Our Expert in Germany
No results available
Distressed M&A in Germany has entered a new phase in 2026, shaped by rising corporate insolvencies, tighter refinancing markets and the April 2026 rollout of the EU’s harmonised insolvency directive. For buyers, lenders and restructuring teams, the legal landscape now demands faster execution, deeper regulatory awareness and a transaction playbook that accounts for both the German Insolvency Code (Insolvenzordnung, InsO) and the pre-insolvency restructuring framework under StaRUG. This guide provides a step-by-step legal checklist, covering deal structuring, employee transfer obligations, clawback exposure and rescue financing, designed to help decision-makers move from opportunity assessment to signed SPA with confidence. Every section is built around the specific rules and practical risks that distinguish a distressed acquisition from a conventional German M&A process.
Before engaging advisors or entering a data room, use the twelve-point checklist below to frame your initial assessment. It is designed to be printed as a single page and used as a decision gate at the first internal committee meeting.
| Risk Category | Asset Deal (Insolvency Sale) | Share Deal |
|---|---|---|
| Successor liability for seller debts | Generally limited, buyer selects assets and liabilities | Full exposure, buyer acquires the legal entity with all liabilities |
| Employee transfer (§613a BGB) | Applies, all employees assigned to the transferred business unit transfer automatically | No transfer event, employees remain with the entity |
| Contract continuity | Requires individual assignment or novation for most contracts | Contracts remain in place unless change-of-control triggers apply |
| Tax loss carry-forwards | Lost, do not transfer with assets | Potentially preserved, subject to §8c KStG restrictions |
| Speed to closing | Fast (often 4–8 weeks in insolvency) | Slower, full due diligence and liability assessment required |
In a distressed M&A setting, the conventional due diligence timeline compresses dramatically. Where a standard German M&A process may allow three to six months of investigation, an insolvency asset sale regularly demands a binding bid within two to four weeks. The tension between speed and depth is the first strategic choice a buyer must resolve.
Industry observers expect that the most effective distressed-deal teams in 2026 will adopt a tiered diligence model. Tier 1 items, those that must be assessed before any indicative offer, include:
Tier 2 items, important but assessable in parallel with negotiations, include property and environmental liabilities, litigation exposure, and non-critical supplier contracts.
In formal insolvency proceedings, the insolvency administrator controls the data room. Buyers should submit a standardised request list within 48 hours of engagement. A practical six-question initial diligence checklist for internal use is:
The following red flags should prompt an immediate re-assessment of bid economics or deal structure:
The choice of deal structure is the single most consequential decision in any distressed M&A transaction in Germany. It determines the buyer’s liability envelope, the employee transfer regime, and the speed at which the transaction can close.
When a company is in formal insolvency proceedings under the InsO, the insolvency administrator has exclusive authority to dispose of assets belonging to the insolvency estate (Insolvenzmasse). The administrator’s fiduciary duty runs to the creditors, not to the debtor’s shareholders, which means the administrator is obliged to maximise recoveries. In practice, this creates a competitive bidding dynamic that favours buyers who can move quickly and demonstrate funding certainty.
The creditor committee (Gläubigerausschuss), where one has been appointed, must approve transactions of particular significance under §160 InsO. Buyers should confirm early whether creditor committee approval is required and build the approval timeline into their offer conditionality.
A key advantage of purchasing assets from the insolvency estate is that the buyer generally acquires them free from the debtor’s unsecured liabilities. Secured creditors retain their rights of separate satisfaction (Absonderungsrechte) over pledged assets, so buyers must negotiate releases or purchase prices that account for secured claims.
A share deal preserves the legal entity and, with it, all contracts, permits and relationships, but also all liabilities. In a distressed context, share deals are less common because they expose the buyer to hidden liabilities, pending litigation and the full tail of the target’s obligations. They may, however, be preferred where critical permits or licences are non-transferable, or where the tax loss carry-forwards of the entity have material value.
The StaRUG (Act on the Stabilisation and Restructuring Framework for Enterprises), which transposed the EU Restructuring Directive into German law, provides a pre-insolvency toolkit that can facilitate a sale before formal insolvency proceedings are opened. Under a StaRUG restructuring plan, a debtor can bind dissenting creditors to the terms of a transaction, provided certain majority thresholds and court confirmation requirements are met. Early indications suggest that buyers and sellers are increasingly exploring StaRUG-facilitated pre-insolvency sales in Germany as an alternative to the speed and reputational costs of formal insolvency.
| Mechanism | Buyer Protection | Practical Note |
|---|---|---|
| Insolvency asset sale (Insolvenzmasse sale) | Clean asset transfer; limited successor liability when purchased from administrator | Fast (often 4–8 weeks); typically no seller warranties; buyer must conduct accelerated diligence |
| Pre-insolvency sale under StaRUG | Possibility to bind dissenting creditors via restructuring plan; buyer may negotiate representations | Complex creditor voting process; timing and disclosure requirements are critical |
| Share purchase | Acquirer takes legal entity with existing contracts, permits and employees intact | Higher liability risk; tax and hidden liabilities less avoidable; full diligence essential |
Employee transfer obligations are among the most consequential, and most frequently underestimated, risks in a German asset deal. The rules governing employee transfer in an asset sale apply with full force in distressed transactions, though certain insolvency-specific modifications ease the burden on buyers.
Where the target business has a works council (Betriebsrat), the buyer and seller must comply with information and consultation obligations before closing. Under §613a(5) BGB, the employer must inform affected employees in writing about the transfer, the reason for it, the legal, economic and social consequences for employees, and any measures envisaged. Employees then have one month to object to the transfer. Failing to provide this information correctly does not block the transfer itself but extends the objection period indefinitely, a significant post-closing risk.
Under §613a BGB, all employees assigned to a transferred business or business unit (Betrieb or Betriebsteil) transfer automatically to the buyer by operation of law. The buyer assumes all rights and obligations under existing employment contracts, including accrued holiday, bonus entitlements and notice periods. However, in formal insolvency proceedings, certain modifications apply: the buyer is generally not liable for wage arrears and social security contributions that accrued before the opening of insolvency proceedings, as these become insolvency claims against the estate. This insolvency-specific carveout is one of the principal reasons why an asset deal in insolvency is attractive from an employment cost perspective.
Practical steps to mitigate employee-related exposure include:
One of the most persistent concerns for any buyer considering distressed M&A in Germany is the risk that the transaction itself, or payments made in connection with it, may be challenged and unwound after closing. German insolvency law provides the insolvency administrator with broad avoidance powers under §§129–147 InsO, and understanding the applicable look-back periods is essential to structuring a defensible transaction.
The InsO establishes several categories of avoidable transactions, each with its own look-back period measured from the date the insolvency application is filed:
In an asset deal conducted through formal insolvency proceedings, buyer liability for the seller’s debts is substantially limited. However, buyers should be aware of specific statutory successor liability provisions that can override contractual arrangements:
Rescue financing is frequently the linchpin of a viable distressed acquisition. In Germany, the legal framework for rescue financing has evolved significantly, particularly following the introduction of StaRUG and the 2026 EU insolvency directive amendments that expressly encourage member states to protect new financing provided during restructuring.
Lenders providing rescue financing in Germany typically require the following protections:
Where existing secured creditors hold rights of separate satisfaction (Absonderungsrechte) over the target’s assets, the buyer and its financing banks must negotiate clear intercreditor terms. Industry observers expect that the 2026 amendments will accelerate the adoption of standardised intercreditor agreements in German restructurings, bringing practice closer to the UK and US models. Key issues to resolve include the ranking of new money relative to existing security, the treatment of enforcement proceeds, and standstill periods during which existing creditors agree not to enforce.
German law requires specific formalities for the creation and perfection of security interests. Share pledges over GmbH interests must be notarised. Security assignments of receivables and movable assets (Sicherungsabtretung and Sicherungsübereignung) require written agreements but no registration. Land charges (Grundschulden) require entry in the land register and can take several weeks. Buyers and their financing banks should build these perfection timelines into the closing mechanics to avoid gaps in the security package.
The regulatory framework governing distressed M&A in Germany underwent material changes in early 2026. Understanding the timeline of these changes is critical for structuring transactions that comply with the current rules and benefit from the protections they offer.
| Date | Rule Change | Transactional Implication |
|---|---|---|
| January 2021 | StaRUG enters into force, transposing EU Restructuring Directive (2019/1023) into German law | Pre-insolvency restructuring plan tool becomes available; new option for pre-insolvency sales to bind dissenting creditors |
| June 2023 | EU Commission publishes proposal for harmonised insolvency rules (Directive proposal COM(2022) 702) | Signals future harmonisation of avoidance actions, creditor hierarchies and pre-pack frameworks across the EU |
| April 2026 | EU insolvency directive harmonisation provisions take effect in member states (first implementation tranche) | Cross-border insolvency cooperation rules tightened; new protections for rescue financing confirmed; pre-pack sale frameworks encouraged |
For buyers and restructuring teams considering a StaRUG-facilitated transaction, the following steps are essential:
The following annexes are designed for operational use by deal teams. They summarise the core documentary requirements at each stage of a distressed M&A process in Germany.
Annex A: Diligence Evidence List
Annex B: Purchase Checklist (Pre-Signing)
Annex C: Sample Indemnity Carveouts
Distressed M&A in Germany in 2026 operates at the intersection of commercial opportunity and legal complexity. The compressed timelines, limited warranties and layered regulatory requirements, from InsO avoidance rules to StaRUG restructuring plans and the EU insolvency directive, demand a disciplined, checklist-driven approach. Buyers who prioritise structured diligence, defensible pricing and early engagement with the insolvency administrator and creditor committee will consistently achieve better outcomes. Lenders who secure super-priority protections and clear intercreditor terms can participate with measured risk. For all stakeholders, the practical checklists and risk matrices set out in this guide provide a framework to move from initial assessment to a completed transaction with the legal rigour the German market demands.
The Global Law Experts lawyer directory connects buyers, lenders and restructuring teams with experienced German restructuring lawyers who can provide jurisdiction-specific guidance tailored to each transaction.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Dr. Anja Dachner at Kliemt.HR Lawyers, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
posted 1 minute ago
posted 19 minutes ago
posted 42 minutes ago
posted 1 hour ago
posted 1 hour ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
No results available
Find the right Legal Expert for your business
Sign up for the latest legal briefings and news within Global Law Experts’ community, as well as a whole host of features, editorial and conference updates direct to your email inbox.
Naturally you can unsubscribe at any time.
Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.
Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.
Send welcome message