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The landscape for M&A lawyers in the United Kingdom shifted decisively on 20 January 2026 when the Department for Business and Trade opened a far-reaching consultation on reform of the Competition and Markets Authority’s merger-control regime. For the first time in over a decade, the proposed changes threaten to redraw jurisdictional thresholds, tighten procedural timelines and expand the CMA’s enforcement toolkit, all while a separate but equally consequential development, the Targeted Anti-Avoidance Rule (TAAR), casts fresh doubt over the tax-neutral status of share-for-share exchanges routinely used in buyouts. Taken together, these twin pressures create a new risk matrix that general counsel, private equity sponsors, CFOs and lenders must navigate before any UK transaction reaches signing in 2026.
This article provides the in-depth, practitioner-focused analysis that short firm alerts cannot: a section-by-section breakdown of the CMA merger control reforms 2026, the TAAR’s legal mechanics, private equity deal-timing consequences, debt finance implications for UK deals and a step-by-step practical checklist.
Quick take, for time-pressed GCs and sponsors
The January 2026 consultation represents the most significant proposed overhaul of UK merger control since the Enterprise Act 2002 established the CMA’s predecessor regime. Industry observers expect the reforms, if adopted in full, to bring UK merger review closer in scope and procedural intensity to the European Commission’s regime, while retaining the UK’s distinctive voluntary notification system, at least nominally.
The consultation document sets out several headline proposals that M&A lawyers in the United Kingdom should treat as working assumptions for transaction planning:
| Milestone | Proposed / Expected Date | Implication for Deal Teams |
|---|---|---|
| Consultation opened | 20 January 2026 | All deal teams should model scenarios against proposed thresholds from this date. |
| Consultation response deadline | Expected Q2 2026 (date to be confirmed by gov.uk) | Last opportunity for industry submissions; sponsors and trade bodies should coordinate responses. |
| Government response and draft legislation | Expected H2 2026 – H1 2027 (proposed) | Period of maximum regulatory uncertainty; protective drafting required in SPAs and loan agreements. |
| Parliamentary passage and Royal Assent | Earliest 2027 (proposed) | Transitional provisions will determine which in-flight deals are caught; monitor closely. |
| CMA guidance update and new rules in force | 2027–2028 (proposed) | Full compliance required; deal teams must have new notification workflows in place. |
Note: All dates beyond 20 January 2026 are proposed or estimated based on the consultation document and standard legislative timetables. Deal teams should monitor the gov.uk consultation page for confirmed dates.
Under the current voluntary notification regime, many UK deals proceed without CMA engagement unless the parties identify a clear competition concern. The proposed reforms would make this approach considerably riskier. With lower merger notification thresholds and an expanded jurisdictional nexus, transactions that previously fell below the CMA’s radar, particularly mid-market private equity buyouts and bolt-on acquisitions, would likely require at least a preliminary competition assessment. Early indications suggest that the practical effect will be a significant increase in the volume of informal pre-notification discussions and, subsequently, formal filings.
| Entity Type | Likelihood to Trigger Notification (Under Proposed Reforms) | Practical Implication for Deal Team |
|---|---|---|
| Private equity sponsor acquiring 100% of target | High | Early CMA assessment; pre-emptive notification likely; coordinate financing and intercreditor consents. |
| Strategic acquirer buying minority stake (significant influence) | Medium | Assess stakebuilding rules; consider voluntary CMA engagement; watch for interim undertakings. |
| Cross-border merger with UK nexus via assets/customers | High | Jurisdictional threshold analysis required; expect in-depth remedies and longer timelines. |
| Mid-market bolt-on acquisition by portfolio company | Medium–High | Aggregate turnover across the platform may breach new thresholds; portfolio-wide analysis needed. |
The Targeted Anti-Avoidance Rule, commonly abbreviated to TAAR, is a provision in UK tax legislation designed to prevent taxpayers from accessing reliefs where the main purpose, or one of the main purposes, of a transaction or arrangement is the avoidance of tax. Although not new in principle, the TAAR has taken on heightened importance for M&A lawyers in the United Kingdom during 2026 because of HMRC’s increasingly assertive posture on share-for-share exchanges used in buyout structures. Where HMRC applies the TAAR successfully, a reorganisation that was intended to be tax-neutral can be re-characterised as a taxable disposal, creating an unexpected capital gains charge for selling shareholders and, in some cases, secondary tax liabilities within the acquiring group.
Share-for-share exchanges under sections 127 to 130 of the Taxation of Chargeable Gains Act 1992 (TCGA 1992) ordinarily allow the original shares and new shares to be treated as the same asset for capital gains purposes, deferring any charge until a subsequent disposal. The TAAR can override this treatment if HMRC determines that the exchange was carried out for purposes that include tax avoidance rather than genuine commercial restructuring. In the context of a private equity buyout, this challenge typically arises where:
One complication that M&A practitioners must manage is the interface between tax avoidance (where the TAAR applies) and regulatory structuring (where holding company arrangements may be driven by CMA or FCA requirements). Where a Newco is established partly to satisfy regulatory conditions, for example, ring-fencing regulated activities, the commercial purpose defence becomes stronger. However, HMRC may scrutinise whether the regulatory justification is genuine or merely ancillary, particularly where the primary economic effect of the structure is tax deferral.
| Scenario | TAAR Risk Level | Key Factor |
|---|---|---|
| Management rollover into Newco with clear ongoing governance role | Low | Genuine commercial rationale documented; Newco has substantive board and operational function. |
| Pre-sale reorganisation solely to defer CGT on exit | High | No commercial purpose beyond tax deferral; HMRC likely to challenge. |
| Share-for-share exchange driven by CMA remedy conditions (e.g., hold-separate) | Low–Medium | Regulatory purpose provides defence, but document the link to CMA requirements carefully. |
| Cross-border roll-up with UK Newco used to consolidate offshore holdings | Medium–High | Transfer pricing and anti-avoidance provisions apply in parallel; multiple HMRC angles of attack. |
For private equity UK 2026 transactions, the combination of CMA merger-control reform proposals and TAAR exposure creates a dual compliance burden that demands earlier and more coordinated planning than in any recent deal cycle. Sponsors accustomed to moving quickly on competitive auction processes will need to build regulatory and tax workstreams into their timetables from the outset.
Before submitting a non-binding offer, the deal team should conduct a preliminary competition assessment against both the current CMA thresholds and the proposed lower thresholds. This dual analysis is essential during the transitional period because deals signed before the reforms take effect may still be called in for review under the CMA’s existing own-initiative powers, and deals that complete after implementation will be subject to the new rules. Industry observers expect the CMA to be particularly active in exercising its call-in powers during this interim period, signalling intent and building precedent for the expanded regime.
Simultaneously, the tax workstream should assess whether any proposed management rollover or share-for-share exchange is vulnerable to TAAR challenge. This means engaging specialist tax counsel early, not as an afterthought during the structuring phase, but as a core part of the initial bid assessment.
Under the current voluntary regime, timing of CMA engagement is a tactical decision. Some deal teams prefer to notify early to secure clearance before signing; others wait until after signing to avoid signalling a transaction to competitors. The proposed reforms would make early notification more attractive for several reasons:
In a competitive auction, the bidder who can offer the seller the greatest certainty of closing has a significant advantage. Under the proposed reforms, this means that sponsors who have conducted pre-deal CMA analysis and can credibly represent a low risk of Phase 2 referral will be better positioned. Conversely, break fees may need to be recalibrated to reflect the increased risk and cost of an extended CMA review, including the possibility of remedies that fundamentally alter deal economics.
| Week | Action | Responsible Party |
|---|---|---|
| T-12 | Preliminary competition assessment against current and proposed thresholds | Sponsor / M&A counsel |
| T-10 | TAAR risk assessment on proposed management rollover structure | Tax counsel |
| T-8 | Informal pre-notification discussion with CMA (if filing likely) | Competition counsel |
| T-6 | Submit non-binding offer with CMA clearance conditionality | Sponsor |
| T-4 | Formal CMA notification (if required) | Competition counsel |
| T-4 to T+1 | Phase 1 review period (proposed statutory timetable) | CMA |
| T+1 | Phase 1 decision: clearance, undertakings in lieu, or Phase 2 referral | CMA |
| T+1 to T+3 | Negotiate and finalise SPA; satisfy CMA conditions | All parties |
| T+3 | Lender drawdown (subject to CMA clearance condition) | Lenders / sponsor |
| T+4 | Completion | All parties |
Timeline assumes Phase 1 clearance with no Phase 2 referral. A Phase 2 investigation would add a further 24 weeks or more under the proposed statutory timetable.
The share-for-share exchange tax risk is not a theoretical concern. HMRC’s recent focus on management incentive plans and rollover structures in buyouts signals a willingness to deploy the TAAR where the tax-avoidance purpose can be established, even where the transaction also has genuine commercial elements. For M&A lawyers in the United Kingdom advising on deal structuring, this means that the default assumption of tax neutrality must now be tested rigorously on every transaction.
Where the TAAR risk is assessed as medium or high, deal teams have several structuring alternatives to consider:
HMRC does not operate a formal advance ruling system for TAAR purposes in the same way that some other jurisdictions offer binding rulings on tax-neutral reorganisations. However, deal teams can seek non-statutory clearance under HMRC’s published procedures. The likely practical effect is that HMRC will respond to clearance applications within 28 days in straightforward cases, but more complex structures, particularly those involving cross-border elements or multiple reorganisation steps, may take considerably longer. Building this clearance timeline into the deal programme is essential, especially where lenders require tax certainty as a drawdown condition.
The CMA merger control reforms 2026 have direct consequences for lenders and the intercreditor arrangements that govern multi-tranche acquisition finance. Where the CMA’s review timeline extends or remedies are imposed that alter deal economics, lenders need contractual protection against delayed or restructured closings. This section addresses the key intercreditor arrangements M&A negotiation points that should be on every lender’s radar.
The proposed reforms create several pressure points in the intercreditor relationship:
Bridge facilities used to fund acquisitions pending the arrangement of permanent financing are particularly vulnerable to extended CMA timelines. A bridge that was sized and priced for a 90-day availability period may become commercially unviable if CMA review pushes completion beyond that window. The debt finance implications for UK deals include the need for longer bridge availability periods, higher ticking fees to compensate lenders for extended exposure, and clear flex provisions that allow the bridge to be restructured if the deal is delayed by regulatory review.
| Covenant Area | Current Typical Position | Recommended Position Under Proposed Reforms |
|---|---|---|
| CMA clearance condition | Condition precedent to drawdown; no specificity on Phase 2 | Tiered CP: Phase 1 clearance triggers drawdown; Phase 2 referral triggers standstill with automatic extension rights |
| Change of control definition | Legal ownership of >50% of shares | Expanded to include effective economic control; carve-out for CMA-mandated structural separations |
| MAC clause | General MAC; regulatory outcomes often excluded | Expressly includes CMA Phase 2 referral, remedy imposition and interim undertakings |
| Longstop date | Fixed calendar date (typically 90–120 days post-signing) | Automatic extension tied to CMA review milestones; minimum 9-month longstop to accommodate Phase 2 |
| Bridge availability period | 90 days | 180 days minimum; ticking fee escalation from day 91; flex to term-out if regulatory delay exceeds 150 days |
The following checklist consolidates the action items arising from the CMA merger control reforms 2026, the TAAR and the debt finance implications discussed above. Each step is assigned a priority level and a responsible party to facilitate immediate implementation.
| Step | Action | Responsible Party | Priority |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Conduct a portfolio-wide competition assessment against both current and proposed CMA thresholds | Sponsor / M&A counsel | Immediate |
| 2 | Map all in-flight and pipeline transactions that may be caught by expanded jurisdictional nexus | Sponsor / deal team | Immediate |
| 3 | Engage specialist competition counsel for preliminary CMA risk assessment on live deals | M&A counsel | Immediate |
| 4 | Commission TAAR risk assessment on all management rollover and share-for-share exchange structures | Tax counsel | Immediate |
| 5 | Review and update SPA conditionality to include tiered CMA clearance provisions | M&A counsel / sponsor | Short-term |
| 6 | Negotiate extended longstop dates and CMA-linked extension mechanisms in facility agreements | Lenders / finance counsel | Short-term |
| 7 | Update MAC and change-of-control definitions in intercreditor agreements | Lenders / finance counsel | Short-term |
| 8 | Prepare HMRC non-statutory clearance applications for material share-for-share exchanges | Tax counsel | Short-term |
| 9 | Establish internal monitoring process for the government consultation response and draft legislation | GC / compliance | Medium-term |
| 10 | Submit consultation responses through relevant trade bodies or directly to the Department for Business and Trade | GC / public affairs | Medium-term |
| 11 | Build CMA Phase 2 scenario modelling into all bid financial models (include cost of remedies and delay) | Sponsor / CFO | Medium-term |
| 12 | Train deal teams on new notification triggers and interim enforcement risks | M&A counsel / GC | Medium-term |
The 2026 consultation marks a watershed moment for M&A lawyers in the United Kingdom and for every participant in the UK deal ecosystem. The CMA’s proposed merger-control reforms, combined with an increasingly assertive HMRC stance on the TAAR and share-for-share exchanges, demand a fundamental recalibration of how transactions are structured, financed and timed. Sponsors who move first, conducting early competition assessments, stress-testing tax structures and negotiating protective financing terms, will secure a material advantage in competitive processes. Lenders who update their covenant frameworks and intercreditor arrangements now will avoid being caught by regulatory delays that erode deal economics.
The window between consultation and implementation is the critical planning period; the time to act is before the rules are finalised, not after.
For tailored guidance on any aspect of UK M&A, CMA merger-control compliance or transaction structuring, explore our United Kingdom lawyer directory to connect with experienced practitioners.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Hugh Gardner at Marriott Harrison, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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