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Last reviewed: 4 May 2026
Australia’s mandatory merger-notification regime, which took effect on 1 January 2026, has fundamentally changed the compliance calculus for every joint-venture transaction in the country. Under the new framework, ACCC notification for joint ventures in Australia is required whenever a JV arrangement amounts to a notifiable “acquisition” or confers “control” that meets prescribed monetary and structural thresholds. The regime is suspensory, meaning parties cannot complete the transaction until the ACCC grants clearance, and non-compliance carries significant enforcement risk, including divestment orders and substantial penalties. This guide provides corporate counsel, in-house M&A teams, private-equity sponsors, developers and SME JV parties with a practical decision framework, drafting checklist and step-by-step notification roadmap for navigating the 2026 rules.
Not every joint venture triggers the mandatory merger notification 2026 regime, but many do, and the consequences of getting it wrong are severe. The short answer: if your JV involves the acquisition of shares, assets, or a long-term interest that meets the ACCC’s monetary thresholds, and it confers a level of control or decisive influence over strategic commercial decisions, you almost certainly need to notify.
Six-point rapid-assessment checklist:
If the answer to items 1–4 is “yes” and item 5 yields no available exemption, the JV is a notifiable acquisition. Parties must lodge a notification with the ACCC and wait for clearance before completing the transaction. The rest of this guide walks through each element in detail.
The mandatory merger-control regime is housed in the new Part IVA of the Competition and Consumer Act 2010 (Cth). It replaced the previous voluntary, informal-clearance system that had operated for decades. The legislation received Royal Assent in 2025 and commenced on 1 January 2026, establishing Australia as one of the growing number of jurisdictions with a suspensory, pre-completion notification requirement.
Under the new framework, any “acquisition” that meets prescribed thresholds must be notified to the ACCC before it is completed. The regime is explicitly suspensory: parties are prohibited from giving effect to the acquisition until the ACCC has made a determination or the statutory review period has expired. The ACCC has published several guidance documents to assist parties, including the Merger Process Guidelines (Interim Version, December 2025) and a dedicated Merger Reform FAQ (updated 6 March 2026).
Key primary sources for JV parties:
For JV parties specifically, the critical question is whether their proposed arrangement falls within the statutory definition of an “acquisition” and, if so, whether it confers “control” in a manner that triggers the notification obligation. The ACCC has signalled that it will look to substance over form, meaning a contractual JV that confers decisive commercial influence can be caught just as readily as an equity-based structure.
The following six-step decision framework helps JV parties determine whether their transaction requires ACCC notification for joint ventures in Australia. Work through each step in sequence.
In a typical equity JV, parties subscribe for shares in a new or existing company. The ACCC’s guidance on ACCC merger control for JVs makes clear that acquiring a shareholding of any size can constitute an “acquisition” for Part IVA purposes, provided the holder gains the ability to exercise material influence. A 50/50 equity split does not automatically equate to “control”, but where one party holds casting votes, chair-appointment rights, or exclusive vetoes over key reserved matters (such as budget approval, business-plan adoption, or senior management appointments), the ACCC may treat that party as acquiring control.
Industry observers expect the ACCC to scrutinise governance arrangements closely, particularly where a nominally equal shareholding masks asymmetric decision-making power through side agreements or shareholder-deed provisions.
Contractual JVs, those without a shared equity vehicle, can also amount to a notifiable acquisition if the contractual terms confer decisive influence over the commercial conduct of a business. The ACCC’s Merger Process Guidelines note that long-term exclusive supply agreements, management contracts, and profit-sharing arrangements may all be relevant. The test is whether the arrangement, viewed in its totality, gives one party the practical ability to determine the strategic direction of the other’s business or a substantial part of it.
The likely practical effect is that parties to long-term franchise, distribution, or management agreements should assess whether their deal crosses the control threshold, even in the absence of any share transfer.
The regime includes connected-entity provisions that aggregate the revenues and market positions of related bodies corporate and, in some circumstances, entities acting in concert. For JV parties that belong to larger corporate groups, this means the thresholds may be met even if the JV vehicle itself is small. Parties must map their full group structures and any existing interests in competing or adjacent markets before assessing whether notification is required.
| JV Type | Typical Control Indicators | ACCC Notification Risk |
|---|---|---|
| Equity 50/50 JV with joint board | Shareholding + board control + reserved matters shared | High, if one party obtains de facto control or exclusive vetoes |
| Minority-equity JV + extensive management rights | Minority shares + management appointment powers + decisive vetoes | Medium–High, depending on practical control exercised |
| Contractual JV (no equity) | Long-term exclusive supply or management rights, decisive operational control via contract | Medium, can be treated as acquisition if contract confers decisive influence |
The ACCC has established monetary thresholds that determine when an acquisition must be notified. The thresholds are designed to capture transactions of a size and scale likely to raise competition concerns, while exempting smaller deals from the notification burden. As set out on the ACCC’s Thresholds for Notifying Acquisitions page, there are two principal tests that operate cumulatively.
| Threshold | How Measured | Practical Signposts for JV Parties |
|---|---|---|
| Combined Australian turnover of the acquirer (party-size test) | Aggregate Australian revenue of the acquirer and its connected entities in the most recent financial year | Large corporate groups, PE sponsors with multiple portfolio companies, and national franchise networks are most likely to meet this limb |
| Cumulative Australian turnover of the target / JV entity (target-size test) | Aggregate Australian revenue of the target business, entity, or assets being acquired | Even a modestly sized JV vehicle can meet this test if the underlying business generates sufficient Australian revenue |
| Transaction value / consideration | Total value of the acquisition (including assumed liabilities), where applicable | High-value acquisitions, particularly in property, infrastructure, and resources, may trigger notification on value alone |
Parties should note that the ACCC has published detailed guidance on how revenue is calculated, including treatment of intercompany transactions and foreign-currency conversion. Industry observers expect the ACCC to take a purposive approach to threshold calculations, particularly in complex group structures common to JV arrangements. The key message: do not assume a JV falls below the thresholds without conducting a rigorous, group-wide revenue assessment.
Thoughtful JV structuring in Australia can make the difference between a transaction that sails through with no notification obligation and one that triggers a lengthy (and costly) ACCC review. The goal is not to avoid legitimate regulatory scrutiny, but to ensure the governance and commercial architecture of the JV accurately reflects the parties’ genuine intentions, and does not inadvertently confer a level of control that triggers the mandatory notification regime.
The allocation of board seats, voting rights, and reserved matters is the single most important determinant of whether an equity JV crosses the control threshold for ACCC purposes. Key drafting risks include:
The recommended approach when drafting a JV agreement to manage ACCC risk is to use genuinely balanced governance: equal board representation, mutual vetoes on a symmetrical list of reserved matters, and joint appointment of key management personnel.
Parties may be able to achieve their commercial objectives through supply agreements, distribution licences, or IP-licensing arrangements that stop short of conferring control. For example, a manufacturer and a distributor could enter a long-term supply agreement that allocates territory and pricing guidelines without giving either party decisive influence over the other’s broader business.
However, the ACCC has cautioned that the form of the arrangement is not determinative. If a suite of interconnected commercial contracts, viewed together, gives one party the practical ability to dictate the other’s strategic direction, the ACCC may treat the arrangement as an acquisition conferring control. Parties should therefore assess the cumulative effect of all related agreements, not just the JV agreement in isolation.
Call and put options are common in JV agreements, particularly those with a staged-investment structure. A call option allowing one party to acquire the other’s interest at a future date may itself constitute a notifiable acquisition if, at the time of exercise, the thresholds are met and control passes. Key drafting caveats include:
The following checklist and sample clauses are designed to assist parties drafting JV agreements under the 2026 regime. These are illustrative examples, all clauses should be reviewed and adapted by qualified legal counsel for the specific transaction.
Drafting checklist, key items to address:
Sample clauses (illustrative, seek legal review before use):
Understanding the procedural mechanics of the notification process is essential to managing deal timetables and stakeholder expectations. The ACCC’s Merger Process Guidelines (Interim Version, December 2025) and the Merger Reform FAQ (6 March 2026) set out the applicable procedures.
The notification must be lodged by the “acquirer”, that is, the party (or parties) acquiring shares, assets, or a controlling interest. In a multi-party JV, where two or more parties are each acquiring interests in a new JV entity, coordinated co-notification is the standard approach. The Merger Process Guidelines indicate that parties should identify a single lead contact for the ACCC’s engagement, even where multiple parties are co-notifiers. In practice, the JV agreement should designate which party bears primary responsibility for preparing and lodging the notification, and all parties should agree to provide timely cooperation.
The ACCC offers both short-form and long-form notification pathways. The selection depends on the complexity of the transaction and the degree of competitive overlap or concern:
The notification process operates in two phases. The ACCC conducts an initial assessment (Phase 1) and may proceed to a detailed review (Phase 2) if competition concerns are identified. Fees are payable at each stage and vary based on the complexity and value of the transaction.
| Stage | Indicative Timeline | Key Points for JV Parties |
|---|---|---|
| Pre-notification (voluntary) | Variable, recommended for complex JVs | Parties may engage informally with the ACCC before lodging; this can streamline the formal process |
| Phase 1, Initial assessment | Statutory initial period from date of valid notification | ACCC may clear, request further information (which stops the clock), or proceed to Phase 2 |
| Phase 2, Detailed review | Extended review period; additional fees apply | Triggered where competition concerns identified; parties may offer undertakings to address concerns |
| Determination | At conclusion of applicable review phase | Clearance, clearance with conditions, or prohibition; parties may seek Tribunal review of a prohibition |
Parties should factor notification timelines into their overall deal timetable from the outset. Early engagement through a pre-notification meeting with the ACCC is strongly recommended for complex JV structures where the control analysis is nuanced.
When preparing a notification, JV parties should assemble the following materials:
The ACCC has the power to grant waivers from the notification requirement in certain circumstances. The Merger Reform FAQ (6 March 2026) confirms that a waiver may be sought where the transaction is unlikely to substantially lessen competition and the administrative burden of notification is disproportionate to the competitive risk. Parties must apply proactively and provide supporting evidence.
Early indications suggest the ACCC will exercise its waiver power conservatively, particularly during the initial years of the new regime. Parties considering a waiver application should prepare a robust submission addressing market definition, competitive conditions, and the absence of competitive overlap or vertical effects.
The enforcement consequences of proceeding without notification are severe. The regime provides for penalties for completing a notifiable acquisition without clearance, including:
Where a deal is at risk of delay or collapse due to notification timelines, parties should explore interim arrangements that do not amount to completion (such as escrow or hold-separate arrangements) rather than proceeding in breach of the suspensory obligation.
The ACCC notification framework applies across all sectors, but certain industries present recurring control-analysis challenges for JV structuring in Australia. The following anonymised vignettes illustrate common risk patterns.
The following checklist summarises the key steps for deal teams preparing a joint venture that may require ACCC notification for joint ventures in Australia.
The mandatory merger-notification regime that took effect on 1 January 2026 has introduced a critical new compliance obligation for joint-venture parties across every sector of the Australian economy. Whether a JV involves an equity subscription, a contractual collaboration, or a hybrid structure, the question of ACCC notification for joint ventures in Australia must now be addressed at the earliest stage of deal planning, not as an afterthought. Parties that invest in proper threshold analysis, thoughtful governance design, and robust notification-cooperation provisions will be best positioned to move through the regulatory process efficiently and protect the commercial value of their ventures.
For bespoke advice on a specific JV structure, engagement with qualified legal advisers experienced in Australian competition law is strongly recommended.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Louis Shivarev at TNS Lawyers, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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