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Last updated: 19 May 2026
From 1 January 2026, Hungary’s revised reporting framework for long-term service contracts (tartós megbízási jogviszony) imposes new obligations on every business that engages contractors on a continuing basis. The changes affect Hungarian registered companies, local branches of foreign firms, and the individual contractors who serve them, creating fresh compliance, payroll‑tax and reclassification risks that demand immediate attention. This practical guide on long-term service contracts Hungary walks general counsel, HR directors, CFOs and independent contractors through the 2026 rules step by step: what must be reported, who reports it, how to draft contract clauses that reduce reclassification exposure, and what documentation to keep for an audit.
Whether you are reviewing an existing contractor roster or onboarding a new service provider, the seven‑step workflow and sample clause bank below will help you stay compliant.
Under Hungary’s Civil Code (Act V of 2013), a megbízási szerződés (mandate or service contract) becomes a tartós megbízási jogviszony, a long‑term service relationship, when the engagement exhibits certain hallmarks of continuity, economic dependence and duration. The 2026 amendments did not create an entirely new contract type; instead, they tightened the reporting and classification rules that surround relationships already recognised in Hungarian civil and labour law.
Industry observers expect the practical effect to be a far sharper regulatory focus on arrangements where a contractor performs services on a continuous basis for a single payer, mirroring the economic substance of employment. For the purposes of the new reporting obligation, the key question is whether the relationship meets the threshold tests summarised below.
Why it matters: Misidentifying a long‑term service relationship means missing the reporting deadline, and exposing both payer and contractor to reclassification, retroactive tax assessments and administrative penalties.
The 2026 reporting obligations Hungary framework places the primary duty on the payer, the entity that commissions and pays for the services, rather than on the individual contractor. The payer must submit a structured notification to the Hungarian Tax and Customs Administration (NAV, Nemzeti Adó‑ és Vámhivatal) containing prescribed data fields about the contractor and the nature of the engagement.
While official guidance continues to be refined, reporting long-term contracts under the 2026 rules requires the payer to supply at least the following information:
| Entity type | Must report? | Practical notes / special rules |
|---|---|---|
| Hungarian registered company (payer) | Yes | Primary reporting obligation; payroll and tax team should lead the submission to NAV. |
| Branch of a foreign company operating in Hungary | Yes (if paying for services performed in Hungary) | The local branch or fiscal representative must file; confirm the authorised signatory with NAV. |
| Individual contractor (independent) | No (the payer reports) | However, contractors must keep their own records and should verify that the payer has filed correctly. |
Where a foreign‑resident contractor provides continuous services to a Hungarian payer, the reporting obligation still rests with the Hungarian entity. Additional considerations apply: the payer should check whether the contractor holds a valid residence permit or work authorisation (see OIF guidance for employers) and whether double‑taxation treaties affect withholding obligations. For intra‑group secondments, the host entity in Hungary is generally regarded as the payer for reporting purposes, even if the contractor’s employment contract sits with a foreign group company.
The legislative amendments took effect on 1 January 2026. The table below sets out the critical milestones that payers and contractors should track.
| Milestone | Date | Action required |
|---|---|---|
| Legislation effective | 1 January 2026 | All new long‑term service contracts entered into from this date are subject to the reporting rules from inception. |
| Transitional reporting window for pre‑existing contracts | By 30 June 2026 (expected) | Contracts that were already in force before 1 January 2026 and that meet the long‑term threshold must be reported within the transitional window. |
| First periodic reporting deadline | Ongoing (within 15 days of contract start or material amendment) | Payers must file an initial notification with NAV within 15 days of concluding or materially amending a qualifying contract. |
| Annual reconciliation | 31 January each year (anticipated) | An annual summary return confirming the status, fees paid and classification indicators for each reported contract. |
What to do now: Businesses that have not yet filed for pre‑existing long-term service contracts Hungary should treat the transitional window as the immediate priority and begin preparing documentation without delay.
The 2026 reporting rules do not operate in isolation. They sit alongside Hungary’s existing legal framework for distinguishing genuine independent contractor relationships from disguised employment. When NAV receives a report, the data it contains may itself trigger a classification review, making accurate self‑assessment essential.
Hungarian authorities, drawing on the Labour Code (Act I of 2012), the Civil Code (Act V of 2013) and NAV enforcement practice, apply a multi‑factor test. The CMS Expert Guide to Labour Law in Hungary and academic scholarship confirm that no single factor is decisive; instead, the overall picture determines classification.
| Indicator | Points toward employee | Points toward contractor |
|---|---|---|
| Supervision and control | Payer dictates how, when and where work is done | Contractor controls method and schedule |
| Substitution | Personal service required; no right to send a substitute | Contractor may delegate or subcontract |
| Economic dependence | Contractor derives >75 % of income from one payer | Multiple clients; diversified revenue |
| Tools and equipment | Payer supplies workspace, laptop, software | Contractor uses own tools and premises |
| Integration into organisation | Contractor has company email, attends staff meetings, listed on org chart | Works externally with limited integration |
| Remuneration | Fixed monthly salary regardless of output | Fee per project, milestone or deliverable |
| Risk and liability | Payer bears commercial risk | Contractor bears own business risk, carries insurance |
If NAV or a labour inspectorate determines that a reported long‑term service contract is in substance an employment relationship, the financial consequences are significant:
The following long term contract compliance checklist translates the legal requirements into an actionable internal workflow. Each step identifies the responsible team and the key deliverable.
Well‑drafted clauses cannot by themselves guarantee contractor status, substance always prevails over form. However, clear contractual language aligned with the genuine commercial reality of the relationship provides critical evidence in the event of an audit. The following sample clauses are offered as starting points for contract drafting Hungary and should be adapted to each engagement with the assistance of local counsel.
If a classification risk assessment scores a relationship as high risk, particularly where multiple indicators (personal service required, single‑client dependence, payer supervision, fixed monthly pay) all point toward employment, amending the contract alone is unlikely to be sufficient. In such cases, the commercially and legally prudent step is to offer the individual an employment contract under the Labour Code. Early indications suggest that NAV will take a dim view of arrangements where contract wording was changed cosmetically while the day‑to‑day substance of the relationship remained unchanged.
The primary enforcement authority for the 2026 reporting rules is NAV, which may also share data with the labour inspectorate. Non‑compliance can trigger several categories of consequence:
Practical mitigation if audited: Cooperate promptly with the inspecting authority, provide a complete and organised contract file (see the audit‑evidence section below), and consider whether a voluntary disclosure, correcting a reporting omission before it is identified by NAV, may reduce penalty exposure.
Robust documentation is the single most effective defence in a classification or reporting audit. The following checklist covers the records that every payer and contractor should maintain.
Retention period: Industry observers recommend retaining all of the above documentation for a minimum of five years after the end of the contract or the last reporting period, whichever is later. This aligns with the general statute of limitations for Hungarian tax assessments.
When NAV or a labour inspector issues an information request, respond within the stated deadline using a structured cover letter that lists every document provided, references the relevant contract and reporting period, and includes a contact person for follow‑up questions. Attach the full contract file in indexed, searchable format (PDF with bookmarks or a numbered bundle). A well‑organised response signals compliance culture and can influence the authority’s approach.
The 2026 reporting rules for long-term service contracts Hungary represent a significant shift in how the authorities monitor, and are likely to challenge, contractor engagements. Compliance is not optional, and the consequences of inaction extend well beyond administrative fines to include retroactive tax bills, reclassification orders and operational disruption. The seven‑step workflow, classification indicator table and sample clause bank in this guide give general counsel, HR leads and finance teams a structured starting point. Early indications suggest that businesses which move quickly to audit their contractor relationships, amend their contracts where necessary and file on time will be best positioned when NAV begins its first wave of reviews.
For tailored advice on your organisation’s specific exposures, consult a qualified Hungarian contract lawyer through the Global Law Experts Hungary lawyer directory.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Henrietta Virág Burus at Dr. Burus Henrietta Virág Law Office, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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