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Can Private Equity Invest in Italian Law Firms in 2026? Legal Risks, Structures & a Practical Roadmap for Funds

By Global Law Experts
– posted 2 days ago

Italy’s 2025 Budget Law and subsequent draft amendments to Decreto Legislativo 58/1998 (the Testo Unico della Finanza, or TUF) have opened a narrow but commercially significant window for private equity law firms Italy transactions, specifically, minority financial stakes in professional firms structured as corporate entities. For PE sponsors and law-firm managing partners alike, the question is no longer whether outside capital is theoretically possible but how to structure, approve and close a compliant deal before the regulatory landscape settles. This guide delivers a practitioner-facing investor playbook: permissibility analysis, approval checklists, deal structures, due diligence priorities, exit mechanics and a step-by-step transaction timeline grounded in the current Italian legal profession reform 2026 framework.

Investor Quick-Read Checklist

  • Permissibility. Minority financial stakes by non-lawyers are conditionally permitted in law firms structured as società tra professionisti (STPs) or corporate vehicles (SRL/SPA), subject to professional-conduct guardrails set by the Consiglio Nazionale Forense (CNF).
  • Management control limit. Non-lawyer investors must not exercise management or professional-decision control; governance rights must be ring-fenced from practice decisions.
  • Bar notification. The competent bar association (Ordine degli Avvocati) must be notified of any change in ownership structure involving non-lawyers.
  • CONSOB/TUF screening. Where the investment instrument has features of a financial product, CONSOB disclosure obligations under Decreto Legislativo 58/1998 may be triggered.
  • Golden power check. Investments touching strategic sectors or involving non-EU acquirers may require Council of Ministers notification under Italy’s golden power regime.
  • Antitrust review. Transactions exceeding AGCM merger-control thresholds require pre-closing notification to the Autorità Garante della Concorrenza e del Mercato.

Background: The 2025–26 Reforms and Legal Context for Private Equity Law Firms Italy Deals

Key Legislative Instruments

The legislative foundation for private equity investment in Italian professional firms rests on two pillars. First, the 2025 Budget Law (Legge di Bilancio 2025), published in the Gazzetta Ufficiale, introduced measures broadening the scope for third-party capital participation in professional entities, including law firms, provided certain ownership and governance conditions are met. Second, CONSOB has circulated draft amendments to the TUF (Decreto Legislativo 58/1998) that clarify how fund-level investments in professional-services vehicles interact with financial-instrument disclosure and investor-protection rules. These draft changes remain subject to finalisation, and industry observers expect the definitive text to be adopted by late 2026.

Professional Rules: Consiglio Nazionale Forense

The CNF, Italy’s national bar council, retains supervisory authority over law-firm ownership structures. Its guidelines on non-lawyer ownership in Italy confirm that external investors may hold equity in a società tra avvocati or professional STP only if they do not acquire majority control and do not influence professional judgement, client selection, or fee-setting. Violations expose both the firm and its registered lawyers to disciplinary proceedings.

Date Instrument Effect
December 2024 Budget Law 2025 (Legge di Bilancio 2025), Gazzetta Ufficiale Expanded scope for minority third-party investment in professional firms; set governance guardrails for non-lawyer equity holders.
Q1 2026 CONSOB draft amendments to TUF (Decreto Legislativo 58/1998) Clarified disclosure triggers and investor-protection obligations for fund investments in professional-services vehicles. Draft, subject to change.
Q2 2026 CNF updated guidelines on external ownership Confirmed permissibility conditions: minority stake, no management control, bar notification mandatory.
Ongoing MEF policy statements on professional-sector reform Signalled government support for capital-market access by professional firms; further implementing decrees expected.

Is Investment Permitted? Legal Permissibility Analysis

Permitted vs Prohibited Activities

Under the post-reform framework, a PE fund may acquire a minority financial stake in an Italian law firm provided the investment is structured as a passive economic participation. What remains prohibited is any arrangement that grants the non-lawyer investor decision-making authority over professional matters: client engagement, legal strategy, fee allocation among partners, or disciplinary compliance. The CNF’s guidelines draw a clear line between capital provision and professional governance.

Minority Financial Stakes vs Management Control

The critical distinction for private equity sponsors is between economic rights and governance rights. A minority stake law firm structure that provides the investor with dividend entitlements, information rights and standard protective covenants (anti-dilution, pre-emption) is broadly permissible. A structure that confers board seats with voting power over practice management, partner appointment or client acceptance crosses the regulatory boundary. Early indications suggest that regulators will scrutinise voting arrangements, veto catalogues and deadlock-resolution mechanisms closely to ensure no de facto control accrues to the non-lawyer shareholder.

Cross-Border Vehicle Considerations

Funds domiciled outside Italy, whether in Luxembourg, the Channel Islands or Delaware, face additional layers of scrutiny. The golden power regime may apply where a non-EU entity acquires a stake in a firm deemed to operate in a strategic sector. Additionally, AML/beneficial-ownership transparency requirements under Italian law (Decreto Legislativo 231/2007) will apply to the ultimate beneficial owners of the investing vehicle, requiring full disclosure to the competent authorities at closing.

Regulatory Approvals and Notifications for Law Firm Investment

Bar Notifications and Ethics

Any change in the ownership structure of a registered law firm must be notified to the local Ordine degli Avvocati and, where applicable, to the CNF. The notification must disclose the identity of the new shareholder, the size of the stake, and the governance arrangements. Failure to notify is itself a disciplinary matter and may result in sanctions against the firm’s registered partners.

CONSOB/TUF Triggers

Where the investment takes the form of a financial instrument, convertible notes, profit-participation certificates, or structured equity with embedded optionality, CONSOB disclosure obligations under Decreto Legislativo 58/1998 may be triggered. The draft TUF amendments circulated in early 2026 propose specific carve-outs for plain-equity minority stakes in professional firms, but these remain subject to finalisation. Funds should assume full TUF compliance until the final text is adopted.

Golden Power and National Security

Italy’s golden power framework (Decreto-Legge 21/2012, as expanded) grants the Council of Ministers the authority to block, condition or impose requirements on transactions involving strategic assets. While legal services are not a designated strategic sector per se, the likely practical effect of current policy is that investments by non-EU entities, or those touching cybersecurity, data-sensitive advisory or government-contract work, could trigger a notification obligation. The Presidency of the Council of Ministers administers the golden power review, and notification is mandatory before closing where thresholds are met.

Antitrust and Merger Control

The AGCM (Autorità Garante della Concorrenza e del Mercato) applies standard merger-control thresholds to professional-services transactions. Where the combined turnover of the parties exceeds the applicable thresholds, a pre-closing notification is required. Clearance timelines vary but typically run 30–45 days for Phase I review.

Approvals and Reporting Obligations by Entity Type

Entity Type Approvals / Notifications Required Typical Timing / Notes
Società tra avvocati (STP / professional company) Bar association notification; CNF guidance compliance check; restrictions on non-lawyer shareholding percentage. 4–8 weeks for internal approvals; regulator response times vary.
Law firm as SRL / SPA (corporate vehicle) Corporate law filings; possible CONSOB/TUF triggers if investment creates financial-instrument features; antitrust review if thresholds are exceeded; golden power screening if strategic sector is implicated. 6–12 weeks (plus antitrust/golden power review timings).
Investment via holding / SPV (foreign or fund vehicle) Notification to company registry; beneficial-ownership due diligence (AML, D.Lgs. 231/2007); golden power and antitrust screening as above. Enables contractual governance separation; timeline depends on SPV jurisdiction.

Deal Structures: How to Private Equity Invest in Law Firms Italy

Direct Minority Share Purchase (Corporate Entity)

The most straightforward structure is a direct acquisition of a minority equity stake in a law firm organised as an SRL or SPA. This approach provides clear corporate-law protections (registered shares, statutory books, audited financials) and established precedent for shareholder agreements. The downside is visibility: the investor appears on the company register, which may trigger reputational or competitive sensitivities among the firm’s clients and competitors.

Investment via Holding or Special Purpose Vehicle

Routing the investment through a dedicated SPV, often a Luxembourg SCSp or Italian SRL, allows the fund to separate its economic interest from direct association with the law firm’s branding. This structure also facilitates portfolio-level management, co-investment by limited partners, and cleaner exit mechanics. It does, however, add a layer of AML transparency and may increase regulatory scrutiny at closing.

Preferred Economic Rights vs Governance Rights

Because non-lawyer investors cannot hold governance rights that affect professional decisions, deal structuring must rely on economic instruments that deliver returns without management control. Common tools include:

  • Non-voting preferred shares. Carry a fixed or formulaic dividend preference but no vote on practice matters.
  • Profit-participation certificates (strumenti finanziari partecipativi). Provide economic upside linked to firm revenue or profit, without equity or voting rights.
  • Convertible instruments. Allow conversion into equity upon a triggering event (e.g., regulatory liberalisation, IPO), subject to CNF approval at the time of conversion.

Sample Term Sheet Provisions and Investor Protective Covenants

A well-drafted minority stake law firm structure typically includes the following investor protections:

  • Information rights. Quarterly unaudited financials, annual audited accounts, partner compensation summaries (anonymised where required by bar rules).
  • Protective vetoes. Consent required for material changes: new partner admission above a threshold, debt above a cap, related-party transactions, changes to the firm’s regulatory status.
  • Anti-dilution. Weighted-average or full-ratchet protection against issuance of new equity at a lower valuation.
  • Deadlock resolution. Escalation to independent expert determination or, ultimately, a put/call mechanism at fair market value.
  • Compliance covenant. The firm covenants to maintain its bar registration, professional-indemnity insurance and AML programme in good standing.

Due Diligence and Risk-Spotting for Private Equity Law Firm Investments

Core Due Diligence Workstreams

Due diligence on a law firm differs materially from a standard corporate target. The asset base is human capital, and revenue concentration, partner-departure risk and malpractice exposure are the dominant value drivers. Funds must examine financial, regulatory and reputational dimensions with equal rigour.

Due Diligence Area Key Items to Review Red Flags
Financial / partner P&L Revenue by partner, client concentration, fee arrangements (contingency, fixed, hourly), work-in-progress and lock-up days, partner draw vs profit share. Single-client concentration above 20%; declining realisation rates; opaque partner compensation.
Regulatory / bar compliance Bar registration status, disciplinary history, CNF notification filings, fee-sharing arrangements. Outstanding disciplinary proceedings; undisclosed fee-sharing with non-lawyers.
Malpractice & insurance Professional-indemnity coverage, claims history, pending claims, tail-cover adequacy. Material uninsured or under-insured claims; expiring coverage without renewal commitment.
AML / compliance AML programme documentation, suspicious-transaction reports, client-identification records (D.Lgs. 231/2007). Gaps in client-identification records; late or missing suspicious-transaction reports.
Employment / partnership Partner agreements, restrictive covenants, gardening leave, departure mechanics, associate contracts. Weak or unenforceable restrictive covenants; key-partner departure clauses that trigger revenue clawback.

Competition and Golden Power Screening

Before signing, funds must conduct a preliminary competition analysis to determine whether AGCM thresholds are exceeded and a golden power assessment to confirm whether the target’s client portfolio, data holdings or government-advisory work could trigger a notification. Both analyses should be completed during the exclusivity period to avoid deal-breaking surprises at closing.

Commercial Protections and Exit Mechanics

Exit Structures for Fund Investors

Exiting a minority investment in a law firm is inherently more constrained than exiting a standard portfolio company. Publicly listed law firms remain rare, and partner-consent requirements may restrict secondary sales. Funds should negotiate exit mechanics at entry, embedding them in the shareholders’ agreement with clear valuation and timing provisions.

  • Tag-along / drag-along. Tag-along rights allow the fund to participate in any sale by majority partners; drag-along rights enable a sale of 100% of equity if a threshold (typically 75–80%) of partners agree.
  • Right of first offer / first refusal (ROFO/ROFR). Partners are offered the right to match any third-party offer before the fund may sell externally.
  • Buy-back mechanism. A pre-agreed formula (e.g., trailing EBITDA multiple, revenue multiple or book value) triggers a mandatory buy-back by the firm or its partners at defined intervals (typically 5–7 years post-investment).
  • Earn-out and lock-up. Lock-up periods of 3–5 years are standard; earn-outs tied to revenue growth milestones can bridge valuation gaps at entry.
  • Revenue-allocation limits. CNF rules on fee-sharing and profit distribution may constrain the economic waterfall available to non-lawyer investors. These limits must be modelled into the fund’s return analysis at the investment-committee stage.

Practical Roadmap: 12-Week Transaction Timeline

The following step-by-step timeline provides a template for a typical minority-stake transaction. Actual timelines will vary depending on firm size, regulatory complexity and golden power exposure.

  1. Weeks 1–2: Preliminary assessment and NDA. Fund and firm execute a non-disclosure agreement; fund conducts desktop review of public filings, bar status and financial headlines.
  2. Week 3: Letter of intent (LOI) and exclusivity. Non-binding LOI sets out indicative valuation, structure, exclusivity period (typically 8–10 weeks) and key conditions.
  3. Weeks 4–7: Confirmatory due diligence. Full financial, legal, regulatory and AML due diligence. Competition and golden power screening completed. Bar notification prepared.
  4. Week 8: Investment committee gate. Fund presents due diligence findings, regulatory risk assessment and proposed deal terms to its investment committee for approval.
  5. Weeks 9–10: Documentation and negotiation. Shareholders’ agreement, subscription agreement, governance side letters and compliance covenants negotiated and agreed.
  6. Week 11: Regulatory filings. Bar notification submitted; AGCM filing (if required); golden power notification (if triggered). CONSOB/TUF compliance confirmed.
  7. Week 12: Closing. Funds transferred; shares issued or SPV interests allocated; company-register filings completed; post-closing obligations commence.

Conclusion: Next Steps for Funds Considering Private Equity Law Firms Italy Investments

The 2025–26 Italian legal profession reform has opened a genuine, if carefully bounded, opportunity for fund investment in professional services, including law firms. For PE sponsors, the commercial appeal is clear: predictable revenue streams, high margins and limited capex requirements. The legal complexity, however, is substantial. Every transaction requires coordinated analysis across professional-conduct rules, corporate law, securities regulation, antitrust, golden power and AML frameworks. Funds that invest early in building the right advisory team and regulatory playbook will be best positioned to capture this emerging asset class as the reform framework matures.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Marco Carbonara at Alpeggiani Avvocati Associati, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Gazzetta Ufficiale, Official Journal of the Italian Republic (Budget Law 2025)
  2. CONSOB, Decreto Legislativo 58/1998 (TUF) and draft amendments
  3. Ministry of Economy and Finance (MEF), Professional sector reform guidance
  4. Consiglio Nazionale Forense (CNF), Professional rules and guidelines
  5. Presidenza del Consiglio dei Ministri, Golden Power portal
  6. Banca d’Italia
  7. AGCM, Autorità Garante della Concorrenza e del Mercato
  8. A&O Shearman, Client alerts on Italian PE and professional services reform
  9. Global Legal Insights, Italy legal profession overview
  10. Rivkin Radler, PE investment in law firms practitioner guidance
  11. Mintz, PE investment in professional services

FAQs

Can private equity legally buy a stake in an Italian law firm?
Yes, subject to conditions. Following the 2025 Budget Law and updated CNF guidelines, a PE fund may acquire a minority financial stake in an Italian law firm structured as a corporate entity (SRL, SPA or STP), provided the investor does not exercise management control over professional decisions and the competent bar association is notified.
The main approvals and notifications include: bar association notification (mandatory), CONSOB/TUF compliance where the investment instrument has financial-product features, AGCM antitrust notification if merger-control thresholds are exceeded, and golden power notification if strategic-sector or non-EU-acquirer criteria are met.
Non-lawyer ownership in Italy is permitted on a minority basis under the post-2025 reform framework, provided the non-lawyer investor does not hold management or decision-making power over professional matters. The CNF’s guidelines set the boundaries; structural workarounds such as non-voting shares or profit-participation certificates help maintain compliance.
Governance should ensure that: (a) non-lawyer investors hold no board votes on practice management, partner admission or client acceptance; (b) client and matter information is ring-fenced from investor reporting except in anonymised or aggregated form; (c) an independent compliance officer monitors adherence to bar rules; and (d) protective vetoes are limited to financial and structural matters (debt, dilution, material transactions).
Key red flags include high client-revenue concentration, outstanding or undisclosed disciplinary proceedings, material uninsured malpractice claims, gaps in AML client-identification records, weak partner restrictive covenants and undisclosed fee-sharing arrangements with non-lawyers that breach bar rules.
Golden power may apply where the investing entity is non-EU, where the target firm handles sensitive government advisory work, or where the transaction involves data assets that fall within Italy’s expanded strategic-sector definitions. The Council of Ministers, through the Presidency of the Council, administers the review. Notification is mandatory before closing where the criteria under Decreto-Legge 21/2012 (as amended) are met.
Common exit mechanisms include contractual buy-back obligations at pre-agreed valuation formulae (typically trailing-revenue or EBITDA multiples), ROFO/ROFR provisions giving partners a matching right, tag-along and drag-along clauses, and time-bound put options exercisable after a 5–7 year lock-up period. All exit mechanics should be embedded in the shareholders’ agreement at entry.
Funds investing in Italian partnerships or professional entities must consider the Italian tax treatment of carried interest, withholding tax on profit distributions to non-resident investors, and transfer-pricing implications for management-fee arrangements between the fund vehicle and the target. Tax and carried-interest implications for funds investing in Italian partnerships is a topic that warrants dedicated specialist advice.

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Can Private Equity Invest in Italian Law Firms in 2026? Legal Risks, Structures & a Practical Roadmap for Funds

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