Member
No results available
Any cross-border M&A Poland transaction signed in 2026 now faces a regulatory approval landscape that is materially more complex than it was even two years ago. Poland made its foreign‑direct‑investment screening regime permanent in 2025, shifting oversight to the Ministry of Finance and the Ministry of Economic Development and Technology. At the EU level, the Foreign Subsidies Regulation (Regulation (EU) 2022/2560) is generating its first wave of concentration notifications, adding yet another filing layer for deals involving non‑EU state financial contributions. This guide delivers the practical Poland FDI screening M&A 2026 checklist that general counsel, private‑equity deal teams and transaction advisers need, covering every filing trigger, timeline, authority and mitigation option from letter of intent to post‑closing compliance.
Before diving into the detail, the table below maps the core regulatory actions to the party responsible and the stage of the deal at which each step must be completed. Treat this as your one‑page FDI compliance checklist and Polish M&A approvals 2026 summary.
| Action | Who | Timing |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Identify whether the target operates in a protected sector (defence, energy, critical infrastructure, IT/telecoms, food security, finance, pharmaceuticals, chemicals) | Buyer & Seller | Pre‑LOI / early due diligence |
| 2. Determine whether the buyer is an EEA or non‑EEA entity and whether indirect control triggers apply | Buyer | Pre‑LOI |
| 3. Prepare and file FDI notification with the competent authority under the Investment Control Act (if triggered) | Buyer (with seller cooperation) | Pre‑closing, mandatory clearance before completion |
| 4. Assess EU Foreign Subsidies Regulation notification thresholds (turnover ≥ EUR 500 million and foreign financial contribution ≥ EUR 50 million) | Buyer | Pre‑signing analysis; filing pre‑closing |
| 5. Check UOKiK merger‑control filing thresholds (combined worldwide turnover > EUR 1 billion or combined Polish turnover > EUR 50 million) | Buyer (or merging parties jointly) | Post‑signing / pre‑closing, standstill obligation |
| 6. Map sectoral approvals: energy (URE), telecoms (UKE), financial services (KNF), defence export controls | Buyer & Seller | Pre‑signing due diligence; file promptly post‑signing |
| 7. Draft conditionality provisions in SPA covering all identified regulatory approvals | Buyer & Seller | Signing |
| 8. Engage with UOKiK for pre‑notification consultation where complex remedies anticipated | Buyer | Pre‑filing (optional but strongly recommended) |
| 9. Submit merger notification to UOKiK with supporting evidence | Buyer / notifying party | Post‑signing; standstill until clearance |
| 10. Monitor regulatory review timelines and prepare for information requests / Phase II | Buyer & Seller | Ongoing until clearance |
| 11. Complete post‑closing FDI notifications for indirect acquisitions (where applicable) | Buyer | Post‑closing, within statutory period |
| 12. File post‑completion notifications and update registers with sectoral regulators | Buyer | Post‑closing |
Quick action for buyers (first 72 hours): Run a protected‑sector screen on the target’s activities, confirm the investor’s nationality and control chain, and determine whether EU FSR thresholds are met. These three data points drive the entire approval timeline.
Quick action for sellers (first 72 hours): Assemble a regulatory fact pack, sector licences, permits, concessions and any government contracts, so buyers can complete their FDI filing Poland assessment without delay.
Poland’s investment‑control framework has evolved rapidly. Originally introduced as a temporary COVID‑era measure, the FDI screening regime was made permanent in 2025, anchored in the amended Act on the Control of Certain Investments (commonly referred to as the Investment Control Act). Oversight was consolidated under the Ministry of Finance working alongside the Ministry of Economic Development and Technology, replacing the earlier ad‑hoc coordination between multiple government bodies.
At the same time, the EU Foreign Subsidies Regulation, which entered into force in 2023 and became fully applicable for concentration notifications from October 2023, is now producing enforcement precedent at the European Commission level. For any deal where the acquirer or its group has received non‑EU state financial contributions above the regulation’s thresholds, an FSR notification must be made to the Commission in parallel with any national filings.
Merger control remains within the jurisdiction of UOKiK (the Office of Competition and Consumer Protection), which has its own notification thresholds, timelines and fee schedule. The practical effect for deal teams is that a single cross‑border acquisition of a Polish target may now require filings with three distinct authorities, the relevant Polish ministry for FDI, the European Commission for foreign subsidies, and UOKiK for merger clearance, each operating on its own clock.
| Date | Change | Practical Impact |
|---|---|---|
| 2020 | Temporary FDI screening introduced (COVID amendment to Investment Control Act) | First mandatory pre‑clearance for acquisitions in protected sectors |
| July 2023 | EU Foreign Subsidies Regulation enters into force | New EU‑level notification layer for subsidised acquirers |
| October 2023 | FSR concentration notification obligation becomes applicable | Deals meeting thresholds must notify EC before closing |
| 2025 | Poland makes FDI screening permanent; oversight shifts to Ministry of Finance / Ministry of Economic Development | FDI filing is now a standing requirement, not a sunset provision, planning essential for every deal |
| 2026 | Enforcement intensifies; first wave of Polish FDI decisions under permanent regime; EC FSR enforcement broadens | Longer review times expected; early engagement with all regulators strongly advised |
Understanding precisely which transactions trigger a mandatory FDI filing in Poland is the single most important step in deal planning. The Investment Control Act casts a broad net: it applies to acquisitions of significant participations or dominant influence in entities that operate in designated protected sectors, and it applies to both direct and indirect transactions.
A direct acquisition triggers mandatory FDI screening where the target entity is active in one or more protected sectors and the acquirer, regardless of nationality in many cases, though with heightened scrutiny for non‑EEA investors, obtains a significant participation. Protected sectors include defence and arms manufacturing, energy generation and distribution, critical infrastructure (including ports, airports and water), IT and telecommunications infrastructure, food processing and distribution (where designated as critical), financial services, pharmaceutical manufacturing, chemicals and advanced materials.
Significant participation thresholds broadly capture acquisitions of 20 per cent or more of voting rights, as well as acquisitions that confer dominant influence irrespective of the percentage of equity acquired. The regime is deliberately broad to prevent structuring around simple share‑percentage tests.
One of the most practically significant aspects of the Polish regime is its reach over indirect acquisitions. Where a foreign buyer acquires a holding company outside Poland and that holding company controls a Polish entity operating in a protected sector, the obligation to notify may still apply. Industry observers expect the authorities to scrutinise these structures more closely under the permanent regime, particularly where the acquiring chain runs through multiple jurisdictions.
Deal teams must map the full corporate structure of both buyer and target at the earliest stage of due diligence. Failure to identify an indirect trigger can result in a completed transaction being unwound or subjected to post‑closing remedial orders.
Certain indirect acquisitions may be subject to post‑closing notification requirements where pre‑closing clearance was not practicable, for example, where the Polish entity represents a minor part of a global transaction and the acquisition of indirect control was a secondary consequence. Early engagement with the competent ministry is essential to agree on the appropriate filing route and timeline.
| Transaction Type | Filing Required? | Typical Deadline |
|---|---|---|
| Direct acquisition of ≥ 20 % of shares in a defence supplier | Yes, mandatory pre‑clearance under Investment Control Act | Pre‑closing; no completion until clearance received |
| Indirect acquisition via offshore holdco where target operates critical infrastructure | Often yes, may require post‑closing notification if control is obtained; pre‑closing filing recommended where feasible | Post‑closing notification within statutory period (or pre‑closing if practicable) |
| Asset purchase (non‑strategic assets, no protected sector) | Usually no FDI filing, but sectoral licences or permits may still be needed | Sectoral licence timelines vary (see sectoral approvals table below) |
| Acquisition of a minority stake below significant‑participation threshold in a non‑protected sector | No FDI filing required | N/A, but monitor for subsequent threshold crossings |
The EU Foreign Subsidies Regulation (Regulation (EU) 2022/2560) introduced a new category of mandatory notification that runs in parallel with, and is entirely separate from, national FDI screening and merger control. Any acquisition of a Polish target (or an entity with Polish operations) can trigger an FSR concentration notification where the relevant thresholds are met.
A concentration notification to the European Commission is required where two cumulative conditions are satisfied:
The definition of foreign financial contribution is deliberately wide, it includes subsidies, tax advantages, preferential financing, debt forgiveness and any other financial measure attributable to a non‑EU government.
Where the Commission determines that a foreign subsidy distorts the internal market, it may impose commitments or remedies, ranging from behavioural conditions (such as licensing obligations or access commitments) to structural measures (such as divestment of certain activities). In extreme cases, the Commission may prohibit the concentration entirely. The practical consequence for deal timelines is that an FSR review runs concurrently with national processes and may extend the overall approval calendar.
UOKiK merger control Poland obligations apply independently of the FDI regime and the EU FSR. A concentration must be notified to UOKiK, and completion is suspended until clearance is obtained, whenever the prescribed turnover thresholds are exceeded.
Notification to UOKiK is required where the combined worldwide turnover of the undertakings concerned exceeds EUR 1 billion, or where the combined turnover generated in Poland by the undertakings concerned exceeds EUR 50 million, in the financial year preceding the notification. Turnover is calculated on a group‑wide basis, including all entities within the same capital group.
The notification must include detailed market information: the relevant product and geographic markets, combined and individual market shares, main competitors, vertical relationships and any ancillary restraints contained in the transaction documents.
UOKiK encourages pre‑notification consultations for complex transactions, particularly those that may raise horizontal overlaps or vertical concerns. Early engagement can significantly reduce the formal review timeline by resolving information gaps and discussing potential commitments before the statutory clock begins. Industry observers note that UOKiK has been more willing to accept behavioural remedies alongside structural conditions since recent guidance updates.
The standard Phase I review period is one month from receipt of a complete notification, extendable to a Phase II review of up to four months in complex cases. In practice, clock‑stops for information requests can lengthen these periods considerably.
| Stage | Action | Typical Duration |
|---|---|---|
| Pre‑notification | Optional consultation with UOKiK case team | 2–6 weeks (informal) |
| Filing | Formal notification submitted with supporting evidence | Day 0 |
| Phase I review | Initial assessment; UOKiK may request supplementary information | Up to 1 month |
| Phase II review (if initiated) | In‑depth investigation; market testing of proposed remedies | Up to 4 months |
| Clearance / conditional clearance | Decision issued; conditions (if any) binding from closing | End of review period |
A common source of confusion, and deal delay, is misidentifying the competent authority for a particular filing. The table below maps each approval type to the responsible body.
| Approval Type | Competent Authority | Key Role |
|---|---|---|
| FDI screening (Investment Control Act) | Ministry of Finance / Ministry of Economic Development and Technology | Reviews acquisitions of significant participations in protected‑sector entities; grants or refuses clearance pre‑closing |
| Merger control | UOKiK (Office of Competition and Consumer Protection) | Assesses concentrations for competition effects; clearance required pre‑closing where thresholds met |
| EU Foreign Subsidies Regulation (concentration notification) | European Commission (DG Competition) | Reviews foreign financial contributions for distortive effects on internal market; clearance required pre‑closing where thresholds met |
| Sectoral approvals (energy, telecoms, financial services, defence) | Relevant sectoral regulator (URE, UKE, KNF, Ministry of National Defence, others) | Grants or conditions operating licences and permits that transfer with the business |
Where a single deal triggers filings with all three principal bodies, the Polish ministry, UOKiK and the European Commission, the deal team must manage parallel timelines, separate information requests and potentially conflicting remedies. This is where early coordination and a unified regulatory strategy add the greatest value.
Beyond the overarching FDI and merger‑control regimes, many Polish M&A transactions require sector‑specific regulatory consents. Overlooking these can delay closing by months or, in worst cases, invalidate the transfer of a critical operating licence.
Changes of control over entities holding energy generation, distribution or trading licences must be notified to, and approved by, the Energy Regulatory Office (URE). The same applies to entities operating critical infrastructure assets such as natural‑gas storage or district‑heating networks. URE review timelines vary depending on the complexity of the licence portfolio.
Acquisitions of qualifying holdings in banks, insurance undertakings, investment firms and other regulated financial entities require prior approval from the Polish Financial Supervision Authority (KNF). KNF applies a fit‑and‑proper assessment to proposed new shareholders, and the review process can take several months where complex ownership structures are involved.
Where the target holds telecoms licences or radio‑spectrum allocations, the Office of Electronic Communications (UKE) must be notified and may need to approve the change of control. Spectrum licences in particular are subject to conditions that can be affected by changes in the ultimate beneficial owner.
Acquisitions of entities involved in defence manufacturing, arms trading or dual‑use technology are subject to heightened scrutiny. In addition to the standard FDI screening, the Ministry of National Defence and relevant export‑control authorities may impose additional conditions or restrictions. These are typically the most time‑intensive approvals in a deal involving protected‑sector targets.
| Sector | Regulator | Typical Approval Timeline |
|---|---|---|
| Energy (generation, distribution, trading) | URE (Energy Regulatory Office) | 4–12 weeks |
| Financial services (banking, insurance, investment firms) | KNF (Polish Financial Supervision Authority) | 8–16 weeks (fit‑and‑proper review) |
| Telecoms and spectrum | UKE (Office of Electronic Communications) | 4–8 weeks |
| Defence and dual‑use technology | Ministry of National Defence / export‑control authorities | 8–20 weeks (may be longer for complex cases) |
| Pharmaceuticals | Chief Pharmaceutical Inspectorate (GIF) | 4–10 weeks |
| Mining and geological extraction | Relevant voivodeship marshals / Ministry of Climate and Environment | 6–12 weeks |
| Transport (air, rail, road concessions) | Civil Aviation Authority (ULC) / Office of Rail Transport (UTK) | 6–12 weeks |
Identifying the regulatory triggers is only half the challenge. Effective structuring and proactive mitigation can compress timelines, reduce the risk of objections and protect deal value.
The single highest‑value investment in any cross‑border M&A Poland process is a comprehensive regulatory mapping exercise conducted before signing. This should cover all three principal filing obligations (FDI, UOKiK, FSR), all relevant sectoral approvals and any change‑of‑control clauses buried in the target’s material contracts, concessions and government grants. A regulatory fact pack, prepared jointly by buyer’s and seller’s counsel, dramatically reduces the time to filing and minimises the risk of surprises after signing.
| Week | Activity |
|---|---|
| 1–2 | Regulatory mapping and protected‑sector screen; engage Polish regulatory counsel |
| 3–4 | Due diligence; prepare FDI notification draft and UOKiK merger notification draft |
| 5 | SPA signing with regulatory CPs; FDI notification filed; FSR assessment completed |
| 6–8 | UOKiK pre‑notification consultation; formal merger notification filed |
| 6–10 | FDI review period; respond to ministry information requests |
| 8–12 | UOKiK Phase I review; sectoral licence notifications filed |
| 10–14 | FDI clearance expected; sectoral approvals received; UOKiK clearance (if Phase I sufficient) |
| 14–16 | Closing; post‑closing filings and register updates |
Every deal is different, but the three model timelines below, refined from recent transaction experience, illustrate how the various filing obligations interact in practice.
Where the target does not operate in a protected sector and the buyer has no material non‑EU financial contributions, the regulatory path is limited to UOKiK merger control (if thresholds are met). In this scenario, signing to closing can typically be achieved in 6–10 weeks, driven primarily by the UOKiK Phase I timeline.
Asset purchases may avoid FDI triggers but frequently require transfer or re‑issuance of sectoral licences (energy, telecoms, transport). These transfers must be sequenced carefully, some regulators will not process a transfer until the asset‑purchase agreement is signed, while others require pre‑closing consent. Allow 10–16 weeks from signing to closing, with licence transfers running in parallel.
This is the most complex scenario: FDI pre‑clearance, UOKiK merger control, FSR concentration notification and potentially one or more sectoral approvals, all running concurrently. Realistically, allow 14–24 weeks from signing to closing, with the critical path usually determined by whichever regulator initiates a Phase II or extended review.
Scenario A, Indirect acquisition flagged post‑signing. A non‑EEA private‑equity fund acquired a Luxembourg holding company whose Polish subsidiary operated critical IT infrastructure. The FDI filing obligation was identified only after signing, when seller’s counsel flagged the target’s inclusion in a government critical‑infrastructure register. The solution: an expedited post‑signing FDI notification filed simultaneously with UOKiK, supported by a voluntary hold‑separate arrangement and an independent monitoring trustee appointed by agreement. Clearance was obtained, but the process added eight weeks to the original timeline. The lesson is clear, map indirect control chains before signing, not after.
Scenario B, FSR threshold caught late in diligence. A strategic buyer headquartered in the EU but with a significant non‑EU state‑backed minority shareholder initially assumed the FSR did not apply. Late‑stage diligence revealed that the shareholder’s capital injections over the preceding three years qualified as foreign financial contributions exceeding the EUR 50 million threshold. The deal team had to prepare an FSR concentration notification within a compressed timeline, running parallel with UOKiK and sectoral filings. The practical takeaway: audit the buyer’s entire ownership chain, including minority investors, for non‑EU state financial contributions at the very outset of the transaction.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Piotr Szczeciński at CP | Compliance Partners, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
posted 1 hour ago
posted 1 hour ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
posted 4 hours ago
posted 4 hours ago
posted 5 hours ago
posted 5 hours ago
posted 5 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