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shareholder rights denmark requirements

Shareholder Rights in Denmark, Requirements (2026): Disclosure Thresholds, AGM Powers & Minority Remedies

By Global Law Experts
– posted 3 hours ago

Denmark’s corporate governance framework continues to evolve as EU directives on shareholder engagement, transparency and gender balance are transposed into national law. For listed companies approaching the 2026 AGM season, for in-house counsel advising on major shareholding notifications, and for minority investors seeking to protect their position, understanding the current shareholder rights Denmark requirements is essential. The Danish Companies Act (Selskabsloven), together with the Capital Markets Act and the Shareholder Rights Directive II (SRD II) transposition, forms the backbone of the rules governing disclosure thresholds, voting powers, register obligations and remedies.

This guide sets out each obligation in practical, step-by-step terms, including compliance checklists, comparison tables and sample wording, so that company secretaries, investor relations teams and external advisers can act with confidence during the 2026 compliance window.

Legal Framework: The Danish Companies Act and Related Rules

Key Statutes and Sources

The primary legislation governing shareholder rights in Denmark is the Danish Companies Act (Consolidating Act on Public and Private Limited Liability Companies), most recently consolidated by the Danish Business Authority. This single statute covers both private limited companies (anpartsselskaber, ApS) and public limited companies (aktieselskaber, A/S), though many provisions apply differently depending on entity type.

For companies whose shares are admitted to trading on a regulated market, the Danish Capital Markets Act (Kapitalmarkedsloven) supplements the Companies Act with obligations drawn from the EU Transparency Directive. These include mandatory notification when a shareholder’s voting rights cross specified thresholds, as well as periodic financial reporting duties.

The Shareholder Rights Directive II (SRD II), transposed into Danish law through amendments to the Companies Act and the Capital Markets Act, introduced additional requirements around remuneration reporting, related-party transactions, proxy adviser transparency and shareholder identification. These obligations primarily affect listed A/S entities and their institutional investors.

Additional sources include the Danish Corporate Governance Recommendations published by the Committee on Corporate Governance (applied on a comply-or-explain basis for listed companies) and guidance from the Danish Business Authority on the ownership register (Ejerregistret). The Gender Balance Act, which introduces stricter board-composition targets for certain listed companies effective 30 June 2026, adds a further layer of governance pressure that directly influences AGM agenda-setting.

Who Is a Shareholder Under Danish Law? Register and Proof

Register of Shareholders and the CVR Ownership Register

Under section 50 of the Danish Companies Act, every ApS and A/S must maintain a register of shareholders (ejerbog) containing the names, addresses and shareholdings of all registered owners. Shareholders holding at least 5 % of the share capital, or 5 % of voting rights, must also be recorded in the Danish Business Authority’s central ownership register (Ejerregistret), which is publicly accessible via the CVR (Central Business Register) system. Failure to register is an offence and may result in the suspension of shareholder rights, including voting.

For uncertificated shares (the norm for Danish listed companies), registration with VP Securities (the central securities depository) serves as proof of ownership. Shareholders must ensure their holdings are correctly reflected in the shareholder register well in advance of any general meeting.

Beneficial Ownership and Shares Held in Trust

Where shares are held through nominees or custodians, the beneficial owner must still be disclosed to the company (and, for holdings above 5 %, to the public register). In practice, listed companies set a record date, typically one week before the AGM, by which shareholders must be registered to exercise voting rights. As an illustration, major Danish issuers have set record dates in mid-March for their 2026 annual general meetings, with re-registration deadlines communicated several weeks in advance. Shareholders holding through international custodial chains should allow additional processing time to avoid disenfranchisement.

Disclosure Thresholds and Notification Process, Requirements for Denmark

The disclosure requirements in Denmark operate on two tracks. The Danish Companies Act requires all companies to maintain their shareholder register and imposes a 5 % disclosure threshold for the public ownership register. For listed companies, the Capital Markets Act implements the EU Transparency Directive’s major-shareholding notification regime, requiring disclosure when voting rights reach, exceed or fall below specified thresholds.

Threshold Legal Effect Practical Steps and Timeline
5 % Mandatory registration in the Danish Business Authority’s public ownership register (Ejerregistret) under the Companies Act. For listed companies, triggers the first major-shareholding notification under the Capital Markets Act. Notify the issuer and the Danish Financial Supervisory Authority (FSA) without undue delay. File the notification with the ownership register via the Virk.dk portal. Listed companies must publish the notification as a company announcement.
10 % Further notification obligation under the Capital Markets Act. Triggers additional disclosure in the ownership register. In practice, a 10 % stake signals potential influence and may attract scrutiny from other investors and the market. Same notification process: notify issuer, Danish FSA and publish. Update the ownership register within 14 days of crossing the threshold.
15 %, 20 %, 25 % Each crossing triggers a separate notification under the Capital Markets Act’s step-based system, ensuring continuous market transparency. Notify promptly at each threshold crossing. Monitor holdings carefully, aggregated holdings (including financial instruments with equivalent economic effect) count toward the threshold.
33.3 % (one-third) A blocking minority for certain special resolutions under the Companies Act that require a two-thirds majority. Crossing this level triggers both a Capital Markets Act notification and strategic significance, the holder can effectively veto amendments to the articles of association. Notify as above. Consider whether a mandatory takeover bid may be triggered (the general offer threshold under the Capital Markets Act is one-third of voting rights for listed companies).
50 % Majority control. The holder can pass ordinary resolutions and elect or dismiss the board majority. Notify as above. For listed companies, if a mandatory offer was not already triggered at 33.3 %, consider whether the Danish FSA requires a public bid.
66.7 % (two-thirds) Can pass special resolutions (amend articles, approve mergers, reduce capital). The holder overcomes any single blocking-minority position. Notify. Minority protection provisions become practically relevant for remaining shareholders.
90 % Triggers squeeze-out rights under the Companies Act: the majority shareholder may compulsorily acquire remaining shares. Conversely, minority shareholders gain sell-out rights, the right to demand that the majority purchase their shares at fair value. Notify. If exercising squeeze-out, follow the statutory valuation and notice procedure. Minority holders should promptly assess whether to exercise their sell-out right.

Sources: Danish Business Authority Consolidating Act; Danish Capital Markets Act implementing the EU Transparency Directive; Nilfisk investor guidance on major shareholder disclosure.

A critical compliance point: notifications must cover not only directly held shares but also indirect holdings, shares held through controlled entities and financial instruments that provide an unconditional right to acquire voting rights. Industry observers expect enforcement activity to increase as the Danish FSA aligns its supervisory priorities with ESMA’s common enforcement actions on transparency reporting.

AGM Voting Rights Denmark: Powers, Majorities and Resolution Thresholds

Ordinary vs Special Resolutions

The AGM voting rights Denmark framework distinguishes between ordinary and special resolutions. Ordinary resolutions, such as adoption of the annual report, election of board members and appointment of auditors, require a simple majority of the votes cast. Special resolutions, including amendments to the articles of association, capital increases or reductions, mergers and dissolutions, require at least two-thirds of votes cast and two-thirds of the share capital represented at the meeting, unless the articles prescribe a higher threshold.

Certain changes that restrict shareholder rights (for instance, imposing transfer restrictions or altering the rights attached to a share class) require an even higher majority, typically nine-tenths of votes cast and share capital represented. Understanding these voting rights thresholds, including for preference shareholders, is essential for both majority and minority blocks.

Resolution Type Majority Required Practical Consequence
Ordinary (annual report, board election, auditor) Simple majority of votes cast Standard annual business; quorum rules may apply per articles
Special (amend articles, capital change, merger) Two-thirds of votes cast and share capital represented A 33.3 % holder can block; requires careful proxy solicitation
Highly restrictive (restrict transfer, alter class rights) Nine-tenths of votes cast and share capital represented Near-unanimous consent needed; minority veto power very strong

Convening, Notice, Proxies and Required Documentation

Listed companies must convene the AGM by giving shareholders at least three weeks’ and no more than five weeks’ notice. The notice must contain the agenda, the full text of any proposed resolutions and instructions for proxy appointment and electronic voting (where offered). Under SRD II, the company must also make available the remuneration report and any remuneration policy proposal for an advisory or binding vote.

For private ApS companies, the notice period and formalities may be reduced if the articles so permit, but the minimum is still two weeks unless all shareholders agree to shorter notice. Proxy forms must be made available at least as early as the notice itself.

Sample AGM Notice Wording

“Notice is hereby given that the Annual General Meeting of [Company Name] A/S (CVR no. [●]) will be held on [date] at [time] at [venue/electronic platform]. The agenda is as follows: (1) Adoption of the annual report; (2) Distribution of profit per the adopted annual report; (3) Election of members to the board of directors; (4) Appointment of auditor; (5) Authorisation of the board to acquire own shares; (6) Any other business. Shareholders registered in the shareholder register on the record date, [date], are entitled to attend and vote. Proxy forms and postal voting forms are available at [URL].”

Minority Shareholder Remedies and Enforcement

Pre-Meeting Remedies

Where a minority shareholder believes that a proposed resolution or board action is unlawful, for example, because it breaches the articles of association, the Companies Act or the duty of equal treatment, the shareholder may seek an interim injunction from the Danish courts to prevent the resolution from being put to a vote or from being implemented. Courts will typically require the applicant to demonstrate a prima facie case and a risk of irreparable harm if the resolution proceeds. For a detailed overview of minority shareholder protection principles, see the linked guide.

Post-Meeting Remedies

After a resolution has been passed, minority shareholders have several avenues for redress under the Danish Companies Act:

  • Invalidation of resolutions. A shareholder may bring a court action to have a general meeting resolution declared invalid if it was adopted in breach of the Companies Act, the articles of association or the general principles of Danish company law (including the prohibition on abuse of majority power). The claim must be brought within a reasonable time; delay may be treated as acquiescence.
  • Annulment or injunction. The court may annul the resolution entirely or grant a prohibitory injunction restraining the company from acting on it. In urgent cases, interim relief may be obtained pending a full hearing.
  • Derivative actions. Where the company itself has suffered loss, for example, through a self-dealing transaction approved by the majority, a minority shareholder may bring a derivative claim on behalf of the company against the directors or majority shareholder. This is particularly relevant where the board has refused to act.
  • Unfair prejudice / minority oppression. The Companies Act allows a shareholder to petition the court for dissolution of the company, or for an order directing the majority to purchase the minority’s shares, if the majority has exercised its powers in a manner that is unfairly prejudicial to the applicant. In practice, courts more commonly order a buy-out than dissolution.
  • Squeeze-out and sell-out rights (90 % threshold). When a single shareholder (or group acting in concert) holds at least 90 % of the share capital and voting rights, the majority may compulsorily acquire the remaining shares. Equally, the minority may demand that the majority purchase their shares. Valuation is determined on a fair-value basis, typically with reference to an independent valuation or the terms of any preceding public offer.

Where deadlock provisions in a shareholders’ agreement provide for specific exit mechanisms, these contractual remedies operate alongside, but do not replace, the statutory protections.

Practical Evidence and Procedural Steps

A minority shareholder contemplating a challenge should follow a structured approach:

  1. Preserve all evidence, retain copies of the notice of meeting, agenda, proxy forms, voting results and any correspondence with the board.
  2. Request the shareholder register, under section 50, shareholders are entitled to inspect the register. This confirms who voted and whether the quorum was met.
  3. Obtain the minutes, request the official minutes of the general meeting, which should record all resolutions passed and the voting figures.
  4. Send a formal written demand, before commencing proceedings, write to the board setting out the grounds of objection and requesting that the company refrain from implementing the resolution.
  5. Instruct specialist counsel, Danish court proceedings require careful procedural compliance. Engage a corporate litigation lawyer promptly to assess whether interim relief is warranted.
  6. File a claim, if the board does not remedy the position, commence proceedings in the relevant city court (or, for listed companies, the Maritime and Commercial High Court in Copenhagen).

ApS (Private) vs A/S (Public): Key Differences for Shareholders

The shareholder rights Denmark requirements differ materially depending on the entity type. The following comparison covers the main areas where ApS shareholder rights diverge from those of A/S and listed-company shareholders.

Topic ApS (Private Limited) A/S (Public / Listed)
Shareholder register (section 50) Must maintain an internal register; shareholders above 5 % registered in public ownership register Same obligation, plus enhanced public disclosure for listed entities; shares typically held through VP Securities
Major shareholding notification Primarily governed by articles and any shareholders’ agreement; no Capital Markets Act notification unless shares admitted to trading Mandatory notifications at 5 %, 10 %, 15 %, 20 %, 25 %, 33.3 %, 50 %, 66.7 %, 90 % and 100 % under the Capital Markets Act; published as company announcements
Transfer restrictions and pre-emption rights Common for articles to include consent clauses and pre-emption rights; board approval often required for transfers Free transferability is the default; restrictions rare for listed shares (but may exist for unlisted A/S)
AGM formalities and notice Minimum two weeks’ notice (or shorter if all shareholders consent); simplified proxy rules Three to five weeks’ notice; strict proxy, record-date and documentation requirements; SRD II remuneration reporting obligations apply
Financial reporting Annual report filed with the Danish Business Authority; scope depends on size classification Full IFRS reporting for listed entities; interim reports; ESG/sustainability disclosures; remuneration report
SRD II obligations Do not apply (unless shares admitted to trading) Full application: shareholder identification, say-on-pay, related-party transaction disclosure, proxy adviser transparency

Private companies whose shares are not admitted to trading are not subject to the Capital Markets Act transparency regime. However, shareholders’ agreements in ApS entities frequently impose contractual notification and pre-emption obligations that function as a private-law equivalent. Where an ApS contemplates admitting shares to a multilateral trading facility, it should review whether additional disclosure requirements Denmark rules will apply.

Practical Compliance Checklist for the 2026 AGM Season

If you are a company secretary or in-house counsel:

  • Confirm the record date (typically one week before the AGM) and publish it in the notice of meeting and on the company website.
  • Issue the AGM notice within the three-to-five-week window required for listed companies (two weeks minimum for private ApS).
  • Prepare and publish the remuneration report (listed companies) for the advisory or binding shareholder vote, per SRD II requirements.
  • Verify board-composition compliance with the Gender Balance Act ahead of the 30 June 2026 deadline, consider tabling any necessary board election proposals at the AGM.
  • Ensure proxy forms and postal/electronic voting facilities are available from the date of the notice.
  • Review the shareholder register and update the public ownership register via Virk.dk for any threshold crossings.

If you are a shareholder:

  • Confirm that your shares are registered in your name (or through your custodian) by the record date, allow extra time for international custodial chains.
  • Review the AGM agenda and proposed resolutions as soon as the notice is published.
  • Submit any shareholder proposals to the board within the deadline specified in the notice (typically at least six weeks before the AGM for listed companies).
  • If you hold shares through a nominee, instruct the nominee to disclose your identity to the company if requested under the SRD II shareholder-identification rules.
  • If you intend to challenge a resolution, preserve all documentation and seek legal advice before the meeting.

Quick Templates and Sample Wording

Template 1, Major Shareholder Notification to Issuer

“Dear Board of Directors, pursuant to section [●] of the Danish Capital Markets Act, I/we hereby notify you that on [date], [Shareholder Name] acquired/disposed of shares in [Company Name] A/S (CVR no. [●]), bringing our total holding to [●] % of the share capital and [●] % of the voting rights. This notification is made following the crossing of the [5/10/15…] % threshold. Yours faithfully, [Name].”

Template 2, Minority Shareholder Demand (AGM Resolution Challenge)

“Dear Board of Directors, I am a registered shareholder of [Company Name] holding [●] shares. I write to object to Resolution [●] adopted at the general meeting held on [date], on the ground that [state grounds, e.g., breach of articles, unlawful discrimination between shareholders, inadequate notice]. I request that the company refrain from implementing this resolution pending resolution of this dispute. Should the board decline to act, I reserve the right to seek injunctive relief and to commence proceedings for the invalidation of the resolution. Yours faithfully, [Name].”

Template 3, Request for Register Inspection

“Dear Company Secretary, pursuant to section 50 of the Danish Companies Act, I hereby request access to the shareholder register of [Company Name] (CVR no. [●]). Please advise the time and manner in which the register may be inspected. Yours faithfully, [Name].”

Conclusion: Key Priorities for Shareholder Rights Denmark Requirements in 2026

The 2026 compliance landscape for shareholder rights in Denmark demands proactive attention from boards, company secretaries, investor relations teams and shareholders alike. The convergence of AGM-season deadlines, SRD II remuneration-reporting obligations, Gender Balance Act targets and enhanced transparency enforcement means that compliance gaps are more visible, and more consequential, than ever. Whether you are navigating share capital changes or assessing your position as a minority investor, understanding and acting on the shareholder rights Denmark requirements outlined in this guide is the essential first step. For tailored compliance reviews, AGM support or advice on shareholder disputes, contact a Denmark-qualified corporate lawyer through Global Law Experts.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Flemming Keller Hendriksen at Keller Law Firm, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Danish Business Authority, Consolidating Act (Public/Private Limited Liability Companies)
  2. International Bar Association, Denmark: Minority Shareholder Rights
  3. PwC Denmark, Shareholder Rights Directive (SRD II) Implementation Note
  4. Kromann Reumert, SRD II / Shareholder Rights Implementation
  5. Nilfisk, Major Shareholder Disclosure Requirements (Investor Guidance)
  6. ECGI, Corporate Governance in Denmark
  7. Nordea, General Meeting 2026 (AGM Re-registration Timeline)
  8. Plesner, Danish Gender Balance Act Implementation

FAQs

What rights does a shareholder have under Danish law?
Under the Danish Companies Act, shareholders have the right to: attend and vote at general meetings; receive dividends as declared; inspect the shareholder register and annual accounts; propose items for the AGM agenda (subject to notice deadlines); exercise pre-emption rights on new share issues (where the articles or law so provide); and challenge unlawful resolutions through the courts. The scope of these rights varies between ApS and A/S entities.
All companies must register shareholders holding 5 % or more in the public ownership register. For listed companies, the Capital Markets Act requires notification at 5 %, 10 %, 15 %, 20 %, 25 %, 33.3 %, 50 %, 66.7 %, 90 % and 100 % of voting rights. Notifications must be made to the issuer and the Danish FSA without undue delay and published as a company announcement.
A minority shareholder may seek an interim injunction before the resolution is implemented and, after adoption, may bring a court action to invalidate the resolution on grounds of illegality, breach of articles, fraud or abuse of majority power. Derivative claims on behalf of the company and petitions for buy-out in cases of unfair prejudice are also available. Claims should be brought promptly, delay may be treated as acquiescence.
ApS companies must file annual reports and maintain the public ownership register for shareholders holding 5 % or more. However, the full Capital Markets Act transparency regime (major-shareholding notifications at multiple thresholds, SRD II requirements) does not apply to private companies unless their shares are admitted to trading on a regulated market or multilateral trading facility.
Request the shareholder register (section 50 right), the notice of meeting and agenda, proxy and voting forms, the official minutes of the general meeting (including voting figures), relevant board papers or resolutions and the most recent annual financial statements. These documents establish the factual basis for any challenge to a resolution’s validity.
Under the Danish Companies Act, a shareholder holding at least 90 % of the share capital and voting rights may exercise a squeeze-out right to compulsorily acquire remaining shares at fair value. Equally, minority shareholders holding the remaining shares may exercise a sell-out right, demanding that the majority purchase their shares. Valuation is typically determined by an independent expert or by reference to the terms of a preceding public offer, and may be referred to the courts if the parties disagree.

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Shareholder Rights in Denmark, Requirements (2026): Disclosure Thresholds, AGM Powers & Minority Remedies

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