower coverage terms for Belgian-exposed directors during 2026 and 2027.
The investigation of corporate fraud investigations in Belgium involves multiple actors, each with distinct jurisdiction and powers. Understanding which body is likely to lead, and how they coordinate, is essential for any effective response strategy.
On receipt of a search warrant, dawn-raid notification, or formal request for information, companies must immediately activate their investigation-response protocol. Critical steps include:
Self-reporting is not mandatory under Belgian law for most offences, but voluntary cooperation, including proactive self-reporting, is increasingly recognised as a mitigating factor in prosecutorial decision-making and sentencing. The calculus depends on the specific facts: where EU funds are involved and OLAF or EPPO is likely to discover the issue independently, early self-reporting can materially improve the company’s negotiating position.
Multinational companies operating in Belgium must be aware that EPPO investigations can span multiple EU Member States simultaneously, and OLAF regularly coordinates with national authorities across jurisdictions. Companies that are subject to parallel investigations in Belgium and other countries should ensure that their legal strategy is coordinated across borders to avoid inadvertent admissions or inconsistent positions.
The organisational-fault test under the new Code makes the quality of a company’s compliance programme the central determinant of corporate liability Belgium risk. Below is a phased compliance checklist Belgium designed for boards and in-house teams to implement immediately.
Immediate actions (within 30 days):
Short-term actions (within 3 months):
Medium-term actions (within 6–12 months):
A compliance programme that exists on paper but is not actively monitored and tested will not withstand prosecutorial scrutiny under the organisational-fault test. Companies should track and document the following key performance indicators:
Where misconduct is discovered or an investigation is initiated, companies face critical strategic decisions about cooperation, remediation, and settlement. The new Code does not introduce a formal deferred prosecution agreement (DPA) framework of the kind seen in the United Kingdom or the United States, but Belgian prosecutors have significant discretion in how they handle corporate cases, and cooperation can yield tangible benefits.
A credible remediation plan should address the following elements, documented and presented to prosecutors or regulators as evidence of genuine corrective action:
Companies that fail to remediate, or that present remediation plans without genuine substance, face the most severe outcomes under the sanctions grid, including dissolution at Levels 7 and 8. Industry observers expect Belgian prosecutors to adopt an increasingly structured approach to evaluating remediation efforts during the early years of the new Code’s application.
The following hypothetical scenarios illustrate how the organisational-fault test and the sanctions grid may apply in practice under the new regime.
The New Belgian Criminal Code has fundamentally reshaped corporate criminal liability Belgium. The broader organisational-fault test, the eight-level sanctions grid, and the abolition of the decumulation rule together create a legal environment in which every company with Belgian operations or exposure must take compliance seriously, not as a theoretical exercise, but as an operational imperative. Boards that act now to review their compliance programmes, prepare investigation-response protocols, and document their governance decisions will be in the strongest position to defend against prosecution and to mitigate penalties if proceedings are initiated.
The companies that delay will find themselves exposed to a sanctions regime that is, by design, more severe, more systematic, and more difficult to navigate than anything Belgian criminal law has applied before. For companies seeking specialist guidance on the new regime, the Global Law Experts lawyer directory connects organisations with experienced Belgian white-collar crime practitioners.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Dirk Libotte at Arcas Law, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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