[codicts-css-switcher id=”346″]

Global Law Experts Logo
how do you sell a company

How Do You Sell a Company in Germany (2026): Tax, Structure & Step-by-step Process for Owners

By Global Law Experts
– posted 1 hour ago

Last updated May 21, 2026, includes 2026 tax and merger-control updates.

How do you sell a company in Germany? You choose a deal form, share deal or asset deal, prepare the business for sale, negotiate commercial terms with a qualified buyer and manage the tax, regulatory and liability clearances that German law requires. For a typical mid-market transaction, the company sale process in Germany runs between three and nine months from preparation to closing. In 2026, renewed cross-border buyer interest and a recovering European M&A market are giving German SME owners improved exit opportunities, but recent developments in merger-control enforcement, ongoing Pillar Two implementation, and the expanded scope of the Supply Chain Due Diligence Act (Lieferkettensorgfaltspflichtengesetz, LkSG) mean that sellers must plan earlier and more carefully than in previous cycles.

This guide is a practical, seller-focused playbook. It walks company owners through every phase, from choosing between a share deal and an asset deal, through tax planning and seller due diligence, to merger-control filings, SPA negotiation and post-closing obligations. Whether you are a founder selling a GmbH to a private-equity fund, a family transferring a generational Mittelstand business, or a corporate group divesting a subsidiary to a foreign strategic buyer, the framework below will help you protect value and minimise risk.

How Do You Sell a Company in Germany?, Quick-Answer Timeline

The company sale process in Germany typically follows eight stages. Timelines vary by deal size and complexity, but the ranges below reflect mid-market experience.

  1. Preparation and valuation (4–8 weeks). Engage M&A counsel and a financial adviser. Obtain an independent business valuation. Set price expectations and identify deal-breakers.
  2. Pre-sale housekeeping (2–6 weeks). Clean up the corporate register, resolve dormant disputes, ensure statutory filings are current and prepare an information memorandum (IM).
  3. Confidential marketing and buyer approach (4–8 weeks). Decide between a targeted approach, a limited auction or a broad process. Issue teasers under NDA. Qualify buyers for financial capacity and strategic fit.
  4. Letter of intent / term sheet (2–4 weeks). Agree on headline terms, price mechanism, deal form (share or asset), exclusivity period and key conditions precedent.
  5. Buyer due diligence (4–8 weeks). Populate a virtual data room. Respond to buyer Q&A requests. Run parallel seller due diligence to identify disclosure risks.
  6. SPA negotiation and signing (4–6 weeks). Draft and negotiate the share purchase agreement (SPA) or asset purchase agreement (APA). Agree on reps & warranties, indemnities, escrow and earn-out terms.
  7. Closing and payment (1–4 weeks after signing). Satisfy conditions precedent, merger-control clearance, FDI screening (if applicable), third-party consents. Transfer shares or assets. Receive purchase price.
  8. Post-closing obligations and tax filings (ongoing, 3–24 months). File commercial-register changes, submit tax returns, manage escrow releases, and honour any transitional service agreements.

Industry observers expect that well-prepared mid-market transactions closing in 2026 will complete in roughly five to seven months. Complex cross-border deals or those requiring Bundeskartellamt clearance typically add four to eight weeks.

Deal Forms: Share Deal vs Asset Deal, Which Should a Seller Choose?

The single most consequential decision when selling a business in Germany is whether to structure the transaction as a share deal or an asset deal. Each form produces different tax outcomes, liability profiles and practical complexities. Understanding the share deal vs asset deal Germany pros and cons is essential before engaging with any buyer.

What Is a Share Deal?

In a share deal the shareholders transfer their shares in the company (typically a GmbH or AG) to the buyer. The company itself, with all its assets, contracts, employees, liabilities and permits, stays intact. Ownership changes at the shareholder level; nothing moves at the entity level. A share deal is the most common structure for German mid-market M&A because it is operationally simpler and, for many sellers, more tax-efficient.

What Is an Asset Deal?

In an asset deal the company sells individual assets, equipment, real estate, IP, customer contracts, inventory, and the buyer may also assume specified liabilities. The seller retains the legal entity (the corporate “shell”) after the transaction. Asset deals allow the buyer to cherry-pick assets and step up their tax base, but they create complexity around contract transfers, employee-transfer rules under Section 613a of the German Civil Code (BGB), and VAT treatment.

Pros and Cons for Sellers

Feature Share Deal Asset Deal
Who transfers ownership Shareholders transfer company shares; entity remains intact Company sells assets and liabilities; buyer may cherry-pick assets
Seller tax outcome (typical) Capital gain on shares for seller, tax treatment depends on seller type and available exemptions (e.g., 40% partial-income method for individuals, 95% exemption for corporate sellers) Taxable profit at seller company level; potential VAT and income tax consequences at both entity and shareholder levels
Seller liability post-closing Generally lower, liabilities remain with the company (though warranties and indemnities in the SPA still apply) Potentially higher, buyer may require seller indemnities for transferred liabilities; Section 75 of the German Tax Code (AO) can impose buyer liability for seller’s tax debts
Operational complexity Lower, contracts, permits and employees transfer automatically with the entity Higher, individual asset transfers may need counterparty consent; employees transfer by operation of law under BGB Section 613a but must be notified
Real estate transfer tax (Grunderwerbsteuer) May be triggered at rates of 3.5%–6.5% (depending on federal state) if share-deal thresholds are met Triggered directly on real estate assets included in the sale
Purchase-price step-up for buyer No step-up, buyer inherits book values Full step-up, buyer can depreciate assets at fair market value, creating future tax savings

Key Legal and Contractual Differences

From the seller’s perspective, the critical legal difference is liability exposure. In a share deal, the buyer acquires the entity “as is”, all hidden liabilities transfer inside the company. The seller’s exposure is capped by the reps, warranties and indemnities negotiated in the SPA. In an asset deal, the seller must separately identify every asset and liability to be transferred, and the contract must address each one. Failure to transfer a key contract (e.g., a customer framework agreement requiring counterparty consent) can reduce deal value.

Employment law is another important distinction. In a share deal, employees remain employed by the same entity, nothing changes. In an asset deal, Section 613a BGB mandates an automatic transfer of employees whose employment relationship is connected to the business unit being sold. Employees must be notified and have a one-month objection right. Mishandled employee notifications are a common source of post-closing disputes.

Worked Example: Net Proceeds After Tax

Consider a sole individual shareholder selling 100% of a GmbH at an enterprise value of €5 million. The shareholder originally paid €25,000 for the share capital.

  • Share deal (individual seller): Capital gain of €4,975,000. Under the partial-income method (Teileinkünfteverfahren), 60% of the gain, roughly €2,985,000, is taxable at the seller’s personal income tax rate (up to approximately 45% plus solidarity surcharge). Effective tax on the total gain is approximately 26–28%. Net proceeds to seller: roughly €3.6–3.7 million.
  • Asset deal (same individual as sole shareholder): The GmbH sells its assets. The gain is taxed at the corporate level (corporation tax at approximately 15% plus solidarity surcharge, plus trade tax at roughly 14–17% depending on municipality). After corporate-level tax, distributing the remaining cash to the shareholder triggers a second layer of tax. The combined effective tax burden is often 45–50% of the gain, leaving net proceeds to the shareholder of approximately €2.5–2.75 million.

This example illustrates why most individual sellers strongly prefer a share deal. Corporate sellers selling shares in a subsidiary can benefit from an even more favourable regime, the 95% participation exemption under Section 8b of the Corporation Tax Act (KStG).

Tax Implications for Sellers in Germany (2026 Update)

The tax implications of a company sale in Germany depend on two variables: the deal form (share vs asset) and the seller’s legal status (individual vs corporate). Careful planning before signing a letter of intent can save hundreds of thousands of euros.

Capital Gains on Shares, Corporate and Individual Seller Rules

For individual sellers, capital gains on shares in a GmbH or AG held as business assets are subject to the partial-income method. Sixty per cent of the gain is added to taxable income and taxed at the seller’s marginal income tax rate (14–45%) plus 5.5% solidarity surcharge on the tax itself. Shares held as private assets (non-business) are normally subject to the flat-rate withholding tax (Abgeltungsteuer) of 25% plus solidarity surcharge, though holdings of 1% or more in a corporation fall back into the partial-income method.

For corporate sellers (e.g., a GmbH holding company selling shares in a subsidiary), 95% of the capital gain is effectively tax-exempt under Section 8b KStG. Only 5% of the gain is treated as non-deductible business expenses, producing an effective tax rate of roughly 1.5% on the total gain. This makes structuring ownership through a holding company one of the most powerful pre-sale tax planning tools in German M&A.

Trade Tax, Corporation Tax and Solidarity Surcharge

If the seller entity is itself a German corporation, trade tax (Gewerbesteuer) applies to its business profits. The combined rate of corporation tax (15%) plus solidarity surcharge (0.825%) plus trade tax (typically 14–17%) produces a total effective corporate tax rate of roughly 30–33%. However, the Section 8b KStG exemption means that gains from share disposals escape this burden almost entirely. Asset-deal gains, by contrast, are fully exposed to the combined rate.

Sellers who are natural persons can benefit from the trade-tax credit under Section 35 of the Income Tax Act (EStG), which partially offsets trade tax against personal income tax, but the relief is limited and rarely eliminates the full trade-tax burden on asset-sale profits.

Tax on Asset Sales, VAT and Income Tax Elements

An asset deal generates taxable profit at the company level. The gain, calculated as the difference between the purchase price allocated to each asset and its book value, is subject to corporation tax and trade tax. The seller company must then distribute the after-tax proceeds to its shareholders, triggering a second layer of taxation (dividend or liquidation-distribution tax).

VAT is another consideration. The transfer of an entire business as a going concern (Geschäftsveräußerung im Ganzen) is generally VAT-exempt under Section 1(1a) of the German VAT Act (UStG). If only selected assets are sold, standard VAT rules apply to each asset individually. Careful structuring of the asset perimeter is essential to avoid unnecessary VAT exposure.

Cross-Border Tax Issues and Double Tax Treaties

When the buyer or seller is a non-resident, cross-border m&a Germany tax rules come into play. Germany maintains an extensive network of double tax treaties (DTTs). Under most German DTTs, capital gains on shares are taxable only in the seller’s country of residence, not in Germany, unless the company derives more than 50% of its value from German real estate. In that case, Germany may retain taxing rights under the real-estate clause.

Sellers should verify whether withholding obligations arise (particularly on deemed distributions or asset-sale proceeds paid to foreign entities) by consulting the Bundeszentralamt für Steuern (BZSt). Planning tip: if a foreign seller holds shares through a German holding company, the Section 8b KStG exemption can still be accessed, but substance requirements must be met to avoid anti-avoidance challenges.

Seller Due Diligence and Disclosure: The Checklist Every Owner Needs

Buyer due diligence attracts all the attention, but seller due diligence is where deals are saved, or lost. A seller due diligence checklist for Germany should be assembled at least eight to twelve weeks before engaging buyers. The purpose is to identify deal-breakers before the buyer does, clean up solvable problems and prepare disclosure documents that minimise post-closing warranty claims.

The following categories form the core of a robust seller due diligence exercise:

  • Corporate and governance. Articles of association (Gesellschaftsvertrag), shareholder resolutions, commercial-register excerpts, managing-director appointments, powers of attorney, group-structure charts.
  • Tax. Tax returns and assessments for the last five years, open-audit items, tax-loss carryforwards, transfer-pricing documentation, VAT filings and any ongoing disputes with the Finanzamt.
  • Contracts and commercial. Top-20 customer and supplier contracts, framework agreements, change-of-control clauses, non-compete obligations, ongoing litigation and any material disputes.
  • Intellectual property. Patent, trademark and design registrations, licence agreements, open-source software usage, IP ownership chain and any infringement proceedings.
  • Employment and benefits. Employment contracts (especially managing directors), works-council agreements, pension obligations, bonus and incentive schemes, social-security compliance and any Section 613a BGB issues.
  • Regulatory and compliance. Permits and licences, data-protection impact assessments (GDPR), Supply Chain Due Diligence Act (LkSG) reports, anti-bribery compliance records and any regulatory investigations.
  • Environmental and real estate. Lease agreements, environmental reports, contamination histories, building permits and energy-efficiency certifications.
  • Financial. Audited financial statements for the last three years, management accounts, debt facilities, security interests, guarantees and intercompany balances.

Common red flags that delay or kill deals include undisclosed tax-audit risks, unresolved environmental contamination, key-customer contracts with change-of-control termination rights, and pension under-funding. Identify and resolve these before entering the data room.

Merger-Control and Regulatory Filings in Germany (2026 Thresholds)

Not every company sale triggers a merger-control filing, but failing to file when required can result in the transaction being unwound. The Bundeskartellamt (German Federal Cartel Office) must be notified before closing if the following domestic-turnover thresholds under Section 35 of the Act against Restraints of Competition (GWB) are met:

  • Combined worldwide turnover of all parties exceeds €500 million.
  • At least one party has domestic (German) turnover exceeding €50 million.
  • At least one other party has domestic turnover exceeding €17.5 million.

An additional transaction-value threshold applies where the transaction value exceeds €400 million and the target has substantial domestic activities in Germany, even if it has not yet generated significant turnover. This is designed to capture acquisitions of high-value start-ups.

The standard review period (Phase I) is one month from complete filing. If the Bundeskartellamt opens an in-depth review (Phase II), the total period can extend to five months or more. Pre-notification contact with the authority is strongly recommended for complex transactions. Sellers should plan their signing-to-closing timeline around worst-case clearance periods and negotiate a “long-stop date” in the SPA that accommodates both Phase I and a possible Phase II review.

For transactions that also meet EU-level thresholds, the European Commission has exclusive jurisdiction. Additionally, Germany’s FDI-screening regime under the Foreign Trade and Payments Act (AWV) can require notification for acquisitions by non-EU buyers in sensitive sectors such as defence, critical infrastructure, health and advanced technology. The Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs and Climate Action (BMWK) reviews these cases, and clearance can take several months.

Cross-Border Buyers: Additional Issues and Structuring Tips

Cross-border m&a Germany transactions are increasingly common as private-equity funds and international strategic acquirers target the German Mittelstand. Sellers dealing with foreign buyers should anticipate several additional layers of complexity.

Withholding and Treaty Considerations

Where a share deal generates a capital gain for a non-resident seller, Germany generally does not impose withholding tax on the sale proceeds, provided the relevant DTT allocates taxing rights to the seller’s country of residence and the real-estate clause is not triggered. Sellers should confirm this position under the specific treaty in force between Germany and the buyer’s jurisdiction. The Bundeszentralamt für Steuern (BZSt) maintains a complete list of German DTTs and can issue advance-clearance certificates for withholding-tax purposes.

Purchase Vehicle, Escrow and Guarantees

Foreign buyers commonly establish a German acquisition vehicle (a NewCo GmbH) to hold the target shares. Sellers should scrutinise the NewCo’s capitalisation, an under-capitalised buyer vehicle is a warranty-claim risk. Best practice is to require the buyer’s parent to guarantee the NewCo’s SPA obligations, or to insist on a meaningful escrow deposit (typically 10–20% of the purchase price held for 18–24 months).

Sellers should also consider warranty-and-indemnity (W&I) insurance, which has become standard market practice in German M&A. A buy-side W&I policy allows the seller to cap its liability at a fraction of the purchase price, often €1, while providing the buyer with recourse to the insurer.

FDI Screening and Sanctions Compliance

Since recent AWV amendments, acquisitions of 10% or more voting rights in German companies active in specified sectors by non-EU/EFTA buyers trigger a mandatory FDI-screening filing. Industry observers expect continued enforcement emphasis in 2026, particularly for targets with dual-use technology, semiconductor capabilities or healthcare infrastructure. Sellers should factor screening timelines into the SPA conditions precedent.

Practical Negotiation and SPA Points Sellers Must Secure

The share purchase agreement (or asset purchase agreement) is where value is protected or eroded. Sellers entering negotiation should focus on the following priorities:

  • Price mechanism. Favour a locked-box mechanism (where the price is fixed at a historic balance-sheet date) over a completion-accounts mechanism, which exposes the seller to post-closing price adjustments and audit disputes.
  • Representations and warranties. Limit seller reps to matters within the seller’s actual knowledge. Resist “deemed knowledge” and “constructive knowledge” formulations. Negotiate proportional, not joint and several, liability among multiple sellers.
  • Indemnity cap. Market practice for German mid-market deals is a general warranty cap of 15–30% of the purchase price, with specific indemnities (tax, environmental) capped separately. Push for the lower end.
  • Claim periods. General warranty claims should expire 18–24 months after closing. Tax warranties should align with the statute of limitations for tax assessments (typically four years). Resist open-ended indemnity periods.
  • Escrow and retention. If escrow is required, negotiate for the shortest permissible release schedule, ideally 12 months for general warranties, with partial step-downs.
  • Earn-out provisions. If part of the price is contingent on future performance, insist on clear financial metrics, protection against buyer manipulation (e.g., accounting policy changes), and an independent-arbitrator mechanism for disputes.
  • Non-compete covenants. Expect the buyer to request a two-year non-compete. Resist anything longer and negotiate for geographic and sector limitations that preserve your ability to pursue other business interests.

Post-Closing: Integration, Tax Filings and Release of Guarantees

Closing is not the end of the seller’s obligations. The following post-closing steps apply to most German company sales:

  • Commercial-register filings. The notary will file changes in managing directors and shareholders with the Handelsregister. In a share deal, the updated shareholder list must be filed promptly.
  • Tax filings. The seller must file income tax or corporation tax returns reflecting the gain in the relevant assessment period. If real estate transfer tax was triggered, ensure the Finanzamt receives the notification within the statutory window.
  • Escrow releases. Monitor the escrow-release timetable and ensure the escrow agent receives written release instructions from both parties. Disputes should trigger the arbitration or expert-determination mechanism specified in the SPA.
  • Transitional service agreements (TSAs). If the seller agreed to provide interim services (IT, accounting, HR) to the target post-closing, performance obligations and exit milestones must be tracked carefully to avoid indefinite exposure.
  • Warranty-claim management. Implement a process to review, respond to and, where necessary, contest warranty claims within the SPA’s notice-and-cure deadlines. Missed deadlines can waive valid defences.

Conclusion

Selling a company in Germany in 2026 demands careful planning across deal structure, tax, regulatory clearances and SPA negotiation. For most sellers, a share deal remains the most tax-efficient route, but the choice must be validated against the specific transaction’s facts, including the seller’s tax status, the target’s asset composition and the buyer’s preferences. Early preparation of a seller due diligence checklist, combined with informed decisions on merger-control timing and cross-border structuring, will protect the seller’s value and minimise post-closing surprises. If you are considering how do you sell a company effectively and are navigating the complexities of German M&A in 2026, engaging experienced legal counsel at the earliest stage remains the single most valuable step you can take.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Torsten Bergau at FRANKUS Wirtschaftsprufer Steuerberater Rechtsanwalte, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Bundeskartellamt (German Federal Cartel Office)
  2. Bundesministerium der Finanzen (BMF) / Federal Ministry of Finance
  3. Bundeszentralamt für Steuern (Federal Central Tax Office)
  4. PwC Tax Summaries, Germany
  5. Se-Legal, Sale of a Company in Germany
  6. Rosepartner, Taxation of Sale of GmbH
  7. Stripe, How to Sell a GmbH in Germany
  8. Investopedia
  9. European Commission, Competition

FAQs

How do you sell a company?
You sell a company by choosing a deal form (share deal or asset deal), preparing the business for sale, marketing it to qualified buyers, negotiating a purchase agreement and completing regulatory clearances. The eight-step timeline above outlines the full company sale process in Germany.
The 183-day rule is a tax-residency test found in most German double tax treaties. If an individual is present in Germany for fewer than 183 days in a calendar year, certain types of employment income may remain taxable only in the home country. For sellers, it is relevant when determining whether a non-resident seller’s gain on a company sale is taxable in Germany.
For most individual sellers, a share deal is significantly more tax-efficient because the gain qualifies for the partial-income method (60% taxable) or, where the seller is a corporation, the 95% participation exemption. An asset deal typically results in double taxation, at the company level and again on distribution to shareholders.
If you sell GmbH shares as an individual, 60% of the capital gain is taxable at your personal income tax rate (up to approximately 45% plus solidarity surcharge). If the seller is a corporate holding company, 95% of the gain is effectively exempt. See the detailed tax section above for worked examples.
You must notify the Bundeskartellamt before closing if the combined worldwide turnover of all parties exceeds €500 million and specified domestic-turnover thresholds are met. The authority’s standard Phase I review takes approximately one month.
A well-prepared mid-market company sale typically takes five to seven months from preparation to closing. Complex transactions involving merger-control filings, FDI screening or multi-jurisdictional structures can take nine to twelve months or longer.
A formal or structured auction maximises competitive tension and typically achieves a higher price, but it requires more preparation and can risk confidentiality. A negotiated sale with a single preferred buyer is faster and more discreet, and is often preferred for family businesses or management buyouts. The right choice depends on the number of credible buyers, confidentiality concerns and the seller’s timeline.
By Dr. Hassan Elhais

posted 45 minutes ago

By Awatif Al Khouri

posted 3 hours ago

Find the right Legal Expert for your business

The premier guide to leading legal professionals throughout the world

Specialism
Country
Practice Area
LAWYERS RECOGNIZED
0
EVALUATIONS OF LAWYERS BY THEIR PEERS
0 m+
PRACTICE AREAS
0
COUNTRIES AROUND THE WORLD
0
Join
who are already getting the benefits
0

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.

Newsletter Sign Up
About Us

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 App

Now Available on the App & Google Play Stores.

Social Posts
[wp_social_ninja id="50714" platform="instagram"]
[codicts-social-feeds platform="instagram" url="https://www.instagram.com/globallawexperts/" template="carousel" results_limit="10" header="false" column_count="1"]

See More:

Contact Us

Stay Informed

Join Mailing List
About Us

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.

Social Posts
[wp_social_ninja id="50714" platform="instagram"]
[codicts-social-feeds platform="instagram" url="https://www.instagram.com/globallawexperts/" template="carousel" results_limit="10" header="false" column_count="1"]

See More:

Global Law Experts App

Now Available on the App & Google Play Stores.

Contact Us

Stay Informed

Join Mailing List

GLE

Lawyer Profile Page - Lead Capture
GLE-Logo-White
Lawyer Profile Page - Lead Capture

How Do You Sell a Company in Germany (2026): Tax, Structure & Step-by-step Process for Owners

Send welcome message

Custom Message