Our Expert in Bulgaria
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Bulgaria officially adopted the euro on 1 January 2026, replacing the Bulgarian lev (BGN) and triggering a cascade of corporate obligations that every company operating in the country must now address. From converting registered capital and updating articles of association to restating financial accounts, amending contracts and reconfiguring payroll systems, the scope of Bulgaria euro transition compliance work is substantial. This practical checklist consolidates every action that CFOs, company secretaries, general counsel and SME owners need to complete, organised by function, entity type and deadline, so that no filing is missed and no legal exposure is created by inaction.
The euro became Bulgaria’s sole legal tender on 1 January 2026. All monetary amounts expressed in Bulgarian leva, in legislation, contracts, corporate documents and accounting records, must now be read, interpreted and, where necessary, formally converted into euros. The irrevocably fixed conversion rate, established when Bulgaria joined the eurozone, governs every translation from BGN to EUR. For companies, this is not merely an accounting exercise: it touches corporate governance, commercial relationships, employment terms and regulatory filings.
The following six actions should be treated as immediate priorities, ideally completed within 30 days of the changeover date:
Yes, Bulgarian companies must ensure their registered capital is expressed in euros following euro adoption, though the mechanism differs by entity type.
Under the Euro Adoption Act, all references to the Bulgarian lev in statutory instruments and corporate documents are deemed automatically converted at the irrevocably fixed exchange rate. In practice, this means that the Commercial Register will treat existing BGN capital figures as their EUR equivalents without a company needing to take any affirmative step for the “deemed” conversion to take legal effect. However, to ensure clarity in official records and to eliminate discrepancies when issuing share certificates, applying for financing or entering transactions, companies should file a formal amendment reflecting the EUR-denominated capital figure.
The irrevocably fixed rate is applied to convert the nominal value of each share or partnership interest. The resulting EUR figure is then rounded according to the rules prescribed by the Euro Adoption Act, generally to the nearest cent, with specific provisions to prevent rounding from reducing total capital below the statutory minimum.
The process for updating registered capital at the Commercial Register typically involves the following steps:
The following is indicative wording that can be adapted for a shareholders’ resolution of an OOD:
“RESOLVED that, in connection with the adoption of the euro as the official currency of the Republic of Bulgaria effective 1 January 2026, the registered capital of [Company Name] OOD, previously stated as BGN [amount], shall be re-denominated to EUR [converted amount] at the irrevocably fixed exchange rate. The nominal value of each share in the capital shall accordingly be EUR [value per share]. The articles of association shall be amended to reflect the foregoing.”
| Entity type | Is a formal amendment required? | Typical filing route |
|---|---|---|
| OOD (private limited company) | Recommended, deemed conversion applies by law, but a formal filing eliminates ambiguity in share ledger and financing documentation | Shareholder resolution + updated articles filed at the Commercial Register |
| AD (joint stock company) | Generally required, par value of shares must be restated in EUR, and share certificates re-issued or endorsed | General assembly resolution (notarised) + amended statutes + Commercial Register filing |
| Branch of a foreign company | Formal amendment of the branch’s registered particulars is advisable where the local registration references BGN figures | Application to the Commercial Register by the branch manager; parent company board resolution may be needed |
Every corporate document that contains a reference to the Bulgarian lev should be reviewed and, where necessary, formally amended to reflect the euro.
For an OOD, amending the articles of association to update articles of association Bulgaria-wide after the euro changeover typically requires a resolution adopted by a majority representing more than three-quarters of the company’s capital, unless the articles provide otherwise. For an AD, amendments to the statutes require a qualified majority at a general assembly meeting, with notarisation of the minutes. Companies should check whether their existing constitutive documents prescribe a different threshold.
“Article [X] of the Articles of Association is hereby amended to read as follows: ‘The registered capital of the Company is EUR [amount], divided into [number] shares, each with a nominal value of EUR [value].’”
Where additional provisions reference BGN, for instance, caps on managing director authority, dividend thresholds or reserves, each such clause should be restated in EUR using the fixed conversion rate.
Updated constitutive documents are filed at the Bulgarian Commercial Register (part of the Registry Agency). Depending on the nature of the company’s activities, notifications may also need to be sent to sector-specific regulators (e.g., the Financial Supervision Commission for insurance or investment companies) and to the company’s banks to update signature cards and authority limits.
Euro adoption fundamentally changes the reporting currency for all Bulgarian entities, requiring a coordinated transition across statutory accounts, tax returns and management reporting.
From the 2026 financial year onward, all statutory financial statements must be prepared in euros. Companies must restate opening balances as at 1 January 2026 from BGN to EUR at the fixed conversion rate. Comparative figures for the prior year should likewise be translated. The rounding rules prescribed by the Euro Adoption Act apply, amounts are generally rounded to the nearest cent, and total equity must not be reduced as a result of rounding adjustments. Any immaterial rounding differences are typically recognised in retained earnings or a designated rounding reserve.
Corporate income tax returns, advance tax instalments and all filings with the National Revenue Agency (NRA) must now be denominated in euros. For VAT, all invoices issued from 1 January 2026 must state amounts in EUR. During a transitional period, dual display of prices (BGN and EUR) may be required for consumer-facing transactions as a consumer protection measure, but the legally operative amount on a VAT invoice is the EUR figure. Companies should update their ERP and invoicing software to ensure that tax identification numbers, invoice templates and automatic calculations reflect the new currency.
| Obligation | Action for small companies | Action for large groups |
|---|---|---|
| Restate opening balances | Convert all ledger balances at the fixed rate; post rounding adjustment to retained earnings | Consolidation-level restatement; eliminate inter-company BGN balances; group rounding policy |
| Chart of accounts migration | Update currency code in accounting software; reconfigure bank feeds | Coordinate across subsidiaries; align chart of accounts with group EUR reporting |
| Statutory audit | Auditor reviews conversion methodology and rounding adjustments | Group auditor confirms consistent application of conversion rate across all Bulgarian entities |
| VAT invoicing | Issue invoices in EUR; update invoice templates and NRA e-filing system settings | Centralised invoicing platforms must switch base currency; coordinate with shared service centres |
| Transfer pricing documentation | Generally not applicable | Update benchmarking studies and intercompany agreements to EUR; restate comparable data |
Entities reporting under IFRS should note that the change in functional currency from BGN to EUR is not a change in accounting policy, it is a factual change resulting from the legal adoption of a new currency. No restatement under IAS 8 is required. Instead, IAS 21 governs the translation of comparative periods. Entities applying Bulgarian National Accounting Standards follow analogous guidance issued by the Ministry of Finance.
Existing contracts denominated in BGN remain legally valid, the lev amounts are automatically deemed to be their EUR equivalents at the fixed rate. However, relying solely on the statutory deeming provision creates practical risks, particularly for long-term agreements.
“With effect from 1 January 2026, all references in this Agreement to ‘BGN’ or ‘Bulgarian leva’ shall be read and construed as references to ‘EUR’ or ‘euro’, converted at the irrevocably fixed exchange rate established upon the Republic of Bulgaria’s adoption of the euro. All payment obligations, thresholds and monetary limits expressed in BGN shall be deemed restated in EUR at such rate. The Parties confirm that this conversion does not constitute a novation, amendment or variation of any other term of this Agreement.”
For cross-border contracts already denominated in EUR, no action is necessary regarding the currency itself, but parties should review governing-law clauses and dispute resolution provisions to confirm that the changeover does not trigger any “currency event” or disruption clause. Contracts governed by foreign law that reference BGN may require a formal addendum, as the statutory deeming provision of the Bulgarian Euro Adoption Act may not be automatically recognised in other jurisdictions. Industry observers expect that the practical effect of euro adoption on cross-border contracts will be a simplification of payment flows, but companies should proactively circulate confirmatory notices to counterparties to avoid disputes over rounding or payment mechanics.
Bulgarian banks converted all BGN-denominated accounts to EUR automatically on the changeover date, preserving existing IBANs. Companies should nevertheless verify the following:
Employment contracts that state remuneration in BGN are automatically deemed to refer to their EUR equivalents, but employers must take affirmative steps to ensure transparency and compliance with labour law.
For deal teams with transactions in flight at the time of euro adoption, the changeover introduces practical, though generally manageable, considerations across the transaction lifecycle.
The following timeline organises every corporate obligation into four phases. Companies that have not yet completed the immediate actions should treat them as urgent.
| Phase / date range | Task | Responsible party |
|---|---|---|
| Immediate (0–30 days) | Verify bank account conversion; switch accounting system to EUR; convert payroll; issue employee notices; adopt internal rounding policy | CFO / Finance Director; HR Manager |
| Short term (31–90 days) | Prepare and adopt shareholder/board resolution on capital conversion; file updated articles of association at Commercial Register; amend share ledger; send confirmatory notices to key contract counterparties | Company Secretary / Legal Counsel |
| Medium term (90–365 days) | Complete contract review programme; amend loan and facility agreements; update insurance policies; restate transfer pricing documentation; prepare first EUR-denominated annual financial statements; complete statutory audit | Legal Counsel; External Auditor; Tax Adviser |
| Ongoing | Monitor regulatory guidance for updates; maintain dual-display pricing (if applicable to consumer-facing operations); update internal policies and compliance manuals; train new staff on EUR procedures | Compliance Officer; Operations Manager |
Euro adoption is the most significant operational and legal transition for Bulgarian companies since EU accession. The corporate obligations are wide-ranging, from capital conversion and registry filings to accounting migration, contract amendments and payroll updates, but they are manageable when approached systematically. Companies that act within the timeline set out above will minimise legal risk and operational disruption. Those that delay face compounding complications as banks, regulators and counterparties increasingly expect EUR-denominated documentation. For tailored guidance on any aspect of Bulgaria euro transition compliance, consult a corporate lawyer in Bulgaria through the Global Law Experts directory.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Manuela Purnarova at Purnarova Law Office, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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