Our Expert in Czech Republic
No results available
The Czech Republic has become one of Central Europe’s most active M&A markets, yet a wave of 2025–2026 regulatory reforms means that any foreign buyer without a current M&A checklist for the Czech Republic risks costly delays or outright deal failure. Expanded FDI screening obligations that took effect on 1 November 2025 now capture a wider range of strategic sectors, while updated merger-control notification thresholds under Czech competition law 2026 have reset the filing calculus for mid-market transactions. At the same time, new director and manager personal-liability rules sharpen the consequences of getting clearance procedures wrong.
This foreign buyer guide to Czech M&A distils the three critical regulatory layers, merger control, FDI screening and director liability, into a single, actionable pre-deal roadmap with concrete timelines, sector examples and mitigation steps.
Before signing a letter of intent or entering exclusivity on any Czech acquisition, deal teams should work through the following six-point at-a-glance checklist. Each point is expanded in the sections that follow.
Not every Czech acquisition triggers both merger control and FDI screening. The table below provides a decision matrix that maps regulatory obligations by buyer and target profile. Use it as a first-pass filter before commissioning detailed legal analysis.
| Entity type | Merger control notification trigger | FDI screening trigger |
|---|---|---|
| Czech or EU/EEA target, domestic or EU buyer | Notification required if the statutory combined and individual turnover thresholds are met under the Act on the Protection of Competition. Applies regardless of buyer nationality. | Mandatory if the target operates in listed strategic sectors (defence, dual-use, critical infrastructure, key IT services) or if the investor poses national-security concerns. EU buyers are not automatically exempt if the target’s sector triggers screening. |
| Foreign strategic buyer (non-EU / non-EEA) | Same merger-control thresholds apply. Industry observers expect additional regulatory scrutiny where market-share shifts are significant in concentrated sectors. | Higher likelihood of mandatory notification under the expanded FDI regime effective 1 November 2025. Additional documentation on ultimate beneficial ownership, state links and foreign-government influence will typically be required. |
| State-owned or state-linked buyer | Merger control assessed per standard thresholds, but political sensitivity may increase informal regulatory engagement. | Frequently triggers a full national-security review. The Ministry of Industry and Trade may impose mitigation commitments or, in extreme cases, exercise prohibition powers. |
Practical example: A Gulf-based sovereign-wealth fund acquiring a 51 % stake in a Czech energy-infrastructure operator would likely trigger both merger-control notification (assuming the turnover thresholds are met) and mandatory FDI screening (energy infrastructure is a listed critical sector, and the buyer is state-linked and non-EU). Deal teams should budget for parallel filings and a closing timeline of at least four to five months.
Merger control in the Czech Republic is governed by the Act on the Protection of Competition (Act No. 143/2001 Coll., as amended). The competent authority is the Office for the Protection of Competition (ÚOHS), headquartered in Brno. A “concentration”, meaning a merger, acquisition of control, or creation of a full-function joint venture, must be notified to ÚOHS before closing if the statutory turnover thresholds are met.
Merger control notification in the Czech Republic is triggered when the parties’ turnover figures exceed the thresholds set out below. The thresholds were recalibrated as part of the broader 2025–2026 reform cycle to better capture mid-market transactions with a material local nexus.
| Threshold test | Condition |
|---|---|
| Combined net turnover (all parties) | At least CZK 1.5 billion in the Czech Republic in the last completed financial year |
| Individual net turnover (at least two parties) | Each of at least two parties achieved net turnover of at least CZK 250 million in the Czech Republic in the last completed financial year |
| Alternative international test | Combined worldwide net turnover of at least CZK 1.5 billion and Czech-market net turnover of each of at least two parties exceeds CZK 250 million |
Calculator example: A German automotive-parts manufacturer (Czech net turnover CZK 900 million) acquiring a Czech tier-two supplier (Czech net turnover CZK 650 million). Combined Czech turnover = CZK 1.55 billion; each party individually exceeds CZK 250 million. Result: notification required.
The acquiring party (or parties acquiring joint control) bears the filing obligation. In practice, most deal teams engage in informal pre-notification consultations with the ÚOHS case team to identify information gaps before the formal filing is submitted. Pre-notification contact typically shortens the review period by resolving questions about market definition and competitive overlaps early.
Closing before ÚOHS clearance (so-called “gun-jumping”) can attract fines of up to 10 % of the parties’ aggregate net turnover. ÚOHS can also impose structural or behavioural remedies, divestitures, access commitments or pricing conditions, as a condition of clearance. In extreme cases, the office can prohibit the transaction entirely and require unwinding if it has already been implemented.
FDI screening in the Czech Republic is governed by the Act on Screening of Foreign Investments (Act No. 34/2021 Coll., the “FDI Act”), administered by the Ministry of Industry and Trade (MPO). The FDI Act implements the EU Regulation on the screening of foreign direct investments (Regulation (EU) 2019/452) and establishes both mandatory and voluntary notification tracks. An amendment effective 1 November 2025 widened the scope of mandatory screening to capture additional strategic sectors and tightened documentary requirements for non-EU investors.
The expanded mandatory-screening list includes:
Transactions in listed sectors that involve the acquisition of “effective participation” (generally 10 % or more of voting rights, or any level that confers material influence) require mandatory pre-closing notification to the MPO. For transactions outside the listed sectors, the MPO retains the power to call in any foreign investment for review within five years of completion on national-security grounds, a voluntary pre-closing notification can pre-empt that risk and provide legal certainty.
Directors and statutory managers of Czech companies face heightened personal-liability exposure under the 2026 reforms to the Czech Business Corporations Act. The changes sharpen the duty-of-care standard and clarify that managers who negligently fail to secure required regulatory clearances, including merger-control and FDI approvals, may be personally liable for losses suffered by the company or its shareholders. Key risk scenarios include:
A comprehensive due diligence checklist for Czech M&A covers six main workstreams. The items below represent the minimum scope foreign buyers should commission.
The table below maps the key regulatory tasks to each phase of a typical Czech M&A transaction. Building these steps into the deal calendar from the outset prevents last-minute surprises.
| Deal phase | Key regulatory tasks |
|---|---|
| Pre-LOI / indicative offer | Run merger-control threshold calculator. Prepare FDI sector-trigger memo. Identify director-liability risk profile. |
| LOI / exclusivity | Commission full due diligence across all six workstreams. Engage local Czech counsel for ÚOHS pre-notification contact. Begin drafting FDI notification materials if mandatory filing is likely. |
| Signing | Include condition-precedent clauses tying closing to: (a) ÚOHS merger-control clearance; (b) MPO FDI screening clearance (where applicable). Draft long-stop dates that reflect realistic review periods (minimum 4–5 months if both regimes apply). Include material-adverse-change and regulatory-refusal termination rights. |
| Signing → Closing (interim period) | File merger-control notification with ÚOHS. File FDI notification with MPO. Monitor information requests and respond within statutory deadlines. Comply with interim “standstill” obligations, no exercise of acquired rights before clearance. |
| Closing | Confirm receipt of unconditional clearances (or conditional clearances with accepted remedies). Execute closing deliverables. Register new directors in the commercial register. Activate post-closing compliance calendar. |
Drafting tip: condition-precedent language should reference clearance by the specific authority (ÚOHS for merger control; MPO for FDI) rather than generic “regulatory approval” wording. This avoids disputes about whether an unrelated licence or permit condition must also be satisfied before closing can proceed.
Clearance is not the finish line. Foreign buyers should implement a structured post-closing compliance programme that covers the following areas:
Energy. A non-EU investor acquiring a Czech renewable-energy developer operating wind farms connected to the national grid would trigger mandatory FDI screening (critical energy infrastructure) and, depending on turnover, merger-control notification. Industry observers expect the MPO to scrutinise ownership chains particularly closely where the buyer’s home jurisdiction lacks a reciprocal screening mechanism.
Real estate. A private-equity fund acquiring a Czech commercial-property portfolio through a share deal may not trigger FDI screening unless the portfolio includes buildings housing critical infrastructure tenants (data centres, government offices). Merger control turns on turnover, large portfolio transactions regularly exceed the CZK 1.5 billion combined threshold. Director liability in the Czech context is heightened where the target has outstanding environmental-remediation obligations that were not disclosed during due diligence.
Automotive. A Japanese tier-one automotive-parts supplier acquiring a Czech manufacturing subsidiary from a European OEM would typically require merger-control notification (turnover thresholds are commonly met in the automotive supply chain). FDI screening is less likely unless the target produces dual-use components or holds classified defence contracts. The practical effect of the 2026 director-liability reforms is that the incoming Czech managing director should insist on documented warranty coverage for pre-closing regulatory exposures before accepting appointment.
The 2025–2026 Czech reform package has materially raised the regulatory complexity of inbound acquisitions. Foreign buyers, private-equity sponsors and their advisers should treat the following five action points as non-negotiable starting items on any Czech M&A checklist:
Czech M&A remains highly attractive for cross-border buyers, but the regulatory framework now demands disciplined pre-deal preparation. A thorough M&A checklist for the Czech Republic, covering merger control, FDI screening and director liability in a single coordinated workflow, is the most effective tool for protecting deal value and closing on schedule. For personalised guidance, consult the Global Law Experts lawyer directory or explore the international commercial law guide for broader cross-border transaction support.
This article is provided for general informational purposes and does not constitute legal advice. Readers should consult qualified Czech legal counsel before making binding decisions based on the information presented. Last reviewed: 11 May 2026.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Irena Kolárová at KOLAROVA LEGAL, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
posted 2 minutes ago
posted 8 minutes ago
posted 25 minutes ago
posted 31 minutes ago
posted 49 minutes ago
posted 53 minutes ago
posted 1 hour ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 2 hours ago
No results available
Find the right Legal Expert for your business
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.
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 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.
Send welcome message