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The rules governing merger control in Turkey shifted materially on 11 February 2026, when Communiqué No. 2026/2 entered into force and reset the turnover thresholds that determine whether a transaction must be notified to the Turkish Competition Authority (TCA, Rekabet Kurumu). For in-house counsel, M&A deal teams and private equity funds active in Türkiye, the practical effect is twofold: many smaller deals will fall outside mandatory notification for the first time, while a new category of technology-undertaking transactions may be caught even where traditional revenue tests are not met. This guide delivers the step-by-step compliance checklist, worked threshold calculations, PE-specific guidance and filing-process detail that deal teams need to navigate the 2026 regime with confidence.
TL;DR, If any party to your transaction generates Turkish turnover that meets the revised thresholds below, or if the target qualifies as a technology undertaking under the new rules, you almost certainly need to notify the TCA before closing. Use the ten-point checklist to make the initial call, then read the detailed sections that follow for threshold calculations, PE traps and filing mechanics.
TL;DR, Communiqué No. 2026/2 raised the turnover thresholds that trigger mandatory merger notification in Turkey, introduced dedicated rules for technology undertakings and updated the simplified-notification framework.
The amending Communiqué, published in the Official Gazette and effective 11 February 2026, made three principal changes to the existing Communiqué No. 2010/4 on Mergers and Acquisitions Calling for the Authorisation of the Competition Board:
Communiqué No. 2026/2 applies to all transactions for which notification has not yet been filed as of 11 February 2026. Transactions already pending before the TCA on that date continue to be assessed under the previous thresholds. Industry observers expect the higher thresholds to reduce the overall volume of notified deals by a meaningful margin, while the technology-undertaking provisions will pull certain previously non-notifiable acquisitions back into scope, a deliberate asymmetry designed to sharpen the TCA’s focus on digital-market concentration.
TL;DR, Mandatory merger notification in Turkey applies whenever a transaction results in a change of control and the relevant turnover thresholds are met. The concept of “control” is interpreted broadly.
Article 7 of Turkish Competition Law No. 4054 and the implementing Communiqué define control as the ability to exercise decisive influence over an undertaking’s strategic commercial decisions. Control may be acquired on a sole or joint basis and may arise through:
The table below maps the most common transaction types to their notification triggers and illustrative deal scenarios, which is especially useful when structuring private equity investments in Turkey.
| Transaction Type | When Notifiable (Short Rule) | Typical PE / M&A Example |
|---|---|---|
| Acquisition of sole control | Thresholds met and control acquired via share purchase, asset takeover, or equivalent mechanism | 100% share purchase of a Turkish target by a foreign buyer or PE fund |
| Merger (combination) | Combined turnovers of merging entities meet thresholds | Two Turkish companies merging under a single economic unit |
| Full-function joint venture | JV performs functions of an independent economic entity on a lasting basis and thresholds met | Telecom infrastructure JV operating nationally in Türkiye |
| Asset transfer | Transferred business’s Turkish turnover exceeds threshold | Sale of Turkish manufacturing operations and assets to a foreign acquirer |
| Acquisition of joint control | Two or more parties jointly acquire decisive influence and thresholds met | Consortium buyout where two PE funds co-invest in a Turkish portfolio company |
A transaction between two companies incorporated and headquartered outside Türkiye remains notifiable if the Turkish turnover thresholds are exceeded. The TCA applies an effects-based test: any deal that produces competitive effects within Türkiye, typically demonstrated by the parties’ Turkish revenue streams, falls within scope. Deal teams structuring cross-border acquisitions should therefore always map the target’s (and, where relevant, the acquirer’s) Turkish revenue at the due-diligence stage, regardless of where the parties are domiciled.
TL;DR, The post-2026 thresholds are denominated in Turkish lira (TRY) and measured by reference to the parties’ most recent audited annual financial statements. Both an aggregate and an individual-party test must be applied.
| Threshold Test | Description |
|---|---|
| Aggregate Turkish turnover | The combined Turkish turnovers of all undertakings concerned must exceed the aggregate threshold specified in Communiqué No. 2026/2 |
| Individual-party Turkish turnover | At least two of the undertakings concerned must each individually exceed the individual-party threshold |
| Worldwide turnover (alternative test) | If Turkish turnover thresholds are not met but global turnovers exceed the worldwide threshold, and at least one party’s Turkish turnover exceeds the individual-party test, notification may still be required |
| Technology-undertaking override | Where the target qualifies as a technology undertaking, notification may be triggered even if the target’s individual Turkish turnover falls below the standard threshold, provided alternative conditions in Communiqué No. 2026/2 are satisfied |
Note: Turnover is calculated on a net basis (deducting VAT, excise duties and similar levies) from the most recent complete financial year. For groups, the relevant turnover is the consolidated group turnover in Türkiye, not only that of the direct transacting entity.
Turkish turnover encompasses revenue generated from the sale of goods and services to customers located in Türkiye, regardless of where the selling entity is incorporated. For companies with no direct Turkish subsidiary but with significant export sales into Türkiye, those export revenues form part of the calculation. Intra-group revenues are eliminated. Where a party’s financial statements are prepared in a currency other than TRY, conversion is typically made at the Central Bank of the Republic of Türkiye (CBRT) average exchange rate for the relevant financial year.
The following four scenarios illustrate how to apply the merger control Turkey thresholds in practice. In each case the analysis follows the same three-step logic: (1) identify the undertakings concerned, (2) calculate each one’s Turkish turnover, and (3) test both the aggregate and individual thresholds.
Example A, Share purchase of a Turkish target. A UK-based industrial group acquires 100% of the shares of a Turkish manufacturer. The buyer’s group has annual Turkish turnover from exports into Türkiye. The target’s standalone Turkish turnover is taken from its audited financials. Both figures are tested against the individual threshold; their sum is tested against the aggregate threshold.
Example B, Asset transfer. A French company buys the Turkish production line and customer contracts of a German group’s Turkish subsidiary. Here, the “transferred business” turnover, not the seller group’s total Turkish turnover, is the relevant figure for the target-side threshold. The acquirer’s own Turkish turnover is assessed separately.
Example C, Foreign-to-foreign transaction with Turkish nexus. A US fund acquires a Dutch holding company whose only operating subsidiary is in Türkiye. Despite neither party being a Turkish entity, the Dutch holdco’s Turkish subsidiary turnover feeds into the threshold calculation. The US fund’s own Turkish revenue (if any, through portfolio companies) is also included.
Example D, PE add-on aggregation. A PE fund that already owns a Turkish healthcare platform acquires a second, smaller Turkish clinic chain. Both the fund’s existing portfolio company’s Turkish turnover and the new target’s Turkish turnover are counted. If the fund has completed other acquisitions in the same market within the last three years, the aggregation rule may apply, combining the turnovers of all recently acquired businesses for threshold purposes.
Communiqué No. 2010/4 (as amended) provides that two or more transactions between the same parties, or involving assets in the same relevant market, completed within a three-year period may be treated as a single concentration for threshold purposes. For private equity funds executing a buy-and-build strategy in Türkiye, this aggregation rule is a critical planning variable: individually sub-threshold bolt-on acquisitions can, when combined, exceed the notification thresholds. The practical safeguard is to maintain a rolling three-year tracker of all Turkish-market acquisitions within the fund’s portfolio.
TL;DR, PE sponsors face unique risks under the Turkish merger notification regime, from portfolio-level threshold aggregation to de facto control arguments and staged-acquisition structures that inadvertently trigger notification.
Private equity activity in Türkiye has grown steadily, and the 2026 threshold increases will remove some smaller transactions from the notification radar. However, several PE-specific traps remain:
TL;DR, The TCA operates a mandatory, suspensory merger notification system. Parties may not close until clearance is granted. The review process has two main phases, and conditional clearance with remedies is available.
| Review Stage | Statutory Deadline | Typical Practical Duration |
|---|---|---|
| Completeness check | TCA confirms completeness within a short period after filing | Typically confirmed within one to two weeks |
| Phase I review | Statutory period runs from the date the filing is deemed complete | Most straightforward cases cleared within approximately 30 calendar days of complete filing |
| Phase II investigation | Extended statutory period from the date Phase II is opened | Can take several months depending on complexity, market testing and remedy negotiations |
| Remedies negotiation (if applicable) | Conducted within Phase II timeline | Adds additional time; parties should plan for engagement throughout Phase II |
Communiqué No. 2026/2 broadens the eligibility criteria for the simplified notification form, which requires less detailed market information and is typically processed more quickly. A simplified form may be used where, for example, the parties have no horizontal overlap with a combined market share above specified levels, and no vertical relationship above specified thresholds. Transactions qualifying for simplified treatment are generally cleared within Phase I. Industry observers expect the expanded simplified-form criteria to encourage more filings through the fast track and to reduce the administrative burden on both the TCA and notifying parties.
Where the TCA identifies competition concerns but considers that these can be addressed short of prohibition, it may grant conditional clearance subject to remedies. Typical merger remedies in Turkey include:
The TCA has shown a growing preference for structural remedies in markets with high concentration, while accepting behavioural commitments in cases involving vertical or conglomerate effects where divestment would be disproportionate.
TL;DR, Failing to notify a notifiable transaction, or closing before TCA clearance, exposes the parties to substantial fines and the risk that the transaction may be unwound.
The Turkish Competition Law grants the TCA power to impose turnover-based fines on undertakings that fail to notify or that implement a concentration before obtaining clearance (gun-jumping). Beyond monetary penalties, the TCA may order the parties to reverse the transaction, restore the pre-merger competitive conditions, or divest acquired assets. Directors and managers who bear personal responsibility for the infringement may also face individual fines.
The TCA has signalled heightened enforcement attention in the digital-markets and platform-economy space. Early indications suggest that the technology-undertaking provisions in Communiqué No. 2026/2 were introduced partly in response to concerns about so-called “killer acquisitions”, deals in which a dominant platform acquires nascent competitors or complementary technology firms before those targets generate significant revenue. The practical lesson for deal teams is that revenue-based safe harbours cannot be relied upon in technology sectors. Even where Turkish turnover appears low, a technology target with significant Turkish user data, market presence, or growth trajectory may trigger notification under the new rules.
The likely practical effect will be that foreign acquirers targeting Turkish tech start-ups and digital-platform businesses must include TCA merger-control analysis as a standard workstream in their due-diligence process, rather than treating it as a downstream exercise triggered only by revenue screens.
TL;DR, A complete TCA notification requires the applicable form, supporting documents, market-share evidence and a confidentiality schedule. Missing items delay the completeness clock and extend review timelines.
TL;DR, The TCA is increasingly focused on digital-market transactions, and the new technology-undertaking rules in Communiqué No. 2026/2 are designed to catch killer acquisitions that traditional turnover thresholds would miss.
Deal teams should treat the following as red flags that increase the likelihood of TCA scrutiny under the 2026 merger control Turkey rules:
The introduction of technology-undertaking rules aligns the Turkish regime with broader global trends, similar provisions exist in the EU (under the Digital Markets Act enforcement approach) and in Germany (with its transaction-value threshold). Industry observers expect the TCA to use these provisions selectively but firmly, focusing on deals where the competitive narrative points to potential foreclosure or elimination of nascent competition.
The 2026 changes to merger control in Turkey demand a recalibrated approach from every deal team operating in the Turkish market. Four immediate action points will reduce risk and accelerate clearance:
For specialist guidance on Turkish merger notifications, threshold calculations and sector-specific risk assessments, consult the Turkey lawyer directory or browse the full Global Law Experts lawyer directory for qualified competition-law practitioners.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Efser Zeynep Ergun at ZESA Attorney Partnership, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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