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The adoption of Directive (EU) 2026/799 on 30 March 2026 marks the most significant shift in European insolvency harmonisation in over a decade, and its entry into force in April 2026 places immediate compliance pressure on every Member State, none more so than Germany, where the existing StaRUG preventive restructuring framework must now be reconciled with new EU‑wide minimum standards. For CFOs, general counsel, restructuring advisers and international creditors involved in cross‑border restructuring in Germany, the practical question is no longer whether these rules will change but how quickly German transposition will alter deal mechanics, creditor voting, avoidance actions and plan recognition across the EU.
This article serves as a practitioner‑facing compliance playbook, translating the EU insolvency directive Germany transposition into step‑by‑step operational guidance, checklists and risk maps that decision‑makers can act on today.
TL;DR, what you need to know right now:
The EU insolvency harmonisation process accelerated rapidly from the European Commission’s revised proposal in May 2025 through Council agreement and co‑decision, culminating in the formal adoption of Directive (EU) 2026/799 on 30 March 2026. Understanding the timeline is essential for planning any cross‑border restructuring that involves German entities.
| Milestone | Date | Practical effect |
|---|---|---|
| European Commission revised proposal on insolvency harmonisation | 23 May 2025 | Set scope: avoidance actions, asset tracing, pre‑pack sales, creditor protections, cross‑border recognition |
| Council/Parliament co‑decision agreement | Q1 2026 | Final text settled; Member States begin transposition planning |
| Directive (EU) 2026/799 adopted | 30 March 2026 | Official text published in the Official Journal (Eur‑Lex) |
| Entry into force | April 2026 | Transposition clock starts; Member States must implement within the prescribed deadline |
| German implementing law (expected) | Pending, as of 26 May 2026 | Track the Bundesministerium der Justiz (BMJ) for draft bills; legislative process through Bundestag/Bundesrat anticipated |
Key point for practitioners: although the Directive is in force, Germany has not yet published its implementing legislation as of 26 May 2026. Industry observers expect the BMJ to circulate a discussion draft (Referentenentwurf) in the coming months. Companies and creditors should not wait for the final German text, the Directive itself provides the minimum standards that any implementing law must meet, and proactive planning based on those standards is the prudent course.
Directive (EU) 2026/799 targets several areas where divergent national rules have historically frustrated efficient cross‑border restructurings. The insolvency harmonisation it introduces does not create a single European insolvency code. Instead, it establishes minimum standards that each Member State must implement, leaving room for national variation above the floor.
The three areas with the greatest practical impact for Germany are avoidance actions, asset tracing and plan recognition. The following comparison table maps these areas against Germany’s current framework.
| Topic | Directive (EU) 2026/799, harmonised minimums | Germany, StaRUG / Insolvency Code (InsO) current position |
|---|---|---|
| Avoidance actions / clawback | Harmonised minimum standards for retroactive transactions; unified approach to look‑back periods; Member States set implementation details above the floor | InsO §§ 129–147 provide national avoidance rules with varying look‑back periods (up to 10 years for intentional disadvantage); transposition may standardise certain cross‑border look‑back timeframes and enforcement mechanics |
| Plan binding on dissenting creditors (cram‑down) | Minimum rules for cross‑class cram‑down and cross‑border plan recognition; aims to ensure plans confirmed in one Member State can bind creditors across the EU | StaRUG already provides a cross‑class cram‑down mechanism for pre‑insolvency restructuring plans; alignment with Directive thresholds and recognition procedures may require amendments |
| Asset tracing and access to bank accounts | New EU‑wide tools and measures for tracing debtor assets; faster cross‑border access to bank account information for insolvency practitioners | German law currently relies on national mechanisms and bilateral cooperation; transposition will require implementing new procedural routes for cross‑border information sharing |
| Pre‑pack sales framework | Minimum safeguards for pre‑packaged sales in insolvency, including creditor notification and court approval requirements | Germany has no formal pre‑pack regime; transposition will likely introduce a new statutory framework, potentially as an amendment to InsO or a standalone provision |
| Creditor protection standards | Harmonised minimum information and notification rights; ranking protections for specific creditor classes | InsO and StaRUG provide creditor protections, but the scope of information rights and ranking may need expansion to meet Directive minimums |
The likely practical effect of transposition in Germany will be incremental rather than revolutionary for purely domestic cases, the InsO and StaRUG already provide sophisticated tools. The real change lies in cross‑border restructuring Germany scenarios, where harmonised avoidance rules and plan recognition standards will remove some of the jurisdictional arbitrage that has characterised European restructurings.
For multinational groups with a German parent or significant German subsidiaries, the Directive’s transposition creates both opportunities and traps. This section provides step‑by‑step guidance on the key operational decisions that CFOs, general counsel and restructuring advisers must address.
StaRUG remains Germany’s primary pre‑insolvency proceedings framework. It allows a debtor that is not yet insolvent (but faces impending illiquidity) to propose a restructuring plan to affected creditors without opening full insolvency proceedings. The key advantages, speed, confidentiality and the ability to selectively restructure certain liabilities, are preserved under the Directive.
However, the Directive introduces a parallel set of minimum standards for restructuring plans that Member States must recognise across borders. Early indications suggest that companies should consider the following decision tree:
The Directive imposes new coordination obligations on insolvency practitioners (Insolvenzverwalter or StaRUG restructuring practitioners). These include:
For companies selecting a restructuring practitioner, it is now essential to confirm that the appointee has cross‑border experience and is prepared to operate within the Directive’s cooperation framework.
Creditor rights Germany under the Directive receive both enhanced protections and new procedural obligations. The most significant changes for creditors are:
The Directive creates a layered set of new obligations that differ by stakeholder role. Failing to anticipate these obligations risks both financial loss and personal liability.
German directors already face significant personal liability under InsO (duty to file for insolvency within three weeks of material insolvency or over‑indebtedness under § 15a InsO) and under StaRUG (duty to monitor for threats to the company’s going‑concern status). The Directive’s transposition is expected to add further obligations:
StaRUG, which entered into force on 1 January 2021 as Germany’s implementation of the EU Restructuring Directive (EU) 2019/1023, already provides many of the tools that the new Directive seeks to harmonise across the EU. The critical question for practitioners is where the two frameworks overlap, where gaps exist and how to coordinate timing.
Where StaRUG already meets the Directive:
Where the Directive fills gaps:
Illustrative coordination timeline (multinational GmbH + foreign subsidiaries):
The following multinational restructuring checklist is designed for CFOs and general counsel managing a cross‑border restructuring Germany scenario. Each item should be completed or at minimum assessed within the suggested timeframe.
Immediate (Days 0–30):
Short‑term (Days 30–60):
Medium‑term (Days 60–90):
Ongoing (Days 90–180+):
Consider a mid‑market German manufacturing group: the parent is a GmbH with its COMI (centre of main interests) in Frankfurt, and it has operating subsidiaries in France, Poland and the Netherlands. The group faces a liquidity shortfall driven by supply chain disruption and needs to restructure approximately €120 million in senior secured debt.
Step 1, Jurisdiction analysis: German parent proceeds under StaRUG (pre‑insolvency proceedings Germany). French, Polish and Dutch subsidiaries are assessed against both their national regimes and the Directive’s harmonised standards.
Step 2, Plan design: The restructuring plan is drafted to meet StaRUG requirements for the parent and Directive minimums for cross‑border recognition. Creditors are grouped into classes consistent with both frameworks. Senior secured lenders form one class; unsecured trade creditors form another; intercompany claims are subordinated.
Step 3, Creditor engagement: Standardised information packs meeting Directive requirements are distributed to all creditor classes simultaneously across four jurisdictions. Voting follows StaRUG procedures for the German plan; creditor acceptance is sought in each subsidiary jurisdiction under local rules aligned with the Directive.
Step 4, Confirmation and recognition: The German restructuring court confirms the plan, including a cross‑class cram‑down over dissenting unsecured creditors (who receive more than they would in liquidation). The plan is filed for recognition in France, Poland and the Netherlands under the Directive’s harmonised recognition procedure.
Trap identified: an intercompany loan repayment made by the French subsidiary to the German parent six months before the plan was filed falls within the Directive’s harmonised avoidance look‑back period. The French practitioner challenges the transaction. Resolution requires the German parent to adjust plan economics, demonstrating why proactive avoidance risk mapping (Day 0–30 on the checklist) is essential.
Top 5 quick wins for management:
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Dr. Anja Dachner at Kliemt.HR Lawyers, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
Practitioners should monitor the following primary sources as the German transposition process unfolds:
Immediate action plan:
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