Our Expert in Italy
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Last updated: 6 May 2026
Corporate litigation Italy entered a new phase in early 2026 when Legislative Decree No. 211/2025 came into force, transposing Directive (EU) 2024/1226 and creating dedicated criminal offences for breaches of EU restrictive measures. For the first time, Italian corporates and their directors face explicit criminal and administrative liability for sanctions violations, a development that reshapes risk management for banks, multinational subsidiaries and any entity touching sanctioned counterparties. This article provides a practical litigation playbook covering the new sanctions exposure, directors’ liability under the Model 231 framework, the evolving enforceability of third-party litigation funding, and the bank dispute risks Italy-based general counsel must now plan for.
If you only read one thing: Italy’s transposition of Directive (EU) 2024/1226 through Legislative Decree No. 211/2025 introduced corporate criminal offences for sanctions breaches, extended the scope of Legislative Decree 231/2001 (Model 231) to cover these new offences, and triggered immediate compliance obligations for every company operating in or through Italy. General counsel should treat Q1 2026 as the baseline for updated risk assessments.
The legal landscape for corporate litigation Italy practitioners shifted decisively with the EU’s adoption of Directive (EU) 2024/1226, which required all Member States to introduce criminal penalties for sanctions breaches. Italy fulfilled this mandate through Legislative Decree No. 211/2025, which entered into force in late 2025 and immediately redefined sanctions corporate liability Italy-wide.
Prior to the Decree, Italy lacked dedicated criminal sanctions for breaches of EU restrictive measures. Prosecutions relied on general foreign-policy and export-control provisions, which were narrow in scope and rarely invoked. Legislative Decree No. 211/2025 changed this by introducing targeted offences covering:
Penalties for individuals include imprisonment, while corporate criminal offences Italy now trigger administrative fines calculated on a quota system and, in serious cases, disqualification orders and judicial supervision under the Model 231 framework. Industry observers expect prosecutors to prioritise cases involving financial intermediaries and repeat offenders, given the regulatory emphasis on banking-sector compliance.
| Date | Measure | Practical Effect |
|---|---|---|
| 2024 | Adoption of Directive (EU) 2024/1226 requiring Member States to criminalise sanctions breaches | Established harmonised EU-wide obligation; set transposition deadline for Member States |
| Late 2025 | Italy publishes Legislative Decree No. 211/2025 in the Gazzetta Ufficiale | Created dedicated criminal offences for sanctions breaches; amended Legislative Decree 231/2001 predicate-offence catalogue |
| January 2026 | Major law-firm alerts published (Cleary Gottlieb, Greenberg Traurig, Baker McKenzie, LAWP) | Signalled market awareness; compliance deadline effectively set at Q1 2026 for Model 231 updates |
| 2026 (ongoing) | European Commission enforcement monitoring and infringement proceedings | Commission oversight ensures Italian implementation remains aligned with Directive objectives |
Legislative Decree 231/2001, commonly referred to as “Law 231” or the Model 231 regime, establishes administrative liability for Italian legal entities whose employees or representatives commit certain predicate offences in the interest or to the advantage of the company. It operates alongside criminal proceedings against individuals and can result in monetary sanctions, confiscation, prohibition from contracting with public authorities, and even judicial liquidation in extreme cases.
Legislative Decree No. 211/2025 expressly adds sanctions-breach offences to the catalogue of 231 predicate offences. The practical consequence is that any company lacking an effective compliance programme specifically addressing EU restrictive measures now faces corporate exposure if an employee commits a sanctions offence, even without board-level knowledge. This makes compliance sanctions litigation a board-level governance priority rather than merely a regulatory afterthought.
Understanding how sanctions cases are initiated, investigated and prosecuted in Italy is essential for any corporate litigation Italy defence strategy. The new regime creates parallel enforcement tracks, criminal, administrative and civil, each with distinct evidentiary requirements and tactical implications.
Enforcement typically begins with one of three triggers: a suspicious-transaction report filed by a financial institution under Italy’s anti-money-laundering framework; a referral from the Bank of Italy or the Italian Financial Intelligence Unit (UIF); or intelligence shared through EU-level cooperation mechanisms, including Europol financial-crime units and the European Commission’s sanctions-monitoring bodies.
Once an investigation is opened, prosecutors in Italy have broad powers to:
The culpability standard for individuals under the new Decree encompasses both intentional conduct and, for certain offences, gross negligence, meaning that a director who failed to implement adequate screening could face personal criminal exposure even without direct knowledge of a specific sanctioned transaction.
Beyond criminal proceedings, sanctions breaches open the door to civil claims. Counterparties whose funds are frozen, contracts disrupted or payments delayed may bring tort or breach-of-contract claims. In addition, shareholders may pursue derivative actions against directors for losses attributable to compliance failures. Banks face particular exposure where account-blocking measures are later found to have been disproportionate or inadequately documented, a pattern that is already generating bank dispute risks Italy 2026 practitioners must prepare for. The likely practical effect is a rise in multi-track proceedings where criminal, regulatory and civil claims run simultaneously, each requiring coordinated defence strategies.
Directors’ liability Italy now extends explicitly to sanctions compliance. Under the combined effect of Legislative Decree No. 211/2025, the Model 231 framework and general civil-law duties of care, directors who fail to oversee adequate sanctions controls face criminal prosecution, personal fines, disqualification and civil damages claims.
A company can avoid or mitigate administrative liability under Legislative Decree 231/2001 by demonstrating that it had adopted and effectively implemented an Organisational, Management and Control Model (the “Model 231”) before the offence occurred, and that the offence was committed by circumventing the model’s controls. With sanctions breaches now among the predicate offences, every existing Model 231 must be reviewed and updated to address:
Early indications suggest that Italian courts will scrutinise the specificity and operational effectiveness of these sanctions modules, generic compliance frameworks are unlikely to provide a credible defence.
In corporate litigation Italy disputes, contemporaneous documentation often determines the outcome. Directors should ensure that board and committee minutes record:
10-Point Directors’ Mitigation Checklist
As corporate disputes grow more complex and enforcement risks multiply, third-party litigation funding Italy is attracting increasing interest from claimants, respondents and their advisers. The enforceability of funding arrangements in Italy, however, remains nuanced, a critical consideration for any party evaluating this option in a sanctions-related or banking dispute.
Italy has no specific statute governing litigation funding. Unlike common-law jurisdictions, Italian law does not have a formal doctrine of champerty or maintenance. However, public-policy considerations and professional-conduct rules for lawyers create boundaries that funding agreements must respect.
The most commonly used funding structures in Italy include:
| Funding Model | How It Works | Key Enforceability Considerations |
|---|---|---|
| Assignment of proceeds | Claimant assigns a share of future litigation proceeds to the funder in exchange for upfront capital | Generally enforceable; must be structured to avoid re-characterisation as a loan or insurance product |
| Damages-based funding | Funder receives a percentage of damages recovered, bearing the risk of an adverse outcome | Enforceable in principle; Italian courts examine proportionality and whether the arrangement impairs the claimant’s control over proceedings |
| Contingency-fee hybrid | Lawyer fees are partially contingent on outcome, supplemented by funder capital for disbursements | Italian Bar rules restrict pure contingency fees (patto di quota lite), but success-premium arrangements are permissible if carefully drafted |
Recent practice shows Italian courts enforcing funding agreements where the contract clearly preserves the claimant’s procedural autonomy, includes transparent fee disclosure, and does not create conflicts of interest between funder and counsel. Litigation funding enforceability turns on drafting quality: vague or overly one-sided clauses invite judicial scrutiny.
An emerging question in the corporate litigation Italy landscape is whether litigation funders providing capital to parties involved in sanctions-related disputes assume any regulatory risk themselves. Industry observers expect that funders will increasingly require representations and warranties from funded parties confirming that the underlying dispute does not involve sanctioned persons or transactions. Funders would be well advised to conduct their own sanctions screening before committing capital, particularly where the funded claim relates to frozen assets or blocked payments. Careful allocation of regulatory risk in the funding agreement, through indemnification clauses and termination triggers, is now a best-practice requirement.
Funding-Agreement Clause Checklist:
Banks operating in Italy occupy the front line of sanctions enforcement, and the front line of corporate litigation Italy disputes arising from that enforcement. The combination of mandatory asset-freezing obligations, anti-money-laundering reporting duties and contractual obligations to customers creates a triangle of conflicting pressures that frequently results in litigation.
When a bank blocks an account or refuses to process a payment due to a sanctions match, the affected counterparty’s first move is typically an application for urgent interlocutory relief (provvedimento d’urgenza) under Article 700 of the Italian Code of Civil Procedure. Courts assess whether the blocking was proportionate and whether the bank followed its own documented procedures.
For banks defending these applications, the strength of the defence depends almost entirely on contemporaneous documentation. A practical evidence checklist for bank dispute risks Italy 2026 includes:
Industry observers expect Italian courts to apply a reasonableness standard: a bank that can show documented, proportionate decision-making will fare significantly better than one that imposed a blanket freeze without individualized assessment.
Compliance sanctions litigation in the banking sector increasingly resolves through regulator-informed settlements rather than full trial proceedings. Banks negotiating settlements should consider:
For general counsel facing a potential sanctions-related enforcement action or civil claim, the first 72 hours after receiving notice or identifying an internal red flag are decisive. This litigation playbook provides a step-by-step framework for corporate litigation Italy defence teams.
Preserving legal privilege is the single most important procedural step in the early phase of any sanctions investigation. Italian law recognises professional secrecy (segreto professionale) for communications between lawyer and client, but the scope of protection differs from common-law privilege and can be narrower in regulatory proceedings. Immediate actions include:
The decision tree for notification depends on the nature of the trigger event:
Scenario 1, Bank blocks payment due to sanctions screening alert. A mid-sized Italian bank’s automated screening system flags an outgoing EUR 2.4 million payment to a logistics company whose beneficial owner appears on the EU consolidated sanctions list. The bank freezes the payment and the customer’s account. The customer, a legitimate trading company, applies for urgent interlocutory relief, arguing the sanctions match is a false positive. The bank’s defence succeeds because it can produce contemporaneous screening reports, escalation emails and a documented decision by the compliance committee to maintain the freeze pending enhanced due diligence. Lesson: real-time documentation of every screening decision is the most effective defence against wrongful-blocking claims.
Scenario 2, Director alleged to have approved shipment to sanctioned entity. A director of an Italian industrial-components manufacturer is investigated for approving a shipment to a subsidiary of a sanctioned entity. Prosecutors seize board minutes, email correspondence and export-licence documentation. The company avoids corporate liability under Model 231 because its compliance programme included a dedicated sanctions module, regularly updated screening lists, and mandatory sign-off by the compliance officer for all transactions exceeding EUR 500,000. The director faces individual charges but mounts a defence based on reliance on professional advice and documented compliance procedures. Lesson: the separation between corporate and individual liability turns on whether the Model 231 was genuinely operational, not merely on paper.
The 2025–2026 reforms demand an immediate, structured response from every general counsel and compliance officer at companies operating in or through Italy. The following eight actions should be treated as non-negotiable priorities:
Corporate litigation Italy is no longer a jurisdiction where sanctions enforcement can be treated as a remote risk. The combination of new criminal offences, expanded corporate liability, heightened bank-sector scrutiny and evolving litigation-funding structures means that preparation, not reaction, defines the companies that will navigate this landscape successfully.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Debora Monaci at SZA Studio Legale, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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