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company share transfer in germany

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Company Share Transfer in Germany: Notarisation, SPA Essentials, Shareholder Consent and Register Updates

By Global Law Experts
– posted 54 minutes ago

Last reviewed: July 10, 2026

A company share transfer in Germany is one of the most common routes for acquiring or divesting a business, yet the process is governed by strict notarisation requirements, statutory consent mechanics and post-closing filing obligations that differ significantly from Anglo-American share-transfer conventions. Under Section 15 of the German Limited Liability Companies Act (Gesetz betreffend die Gesellschaften mit beschränkter Haftung, GmbHG), every agreement to transfer GmbH shares must be executed in notarised form, failure to comply renders the entire transaction void. This guide provides deal teams, in-house counsel and international advisers with a concrete, step-by-step framework covering notarisation logistics, share purchase agreement (SPA) drafting essentials, shareholder consent procedures, commercial register updates and the principal tax traps that surround German share deals.

Whether you are a domestic buyer structuring an acquisition or a foreign investor completing a cross-border purchase, the checklist-driven approach below is designed to keep every critical deadline and statutory obligation in view.

Quick Answer, Does a Company Share Transfer in Germany Require Notarisation?

Yes. Under GmbHG §15(3), every agreement to transfer shares in a GmbH (Geschäftsanteile) must be notarised by a German notary. An agreement that fails to meet this form requirement is void (nichtig). The notarisation obligation extends not only to the final transfer deed but also to any binding obligation to transfer, including the SPA itself if it contains the operative assignment clause.

  • Mandatory scope. Both the Verpflichtungsgeschäft (obligating agreement) and the Verfügungsgeschäft (actual assignment of the share) require notarial form (GmbHG §15(3) and §15(4)).
  • Healing mechanism. If an agreement was defective in form, the deficiency is cured once the assignment itself is properly notarised and entered in the shareholder list, but relying on this cure carries significant practical risk.
  • No self-help workaround. Unlike shares in a German stock corporation (Aktiengesellschaft, AG), GmbH shares are not freely transferable by simple endorsement or book-entry, notarisation is always required regardless of the number of shares or the value of the transaction.

Industry observers note that the notarisation requirement, while sometimes perceived as burdensome by international buyers, serves as an important buyer-protection and anti-fraud mechanism that reduces disputes over the validity of share transfers significantly compared to jurisdictions that rely solely on written instruments.

Overview: Share Deal vs Asset Deal, Why the Transfer Structure Matters

Before initiating a transfer of shares in a German GmbH, the parties must decide whether to structure the acquisition as a share deal (purchase of the GmbH’s shares) or an asset deal (purchase of individual assets and liabilities from the GmbH). The choice carries dramatically different consequences for notarisation obligations, tax exposure, employee transfer rules and regulatory filing requirements.

Issue Asset Deal Share Deal
Object of transfer Individual assets, contracts, IP, employees, each transferred separately GmbH shares (Geschäftsanteile), company continues as legal entity
Notarisation required? Only if real property is included (BeurkG) Always required (GmbHG §15)
Real estate transfer tax (GrESt) Applies to any real property transferred Applies if ≥ 90 % of shares are transferred within 10 years and GmbH holds German real estate (GrEStG)
Employment transfer §613a BGB, automatic transfer with employee protections and objection right No transfer of employment, employer entity unchanged
Liabilities Buyer generally assumes only agreed liabilities All liabilities remain with GmbH, buyer assumes indirectly
Contracts & permits Each contract must be assigned; permits may not be transferable Contracts and permits remain with GmbH
Typical use case Cherry-picking specific business lines; distressed acquisitions Full company acquisitions; private equity buy-outs; cross-border M&A

From a practical standpoint, share deals dominate mid-market and private equity transactions in Germany because they allow the buyer to acquire the entire business, including contracts, licences and workforce, without the need to assign individual assets. The trade-off is that the buyer inherits all known and unknown liabilities, making thorough due diligence and robust SPA warranties essential. For a comparative perspective on how share transfers work in other jurisdictions, see our guide on how to transfer shares to another person in Singapore.

Statutory Mechanics for GmbH Share Transfers, Step-by-Step

The transfer of shares in a German GmbH follows a precise statutory sequence prescribed primarily by GmbHG §15 and the Notarisation Act (BeurkG). Every step must be completed correctly for the transfer to take legal effect.

Agreement and Notarisation Requirement

Under Section 15(3) GmbHG, the agreement to transfer shares requires notarised form. In German legal doctrine, this means a German notary (Notar) must:

  1. Read the entire agreement aloud to the parties.
  2. Confirm the identities of the signatories (or their authorised representatives).
  3. Verify that all parties understand the legal consequences of the transfer.
  4. Create a notarial deed (Niederschrift) compliant with the BeurkG.

The assignment of the shares (Abtretung) under Section 15(4) GmbHG likewise requires notarisation. In practice, the SPA and the assignment are usually combined in a single notarial deed to avoid duplication of costs and procedural steps.

Execution of the SPA: Signatures, Notarisation and Translations

All parties, or their authorised representatives holding notarised powers of attorney, must appear before the notary simultaneously. Where a party is represented by proxy, the power of attorney itself must be notarised or at least certified in a form accepted by German notarial practice. For cross-border transactions, foreign powers of attorney typically require an apostille or legalisation.

If any party does not speak German, the notary must arrange for a sworn interpreter to be present during the reading of the deed. The SPA may be drafted bilingually (German and English), but the German version governs if there are discrepancies, unless the parties explicitly agree otherwise in the notarial deed.

Assignment vs Purchase, Understanding the Two Legal Acts

German law distinguishes between the Verpflichtungsgeschäft (the contractual obligation to transfer, i.e., the SPA) and the Verfügungsgeschäft (the actual disposition, i.e., the assignment). Both must be notarised independently under Section 15 GmbHG. Where the SPA contains the assignment clause (as is standard), a single notarisation covers both legal acts. Splitting the SPA and the assignment into separate instruments, for example, when closing conditions must be satisfied before shares change hands, requires careful drafting to ensure both instruments are properly notarised.

Post-Closing Steps: Shareholder Register and Commercial Register

After the notarised transfer is complete, the notary is responsible for updating the shareholder list (Gesellschafterliste) maintained at the commercial register (Handelsregister). The updated list must be filed electronically via the notary’s system with the relevant local court (Amtsgericht). The following timeline reflects typical practice:

Step Responsible Party Typical Timeline
Signing and notarisation of SPA (including assignment) Buyer, seller, notary Day 1 (signing date)
Satisfaction of closing conditions (if deferred closing) Buyer, seller Days 1–60 (as agreed)
Notary prepares and files updated shareholder list Notary Within days of closing
Commercial register acknowledges receipt and publishes updated list Amtsgericht Typically 1–4 weeks
New shareholder listed as owner in the Handelsregister Amtsgericht / automatic Upon publication

Until the updated shareholder list is filed with the Handelsregister, the previous shareholder continues to be treated as the owner vis-à-vis the company and third parties for certain purposes under GmbHG §16. This makes prompt filing essential.

GmbH Share Transfer Notarisation Explained: BeurkG, Process, Remote Options and Costs

Notarisation is the single most critical procedural step in any company share transfer in Germany. The requirements are governed by the Notarisation Act (Beurkundungsgesetz, BeurkG), which prescribes the format, content and execution of notarial deeds.

When a Notary Is Required

A German notary is required whenever GmbH shares are transferred, regardless of the transaction value, the number of shares involved, or whether the buyer and seller are individuals or corporate entities. The notary is not merely witnessing signatures; the notary creates a legal instrument of public faith (öffentliche Urkunde) that carries evidentiary force in German courts.

Notarial Record Contents

Under the BeurkG, the notarial deed must contain:

  • Full identification of all parties, names, dates of birth, addresses and proof of identity (passport or German identity card).
  • Full text of the agreement, the SPA and assignment clause, read aloud by the notary.
  • Declaration of understanding, confirmation that all parties understood the content and legal consequences.
  • Signatures, original signatures of all parties (or their authorised representatives) and the notary’s own signature and seal.
  • Interpreter certification, where a non-German-speaking party is present, the interpreter’s identity and oath must be recorded.

Remote and Video Notarisation

German law has introduced provisions for online notarisation (Online-Beurkundung) in certain contexts. The Bundesnotarkammer has published guidance confirming that video-based notarisation is available for certain corporate filings and company formations. However, industry observers expect that for GmbH share transfers, most notaries continue to require in-person attendance as of mid-2026, particularly for complex transactions involving multiple parties or foreign-language elements. Parties planning a cross-border share purchase should confirm remote notarisation availability directly with the instructed German notary well in advance of closing.

Typical Notarisation Costs

Notary fees in Germany are set by statute under the Court and Notary Costs Act (Gerichts- und Notarkostengesetz, GNotKG) and are calculated on the basis of the transaction value (Geschäftswert). As a rough guide:

  • Transaction value up to €1 million: notary fees typically range from approximately €1,000 to €3,500.
  • Transaction value €1–10 million: fees typically range from approximately €3,500 to €12,000.
  • Transaction value above €10 million: fees are capped under the GNotKG fee tables but can reach €20,000 or more for complex multi-step deeds.

These figures include the notary’s fee for the deed, filing the updated shareholder list and certified copies, but exclude VAT and any additional charges for translations or travel.

Share Purchase Agreement Essentials and Must-Be-Notarised Clauses

The share purchase agreement notarised in Germany serves as both the commercial contract and the legal instrument of transfer. Drafting requires particular care because the notarisation requirement means that any material amendment to the SPA after notarisation will itself require fresh notarisation, adding time and cost to the process.

Key SPA Provisions

A well-drafted GmbH SPA should address, at minimum, the following elements:

  • Identification of the shares. Precise description of the shares being transferred, including nominal values and share numbers as they appear in the current shareholder list.
  • Purchase price and payment mechanics. Fixed price, earn-out components, escrow arrangements and payment timelines.
  • Representations and warranties. Seller’s warranties regarding the company’s financial condition, assets, liabilities, contracts, employees and compliance status.
  • Indemnities. Specific indemnification obligations, tax indemnities are especially critical in German share deals.
  • Closing conditions. Conditions precedent such as regulatory approvals, shareholder consent and lender waivers.
  • Non-compete and transitional provisions. Post-closing restrictions on the seller and transitional service arrangements.

Model Clause Bank, Five Essential SPA Clauses

The following model clauses illustrate standard formulations. They are summaries for guidance purposes and must be adapted by qualified counsel for each transaction:

  1. Transfer and Assignment Clause: “The Seller hereby assigns and transfers to the Buyer, with economic effect as of the Closing Date, share no. [●] in [Company Name] GmbH with a nominal value of EUR [●], representing [●]% of the registered share capital. The Buyer hereby accepts the assignment.”
  2. Closing Conditions Clause: “The obligations of the parties to complete the transactions contemplated herein are subject to the fulfilment (or written waiver) of the following conditions precedent on or before [date]: (a) receipt of shareholder consent pursuant to §[●] of the Articles of Association; (b) [regulatory approval, if applicable].”
  3. Shareholder Consent Clause: “The transfer of the Shares is subject to the prior written consent of [remaining shareholders / the shareholders’ meeting] in accordance with §[●] of the Articles of Association. The Seller undertakes to procure such consent prior to the Closing Date.”
  4. Escrow Clause: “An amount of EUR [●] of the Purchase Price shall be deposited into a notarial escrow account (Notaranderkonto) and released to the Seller upon [expiry of the warranty period / satisfaction of specified conditions].”
  5. Tax Indemnity Clause: “The Seller shall indemnify and hold the Buyer and the Company harmless against any tax liabilities of the Company arising from or relating to periods prior to the Closing Date, including any GrESt liability triggered by the transactions contemplated herein.”

Cross-Border Drafting Pitfalls

For foreign buyers, three issues require particular attention in a share purchase agreement notarised in Germany:

  • Powers of attorney. If a foreign buyer cannot attend the notarisation in person, a notarised power of attorney must be prepared in the buyer’s home jurisdiction, apostilled (for Hague Convention countries) or legalised, and presented to the German notary. Processing time can be several weeks.
  • Bilingual deeds. While bilingual SPAs are common, the German version is the one the notary reads aloud and certifies. Ensure that the English translation is prepared by a qualified legal translator and reviewed for consistency.
  • Corporate authority. Foreign corporate buyers must provide evidence of due authority, typically a board resolution and certificate of good standing, in a form acceptable to the German notary. Requirements vary by jurisdiction of incorporation.

Shareholder Consent in GmbH Transfers, Who Must Agree?

A frequently asked question is whether GmbH shares are freely transferable. The statutory default under GmbHG §15 is that shares can be transferred, but the articles of association (Gesellschaftsvertrag) almost always modify this default with consent requirements, pre-emption rights or outright transfer restrictions.

Default Rules vs Articles of Association

Unless the articles say otherwise, a shareholder may transfer shares without the consent of other shareholders. In practice, however, the vast majority of GmbH articles contain a consent clause (Vinkulierungsklausel) requiring the approval of the shareholders’ meeting, or, in some cases, the managing directors, before any transfer can proceed. A transfer executed without the required consent is void.

Typical Shareholders’ Agreement (SHA) Restrictions

Beyond the articles of association, shareholders frequently enter into a separate shareholders’ agreement imposing additional restrictions. Common provisions include:

  • Pre-emption rights (Vorkaufsrechte). Existing shareholders may have the right to purchase the shares on the same terms offered by the third-party buyer.
  • Tag-along and drag-along rights. Minority shareholders may be entitled to join (tag along) or be compelled to participate (drag along) in a sale.
  • Right of first refusal. A separate mechanism requiring the selling shareholder to offer the shares to existing shareholders before marketing them externally.
  • Board or advisory-board approval. Some SHAs require approval from a supervisory or advisory board before a transfer can close.

For a detailed examination of what happens when shareholders disagree on a transfer, see our article on deadlock provisions in shareholders’ agreements. The enforceability of shareholders’ agreements in other jurisdictions also offers useful comparative context for cross-border deal teams.

Consent Mechanics, Practical Steps

To obtain shareholder consent for a GmbH share transfer, the following steps are typically required:

  1. Convene a shareholders’ meeting (Gesellschafterversammlung) or circulate a written resolution (Umlaufbeschluss).
  2. Present the proposed transfer, identifying the buyer, the shares to be transferred and the key commercial terms.
  3. Obtain the required majority vote as specified in the articles (often a simple majority, though some articles require unanimity or a qualified majority).
  4. Record the resolution in writing and have it notarised if the articles require notarial form for consent resolutions.
  5. Provide the consent resolution to the instructed notary before (or simultaneously with) the notarisation of the SPA.

Register and Post-Closing Updates, Share Register and Commercial Register Filing

The share register Germany update process is a mandatory post-closing step that directly affects who is recognised as the legal owner of the transferred shares.

Updating the Shareholder List (Gesellschafterliste)

Under GmbHG §40, the managing directors of the GmbH are responsible for maintaining an accurate shareholder list. In practice, however, it is the notary who prepares and files the updated shareholder list with the commercial register following a share transfer. The updated list must reflect:

  • The new shareholder’s full name, date of birth, residential address and the nominal value and number of shares acquired.
  • Remaining shareholders’ unchanged holdings (confirmed).
  • Any changes to total share capital (if shares have been divided or consolidated as part of the transaction).

Filing with the Handelsregister

The updated shareholder list is filed electronically with the competent local court (Amtsgericht) through the Handelsregister portal. Key filing requirements include:

  • Electronic submission by the notary in a prescribed XML format.
  • Notary’s certification confirming the list’s accuracy and that the underlying transfer was validly notarised.
  • No separate registration fee for the shareholder list filing itself, costs are covered by the notary’s overall fee under the GNotKG.

Delays in filing can create a mismatch between the legal position (share transferred at closing) and the register position (old shareholder still listed). Under GmbHG §16(1), a person listed in the most recently filed shareholder list is deemed to be the shareholder vis-à-vis the company. This means that until the new list is filed, the old shareholder may continue to exercise voting rights and receive distributions, a result that can cause significant commercial disputes if filing is delayed.

Employment, Works Council and Regulatory Considerations

A share deal in Germany does not, in itself, trigger an automatic transfer of employees because the employer entity (the GmbH) remains unchanged. However, several employment and regulatory issues still arise.

Works Council Notification (BetrVG)

If the target GmbH has a works council (Betriebsrat), the managing directors must inform the works council about the share transfer pursuant to the Works Constitution Act (Betriebsverfassungsgesetz, BetrVG). While a pure share deal does not trigger formal co-determination rights in the same way as an asset deal under §613a BGB, the works council has information and consultation rights under BetrVG §§80 and 111 where the transaction constitutes a significant business change (Betriebsänderung). Early indications suggest that in transactions where the buyer plans post-closing restructuring, the works council’s consultation rights are an increasingly prominent source of deal delay.

Regulatory Approvals

Depending on the GmbH’s industry, a company share transfer in Germany may require additional regulatory approvals, for example, from the Federal Financial Supervisory Authority (BaFin) for financial-services entities, or merger-control clearance from the Federal Cartel Office (Bundeskartellamt) if applicable thresholds are met. These requirements must be identified during due diligence and built into the SPA as closing conditions.

Tax and Special Traps: GrESt, Capital Gains, VAT and Reporting

Tax considerations can fundamentally alter the economics of a GmbH share deal. Three areas demand particularly careful analysis.

Real Estate Transfer Tax (GrESt), The 90 % Rule

Under the German Real Estate Transfer Tax Act (GrEStG), GrESt is triggered when at least 90 % of the shares in a company holding German real estate are transferred, directly or indirectly, within a ten-year period. The tax rate varies by federal state (Bundesland) and ranges from 3.5 % to 6.5 % of the property’s assessed value. Practical example: if a buyer acquires 100 % of a GmbH that owns commercial property in Berlin (where the GrESt rate is 6 %), the full GrESt liability will apply to the real estate value, potentially adding millions to the transaction cost.

Capital Gains Tax

The seller’s gain on the disposal of GmbH shares is generally subject to German income tax (for individuals) or corporate income tax (for corporate sellers). Under the partial-income method (Teileinkünfteverfahren), 60 % of the gain is taxable for individual sellers. Corporate sellers benefit from a 95 % exemption on the capital gain, with 5 % treated as non-deductible business expense. Cross-border sellers should examine applicable double-tax treaties, as Germany retains taxing rights over gains from substantial shareholdings (typically ≥ 1 %) under most treaties.

VAT and Reporting Obligations

The transfer of GmbH shares is generally exempt from VAT under German law. However, input-VAT deduction on advisory fees (legal, tax, financial) may be restricted depending on the transaction structure. Both buyer and seller have reporting obligations to the tax authorities (Finanzamt), and the notary is required to notify the tax office of the transfer within a prescribed period.

Practical Checklist for Deal Teams: Pre-Signing Through Post-Closing

The following 20-point checklist maps the key actions, the responsible party and the phase of the transaction:

  1. Due diligence: Complete legal, financial, tax and commercial due diligence on the target GmbH (Buyer).
  2. Structure decision: Confirm share deal vs asset deal structure and document rationale (Buyer / Seller).
  3. Articles review: Obtain and review articles of association for consent and transfer restrictions (Buyer’s counsel).
  4. SHA review: Identify and review any existing shareholders’ agreement (Buyer’s counsel).
  5. Shareholder consent: Draft and circulate shareholder consent resolution (Seller).
  6. Regulatory check: Identify any regulatory approvals required, BaFin, Bundeskartellamt, foreign investment screening (Both parties).
  7. GrESt analysis: Assess whether the GmbH holds real estate and model GrESt exposure (Buyer’s tax adviser).
  8. Instruct notary: Select and instruct German notary; confirm availability for notarisation date (Both parties).
  9. Power of attorney: If any party cannot attend, prepare and apostille notarised POA (Absent party).
  10. SPA drafting: Draft SPA including transfer clause, warranties, indemnities, escrow and closing conditions (Lead counsel).
  11. SPA review by notary: Submit draft SPA to notary for review and confirmation of compliance with BeurkG (Notary).
  12. Interpreter: If needed, engage sworn interpreter and confirm notary’s acceptance (Party requiring interpreter).
  13. Shareholder meeting: Hold shareholders’ meeting and pass consent resolution (Seller / GmbH).
  14. Signing and notarisation: Execute SPA before notary; notary reads aloud, parties sign (All parties / Notary).
  15. Purchase price payment: Transfer purchase price to notarial escrow (Notaranderkonto) or directly to seller (Buyer).
  16. Closing confirmation: Confirm satisfaction of all closing conditions and release of escrow funds if applicable (Both parties / Notary).
  17. Shareholder list update: Notary prepares and files updated shareholder list with Handelsregister (Notary).
  18. Tax notifications: Notary notifies competent tax office; parties file GrESt return if applicable (Notary / Buyer’s tax adviser).
  19. Works council notification: Inform works council (if any) of the change of control (GmbH managing directors).
  20. Post-closing integration: Update internal records, bank mandates, signatory authorities and insurance policies (Buyer / GmbH management).

Conclusion, Five Key Takeaways on Company Share Transfer in Germany

A company share transfer in Germany is a legally rigorous process that rewards meticulous preparation and punishes procedural shortcuts. The five most important points for any deal team to remember are: first, notarisation under GmbHG §15 is mandatory and non-negotiable, without it, the transfer is void; second, the SPA must address not only commercial terms but also the notarial form requirements under the BeurkG; third, shareholder consent and SHA restrictions must be identified, obtained and documented before closing; fourth, the updated shareholder list must be filed promptly with the Handelsregister to protect the buyer’s position; and fifth, GrESt exposure on real-estate-holding GmbHs can materially change the deal economics and must be modelled at the outset.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Tim Schwarzburg at KUNZ.law, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. German GmbH Act (GmbHG), Section 15 (Transfer of shares)
  2. Notarisation Act (Beurkundungsgesetz, BeurkG)
  3. German Real Estate Transfer Tax Act (GrEStG)
  4. Handelsregister (Commercial Register), Bundesanzeiger Portal
  5. Bundesnotarkammer (Federal Chamber of Notaries)
  6. Works Constitution Act (Betriebsverfassungsgesetz, BetrVG)
  7. Federal Ministry of Finance (Bundesfinanzministerium)

FAQs

How are shares in a German GmbH validly transferred?
Shares in a GmbH are validly transferred by executing a notarised share purchase agreement (or separate assignment deed) before a German notary, followed by the filing of an updated shareholder list with the commercial register (GmbHG §15(3) and §15(4)).
Yes. Every agreement to transfer GmbH shares, whether the transaction involves one share or all shares, and regardless of value, must be notarised. Failure to notarise renders the transfer void under GmbHG §15(3).
The minimum registered share capital for a standard GmbH is €25,000, of which at least half (€12,500) must be paid in before registration. Each share must have a nominal value of at least €1.
Real estate transfer tax (GrESt) is triggered when at least 90 % of the shares in a GmbH holding German real property are transferred within a ten-year period, whether directly or through indirect changes in ownership (GrEStG).
Yes. Most GmbH articles contain consent clauses (Vinkulierungsklauseln) requiring shareholder or management approval before any share transfer. A transfer without the required consent is void.
The notary who notarised the transfer prepares an updated shareholder list and files it electronically with the Handelsregister at the competent local court. Until the new list is published, the previous shareholder may continue to be treated as the owner for certain purposes under GmbHG §16.
A foreign buyer may appoint a representative holding a notarised and apostilled power of attorney to attend the German notarisation. Fully remote video notarisation for GmbH share transfers remains limited in practice; confirmation from the instructed notary is essential.
Shareholder consent is required where the articles of association include a transfer-restriction clause. Works council information rights under BetrVG may also apply if the transaction constitutes a significant business change. Neither approval should be assumed, both must be checked during due diligence.
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Company Share Transfer in Germany: Notarisation, SPA Essentials, Shareholder Consent and Register Updates

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