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Understanding how to set up an acquisition SPV in Germany is a critical first step for any foreign private equity fund, strategic buyer or institutional investor planning to acquire a German target company. The standard vehicle is a Gesellschaft mit beschränkter Haftung (GmbH), a limited liability company formed under the GmbH Act (GmbHG), which ring‑fences acquisition risk, simplifies debt structuring and provides a clean holding layer for cross‑border tax planning. In 2026, the formation process is complicated by tightened foreign direct investment (FDI) screening rules that now cover additional sectors and lower ownership thresholds, making pre‑deal sequencing more important than ever.
This guide walks through eligibility, documents, costs, timelines and the specific regulatory changes that affect the SPV formation process for foreign buyers this year.
A foreign investor can acquire a German company through either a share deal (buying the target’s shares) or an asset deal (buying individual assets, contracts and liabilities). In either scenario, most private equity buyers interpose a newly formed German GmbH between the fund and the target. This special purpose vehicle serves several functions: it isolates acquisition debt and warranties from the parent fund, it provides German‑law counterparty status that sellers and lenders expect, and it creates a clean entity for post‑acquisition restructuring or exit.
An SPV is distinct from a joint venture (JV). While a JV combines two or more operating partners who share governance, an SPV is a single‑purpose subsidiary wholly controlled by the buyer, with no independent commercial activity beyond holding the target. For foreign buyers, the GmbH form is almost always preferable to alternatives such as the Unternehmergesellschaft (UG) or a branch registration because it satisfies the minimum capitalisation expectations of German banks and acquirors.
The quick decision flow is straightforward: if you are a non‑German entity acquiring a German target via share deal and need an acquisition financing vehicle with limited liability, form a GmbH SPV. If you are making a small bolt‑on acquisition with no external debt, a direct purchase by the parent entity may suffice, but tax and liability considerations will usually still favour the SPV route.
German law imposes no nationality restriction on GmbH shareholders. A foreign natural person, a foreign corporate entity or a combination of both may incorporate a GmbH. The statutory minimum share capital is €25,000, of which at least €12,500 must be paid into a German bank account before the managing director can apply for registration in the Commercial Register (Handelsregister). These requirements are set out in GmbHG §5 (share capital) and GmbHG §7 (minimum paid‑in capital at registration).
The GmbH must have a registered office (Satzungssitz) in Germany, which can be a serviced office or a law firm’s address. At least one managing director (Geschäftsführer) must be appointed; there is no German residency requirement for managing directors, although practical considerations, banking, mail receipt, regulatory contact, make a Germany‑based director or authorised representative advisable.
All shareholders and ultimate beneficial owners (UBOs) are subject to KYC and anti‑money‑laundering checks by both the notary and the bank. Foreign corporate shareholders must provide apostilled or legalised certificates of incorporation, extracts of directors and authorising resolutions, together with certified German translations where the originals are not in English or German.
Before committing to SPV formation, foreign buyers must determine whether the proposed acquisition triggers Germany’s investment screening regime administered by the Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs and Climate Action (BMWK). FDI screening Germany 2026 applies in two main tracks:
If screening applies, a voluntary or mandatory notification to the BMWK should ideally be filed before signing the SPA, or at least before closing. The practical consequence for SPV formation is that deal counsel must complete the FDI assessment in parallel with, or even before, drafting the articles of association.
The following numbered steps represent the standard formation sequence. The timeline table below consolidates typical durations.
Deal counsel and the buyer’s compliance team assess whether the target sector and the buyer’s nationality trigger FDI screening. Simultaneously, internal KYC and sanctions screenings are run on all shareholders, UBOs and proposed directors. If FDI notification is required, counsel prepares the notification package (source of funds documentation, UBO disclosures, transaction description). This step should begin before the SPV is formed so that any government objections are identified early. Typical duration is 3–14 days, though sector complexity or multi‑jurisdictional buyer structures can extend this.
The buyer’s counsel drafts the articles of association (Gesellschaftsvertrag), shareholder resolutions, subscription agreements and any powers of attorney needed for remote signing. The articles must include the company name, registered office, corporate purpose, share capital amount and the nominal value of each share, as required by GmbHG §3. For acquisition SPVs, the corporate purpose clause is typically drafted broadly to cover holding, financing and advisory activities related to the target acquisition. This drafting phase normally takes 2–5 business days.
Under GmbHG §2, the formation of a GmbH requires notarial certification. All shareholders (or their proxies holding notarised powers of attorney) attend a German notary who reads and certifies the articles. The notary deed (Notarielle Urkunde) constitutes the definitive formation document. Key elements the notary verifies include each shareholder’s identity and authority, the share capital subscription, the appointment of the managing director and the director’s specimen signature. Where shareholders sign by proxy, the power of attorney itself must be notarised and, for foreign‑issued documents, apostilled or legalised and accompanied by a certified German translation. The notarisation typically takes place in a single appointment.
Before the managing director can apply for Commercial Register entry, the GmbH must prove that at least half the minimum share capital (€12,500) has been deposited in a German bank account for the GmbH. The bank issues a confirmation of deposit (Einzahlungsbestätigung). Opening a bank account for a GmbH with non‑resident UBOs can be the most time‑consuming step: German banks apply stringent KYC procedures, and processing times range from 3 to 14 business days. Industry observers expect that foreign PE sponsors with established German banking relationships can accelerate this, while first‑time entrants should plan for the longer end of the range.
The notary electronically files the application for entry in the Handelsregister at the competent local court (Amtsgericht). The filing must include the notarised formation deed, proof of capital deposit, the managing director’s consent to appointment and the initial shareholder list (Gesellschafterliste). Registration typically takes 5–14 business days, though certain courts may take up to 21 days. The GmbH acquires full legal personality only upon entry in the Handelsregister. In parallel, the managing director or tax adviser submits the tax registration questionnaire (Fragebogen zur steuerlichen Erfassung) to the local tax office (Finanzamt) to obtain a tax identification number (Steuernummer) and, where applicable, a VAT ID. Tax registration normally takes 1–4 weeks.
Once registered, the SPV may need to file a trade registration (Gewerbeanmeldung) with the local municipality if it will carry on a commercial business. If the target’s employees will transfer to the SPV on closing, social insurance and payroll registrations must be established. The SPV’s bank account is activated for the acquisition funding wire, signing authorities are confirmed, and the managing director executes the share purchase agreement on behalf of the SPV. These post‑registration formalities typically take 3–14 days, depending on complexity.
| Step | Who does it | Typical duration |
|---|---|---|
| Pre‑deal FDI & KYC assessment | Buyer’s deal counsel and compliance team | 3–14 days |
| Draft articles, shareholder resolutions, subscription documents | Buyer’s counsel and sponsor | 2–5 business days |
| Notary appointment & notarisation of formation deed | Notary, shareholders or proxies | 1 day (same‑day notarisation) |
| Bank account opening & capital deposit proof | German bank, SPV managing director | 3–14 business days |
| Commercial Register filing & entry | Notary files; local court (Amtsgericht) processes | 5–21 business days |
| Tax registration (Finanzamt) & Steuernummer | Tax adviser, Finanzamt | 1–4 weeks |
| Post‑registration formalities (trade office, payroll setup) | SPV, local service providers | 3–14 days |
The following table lists every document typically required to form and register an acquisition SPV in Germany. Deal teams should begin collecting foreign‑issued documents early, as apostille and translation requirements can add days to the overall timeline.
| Document | Notes |
|---|---|
| Notarised articles of association / formation deed | Prepared and certified by a German notary (Notarielle Urkunde). Original required for Handelsregister filing. |
| Shareholder resolution / subscription agreement | Signed originals by the sponsor. If signed by proxy, a notarised power of attorney is required. |
| Proof of paid‑in share capital | Bank confirmation showing deposit of at least €12,500 into the GmbH’s German bank account. |
| Passport / ID and proof of address for each shareholder and UBO | Certified copies, no older than 3 months. Required by both the notary and the bank for KYC/AML compliance. |
| Corporate documents for legal‑entity shareholders | Certificate of incorporation, register extract, board resolution authorising the investment. Apostille or legalisation plus certified German translation required. |
| Managing director appointment and consent | Written consent of the managing director to appointment, including specimen signature. |
| Trade registration form (Gewerbeanmeldung) | Filed with the local municipality (Gewerbeamt) if the SPV will carry on a commercial trade. |
| Tax registration questionnaire (Fragebogen zur steuerlichen Erfassung) | Submitted to local Finanzamt. A Handelsregister extract is required as an attachment. |
| Shareholder list (Gesellschafterliste) | Must be filed with the Handelsregister. The initial list is filed with the formation application; updates are due within one month of any change in shareholding. |
| Power of attorney / remote signing documents | If shareholders cannot attend the notary in person: notarised POA with apostille and certified German translation. |
| FDI notification or pre‑clearance documents | If screening thresholds or sector triggers apply: notification to BMWK with source‑of‑funds evidence, UBO disclosures and transaction description. |
The notary deed for GmbH formation must include specific declarations. Deal teams should ensure the following elements are covered in the notary script:
The total elapsed time from initial drafting to Handelsregister entry for a German acquisition SPV is typically 2–6 weeks. Where FDI screening applies, the overall timeline may extend substantially: the BMWK’s review period can be up to two months from receipt of a complete notification, with the possibility of a further four‑month in‑depth review in complex cases. Deal teams should therefore factor FDI screening into the SPA timetable as a condition precedent to closing rather than treating it as a parallel workstream that will resolve automatically.
Critical statutory deadlines to track include the requirement under GmbHG §40 to file an updated shareholder list with the Handelsregister promptly after any change in shareholding, and in any event within one month. The notary is also required to submit the formation filing electronically without undue delay after notarisation. Failure to meet these deadlines can result in enforcement measures by the registry court and, in the case of the shareholder list, potential liability for the managing director.
Where the deal involves a signing‑then‑closing structure, the SPV should ideally be fully registered and bank‑funded before signing so that it can act as the contractual buyer. If timing does not permit this, the SPA can be signed by the parent entity or by the SPV “in formation” (Vor‑GmbH), with the parent guaranteeing obligations until registration is complete. Industry observers note, however, that German sellers and their advisers increasingly prefer to contract with a fully registered GmbH rather than an entity in formation.
The table below sets out indicative cost ranges. Actual costs depend on capital structure, deal complexity and professional adviser fees.
| Item | Typical amount (EUR) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Minimum GmbH share capital | €25,000 (at least €12,500 paid in before registration) | Statutory requirement under GmbHG §5 and §7. |
| Notary fees (formation deed and related certifications) | €300–€1,200 | Fee scale under the Gerichts‑ und Notarkostengesetz (GNotKG); varies with share capital amount and complexity. |
| Commercial Register (Handelsregister) filing fee | €150–€400 | Court fees for registration at the local Amtsgericht. |
| Bank account opening and confirmation | €0–€200 | Some banks charge setup or enhanced KYC fees for foreign UBOs. |
| Legal and formation service fees | €1,500–€10,000+ | Counsel fees for drafting, tax structuring, KYC and project management. |
| FDI screening advisory and filing costs | €2,500–€30,000+ | Applies where BMWK notification is required; cost depends on sector and complexity. |
| Tax registration and tax adviser | €500–€3,000 | Covers Steuernummer application, VAT registration and initial compliance setup. |
| Translation, apostille and document legalisation | €50–€500 | For foreign corporate documents and certified translations. |
A German GmbH is subject to corporate income tax at a rate of approximately 15% plus a 5.5% solidarity surcharge on the tax, together with trade tax (Gewerbesteuer) levied by the municipality where the GmbH is registered. Trade tax rates vary but typically fall in the range of 14–17%. The combined effective corporate tax rate for a GmbH is therefore approximately 30%.
Foreign parent entities receiving dividends from the SPV should consider applicable withholding tax (standard rate of 25% plus solidarity surcharge, reduced under applicable double tax treaties) and the availability of the EU Parent‑Subsidiary Directive exemption where the parent is an EU entity. Additionally, deal teams should ensure that the SPV’s activities and management presence in Germany do not inadvertently create a permanent establishment for the foreign parent. Managers spending more than 183 days in Germany in a calendar year may trigger personal tax residency.
Germany’s investment screening regime has been progressively tightened from 2020 through 2026. The likely practical effect for foreign PE buyers setting up acquisition SPVs in 2026 includes the following developments:
Current screening rules and sector lists are published on the BMWK’s investment screening portal. Foreign buyers should verify the applicable thresholds and sector triggers with German counsel at the earliest stage of deal planning.
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.
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