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When an Italian company enters financial distress, its directors face a concrete choice between two principal restructuring routes: the court-supervised concordato preventivo and the privately negotiated accordo di ristrutturazione dei debiti. Deciding between a concordato preventivo vs accordo di ristrutturazione in Italy in 2026 is more consequential than in any recent year, because the MEF Ministerial Decree of 11 May 2026 (published in GU n.115, 20 May 2026) has overhauled the methodology for the Concordato Preventivo Biennale (CPB), materially altering the tax calculus that underpins the decision. This guide sets out both options dimension by dimension, delivers a clear decision framework, and identifies the precise situations in which directors should engage specialist insolvency counsel before committing to either path.
The concordato preventivo is Italy’s flagship court-supervised insolvency procedure, now governed by the Codice della Crisi d’Impresa e dell’Insolvenza (CCII, D.Lgs. 12 gennaio 2019, n. 14). It allows a debtor company to propose a restructuring plan, which may include a partial write-down of debts, an extended payment schedule, or the disposal of certain assets, to its creditors under the oversight of a judicial commissioner (commissario giudiziale) appointed by the court.
The procedure begins with a voluntary petition filed by the debtor with the competent court. The court evaluates admissibility, appoints the commissioner, and convenes creditors for a vote. Creditors vote in classes, and the plan is approved if it secures the majority thresholds prescribed by the CCII. Once homologated (confirmed) by the court, the concordato binds all creditors, including dissenters, producing a binding, enforceable restructuring.
The concordato preventivo suits companies that need the coercive force of a court order to overcome holdout creditors, that require a significant debt haircut, or that face a complex creditor base spanning secured, unsecured, and privileged claims. It also provides a formal shield against individual enforcement actions from the moment the petition is filed, giving directors breathing room to finalise the plan.
Since 2024, the concordato preventivo intersects with the Concordato Preventivo Biennale (CPB), established by D.Lgs. 12 febbraio 2024, n. 13. The CPB is a biennial tax settlement mechanism that allows eligible taxpayers, including distressed companies that apply ISA (Indici Sintetici di Affidabilità Fiscale), to lock in their tax base for a two-year period. For companies simultaneously pursuing a concordato preventivo, the CPB can deliver valuable tax certainty and cash-flow predictability during the restructuring period, provided the company meets the eligibility criteria and submits the required models to the Agenzia delle Entrate.
The accordo di ristrutturazione dei debiti is a contractual, out-of-court restructuring tool also codified within the CCII framework. Unlike the concordato preventivo, it originates as a private negotiation between the debtor and its creditors. The debtor drafts a restructuring agreement, accompanied by an independent expert’s attestation (attestazione) confirming the plan’s feasibility and the company’s ability to pay non-adhering creditors in full and on time.
The agreement must be signed by creditors representing at least 60 % of total claims (or 30 % in the case of the “extended” version). Once concluded, the debtor files the agreement with the court for homologation. Judicial homologation grants the agreement protections similar to those of a concordato, including a stay on enforcement actions, but the procedure remains fundamentally consensual in nature.
A critical question directors ask is whether an accordo di ristrutturazione can bind non-adhering creditors. The answer is qualified: under the accordi di ristrutturazione cram-down provisions in the CCII, the court may extend certain effects to non-adhering creditors, notably tax and social-security creditors through the transazione fiscale mechanism, if the plan offers them treatment at least as favourable as they would receive in liquidation. However, for ordinary commercial creditors who do not sign, the debtor must demonstrate it can pay them in full. This makes the accordo most effective when a company can secure broad creditor buy-in voluntarily.
The accordo suits companies whose creditor base is concentrated, whose relationships with key lenders remain workable, and whose directors prioritise speed and confidentiality over the binding force of a court-imposed solution. It is typically faster and less costly than a full concordato, and it avoids the reputational impact of a public court filing, at least until registration.
The following table sets out the core dimensions that distinguish the two restructuring options under Italy’s 2026 framework. Directors should read each row as a decision input, not merely as a definitional contrast.
| Dimension | Concordato Preventivo (Court-Led) | Accordo di Ristrutturazione (Negotiated) |
|---|---|---|
| Eligibility | Any debtor meeting the CCII insolvency thresholds (D.Lgs. 14/2019); voluntary petition only | Any debtor; no minimum insolvency threshold required to negotiate; expert attestation mandatory |
| Creditor approval thresholds | Majority vote within each creditor class as prescribed by the CCII; court homologation can override dissenting classes under specific conditions | 60 % of total claims (standard) or 30 % (extended version); non-adhering commercial creditors must be paid in full |
| Timing (typical) | 6–18 months from filing to homologation, depending on plan complexity and court workload | 3–9 months if creditor negotiations succeed; faster where creditor base is concentrated |
| Cost structure | Court filing fee + commissioner remuneration + legal and financial advisors; higher overall cost due to judicial oversight | Expert attestation fee + legal and financial advisors; lower overall cost; no commissioner |
| Tax treatment (CPB 2026) | Eligible companies may lock tax base for 2 years via CPB (D.Lgs. 13/2024; MEF DM 11 May 2026); high tax certainty | No automatic tax lock; transazione fiscale available for tax/social-security debts only; negotiated case by case |
| Directors’ liability | Court supervision provides documented evidence of timely action; reduces personal exposure if filing is prompt | No judicial supervision shield; directors bear full risk of later challenge if insolvency is subsequently declared |
| Enforceability / cram-down | Homologation binds all creditors, including dissenters, if CCII requirements met | Cram-down limited to tax/social-security creditors via transazione fiscale; commercial holdouts must be paid in full |
| Public disclosure | Court filing is public from the date of admission; reputational impact immediate | Private until registered with the Companies Register; reputational impact deferred and often limited |
| Best suited for | Companies needing a binding debt haircut, facing holdout creditors, or requiring strong liability protection for directors | Companies with cooperative creditors, concentrated lending relationships, and a premium on speed and confidentiality |
Key takeaways from the table:
Under the CCII (D.Lgs. 14/2019), access to the concordato preventivo requires the debtor to meet the statutory insolvency thresholds, broadly, that the company is in a state of crisis or insolvency as defined by the Code. The debtor must file a voluntary petition with the competent court, accompanied by a restructuring plan and supporting financial documentation.
The accordo di ristrutturazione imposes no formal insolvency threshold for initiation. Any debtor may negotiate with creditors and propose an agreement, provided an independent expert attests to the plan’s feasibility. This lower barrier to entry makes the accordo accessible to companies in pre-crisis states that want to restructure proactively, before insolvency is formally established.
Tax treatment is where the 2026 landscape diverges most sharply. Companies pursuing a concordato preventivo may simultaneously access the concordato preventivo biennale 2026 under D.Lgs. 13/2024, as implemented by the MEF DM of 11 May 2026. The CPB locks the company’s tax base for the 2026–2027 biennium, based on a formula that uses ISA data, corrective factors and the MEF methodology. The practical effect is that the company’s income-tax and IRAP liability become predictable for two years, a significant cash-flow advantage during restructuring.
Companies using the accordo di ristrutturazione do not have automatic access to this tax lock. They may negotiate a transazione fiscale covering tax and social-security debts, but this requires specific court approval and does not guarantee the same two-year certainty the CPB provides.
| Cost / Tax Item | Concordato Preventivo | Accordo di Ristrutturazione |
|---|---|---|
| Court filing contribution | Required (contributo unificato varies by claim value); payable at petition | Required only if the agreement is submitted for judicial homologation |
| Commissioner / trustee | Commissario giudiziale appointed by the court; remuneration set by court based on asset/liability volume | No commissioner; independent attestor fee only (typically lower) |
| Legal and financial advisory fees | Higher, plan preparation, creditor-class analysis, court hearings, commissioner liaison | Lower, focused on negotiation, expert report and (optional) homologation filing |
| CPB tax-base lock (2026–2027) | Available under D.Lgs. 13/2024 + MEF DM 11 May 2026; income-tax and IRAP base fixed for the biennium | Not available; transazione fiscale possible but case-specific and requires court approval |
| Overall cost trajectory | Higher upfront; potentially lower total tax outlay if CPB applies | Lower upfront; tax costs remain variable and subject to negotiation outcomes |
Speed favours the accordo. A well-prepared accordo di ristrutturazione can move from first creditor contact to homologation in three to nine months. The concordato preventivo, by contrast, typically requires six to eighteen months, driven by the sequential steps of court admission, commissioner appointment, creditor-class formation, voting, and judicial homologation. Industry observers expect that court backlogs in major Italian jurisdictions, Milan, Rome, Naples, continue to extend concordato timelines in 2026, reinforcing the speed advantage of the negotiated route where creditor cooperation is achievable.
Italian insolvency law imposes a duty on directors to take prompt action when a company enters crisis. Under the CCII, directors who delay filing face potential personal liability for the aggravation of the company’s insolvency. The concordato preventivo offers directors an important shield: the act of filing for court-supervised restructuring is documented, dated, and supervised, providing strong evidence that the duty to file was discharged in a timely manner.
The accordo di ristrutturazione, being a private negotiation, does not carry the same documentary protection. If the restructuring fails and the company later enters liquidation, directors may face claims that they should have sought court protection sooner. This liability risk is a decisive factor for directors of companies where the restructuring outcome is uncertain.
The concordato preventivo’s defining advantage is universal binding force: once homologated, the plan binds every creditor, including those who voted against it, provided the CCII’s approval thresholds and fairness requirements are met. This makes the concordato indispensable when the creditor base includes holdouts whose refusal to cooperate would otherwise torpedo the restructuring.
The accordo di ristrutturazione’s cram-down power is narrower. The CCII permits the court to impose the agreement on dissenting tax and social-security authorities (via transazione fiscale) if the plan offers them treatment no worse than liquidation. But ordinary commercial creditors who refuse to sign must be paid in full and on time. This structural limitation means the accordo cannot deliver a debt haircut to a reluctant creditor base, only to those who consent.
The most significant 2026 development is the MEF Ministerial Decree of 11 May 2026, published in Gazzetta Ufficiale n.115 on 20 May 2026. This decree implements the updated MEF methodology for the Concordato Preventivo Biennale covering the 2026–2027 tax periods. The methodology defines how the Agenzia delle Entrate calculates the proposed tax base, incorporating ISA reliability indicators, sector-specific corrective factors, and provisions for extraordinary events (such as the economic effects of ongoing geopolitical disruptions).
In parallel, the Agenzia delle Entrate issued Provvedimento Prot. n. 71684 of 27 February 2026, which approved the ISA and CPB models, technical specifications, and software tools that taxpayers and their advisers must use to compile and submit the required data. Directors of companies considering the concordato preventivo route should note that the data-collection requirements under the 2026 models are more granular than in previous years, demanding timely coordination between the company’s finance team, tax advisers, and insolvency counsel.
The practical effect of these changes is threefold. First, the CPB tax-base lock is now built on a more refined formula, which early indications suggest will produce slightly higher proposed tax bases for some sectors, meaning the “discount” from locking in early is no longer as generous as in the first CPB cycle. Second, submission deadlines are aligned with the standard tax-return calendar, so directors must begin data preparation well in advance of filing. Third, the interaction between the CPB election and the concordato timeline must be carefully sequenced: accepting the CPB proposal before or during a concordato filing has different procedural consequences that require specialist advice.
The choice between these two restructuring paths is not a matter of general preference, it depends on specific, identifiable conditions in the company’s situation. The following framework translates those conditions into clear recommendations.
Choose the concordato preventivo when:
Choose the accordo di ristrutturazione when:
| If your priority is… | Choose… |
|---|---|
| Binding all creditors, including holdouts | Concordato preventivo |
| Tax certainty via CPB 2026–2027 | Concordato preventivo (with CPB election) |
| Director liability protection | Concordato preventivo |
| Speed and lower cost | Accordo di ristrutturazione |
| Confidentiality | Accordo di ristrutturazione |
| Proactive pre-crisis action | Accordo di ristrutturazione |
| Cram-down of tax/social-security debts | Either route (transazione fiscale available in both; concordato offers broader cram-down) |
Not every distressed company needs to retain insolvency counsel immediately, but certain triggers make professional advice essential before committing to either route. Engage a specialist insolvency lawyer in Italy when:
The choice between a concordato preventivo vs accordo di ristrutturazione in Italy in 2026 hinges on three practical variables: the degree of creditor cooperation the company can realistically achieve, the value of the CPB tax-base lock under the new MEF methodology, and the directors’ need for liability protection through court-supervised proceedings. Where holdout creditors, fragmented claims, or significant tax exposures are present, the concordato preventivo is the stronger route. Where speed, cost, and confidentiality are paramount, and at least 60 % of creditors will sign, the accordo di ristrutturazione delivers a faster, leaner outcome.
In either case, the 2026 regulatory changes make early professional advice not merely prudent but essential to avoid procedural missteps that can expose directors personally and compromise the restructuring itself.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Maurizio Orlando at Orlando E Associati – Studio Legale, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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