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Last updated: 4 May 2026
Romania’s regulatory landscape for cross‑border mergers and acquisitions shifted significantly in early 2026, and deal teams that fail to adapt risk delayed closings, blocked transactions, or unexpected tax liabilities. The most consequential Romania M&A law changes 2026 centre on three pillars: an overhauled FDI screening regime under Government Emergency Ordinance No. 17/2026 (GEO 17/2026), tighter notary and registration formalities for transfers of controlling stakes in limited‑liability companies (SRLs), and a dividend‑tax increase that reshapes post‑close distribution economics. This guide consolidates every filing obligation, deadline and drafting consideration into a single, transaction‑ready compliance checklist for in‑house counsel, CFOs and overseas acquirers structuring or closing a Romania deal in 2026.
Before mapping the detail, three headline changes demand immediate attention from any buyer or seller in the Romanian market:
Do foreign investors need to notify Romania’s FDI screening regime for M&A transactions in 2026? The short answer is yes, whenever the acquisition targets a sensitive sector and the transaction meets the value or shareholding triggers set out in GEO 17/2026, a mandatory notification to the Commission for the Examination of Foreign Direct Investments (CEISD) is required. Failure to notify can result in the transaction being declared void. The sections below walk through every step, threshold and sample clause that buyers and sellers need to manage compliance effectively.
Understanding the sequence of legislative events is critical for determining which rules apply to transactions signed before, but closing after, a particular effective date. The table below summarises the key instruments affecting cross‑border M&A Romania deals in 2025–2026.
| Date | Legislation | Practical Effect on M&A |
|---|---|---|
| 2025 (various dates) | Law 238/2025, amendments to corporate law Romania 2026 (issuers’ rules, SRL formalities) | Introduced new notary authentication requirements for SRL share transfers, enhanced disclosure duties for listed issuers, and updated minimum‑capital and bank‑account rules. |
| 12 March 2026 (published) | Government Emergency Ordinance No. 17/2026 (GEO 17/2026) | Overhauled the FDI screening regime: broadened sensitive‑sector definitions, added the interdependent‑transactions rule, and updated filing thresholds. Effective from 13 March 2026. |
| Q1 2026 (fiscal acts) | Fiscal Code amendments, dividend tax increase and related withholding changes | Raised the dividend tax rate from 10 % to 16 %. Affects post‑close distributions, escrow calculations and SPA tax indemnities for all deals closing in 2026 onwards. |
Industry observers expect further secondary legislation and CEISD procedural guidelines to be published throughout 2026. Deal teams should monitor the Monitorul Oficial portal for supplementary orders, particularly any guidance clarifying calculation methodology for interdependent‑transaction values.
Under GEO 17/2026, any foreign investor acquiring control, significant influence or management rights in a Romanian entity operating in a sensitive sector must file a mandatory notification with the CEISD before completing the transaction. The regime applies to both EU and non‑EU investors, although the scope of review and the sensitivity analysis may differ depending on the investor’s origin.
The ordinance maintains and expands the list of sensitive sectors that trigger FDI screening Romania 2026 obligations. These include, among others:
Buyers should conduct a sector‑mapping exercise at the letter‑of‑intent stage: identify every licence, permit and regulated activity held by the target and cross‑reference it against the GEO 17/2026 sector list. Where the target operates across multiple sectors, the highest‑risk classification governs the notification obligation.
| Transaction Type | Filing Required? | Expected Timeline |
|---|---|---|
| 100 % acquisition of SRL in sensitive sector by non‑EU buyer | Yes, mandatory FDI notification to CEISD | 30–60 days; may extend if conditions imposed |
| Acquisition of listed shares granting board‑appointment rights | Yes, if control or management rights change | 30–60 days; coordinate with merger control |
| Asset purchase of critical infrastructure | Likely yes, if strategic infrastructure affected | 30–60 days plus sectoral permits (30–120+ days) |
| Minority stake (<10 %) by EU investor, no management rights | Typically no, unless interdependent‑transactions rule applies | Internal review: 10–30 days recommended |
Possible outcomes of a CEISD review include unconditional clearance, clearance subject to conditions or mitigation measures (e.g., ring‑fencing sensitive data, appointing independent board members), or, in extreme cases, prohibition. Early engagement with legal counsel is recommended to pre‑assess the likely outcome and prepare the technical annexes that accompany the notification form. The likely practical effect of the new interdependent‑transactions rule will be that buyers structuring phased acquisitions should obtain legal opinions at each stage confirming that the aggregate position does not cross a notification threshold.
The transfer of a controlling stake in an SRL has become procedurally more demanding under the corporate law Romania 2026 reforms introduced by Law 238/2025. Buyers and sellers must now satisfy enhanced notary authentication requirements and ensure compliance with updated capital and bank‑account rules before the Trade Register will process the transfer.
Deal teams should consider including a condition precedent along the following lines in the SPA:
“Completion shall be conditional upon (i) the notarisation of the Share Transfer Deed in accordance with applicable Romanian law, (ii) the issuance by the target’s bank of a certificate confirming compliance with minimum capital‑deposit requirements, and (iii) the acceptance for registration by the Trade Register of the updated Articles of Association, each to the reasonable satisfaction of the Buyer.”
Allow a minimum of four to six weeks from SPA signing to anticipated Trade Register acceptance when building a deal timeline. Failure to account for notarisation lead times, particularly during holiday periods or when foreign‑language apostille requirements apply, is a common source of closing delays in cross‑border M&A Romania transactions.
The increase in Romania’s dividend tax from 10 % to 16 % is the single most impactful fiscal change for M&A deal economics in 2026. Every SPA signed this year must account for the new rate in its financial modelling, particularly where post‑close profit distributions are part of the purchase‑price mechanism or earn‑out structure.
Numeric example: On a gross dividend of EUR 100,000 declared after the effective date of the increase, the withholding obligation rises from EUR 10,000 (at 10 %) to EUR 16,000 (at 16 %), a EUR 6,000 per‑distribution increase that compounds significantly across multiple quarterly or annual payments.
Distributions declared before the effective date of the fiscal amendments but paid after that date may be subject to transitional provisions. Buyers should request confirmation from the seller, supported by board minutes and ANAF filings, of the applicable rate for any “in‑flight” dividends. Where uncertainty exists, the safer approach is to withhold at 16 % and seek a refund if the lower rate ultimately applies, rather than under‑withhold and face penalties.
Beyond FDI screening, many cross‑border transactions require separate clearances from sector regulators and the Romanian Competition Council. The table below maps the key bodies, their triggers and typical processing times.
| Regulator | Trigger | Filing Timeline (Typical) |
|---|---|---|
| Romanian Competition Council | Merger control Romania thresholds: combined aggregate turnover and individual turnover in Romania exceeding statutory limits | Phase I: 30–45 days; Phase II (if opened): up to 5 months |
| BNR (National Bank of Romania) | Acquisition of qualifying holdings in banks, NBFIs, payment institutions | 60–90 days from complete filing |
| ANRE (Energy Regulator) | Change of control in licence holders (electricity, gas, oil) | 30–90 days; may require licence‑amendment procedure |
| ANCOM (Telecom Regulator) | Transfer of spectrum licences or change of control in authorised operators | 30–60 days |
In many Romanian transactions, FDI review and merger control can run in parallel, but careful sequencing of conditions precedent is essential. The recommended approach is to file the FDI notification and the merger‑control notification simultaneously at the point of SPA signing, while submitting sector‑specific applications (BNR, ANRE, ANCOM) as soon as the relevant information packages are ready. Structure the SPA so that closing is conditional on all required clearances, with a long‑stop date that accommodates the slowest regulator in the chain, typically 90 to 120 days for complex, multi‑regulator transactions.
The 2026 legislative package expands the scope of Romania M&A due diligence 2026 in several practical ways. Buyers should add the following workstreams to their standard due‑diligence checklist:
Warranty and indemnity (W&I) insurance underwriters are already adjusting their appetite for Romania deals in light of the Romania M&A law changes 2026. Early indications suggest that policy excesses and premium rates for FDI‑related risk exclusions are trending upward, making it advisable to engage brokers at the earliest possible stage.
A well‑structured closing sequence for a 2026 Romania cross‑border deal should follow the order below:
| Entity / Transaction Type | Filing Trigger (FDI / Sectoral / Merger Control) | Typical Timeline (Estimate) |
|---|---|---|
| Acquisition of 100 % of SRL by non‑EU buyer | FDI filing if sector sensitive and investment value ≥ threshold; notary transfer formalities for SRL; sector approvals if regulated | FDI: 30–60 days (may extend); Notary + registry: 7–21 days; Sectoral: 30–90+ days |
| Share purchase of issuer / listed company | Potential merger control filing; Law 238/2025 changes for issuers; FDI if strategic assets impacted | Merger control: 30–45 days (Phase I); FDI review may run in parallel or require prior clearance |
| Asset purchase (plant / critical infrastructure) | FDI screening likely if transfer affects strategic infrastructure; sectoral permits (ANRE, ANCOM) may apply | FDI: 30–60 days; Sectoral approvals: 30–120+ days depending on agency |
| Minority stake (<10 %) by EU investor | Typically no FDI filing unless control/management rights change; consider interdependent‑transactions rule | No filing in most cases, but 10–30 day internal review recommended |
The Romania M&A law changes 2026 require every cross‑border deal team to reassess its compliance playbook, from the earliest due‑diligence workstream through to post‑close regulatory notifications. Use the checklists, timelines and sample clauses in this guide as a starting framework, and engage qualified Romanian M&A counsel early to tailor them to the specifics of your transaction. For further guidance, visit the International M&A practice area on Global Law Experts or find a Romania M&A lawyer through the GLE directory.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Andreea Calciu at Sioufas & Associates Law Firm, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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