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Slovenia’s insolvency and restructuring landscape is undergoing its most significant overhaul in a decade, driven by the ZFPPIPP‑H amendment to the Financial Operations, Insolvency Proceedings and Compulsory Dissolution Act and the parallel requirements of the 2026 EU Insolvency Harmonisation Directive. For creditors holding Slovenian exposures, company directors navigating early signs of distress, and in‑house counsel advising multinational groups with operations in the country, insolvency restructuring in Slovenia now demands fresh analysis and immediate tactical decisions. This guide synthesises the domestic legislative changes, the EU cross‑border layer, and the practical steps that decision‑makers should take within the first 14 to 90 days of the new regime.
It replaces generic overviews with step‑by‑step checklists, precise voting thresholds, clawback timelines, and a comparison of every formal procedure available under Slovenian law in 2026.
Before diving into the detailed analysis, every creditor or director with a Slovenian exposure should address the following six items within the first two weeks of the ZFPPIPP‑H effective date:
Slovenia’s insolvency regime has been governed by the ZFPPIPP (Zakon o finančnem poslovanju, postopkih zaradi insolventnosti in prisilnem prenehanju) since its original enactment. The statute has been amended multiple times, the EBRD country profile records a succession of reforms aimed at strengthening creditor protections and aligning Slovenian practice with European norms. The IMF’s selected issues paper on Slovenia noted that, historically, restructuring tools were underused relative to bankruptcy liquidations, partly because procedural complexity discouraged early intervention. Understanding the pre‑2026 baseline is essential for appreciating the magnitude of the ZFPPIPP‑H changes.
Before the ZFPPIPP‑H amendment, the ZFPPIPP offered three principal pathways for financially distressed companies, as described in the European e‑Justice Portal’s procedural guide for Slovenia:
Insolvency proceedings in Slovenia may be initiated by the debtor itself, by creditors (for bankruptcy), or, in the case of preventive restructuring, by the debtor with the support of a qualifying proportion of its financial creditors. The CMS expert guide on restructuring and insolvency law in Slovenia confirms that the debtor’s management board bears primary responsibility for monitoring solvency and for filing within prescribed time limits once insolvency is established. Failure to file promptly can trigger personal liability for directors, a risk that the ZFPPIPP‑H amendment intensifies.
Under the pre‑amendment framework, a preventive restructuring application triggered a limited moratorium on enforcement by financial creditors, but the scope and duration of that moratorium were narrower than under equivalent regimes in other EU member states. Compulsory settlement proceedings likewise imposed a stay, but its practical effectiveness was often undermined by delays in court processing. The EBRD profile noted that Slovenian insolvency proceedings were characterised by relatively long durations and modest recovery rates for unsecured creditors, factors that made creditor engagement in restructuring a calculated risk rather than a routine commercial decision.
The ZFPPIPP‑H amendment represents the most comprehensive revision of the Slovenian insolvency statute in recent years. As reported by the Slovenian National Assembly and analysed by Šelih & Partners, the amendment addresses structural weaknesses in the existing framework while aligning domestic law with the EU’s Preventive Restructuring Directive (Directive (EU) 2019/1023) and anticipating the requirements of the 2026 EU Insolvency Harmonisation Directive.
The amendment’s stated objectives include: broadening access to preventive restructuring; strengthening the automatic moratorium on enforcement; refining the treatment of secured creditors within restructuring plans; introducing clearer rules on avoidance and clawback actions; and imposing stricter obligations on directors to act early when distress indicators emerge. Industry observers expect these changes to increase the practical viability of preventive restructuring as an alternative to bankruptcy, particularly for mid‑market companies with complex capital structures.
The ZFPPIPP‑H amendment also revises the interaction between Slovenian domestic proceedings and cross‑border insolvency rules, creating a framework intended to dovetail with the EU Insolvency Harmonisation Directive. As Šelih & Partners note, the amendment introduces a modernised definition of “likelihood of insolvency”, the gateway test for preventive restructuring, that lowers the threshold for entry while imposing more rigorous disclosure obligations on the debtor.
One of the most consequential changes for creditor rights in Slovenia is the revision of the clawback and avoidance regime. Under the pre‑amendment ZFPPIPP, transactions could be challenged if they occurred during a defined look‑back period prior to the commencement of insolvency proceedings and resulted in a disadvantage to the general body of creditors. The ZFPPIPP‑H amendment expands this framework in several ways:
For creditors who received payments or security from a Slovenian debtor in the period preceding formal proceedings, these changes demand an immediate review of transaction exposure. Early indications suggest that practitioners will test the boundaries of the new clawback rules aggressively in the first wave of cases under the ZFPPIPP‑H regime.
The ZFPPIPP‑H amendment rebalances the position of secured and unsecured creditors in several important respects. Secured creditors, historically less affected by restructuring plans, now face the possibility of being included in restructuring measures under preventive restructuring, provided that specific safeguards are met. The amendment requires that any impairment of secured claims must be accompanied by a court finding that the secured creditor would not receive a better outcome in a hypothetical bankruptcy liquidation, the so‑called “best interests of creditors” test, consistent with EU requirements.
Unsecured creditors, meanwhile, benefit from enhanced disclosure obligations placed on the debtor and from the revised voting mechanics (discussed in the next section). The net effect is a system that pushes parties towards negotiated restructuring solutions while maintaining a backstop of court oversight and creditor protections.
Preventive restructuring in Slovenia is not an insolvency proceeding in the formal sense, it is a pre‑insolvency mechanism designed to prevent insolvency by enabling a negotiated financial adjustment. However, a confirmed restructuring plan has binding legal effects on creditors, including those who voted against it, which means that the distinction between “restructuring” and “insolvency” matters for enforcement, regulatory capital treatment and contractual triggers.
The debtor initiates preventive restructuring by filing an application with the competent district court. The application must include:
Upon filing, the court publishes a notice on the Slovenian official publications portal. This notice triggers the automatic moratorium on enforcement actions by financial creditors and starts the clock on creditor response deadlines.
The restructuring plan under the ZFPPIPP‑H amendment must contain materially more detail than was required previously. The plan must now include:
The court’s function in preventive restructuring is supervisory rather than adjudicative in the first instance. The judge reviews the application for formal completeness, orders publication, and oversees the voting process. However, the court has significant powers in contested situations: it may extend or limit the moratorium, resolve disputes over creditor classification, and ultimately confirm or reject the plan following a contested hearing.
The ZFPPIPP‑H amendment introduces a fast‑track urgent relief mechanism allowing the debtor to apply for an interim moratorium even before the full application is filed, where there is evidence of imminent enforcement action that would frustrate the restructuring. This provision, modelled on similar mechanisms in German and Dutch law, gives directors a “safe harbour” window to prepare documentation without the threat of asset seizure.
Directors should note that the safe harbour is not unconditional. To benefit from it, the director must demonstrate that the restructuring application is being prepared in good faith, that creditors have been notified, and that the company is not already balance‑sheet insolvent beyond remediation. Failure to meet these conditions can expose directors to personal liability for debts incurred during the safe harbour period.
The creditor voting regime is the mechanical heart of any restructuring framework, and the ZFPPIPP‑H amendment introduces meaningful changes to how votes are counted, how classes are formed, and what remedies dissenting creditors retain.
Under the revised framework, creditors vote on the restructuring plan within their respective classes. The CMS guide on restructuring and insolvency law in Slovenia indicates that a plan is approved if it receives the requisite majority within each voting class. The key thresholds are:
Consider a simplified illustration: a debtor has three creditor classes, senior secured (€5 million), junior secured (€2 million) and unsecured (€3 million). If the senior secured class and the unsecured class vote in favour (two out of three classes), and the junior secured class’s treatment under the plan meets the statutory safeguards, the court may confirm the plan over the junior secured class’s objection.
Dissenting creditors are not without recourse. The ZFPPIPP‑H amendment preserves the right of any creditor to challenge the plan before the court on the following grounds:
The court must rule on these objections before confirming the plan. Industry observers expect that litigation over creditor classification and the best‑interests valuation will be the primary battleground in early ZFPPIPP‑H cases.
Creditors facing a Slovenian preventive restructuring should approach the process with a clear tactical strategy:
The 2026 EU Insolvency Harmonisation Directive builds on the framework established by the EU Insolvency Regulation (Regulation (EU) 2015/848) and the Preventive Restructuring Directive (Directive (EU) 2019/1023). Its objective is to harmonise core elements of insolvency law across member states, reducing forum shopping, increasing the predictability of cross‑border outcomes, and ensuring minimum standards for avoidance actions.
The directive strengthens the automatic recognition framework for insolvency proceedings opened in another EU member state. For creditors of Slovenian debtors, this means that a restructuring plan confirmed by a Slovenian court will have enhanced enforceability across the EU, subject to the existing COMI (centre of main interests) rules. Conversely, foreign proceedings involving a debtor with assets in Slovenia will be recognised more efficiently, reducing the scope for parallel local enforcement strategies.
The likely practical effect will be faster freezing of Slovenian assets when foreign proceedings are opened and less room for creditors to “race” to enforcement in Slovenia before recognition takes effect. Cross‑border insolvency in Slovenia is thus becoming a more predictable, but also more constrained, exercise.
The directive introduces minimum standards for avoidance actions that all member states must meet, including minimum look‑back periods and a common framework for the types of transactions that must be susceptible to challenge. For Slovenia, this means that the ZFPPIPP‑H clawback provisions will need to be at least as robust as the directive’s floor, and the amendment’s drafters appear to have anticipated this requirement.
The practical implication for creditors with cross‑border exposures is significant: a transaction made with a Slovenian company that is subsequently subject to clawback in Slovenia may also be relevant in proceedings in another member state, and vice versa. The directive aims to prevent the arbitrage of avoidance rules across jurisdictions, meaning that creditors can no longer assume that relocating assets or booking transactions through a subsidiary in a more permissive jurisdiction will insulate them from challenge.
The COMI presumption remains the primary jurisdictional anchor: a company’s COMI is presumed to be at the place of its registered office unless evidence shows otherwise. However, the directive refines the evidentiary standards for rebutting this presumption, and early indications suggest that multinational groups will face greater scrutiny when seeking to shift COMI away from the jurisdiction of their operational centre. For Slovenian subsidiaries of foreign groups, this reinforces the importance of maintaining genuine local management and decision‑making if the registered office is to serve as the basis for opening proceedings in Slovenia.
| Timeframe | Action |
|---|---|
| Immediate (Days 1–7) | Identify all Slovenian exposures. Verify security registrations. Check for pending enforcement or litigation. Engage Slovenian counsel. |
| Within 14 days | Prepare proof‑of‑claim packages (contracts, invoices, correspondence). Assess clawback exposure on recent transactions with the debtor. Join or form a creditor committee/group. |
| Within 30 days | Review the debtor’s restructuring plan (if filed). Obtain independent valuation evidence for the best‑interests test. File formal creditor response or objection with the court. |
| Within 90 days | Vote on the plan (or support/oppose cross‑class cram‑down). Monitor plan implementation milestones. Reassess enforcement options if the plan fails confirmation. |
DOs: File claims promptly and completely. Engage with the debtor and other creditors early. Obtain independent valuations. Preserve documentation of all dealings with the debtor during the look‑back period.
DON’Ts: Do not assume that enforcement can continue after the moratorium is published. Do not ignore the voting deadlines, failure to vote typically means the creditor is bound by the plan without input. Do not rely on pre‑amendment assumptions about clawback exposure.
| Procedure | Effect on Creditors | Key Deadlines |
|---|---|---|
| Preventive restructuring (pre‑insolvency) | Automatic moratorium on enforcement by financial creditors for the duration of the procedure. Creditors vote on a plan; if confirmed, the plan binds all creditors in each approving class (and potentially dissenting classes via cram‑down). Potential recovery typically exceeds bankruptcy distribution. | Filing triggers moratorium. Creditor meeting(s) within court‑prescribed period. Court confirmation hearing follows the vote. Total procedure duration: typically several months. |
| Compulsory settlement (insolvency procedure) | Applies to companies already insolvent. If the settlement plan is approved by the requisite creditor majority and confirmed by the court, it binds all ordinary unsecured creditors, including dissenters. Secured creditors are generally not affected unless they consent. Recovery rates vary but are usually higher than bankruptcy. | Court announcement opens the voting period. Creditors file claims within the statutory deadline. Voting period and court confirmation follow. Implementation monitored by court. |
| Bankruptcy (liquidation) | Assets realised by court‑appointed trustee. Proceeds distributed according to statutory priority: secured creditors first from collateral, then priority claims, then ordinary unsecured creditors. Unsecured recovery rates are typically the lowest of the three options. | Petition filed and court opens proceedings. Trustee appointed promptly. Claims filing deadline set by court. Distributions made as assets are realised. Duration varies, often 12 months or more. |
For creditors, the comparative message is clear: early engagement in preventive restructuring or compulsory settlement generally yields better outcomes than waiting for bankruptcy. The ZFPPIPP‑H amendment reinforces this dynamic by making preventive restructuring more accessible and more binding, while the expanded clawback regime increases the litigation risk for creditors who receive preferential treatment outside of formal proceedings.
The combined effect of the ZFPPIPP‑H amendment and the 2026 EU Insolvency Harmonisation Directive is to make insolvency restructuring in Slovenia more accessible, more binding and more predictable, but also more demanding for all parties. Creditors must act faster, prepare better and engage earlier. Directors face tighter obligations to monitor solvency and stricter personal liability for delay. And cross‑border creditors can no longer rely on jurisdictional arbitrage to shield transactions from challenge.
The reforms reward proactive decision‑making. Creditors who understand the revised voting thresholds, prepare robust proof‑of‑claim packages and engage with the restructuring process from its earliest stages will consistently achieve better outcomes than those who wait for bankruptcy distributions. Directors who use the safe harbour provisions correctly, documenting their analysis, obtaining professional advice and filing on time, will protect both their companies and themselves. For any party with a Slovenian exposure, the time to review strategy and take action on insolvency restructuring in Slovenia is now.
Last updated: 27 May 2026. This guide will be reviewed when Slovenian implementing measures for the EU Insolvency Harmonisation Directive are published or when further amendments to the ZFPPIPP enter into force.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Marko Butinar at Marko Butinar – odvetnik, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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