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director liability insolvency hotspot period

Germany: Director Liability in the Insolvency Hotspot Period

By Oliver Otto
– posted 1 hour ago

Few areas of German corporate law carry consequences as immediate and personal as director liability in the insolvency hotspot period. When a GmbH approaches financial crisis, the window between recognising distress and filing for insolvency, often called the hotspot or twilight period, can determine whether a managing director faces damages claims running into millions, criminal prosecution, or both. At Rimon Falkenfort, I regularly advise directors navigating this critical phase, and the pattern I see most often is the same: the crisis itself is manageable, but the delay in acting transforms a corporate problem into a personal one.

With German courts continuing to expand managing director liability through landmark rulings, understanding exactly when to file, which payments to stop, and how to document every decision has never been more important.

Key Takeaways

  • File without undue delay, with a strict outer limit of three weeks. Under § 15a of the German Insolvency Code (Insolvenzordnung, InsO), managing directors must file for insolvency without undue delay once illiquidity (Zahlungsunfähigkeit) is established, with a strict outer limit of three weeks, which is not a permitted reaction period but only available where there is a realistic prospect that the insolvency ground can be remedied within that timeframe.
  • Over-indebtedness (Überschuldung) allows a longer filing window, but only with a positive going-concern prognosis. Where over-indebtedness is the sole trigger, the maximum period for filing extends to six weeks (raised from the previous three-week standard), but only if no illiquidity exists and a positive going-concern prognosis is being assessed on a substantiated basis.
  • Prohibited payments during the hotspot period create personal liability. Payments made after insolvency maturity that are not consistent with the care of a prudent businessperson expose directors to personal repayment claims under § 15b InsO.
  • Case law extends liability even after a director leaves office. Courts have held that directors may be liable for damages that arise after their departure where the root cause was misconduct during their tenure and such damages are causally linked to that breach.
  • Documentation is your strongest defence. Every payment decision, every board resolution, and every piece of legal advice received during the crisis period should be recorded contemporaneously.

Legal Triggers: When Must a Managing Director File for Insolvency in Germany?

German insolvency law imposes a mandatory obligation on managing directors to file for the opening of insolvency proceedings once specific financial triggers are met. This is not a discretionary decision, it is a statutory duty carrying both civil and criminal sanctions. The legal framework is primarily set out in § 15a InsO.

Definitions: Illiquidity vs Over-Indebtedness

Two distinct grounds trigger the obligation to file for insolvency in Germany, and understanding the difference between them is essential for managing director liability:

  • Illiquidity (Zahlungsunfähigkeit), § 17 InsO. A GmbH is illiquid when it is unable to pay its due debts. German case law has developed a rule of thumb under which a liquidity gap of approximately 10% or more of its total due liabilities that persists and cannot be closed within three weeks may indicate illiquidity, subject to an overall assessment of the company’s financial position. This is an objective test, the director’s subjective awareness is irrelevant to whether the condition exists.
  • Over-indebtedness (Überschuldung), § 19 InsO. Over-indebtedness exists where a company’s liabilities exceed the value of its assets, unless a positive going-concern prognosis (Fortführungsprognose) can be demonstrated. If the business has a realistic prospect of continued operation, over-indebtedness alone does not trigger the filing obligation, but the prognosis must be substantiated and documented and is inherently based on forward-looking assumptions.

However, imminent illiquidity (drohende Zahlungsunfähigkeit), § 18 InsO, entitles, but does not compel, the debtor company to file voluntarily. It becomes relevant as an early-warning indicator and for accessing preventive restructuring frameworks.

Standard Deadlines and Practical Interpretation

The filing must be made without undue delay (ohne schuldhaftes Zögern) and at the latest within three weeks of the occurrence of illiquidity, as specified in § 15a(1) InsO. For over-indebtedness as the sole filing trigger, a 2022 legislative reform extended the maximum filing period to six weeks, provided that no illiquidity exists and that a positive going-concern prognosis is being carefully assessed on a substantiated basis during that extended window.

In practice, “without undue delay” means that directors must act as soon as they become aware, or should have become aware, of the insolvency ground. The three-week or six-week maximum is an outer limit, not a grace period. If a director is aware of illiquidity on day one and waits until day twenty to file, courts will examine whether the delay was justified by concrete rescue efforts or was simply procrastination. Hence, the advice to clients is direct: treat the obligation as potentially arising once they know, or ought reasonably to have known, of facts indicating a liquidity gap of any significance, not from the moment your accountant confirms it.

The Hotspot / Twilight Period: Prohibited Payments and Director Liability

The insolvency hotspot period, the interval between the moment insolvency maturity arises and the actual filing or opening of proceedings, is where director liability risks are at their most acute. During this twilight period, managing directors remain in operational control of the company, but their freedom to make payments is sharply restricted by § 15b InsO.

The core rule is straightforward: after the onset of illiquidity or over-indebtedness, directors may only make payments that are consistent with the care of a prudent businessperson (Sorgfalt eines ordentlichen Geschäftsmannes). Payments that fail this test expose the director to personal liability for the full amount paid out.

The payment prohibition during the crisis period applies even where a payment appears commercially sensible at the time, unless it can be specifically justified under the standard of a prudent businessperson.

How Courts Assess Director Intent and Reasonableness

German courts apply an objective standard when evaluating whether payments made during the hotspot period were permissible. The key question is whether a hypothetical prudent managing director, aware of the company’s insolvency, would have made the same payment.

In practice, if the insolvency administrator can show that a payment was made after insolvency maturity, directors must substantiate that such payment complied with the standard of a prudent businessperson.

Recent Case Law and Enforcement Trends 

The landscape of director liability in Germany’s insolvency hotspot period has shifted materially over recent years. Courts have broadened the scope of personal exposure.

Notable Cases and Trends

  • Extension of liability to post-office damages. Courts have confirmed that managing directors may be liable for damages that arise after they have left office where such damages are causally linked to misconduct during their tenure.
  • Stricter interpretation of “without undue delay”. Courts are increasingly scrutinising whether directors acted immediately upon the occurrence of illiquidity, treating the three-week deadline as an absolute outer boundary.
  • Payment prohibition. Payments made in the weeks preceding a filing are routinely subject to review by insolvency administrators and courts.

Practical Implications for Directors

These developments mean three things in practice. First, resignation does not, in itself, eliminate exposure. Second, any delay beyond what is strictly necessary for genuine restructuring efforts will be scrutinised. Third, payments made during the hotspot period will be reviewed retrospectively.

Director Liability Exposure and Mitigation: Civil, Criminal and Estate Claims

The consequences of a managing director’s failure to act properly during the insolvency hotspot period fall into three distinct categories, each with different standards and remedies.

  • Civil liability to the insolvency estate. The administrator can claim compensation to the estate of all prohibited payments made after insolvency maturity. Directors are personally liable for the full amount unless they can prove the payment was consistent with prudent business conduct.
  • Civil liability to individual creditors. Creditors who extended credit to the company after the point at which the director should have filed might be allowed to claim compensation for their losses directly from the director.
  • Criminal liability. Delayed or omitted insolvency filings are criminal offences. Intentional late filing carries a penalty of up to three years’ imprisonment; negligent delay carries a penalty of up to one year.

Insurance and D&O Coverage

Directors’ and officers’ (D&O) insurance can provide a financial safety net, but its reliability in insolvency scenarios is limited. D&O policies exclude cover for deliberate criminal acts, and some contain specific insolvency exclusion clauses.  Insolvency administrators may seek to assert claims directed at available D&O insurance cover, creating complex three-party dynamics between director, insurer and estate.

Documentation Best Practice

One of the most important mitigation measures during the hotspot period is rigorous, contemporaneous documentation.

Courts give significant weight to contemporaneous documentation when assessing whether a director acted with the care of a prudent businessperson. Retrospective justifications, prepared after proceedings have begun, carry far less persuasive force.

Cross-Border Group Complications

For managing directors of German subsidiaries within international corporate groups, additional complications arise. Parent company guarantees, intercompany loans, and cash-pooling arrangements can blur the boundary between solvent and insolvent entities. A German subsidiary may be technically illiquid even while the group as a whole remains solvent, and the German director’s filing obligation is assessed at the entity level, not the group level.

The most common blind spots for international groups operating in Germany is the assumption that group solvency protects subsidiary directors.

Conclusion and Next Steps

Director liability in the insolvency hotspot period is not an abstract legal risk, it is a concrete, personal exposure that attaches the moment a managing director knows or should know that the company is illiquid or over-indebted. The deadlines are unforgiving: three weeks for illiquidity, six weeks for over-indebtedness (with documented restructuring efforts), and the true standard is without undue delay. Every payment made during this period will be scrutinised, and case law makes clear that liability can follow directors long after they leave office.

Need Legal Advice?

For specialist advice on this topic, contact Oliver Otto at Rimon Falkenfort.

Disclaimer

This article is provided for general information purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Each situation requires individual legal assessment.

FAQs

When must a managing director file for insolvency in Germany?
File without undue delay, at the latest within three weeks of recognising illiquidity or within six weeks for over-indebtedness with documented restructuring, per § 15a InsO. Seek legal advice immediately.
Generally speaking: Illiquidity (§ 17 InsO) means the company cannot pay its due debts. Over-indebtedness (§ 19 InsO) means liabilities exceed assets unless a positive going-concern prognosis exists. Both trigger mandatory filing.
Damage claims by insolvency administrators for all prohibited payments, criminal prosecution carrying up to three years’ imprisonment for intentional delay, damages claims from individual creditors, and potential disqualification from management roles.
Yes. Liability can extend to post-office damages where misconduct during the director’s tenure, including delayed filing, caused losses that crystallised later.
Immediately upon any sign of illiquidity or material cashflow problems, ideally within 24 hours. Early engagement preserves defences, ensures statutory timelines are met, and allows structured decision-making.
Coverage depends on policy terms. D&O policies exclude deliberate criminal acts or contain specific insolvency exclusions. Directors should review their policy with specialist counsel before any crisis arises.
Generally speaking: No. The filing obligation under § 15a InsO applies at the individual entity level. A German GmbH managing director must file if the subsidiary is illiquid or over-indebted, regardless of the parent group’s financial position.
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Germany: Director Liability in the Insolvency Hotspot Period

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