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Last updated: 13 May 2026
Directive (EU) 2026/799, the long-anticipated overhaul of harmonised EU insolvency, restructuring and second-chance rules, was formally adopted on 30 March 2026, giving every Member State a 33-month window to transpose its provisions into domestic law. For Italy, the transposition deadline of 30 December 2028 means that the country’s existing Business Crisis and Insolvency Code (Codice della crisi d’impresa e dell’insolvenza) will need significant amendment, creating immediate compliance and operational work for companies, directors and creditors with Italian exposures.
This guide provides a complete, Italy-specific playbook on the EU insolvency directive Italy transposition, covering the legislative timeline, the interaction with existing Italian insolvency law, directors’ duties and liability risks, and concrete checklists that CFOs, general counsel and bank workout teams can act on today. Rather than a short regulatory alert, the aim here is a single reference document that will be updated as Italian implementing measures are published in the Gazzetta Ufficiale.
The adoption of Directive (EU) 2026/799 on 30 March 2026 represents the most comprehensive EU-level reform of insolvency and restructuring law since the original Insolvency Regulation. The Directive mandates harmonised minimum standards across several pillars: access to preventive restructuring frameworks, early-warning mechanisms for financially distressed businesses, enhanced directors’ duties when insolvency is foreseeable, strengthened creditor protections during restructuring processes, streamlined cross-border coordination, and an improved second-chance discharge for honest entrepreneurs.
Italy must transpose all provisions by 30 December 2028. Given Italy’s track record of complex, multi-step legislative implementation, evidenced by the protracted roll-out of the Business Crisis and Insolvency Code itself, early preparation is essential. The likely practical effect will be that companies, boards and creditors who wait for the final Italian implementing decree will face a compressed compliance scramble in 2028.
Three immediate takeaways:
Directive (EU) 2026/799 builds on the foundations laid by the earlier Restructuring Directive (EU) 2019/1023 while substantially expanding scope. Industry observers expect the final text to be the reference framework for EU insolvency harmonisation for at least the next decade. Below are the headline obligations that Italian transposition must address.
Member States must ensure that viable debtors in financial difficulty have access to preventive restructuring frameworks at an early stage, before formal insolvency proceedings become unavoidable. The Directive specifies minimum procedural safeguards: debtor-in-possession management (with court-appointed supervision where needed), a moratorium on individual enforcement actions, and structured creditor voting on restructuring plans. For Italy, this will require a review of the existing composizione negoziata della crisi (negotiated crisis composition) and the concordato preventivo to ensure they meet the Directive’s minimum thresholds.
The Directive requires each Member State to establish clear early-warning tools that alert businesses to deteriorating financial conditions. These may include digital monitoring platforms, advisory services, and mandatory reporting triggers linked to financial indicators such as negative working capital, overdue payables or missed tax and social-security payments. Italy’s existing early-warning system, introduced under the Business Crisis and Insolvency Code, will need to be assessed for Directive compliance and, where necessary, upgraded.
A critical pillar for Italian company law: the Directive imposes a duty on directors to have due regard for the interests of creditors, employees and other stakeholders as soon as there is a likelihood of insolvency. Directors must take steps to avoid insolvency and to avoid deliberate or grossly negligent conduct that threatens the viability of the business. This reinforces, and in some areas expands, existing duties under Italian civil law (Articles 2392–2395 of the Codice Civile).
The Directive strengthens creditor participation rights: mandatory class formation for restructuring plan votes, protections against unfair prejudice, and cross-class cram-down mechanisms subject to judicial review. Secured creditors retain priority, but the transposition will clarify how Italian ranking rules interface with the new EU framework for creditor protections in Italy.
Building on the EU Insolvency Regulation (Recast), the Directive improves procedural coordination between main and secondary proceedings in different Member States. For Italian companies with cross-border operations, this means clearer rules on recognition of restructuring plans and better tools for managing multi-jurisdictional creditor claims.
Honest entrepreneurs who are not dishonest or fraudulent will benefit from a full discharge of debts within a maximum period specified by the Directive, aligning Italy’s discharge rules with harmonised EU standards.
Which entities are in scope? The Directive applies to all types of debtors, including natural persons carrying on business activities, with limited exclusions for certain financial institutions, insurance undertakings and public bodies already covered by sectoral EU rules. Italian transposition will need to map these exclusions onto domestic categories.
Understanding the transposition deadline and the likely Italian legislative process is essential for planning compliance work. The table below sets out confirmed dates and expected milestones.
| Date / period | Milestone | Status |
|---|---|---|
| 30 March 2026 | Directive (EU) 2026/799 formally adopted at EU level | Confirmed |
| April–May 2026 | Publication in the Official Journal of the European Union; entry into force (20th day after publication) | Confirmed / imminent |
| H2 2026 – H1 2027 | Italian Ministry of Justice establishes a drafting commission; public consultation on implementing measures | Expected |
| H2 2027 – H1 2028 | Draft legislative decree (decreto legislativo) submitted to the Council of Ministers; parliamentary review (committee opinions) | Expected |
| H2 2028 | Final legislative decree adopted by the Council of Ministers and published in the Gazzetta Ufficiale | Expected |
| 30 December 2028 | Transposition deadline, all Directive provisions must be in force in Italian law | Confirmed |
Italy typically transposes EU directives through a legge di delegazione europea (European delegation law) that authorises the Government to adopt implementing legislative decrees. Given the complexity of insolvency law, industry observers expect that a dedicated decreto legislativo, rather than a simple amendment to an existing code, will be the chosen instrument. The Ministry of Justice will likely publish draft implementing rules for public consultation, as it did during the preparation of the Business Crisis and Insolvency Code.
Italy’s primary insolvency statute, the Business Crisis and Insolvency Code (Codice della crisi d’impresa e dell’insolvenza, Legislative Decree No. 14/2019, as subsequently amended), replaced the venerable Legge Fallimentare (Royal Decree No. 267/1942). The Code has already been subject to multiple rounds of Italian insolvency reform, including through Legislative Decree No. 83/2022 which introduced amendments partly to align with the earlier Restructuring Directive (EU) 2019/1023.
Transposition of Directive (EU) 2026/799 will require further amendments to the Code. Three areas are likely to be the most significant drafting hotspots:
Academic commentary from the University of Bologna’s Italian Labour Law e-Journal has noted that Italy’s layered approach to insolvency reform, with multiple amending decrees, creates interpretive complexity. Early indications suggest that the Ministry of Justice will aim for a consolidated amending decree to minimise fragmentation, but this remains to be confirmed.
For company directors, the transposition of the Directive represents a material expansion of personal risk. The Directive requires that directors take prompt and reasonable steps to minimise losses to creditors when insolvency becomes likely, and Italy’s transposition will need to specify the trigger tests, procedural steps and liability consequences in concrete terms.
Current Italy insolvency law already imposes a general duty of diligence on directors (Article 2392 of the Codice Civile) and specific obligations to convene a shareholders’ meeting when losses exceed certain capital thresholds (Article 2447). The Business Crisis and Insolvency Code added further obligations, including the duty to adopt adequate organisational, administrative and accounting structures to detect early signs of crisis. The Directive builds on this foundation but introduces additional requirements that will likely sharpen directors’ duties in insolvency in Italy:
The transposition deadline of 30 December 2028 may seem distant, but the governance, contractual and operational changes required are substantial. Companies that begin now will be better positioned to navigate any restructuring scenario and to demonstrate compliance from day one. Below is a phased action plan.
The Directive’s strengthened debtor protections, moratoriums, cross-class cram-down and enhanced court oversight, will change the dynamics of creditor enforcement and workout negotiations in Italy. Creditor protections in Italy remain robust, but the terms of engagement are shifting. Creditors and banks should act now to protect their position.
Italian banks, which hold significant corporate loan exposures, should anticipate several operational changes. Early indications suggest that the Directive will require banks to engage with debtors earlier in the distress cycle, to participate constructively in preventive restructuring negotiations, and to accept restructuring outcomes approved through cross-class cram-down even where dissenting. Bank workout teams should:
Effective compliance with the EU insolvency directive Italy framework will depend on having the right tools and templates in place before the implementing rules take effect. Below is a summary of the key documents that companies, directors and creditors should prepare.
The following three scenarios illustrate how the Directive’s provisions are likely to operate in practice once transposed into Italian law.
A family-owned manufacturing company with €8 million annual revenue experiences a sustained decline in orders. Its 13-week cash-flow forecast shows that it will be unable to meet payroll and supplier obligations within 60 days. Under the new framework, the directors trigger the early-warning protocol, prepare a preliminary restructuring plan (operational cost reduction, renegotiation of lease terms, debt rescheduling) and file for access to the preventive restructuring framework. A moratorium on enforcement is granted while creditors vote on the plan. The directors’ contemporaneous documentation supports a safe-harbour defence against personal liability.
A mid-market logistics group with €50 million in bank debt and €20 million in trade payables breaches its bank covenants. The company engages a restructuring adviser, maps all creditors into classes (secured banks, unsecured trade creditors, intra-group claims) and proposes a restructuring plan with a debt-for-equity swap for banks and extended payment terms for trade creditors. One creditor class dissents, but the court approves the plan under cross-class cram-down, applying the “best interest of creditors” test and the “absolute priority” or “relative priority” rule as transposed by Italy.
A major Italian bank holds a €30 million secured loan to a distressed real-estate developer. NPL indicators trigger the bank’s internal workout escalation. The bank activates its workout team, obtains an updated property valuation, and engages with the debtor on a forbearance agreement that includes monthly reporting, a business plan and conditions for release of further drawdowns. When the debtor subsequently enters preventive restructuring, the bank participates as a secured creditor class and recovers in line with its security, the Directive’s protections ensure that the bank is not worse off than in a liquidation scenario.
| Entity type | Key early-warning triggers | Immediate practical next step |
|---|---|---|
| Large corporation (consolidated reporting) | Covenant breach; negative EBITDA for 2 consecutive quarters; liquidity shortfall exceeding 90 days of operating costs | Convene emergency board meeting; prepare 90-day cash-flow forecast; engage creditors; obtain legal review for preventive restructuring eligibility |
| Mid-market company (single-entity) | Overdue payables exceeding 60 days; negative working capital; missed bank covenants | Immediate creditor mapping; initiate tranche-reprofile negotiation; prepare restructuring plan outline |
| Bank / secured creditor | Borrower covenant default; rising NPL indicators; deteriorating collateral values | Activate workout team; commission updated asset valuation; consider pre-pack or forbearance with conditions |
The adoption of Directive (EU) 2026/799 marks a turning point for insolvency and restructuring practice across Europe, and the EU insolvency directive Italy transposition will be one of the most consequential legislative projects in Italian commercial law this decade. With a transposition deadline of 30 December 2028, the window for preparation is open but finite. Companies that act now, implementing early-warning systems, reviewing governance frameworks and preparing restructuring playbooks, will be materially better positioned than those that wait for the final Italian text.
For directors, the message is stark: personal liability exposure is expanding, and contemporaneous documentation of decisions and advice is the single most important protective measure. For creditors and banks, the restructuring landscape in Italy is becoming more structured and debtor-friendly, proactive engagement with facility agreements, workout processes and cross-border claim coordination is essential. The Italian Ministry of Justice’s drafting process will be the key development to monitor in the months ahead, and this guide will be updated as implementing measures are published. Readers seeking jurisdiction-specific advice on preparing for the Italian transposition can consult Italy-qualified insolvency lawyers through our Italy legal guides directory.
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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