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Hungary’s foreign-direct-investment screening regime has undergone its most significant overhaul in years, creating urgent compliance questions for every cross-border deal touching Hungarian targets. Act L of 2025 made the formerly temporary Special FDI Regime permanent, while Act XCIII of 2025 refined notification thresholds, clarified the state pre-emption right and adjusted review timelines. For general counsel, PE sponsors and M&A lawyers Hungary is now a jurisdiction where deal certainty depends on mastering two parallel regulatory tracks, FDI notification and merger-control clearance, and sequencing them correctly. This guide provides the step-by-step decision framework, practical timelines and SPA drafting triggers that in-deal teams need in 2026.
Hungary’s reworked FDI screening rules demand attention at the earliest stage of any inbound acquisition. The regime, anchored in Act L of 2025 and amended by Act XCIII of 2025, imposes mandatory foreign investment notification obligations on transactions that meet nationality, sectoral and value-based tests. Failure to notify within the statutory deadline can result in fines, structural remedies and, in the most sensitive sectors, the exercise of a state pre-emption right that allows the government to step in as buyer.
Key points every deal team should know:
Separately, the Hungarian Competition Authority (GVH) retains its own merger-control regime with distinct turnover-based thresholds and a pre-closing clearance requirement. Many cross-border acquisitions trigger both regimes simultaneously, making coordination essential. Consult an experienced Hungary M&A adviser through the Global Law Experts lawyer directory to assess your deal’s exposure before signing.
Hungary first introduced emergency FDI screening measures during the COVID-19 pandemic to prevent opportunistic acquisitions of strategically important companies at distressed valuations. Those temporary measures, extended multiple times, were eventually replaced by a permanent legislative framework. Act L of 2025 codified FDI screening Hungary obligations on a standing basis, removing the sunset clause that had required periodic renewal. Later in 2025, Act XCIII of 2025 amended the new permanent regime to address implementation gaps, refine the sectoral scope and introduce clearer procedural rules for the state pre-emption right.
| Date | Act / Instrument | Effect |
|---|---|---|
| 2020 | Government Decree 227/2020 (emergency FDI screening) | Temporary FDI notification obligation introduced for foreign acquisitions in strategic sectors. |
| Mid-2025 | Act L of 2025 | Permanent FDI screening regime enacted, replaces emergency decrees. Defines strategic sectors, thresholds, notification procedures and penalties. |
| Late 2025 | Act XCIII of 2025 | Amends Act L: adjusts notification thresholds, clarifies state pre-emption mechanics, modifies review timelines and introduces targeted exemptions for intra-group restructurings. |
| 2026 (ongoing) | Implementing decrees and ministerial guidance | Operational details, filing forms and sector-specific clarifications continue to be issued. |
The shift from temporary emergency measures to a permanent statutory framework has several practical consequences. Deal teams can no longer rely on expiry dates to argue that the regime will lapse before closing. The permanent regime also broadened certain sectoral definitions and introduced more granular threshold tests. Industry observers expect the permanentisation to encourage a more structured enforcement approach by the competent Ministry, replacing the ad hoc reviews that characterised the emergency phase. For M&A lawyers Hungary’s FDI landscape is now a standing feature of every cross-border acquisition checklist.
The FDI screening regime does not apply to every foreign investment in Hungary. Whether a specific transaction triggers a foreign investment notification obligation depends on a sequential test that evaluates the investor, the target and the nature of the transaction. Practitioners should work through the following decision steps before signing any share-purchase or asset-purchase agreement.
If the answer to any step is “no,” the transaction falls outside the FDI notification regime, though it may still require GVH merger-control clearance if turnover thresholds are met.
The legislation designates a broad range of strategic sectors. While the full list is set out in Act L of 2025 and its implementing decrees, the most frequently encountered sectors in cross-border M&A include:
Act XCIII of 2025 introduced targeted exemptions for specific transaction types. Intra-group restructurings where no change in ultimate beneficial ownership occurs may be exempt from the notification requirement, provided the restructuring can be documented to the satisfaction of the competent authority. Similarly, certain de minimis acquisitions falling below the lowest statutory thresholds are excluded. Deal teams should not assume an exemption applies without confirming against the current text of the legislation and any ministerial guidance in force.
The notification thresholds combine an ownership-percentage test with HUF value-based tests. The specific thresholds vary depending on the type of entity being acquired and the sector in which it operates. The table below provides a structural overview; practitioners should verify exact figures against the current text of Act L of 2025 as amended by Act XCIII of 2025 on the Nemzeti Jogszabálytár portal.
| Entity / Sector Type | FDI Notification Threshold | Notes (State Pre-Emption) |
|---|---|---|
| Strategic-sector companies (general) | Acquisition of ownership or voting rights reaching or exceeding defined percentage thresholds (e.g., 10%, 25%, 50%) where the target’s net revenue or asset value exceeds the statutory HUF threshold. | State pre-emption may apply where the acquisition concerns critical-infrastructure or defence-related targets. |
| Critical-infrastructure operators | Lower percentage and value thresholds apply, any change of control or acquisition of significant influence may trigger notification. | State pre-emption right is most likely to be exercised in this category; the state may match the agreed purchase price. |
| Intra-group restructurings | Potential exemption under Act XCIII of 2025, no notification required if ultimate beneficial ownership is unchanged. | Pre-emption right not engaged where exemption applies; documentation must be filed to confirm eligibility. |
| De minimis acquisitions | Transactions below the lowest statutory HUF value threshold and below the minimum ownership-percentage threshold are excluded. | No pre-emption right; no notification obligation. |
One of the most consequential features of Hungary’s FDI regime is the state pre-emption right. In designated sectors, when a notifiable transaction is filed, the competent Minister may refer the transaction for a pre-emption assessment. If the state elects to exercise its right of first refusal, it steps into the position of the buyer on substantially the same commercial terms as the notified transaction.
The mechanics operate as follows:
The likely practical effect of the pre-emption right is that deal teams must factor in the possibility of state intervention when structuring pricing, conditionality and break-fee mechanisms. Sellers in particular should be aware that signing with a foreign buyer does not guarantee closing if the target operates in a pre-emption-eligible sector.
Timing is one of the most critical variables in any Hungarian cross-border deal subject to FDI screening. The statutory framework establishes mandatory filing deadlines, review windows and extension mechanisms that directly affect deal execution calendars.
| Day | Milestone | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Day 0 | Conclusion of the legal transaction (e.g., signing of SPA) | Triggers the notification deadline clock. |
| Day 10 | Deadline for filing the FDI notification | Counted from the date of conclusion of the legal transaction. Filing must be complete, incomplete submissions may not stop the clock. |
| Day 10 + review period | Statutory initial review window begins | The competent Ministry reviews the notification. If no issues arise, clearance may be granted within the initial window. |
| Extension (if applicable) | Extended review for complex or sensitive cases | The authority may extend the review period in cases involving national-security concerns, complex ownership structures or state pre-emption assessment. |
| Final decision | Clearance, conditions, prohibition or pre-emption exercise | Outcomes range from unconditional clearance to outright prohibition or exercise of the state’s right of first refusal. |
The legislation does not formally provide for an “expedited track,” but industry observers note that straightforward transactions in non-sensitive sectors tend to receive faster clearance in practice. Pre-filing engagement with the competent Ministry, including informal consultations and submission of draft filing materials, can reduce the effective review period by addressing information gaps before the formal clock starts. Conversely, cases involving defence-sector targets or potential state pre-emption can take significantly longer than the statutory minimums suggest, particularly where inter-ministerial coordination is required.
Where a transaction also triggers GVH merger-control obligations, the two review tracks run in parallel unless the parties choose to sequence them. Since GVH merger-control clearance is a pre-closing requirement (the transaction cannot be consummated without it), while FDI notification is a post-signing obligation (filed within ten days of signing), the practical sequencing often sees the FDI filing submitted first with the GVH filing following shortly after, or simultaneously. Deal teams should build both timelines into their closing calendar and ensure that SPA longstop dates accommodate the longer of the two review windows.
The GVH operates Hungary’s merger-control regime independently of the FDI screening framework. Transactions that result in a change of control and meet the GVH’s turnover-based thresholds require pre-merger notification and clearance. The two regimes serve different policy objectives, merger control Hungary focuses on market competition, while FDI screening targets national-security and strategic-sector concerns, but they frequently apply to the same transaction.
| Issue | FDI Notification (Act L / Act XCIII of 2025) | Merger Control (GVH) |
|---|---|---|
| Trigger test | Investor nationality or control chain + strategic-sector target + statutory HUF value and ownership-percentage thresholds. | Change of control (sole or joint) + combined and individual turnover thresholds set by the GVH. |
| Filing deadline | Within ten days of the conclusion of the legal transaction (post-signing). | Pre-merger: notification must be filed and clearance obtained before closing. No fixed day count, filing is at the parties’ initiative, but closing without clearance is prohibited. |
| Review authority | Competent Minister (designated under Act L of 2025). | Hungarian Competition Authority (GVH). |
| Possible outcomes | Clearance (unconditional or conditional), prohibition, or exercise of state pre-emption right. Fines for non-notification. | Clearance (Phase I or Phase II), clearance with remedies (e.g., divestments), or prohibition. Fines for gun-jumping. |
| Standstill obligation | Transaction may not be consummated until FDI clearance is received (or the statutory deadline expires without a decision). | Strict standstill: closing before GVH clearance constitutes gun-jumping and is subject to fines. |
When both filings are required, deal teams should prepare a unified information package that can serve both the Ministry and the GVH, while tailoring submissions to each authority’s specific requirements. Coordination points include:
The consequences of failing to comply with Hungary’s FDI notification regime are severe and can undermine the commercial rationale of an acquisition. Act L of 2025, as amended by Act XCIII of 2025, empowers the competent authority to impose a range of penalties for non-notification or for consummating a transaction before receiving clearance.
Enforcement sits with the competent Minister, supported by sector-specific advisory bodies. Early indications suggest that the authorities are taking a pragmatic approach to inadvertent non-compliance where investors file retrospectively and cooperate fully, particularly in sectors where the state pre-emption right is not engaged. However, deliberate evasion or failure to file in sensitive sectors is expected to attract the full range of penalties. Retrospective notification, filing after the ten-day deadline has passed, is possible but does not guarantee favourable treatment. Deal teams that discover a missed filing obligation should seek immediate legal advice and file without delay to mitigate enforcement risk.
The interaction between FDI screening, merger control and commercial deal mechanics demands careful SPA drafting. The checklist below captures the key action items for counsel on both sides of a Hungarian cross-border transaction.
The following sample clause concepts illustrate how practitioners are addressing FDI risk in Hungarian SPAs. These are structural concepts only, final language must be adapted to each transaction.
Condition precedent, FDI clearance:
“Completion shall be conditional upon the Buyer having received unconditional clearance (or deemed clearance through expiry of the statutory review period without a decision) from the competent Minister under Act L of 2025 (as amended) in respect of the Transaction, and the state pre-emption right not having been exercised within the statutory deadline.”
Longstop date with FDI extension:
“The Longstop Date shall be [date], provided that if FDI clearance has not been obtained by such date solely due to the competent Minister having extended the review period, the Longstop Date shall be automatically extended by a period equal to the statutory extension, up to a maximum of [number] days.”
Break fee, pre-emption trigger:
“If the Transaction is not completed solely because the Hungarian state has exercised its pre-emption right under Act L of 2025, the Seller shall pay to the Buyer a break fee of [amount/percentage] as the Buyer’s sole remedy in respect of such non-completion.”
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Daniel Kaszas at DKKR Partners / ARCLIFFE, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
Effective compliance with Hungary’s FDI and merger-control regimes requires disciplined use of checklists and calendars throughout the deal lifecycle. The resources below are designed to support in-deal teams from pre-signing assessment through post-closing confirmation.
For tailored guidance on any aspect of Hungary’s FDI or merger-control regime, connect with an experienced M&A adviser through the Global Law Experts lawyer directory.
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