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how to get FDI clearance in Germany 2026

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How to Get FDI Clearance in Germany 2026, Step‑by‑step Procedural Guide

By Global Law Experts
– posted 1 hour ago

Any foreign investor acquiring shares, voting rights or assets in a German company must determine whether the transaction triggers investment screening by the Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs and Climate Action (BMWK). Understanding how to get FDI clearance in Germany 2026 is critical because the screening regime, anchored in the Foreign Trade and Payments Act (AWG) and the Foreign Trade and Payments Ordinance (AWV), has been materially expanded over the 2025–2026 period, adding new sectors and lowering thresholds. This guide sets out every procedural step from pre‑deal diligence through conditional clearance, together with the documents needed for an FDI filing, indicative costs, realistic timelines and the most common pitfalls that delay or derail transactions.

Overview of the FDI Clearance Process and Who It Applies To

Germany’s FDI screening regime empowers the BMWK to review, and, where necessary, prohibit or impose conditions on, acquisitions of German businesses by non‑German buyers where the transaction could threaten public order or security. The statutory framework rests on Sections 4 and 5 AWG and Sections 55–62 AWV, which together define two parallel review tracks:

  • Cross‑sectoral screening (Sections 55–59 AWV). Applies to any acquisition by a non‑EU/non‑EFTA investor of 25 % or more of voting rights in a German company, regardless of sector. The BMWK may also open a review on its own initiative.
  • Sector‑specific screening (Sections 60–62 AWV). Applies to acquisitions in listed sensitive sectors, including defence, cryptography, critical infrastructure, and a growing catalogue of technology fields, where a lower threshold of 10 % of voting rights triggers a mandatory notification and standstill obligation.

The BMWK leads the review, but may consult other federal ministries, notably the Federal Ministry of Defence (BMVg) for defence‑related targets and the Federal Ministry of the Interior for critical‑infrastructure cases. The process can result in clearance without conditions, clearance subject to remedies, or outright prohibition. Investors may also apply for voluntary clearance or request a certificate of non‑objection (no‑jurisdiction letter) where they are uncertain whether notification is required, a mechanism that provides legal certainty before closing.

FDI Screening Requirements, Eligibility and Prerequisites

Before engaging the BMWK notification procedure, deal teams must answer a threshold question: does this transaction fall within the scope of German FDI screening, and if so, is notification mandatory or voluntary?

Decision flow, do I need to file?

  • Investor origin. Sector‑specific screening applies to investors from any non‑German country (including EU/EFTA). Cross‑sectoral screening applies only to non‑EU/non‑EFTA investors.
  • Voting‑rights threshold. For sector‑specific cases, notification is mandatory once the investor acquires 10 % or more of voting rights. For cross‑sectoral cases, the BMWK’s review power is triggered at 25 % of voting rights, but notification is voluntary, the BMWK can also initiate a review ex officio within a defined window after closing.
  • Indirect acquisitions. Acquisitions of non‑German parent companies that result in indirect control of a German subsidiary can also trigger screening.
  • Asset deals. Acquisition of a material part of a German business’s assets (e.g., an entire business division) may fall in scope even without a share transfer.

FDI Sectors Subject to Screening in 2026

The sector‑specific screening catalogue has expanded significantly. The following table summarises the priority categories. Investors should cross‑check the full list of activities published in the BMWK’s official investment‑screening factsheet.

Sector category Examples of listed activities Threshold
Defence & military equipment Weapons, ammunition, armoured vehicles, military electronics 10 % voting rights
Critical infrastructure (KRITIS) Energy, water, telecoms, IT, hospitals, food, transport, finance 10 % voting rights
Semiconductors & microelectronics Chip design, wafer fabrication, packaging, semiconductor equipment 10 % voting rights
Artificial intelligence & cybersecurity AI‑enabled surveillance, autonomous systems, encryption tech 10 % voting rights
Quantum technology & aerospace Quantum computing, satellite systems, space launch technology 10 % voting rights
Clean energy & critical raw materials Battery cell production, rare‑earth processing, hydrogen tech 10 % voting rights
Media (broadcasting) Operators with significant audience reach 10 % voting rights
Cloud & data processing Data centre operators, telematics infrastructure 10 % voting rights
Cross‑sectoral (all other sectors) Any German target, no sector restriction 25 % voting rights (non‑EU/EFTA investors only)

If the target’s activities fall within even one listed category, the lower 10 % threshold and the mandatory notification obligation apply, regardless of the investor’s country of origin. Industry observers expect the BMWK to interpret sectoral scope broadly; where any doubt exists, seeking voluntary FDI clearance or a no‑jurisdiction letter is the recommended approach.

Step‑by‑Step Procedure for FDI Clearance in Germany

The following numbered steps describe the end‑to‑end BMWK notification procedure, from pre‑deal screening through to conditional clearance and closing. Each step identifies the responsible party and the typical duration.

Step 1, Conduct pre‑deal screening and decide on filing strategy

During due diligence, deal counsel should map the target’s activities against the sector catalogue in Sections 60–62 AWV and identify any red flags: state‑owned investors in the buyer chain, defence contracts held by the target, or critical‑infrastructure designations. The output of this step is a written recommendation on whether to file a mandatory notification, seek voluntary clearance, or request a no‑jurisdiction letter from the BMWK confirming that screening does not apply.

Step 2, Prepare the BMWK notification dossier

The investor, typically through German counsel, assembles the filing package. The dossier must include a cover letter, corporate structure charts, the transaction agreement, a technical description of the target’s activities and sources‑of‑funds evidence (the full documents list is set out in the next section). The filing must be signed by an authorised representative of the investor or accompanied by a power of attorney. German‑language documents are preferred; English‑language annexes are accepted but the BMWK may request certified translations.

Step 3, Submit the filing to the BMWK and receive acknowledgement

The completed dossier is submitted to the BMWK’s investment‑screening unit. The BMWK conducts an initial completeness check and confirms receipt. For mandatory sector‑specific filings, a standstill obligation takes effect upon submission: the transaction must not close until the BMWK has issued clearance or the statutory review period has expired without a decision. Voluntary filings carry no automatic standstill, but deal teams routinely structure them as a closing condition in the SPA to secure legal certainty.

Step 4, Phase I review (initial assessment by the BMWK)

During Phase I, the BMWK’s internal team analyses the filing against public‑order and security criteria. The BMWK may request supplementary information; each request typically resets the review clock. Straightforward cases, for example, an acquisition by a well‑known institutional investor in a non‑sensitive sub‑sector, can be cleared at Phase I with a certificate of non‑objection. Industry observers expect most uncomplicated voluntary filings to be resolved within four to six weeks, assuming the dossier is complete on first submission.

Step 5, Phase II review (interministerial in‑depth assessment)

If the BMWK identifies potential concerns, such as foreign‑government links, proximity to classified programmes, or critical‑infrastructure implications, it opens a formal Phase II investigation. This triggers an interministerial review involving the BMVg, the Federal Foreign Office, or other relevant ministries. The BMWK may issue formal information requests to the investor, the target, and third parties. Phase II can result in unconditional clearance, clearance subject to binding remedies, or a prohibition order. Prohibition is rare but has been imposed in high‑profile cases involving critical technology and defence targets.

Step 6, Negotiate remedies, obtain conditional clearance and close

Where the BMWK identifies manageable risks, it will typically engage in remedy negotiations before resorting to prohibition. Common remedies include ongoing reporting obligations, restrictions on access to classified information, requirements to maintain domestic production capacity, or governance undertakings (e.g., appointing independent directors with security clearance). Investors should negotiate remedies proactively and mirror them in the SPA through escrow arrangements, holdback mechanisms or conditional waivers so that closing mechanics remain aligned with the clearance timetable.

FDI Timeline Germany, Procedure at a Glance

Step Who does it Typical duration
Pre‑deal screening & filing‑strategy decision Investor + deal counsel 1–2 weeks
Prepare and submit BMWK notification dossier Investor counsel / local counsel 1–3 weeks
BMWK intake and initial completeness check BMWK 1–2 weeks
Phase I, initial assessment BMWK (internal) 4–6 weeks
Phase II, interministerial in‑depth review BMWK + relevant ministries (e.g., BMVg) 2–3 months (can extend)
Remedies negotiation & conditional clearance Investor counsel + BMWK / ministries 2–8 weeks (varies)

Documents Needed for a German FDI Filing

The quality and completeness of the filing dossier is the single largest determinant of review speed. An incomplete submission triggers information requests that reset the review clock and can add weeks to the timeline. The following table sets out the core documents needed for an FDI filing, together with practical notes on format, issuer and common pitfalls.

Document Notes
Cover letter and executive summary Signed by the investor or authorised representative. One‑page summary setting out the target, the transaction structure, the commercial rationale and why the acquisition does not threaten public order or security. State sector relevance explicitly.
Corporate structure chart (group chart) Shows full ownership chain up to the ultimate beneficial owner. Highlight any state‑owned entities, sovereign wealth funds or trust structures. Provide as a PDF diagram with a narrative key.
Share purchase agreement or asset purchase agreement Provide the signed or near‑final draft. Redaction of commercially sensitive pricing is usually acceptable, but closing conditions and FDI‑related provisions should be visible. Mark pages referencing FDI clearance gating.
Business plan and technical description of target activities Detailed description of activities relevant to the sector catalogue, e.g., semiconductor IP portfolios, defence contracts, energy‑grid connections. Include product descriptions, customer base and R&D focus.
Audited financials (last 3 years) and forecast Audited accounts of the target and, where relevant, the investor. Management forecasts should explain funding sources and projected capital expenditure.
CVs and bios of investor management Board members and senior managers of the acquiring entity. Show competence, nationality and any affiliations with government or military bodies.
Export‑control, security or defence contracts list If the target holds classified contracts, export licences or security clearances, provide a summary list with contract references (not the contracts themselves, unless requested).
Evidence of investor nationality and residence For corporate investors: commercial register extract. For individuals: passport copy and residence certificate. Notarised copies preferred.
Evidence of sources of funds Bank statements, loan agreements and shareholder resolutions documenting the financing chain. Critical for addressing foreign‑government‑influence concerns.
Power of attorney or representative letter If counsel files on the investor’s behalf. Must be signed by an authorised signatory of the investor and cover the specific BMWK proceeding.
Other regulatory filings (cross‑references) If parallel EU FDI cooperation notifications or merger control filings have been made, provide filing references and current status to demonstrate a coordinated approach.

Deal teams should prepare a master filing index, a single document listing every exhibit by number, title and format, and deliver it alongside the dossier. This accelerates the BMWK’s completeness check and reduces the risk of information requests. A downloadable FDI documents checklist for Germany is in development and will be published as a companion resource.

Timeline and Key Deadlines for FDI Clearance in Germany

Statutory review windows under the AWV define the maximum duration for each phase, but practical timelines vary substantially depending on case complexity and the quality of the initial filing. The following table consolidates the key deadlines deal teams should programme into their transaction timetable.

Phase Statutory / practical timeframe Notes
Completeness check 1–2 weeks after submission BMWK confirms receipt and completeness; incomplete filings are returned with an information request.
Phase I review period Up to 2 months from complete filing (statutory); 4–6 weeks typical Clock resets each time the BMWK issues a supplementary information request. No response within the statutory window typically results in deemed clearance.
Phase II opening decision Within the Phase I window BMWK must notify the investor if it decides to open a Phase II investigation before the Phase I window expires.
Phase II review period Up to 4 months from opening (statutory); 2–3 months typical Extensions are possible in complex cases. Interministerial consultations and third‑party information gathering drive length.
Remedies negotiation 2–8 weeks (no fixed statutory cap) Runs in parallel with, or after, Phase II. Longer negotiations are common in defence and critical‑infrastructure cases.

For mandatory filings (sector‑specific, 10 % threshold), the standstill obligation means the transaction cannot legally close until either clearance is granted or the statutory review period lapses. Closing before clearance renders the acquisition void and exposes the parties to enforcement action.

For voluntary filings (cross‑sectoral, 25 % threshold), there is no automatic standstill. However, prudent deal structuring treats the BMWK’s certificate of non‑objection as a closing condition in the SPA. This protects the buyer against the risk of a post‑closing ex‑officio review, which the BMWK can initiate within a defined period after it becomes aware of the transaction.

Costs, Fees and Practical Budget Considerations

The direct regulatory fees charged by the BMWK are modest relative to overall deal costs, but external counsel fees can be significant, particularly where remedies negotiation or interministerial engagement extends the process. The costs table below provides indicative ranges based on market reporting.

Item Amount Notes
BMWK filing fee, simple Phase I case €800 (indicative) Actual fee depends on complexity and BMWK resource expenditure.
BMWK fee, complex case / Phase II Up to €36,000 (reported range) Fee scales with review duration and ministerial resource commitment.
External counsel (Germany) €10,000–€150,000+ Varies with sector sensitivity, volume of exhibits, translation requirements and remedies negotiation.
Local counsel (investor’s jurisdiction) €5,000–€50,000 KYC/sources‑of‑funds documentation, investor‑side corporate authorisations and cross‑border coordination.

The most significant cost driver is dossier quality. A well‑prepared initial submission that addresses likely BMWK concerns, particularly around sources of funds and foreign‑government influence, reduces the probability of Phase II escalation and the associated increase in regulatory fees and counsel time.

What Changes in 2026, FDI Screening Updates

Germany’s FDI screening regime has undergone continuous expansion since 2020, and the 2025–2026 period marks another significant step. The key procedural changes affecting how to get FDI clearance in Germany 2026 include:

  • Extended sector catalogue. Semiconductors, clean‑energy technologies (battery cells, hydrogen), critical raw materials processing and advanced digital infrastructure have been formally added to the sector‑specific screening list, bringing more transactions within the mandatory 10 % notification threshold.
  • Increased interministerial coordination. Defence‑related transactions now involve more structured input from the BMVg earlier in the process, reflecting heightened security‑policy priorities across NATO member states.
  • Broader practical application. Early indications suggest the BMWK is interpreting existing sector categories more expansively, for example, classifying upstream supply‑chain companies (component suppliers to KRITIS operators) as within scope even where they are not direct KRITIS operators themselves.
  • Greater use of voluntary clearance. Industry observers expect a continued rise in voluntary filings as investors seek legal certainty in borderline cases, driven by the wider sector catalogue and the risk of post‑closing ex‑officio reviews.

The likely practical effect for deal teams is straightforward: earlier FDI analysis in diligence, broader mandatory filing coverage, and stronger SPA gating provisions to accommodate potentially longer review timelines.

Common Pitfalls and How to Avoid Them

  • Assuming EU‑level notification is sufficient. The EU FDI cooperation mechanism coordinates information sharing between member states but does not replace national screening. A separate BMWK filing is always required where German thresholds are met.
  • Closing before mandatory clearance is obtained. Completing a transaction subject to mandatory notification before receiving BMWK clearance renders the acquisition void under the AWV and exposes parties to fines and mandatory unwinding.
  • Incomplete sources‑of‑funds evidence. The BMWK pays close attention to investor financing chains, especially where sovereign wealth funds, state‑owned enterprises or opaque fund structures are involved. Providing only partial bank statements or omitting shareholder‑loan documentation is a frequent cause of information requests.
  • Underestimating ministerial interests. Transactions involving defence, energy or telecoms targets often trigger interministerial review. Failing to anticipate BMVg or interior‑ministry involvement leads to surprise Phase II escalations and timeline overruns.
  • Incorrect sector mapping. Applying the sector catalogue too narrowly, for example, assuming a software company serving KRITIS operators is not itself within scope, can result in a missed mandatory filing. Conservative sector mapping is essential.
  • Failing to seek voluntary clearance when in doubt. Where the target’s activities sit near the boundary of a listed sector, filing voluntarily or requesting a no‑jurisdiction letter provides binding certainty and eliminates the risk of a post‑closing ex‑officio review.
  • Poorly drafted remedies. Remedies negotiated with the BMWK must be operationally realistic and enforceable. Vague commitments, such as “the investor will maintain current employment levels” without a defined period or reporting mechanism, are routinely rejected.
  • Weak SPA gating arrangements. If the SPA does not properly condition closing on FDI clearance, or if long‑stop dates are set too aggressively, the buyer risks being contractually obligated to close before clearance is obtained, or losing the deal because of an expired long‑stop date during Phase II.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Dr. Carolin Raspe at YPOG, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. BMWK, Investment Screening (official factsheet and pages)
  2. White & Case, Foreign direct investment reviews 2026: Germany
  3. PwC Legal, Germany extends FDI review
  4. CMS Expert Guide, Foreign investment screening laws: Germany
  5. Dechert, Germany increases scrutiny of foreign defense investments
  6. GvW, Foreign direct investment in Germany

FAQs

How do I apply for FDI clearance (voluntary or mandatory) in Germany?
You submit a notification dossier to the BMWK’s investment‑screening unit. For mandatory sector‑specific filings, submission is required before closing and triggers a standstill obligation. For voluntary filings under the cross‑sectoral regime, you apply for a certificate of non‑objection. In both cases, the dossier includes a cover letter, corporate structure charts, the transaction agreement, a description of the target’s activities and sources‑of‑funds evidence. The step‑by‑step procedure section above sets out the full sequence.
Sector‑specific screening applies to acquisitions of 10 % or more of voting rights in German companies active in listed sectors, including defence, critical infrastructure, semiconductors, AI, cybersecurity, clean energy and critical raw materials. Cross‑sectoral screening applies to acquisitions of 25 % or more by non‑EU/non‑EFTA investors in any sector. The BMWK publishes the full sector catalogue in its investment‑screening factsheet.
The core filing package includes a cover letter, corporate structure chart, the transaction agreement, business plan, audited financials, investor management CVs, sources‑of‑funds evidence, nationality/residence proof, a power of attorney (if counsel files on the investor’s behalf) and cross‑references to any parallel regulatory filings. The full checklist with practical notes is set out in the required‑documents section above.
For mandatory filings, closing before BMWK clearance is obtained renders the acquisition legally void. The BMWK can order unwinding of the transaction and impose administrative fines. For voluntary filings, there is no formal standstill, but the BMWK retains the power to open an ex‑officio review after closing, which can result in prohibition or mandatory divestiture even after completion.
Yes. Under the voluntary clearance procedure, the investor applies to the BMWK for a certificate of non‑objection (Unbedenklichkeitsbescheinigung). Once issued, this certificate is legally binding and confirms that the BMWK will not exercise its screening powers in respect of the notified transaction. It is the standard mechanism for securing legal certainty in cross‑sectoral cases.
Ideally during the pre‑deal due diligence phase, before signing. Early engagement allows counsel to map the target’s activities against the sector catalogue, advise on filing strategy (mandatory notification, voluntary clearance or no‑jurisdiction letter), draft the SPA’s FDI gating provisions and prepare the dossier in parallel with other deal workstreams, minimising the risk of timeline surprises between signing and closing.
For sector‑specific screening, yes, the mandatory 10 % notification requirement applies to investors from all countries, including EU and EFTA member states. Cross‑sectoral screening (25 % threshold), however, applies only to non‑EU/non‑EFTA investors. EU and EFTA investors active in listed sectors should not assume they are exempt.
Yes. Where the BMWK identifies manageable risks, it routinely enters remedies negotiations rather than pursuing outright prohibition. Typical conditions include ongoing reporting obligations, restrictions on access to classified information, requirements to retain key personnel or domestic production capacity, and governance undertakings such as appointing an independent security‑cleared director. Investors should propose remedies proactively and ensure they are reflected in the SPA’s closing mechanics through escrow or holdback provisions.
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How to Get FDI Clearance in Germany 2026, Step‑by‑step Procedural Guide

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