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Every acquisition of a Polish business forces one threshold decision before any due diligence begins: do you buy the company’s shares, or do you buy its assets? The share deal vs asset deal Poland choice determines who pays VAT, whether the buyer inherits historic liabilities, how much transfer tax changes hands on closing day, and whether the buyer can depreciate what it just purchased. With consolidated VAT Act guidance and tightened PCC enforcement sharpening the financial gap between the two structures in 2026, getting this choice wrong can add hundreds of thousands of zlotys to the deal cost, or saddle a buyer with obligations it never intended to assume.
This guide compares both structures dimension by dimension, quantifies the tax and cash differences, and delivers a concrete decision framework so you can instruct counsel with confidence.
A share deal means the buyer acquires equity, typically shares (udziały) in a Polish limited liability company (sp. z o.o.) or stock (akcje) in a joint-stock company (S.A.). The target company continues to exist as a legal entity. Its assets, contracts, employees, licences and liabilities all remain inside the same corporate wrapper; only the ownership of that wrapper changes. The buyer steps into the shoes of the former shareholders.
Procedurally, shares in an sp. z o.o. are transferred via a written agreement with notarially certified signatures. The company’s management board must be notified, and the share register updated. For a joint-stock company, registered shares are transferred by endorsement and delivery; bearer shares through delivery alone. In both cases the buyer typically files an update with the National Court Register (KRS) to reflect the new ownership structure. For a step-by-step walkthrough, see how to transfer shares in Poland.
An asset deal means the buyer acquires individual assets, machinery, inventory, intellectual property, contracts, real estate, receivables, directly from the selling company or individual. The selling entity remains in existence (unless subsequently liquidated) and retains any liabilities the buyer has not expressly agreed to assume. In Polish practice, an asset purchase agreement (APA) must identify each asset being transferred, and many items require separate formalities: notarial deed for real-estate transfers, registration in the land and mortgage register, assignment and novation of contracts, IP recordals, and notification to employees.
Employee transfers deserve particular attention. Where the assets constitute an “organised part of an enterprise” (zorganizowana część przedsiębiorstwa, or ZCP), Polish labour law triggers an automatic transfer of employees to the buyer on the terms of their existing employment contracts, a mechanism analogous to the EU’s TUPE rules. Where the transfer falls short of a ZCP, employee migration requires individual consent or new employment offers, adding HR cost and timeline risk.
The table below compresses the core differences between a share purchase vs asset purchase in Poland into a single reference. Use it as a starting point, then read the dimension-by-dimension analysis that follows for the statutory detail.
| Dimension | Share Deal (Buy Equity) | Asset Deal (Buy Assets) |
|---|---|---|
| Legal mechanics | Transfer of shares; buyer acquires the company as a going concern; limited need for assignment consents. | Transfer of individual assets and contracts; assignments, consents and registrations required for each item. |
| VAT treatment | Generally outside the scope of VAT; share transfer is not a supply of goods or services under the VAT Act (Dz.U. 2025 pos. 775). | Typically subject to VAT at the standard 23 % rate unless the transfer qualifies as a going-concern (ZCP/OPE) exemption. |
| Transfer tax (PCC) | 1 % PCC on market value of shares, payable by buyer within 14 days of the transaction. | PCC may apply to specific asset classes (e.g., 2 % on real estate); VAT-able asset transfers are generally PCC-exempt. |
| Seller’s tax (CIT/PIT) | Capital gain taxed under CIT or PIT; non-residents may rely on treaty relief (watch the real-estate clause). | Profit from asset sale taxed under CIT; allocation across assets affects the tax base. |
| Buyer’s tax basis | No step-up, target’s existing depreciation base remains. | Step-up to acquisition cost, new depreciation deductions available. |
| Liability exposure | Buyer inherits all historic liabilities (tax, employment, environmental); mitigation via warranties, indemnities and escrow. | Buyer can exclude pre-closing liabilities; statutory successor rules apply to limited categories. |
| Timing and complexity | Usually faster, single transfer, fewer registrations; due diligence is corporate-focused. | Slower, multiple consents, assignments, registrations (land registers, IP offices). |
| Employee transfers | Employees remain employed by target; no additional process. | Automatic transfer if ZCP; otherwise individual consent or new offers required. |
| Regulatory approvals | Change-of-control approvals (energy, telecoms, competition clearance). | Permit transfers or reissuance may be required; approvals often more granular. |
| Post-closing claims | Claims run against the company and indemnifiers; warranty & indemnity (W&I) insurance common. | Claims tied to assigned contracts; seller retains liability for excluded items. |
A quick illustration shows why the numbers matter. On a PLN 10 million transaction, the buyer’s 1 % PCC on a share deal costs PLN 100,000, but there is zero VAT to fund. On an asset deal for the same value, if the standard 23 % VAT applies to the bulk of the assets, the buyer may need to front roughly PLN 2.3 million in VAT (recoverable later through the VAT return cycle, but a significant cash-flow hit at closing). That cash-flow difference alone reshapes the economics of many mid-market transactions.
The seller’s tax position is broadly similar in both structures, profit on the sale is taxable under Polish CIT (for corporate sellers) or PIT (for individual sellers). The buyer’s position, however, diverges sharply. In a share deal, the target retains its historic depreciation schedules; the buyer gets no new deductions. In an asset deal, the buyer records acquired assets at their purchase price, unlocking fresh CIT depreciation. Over the useful life of capital-intensive assets, this difference can return a material portion of the purchase price as tax shield.
| Tax Item | Share Deal | Asset Deal |
|---|---|---|
| PCC / transfer tax | 1 % of market value of shares, payable by buyer (PLN 10 m value → PLN 100,000) | PCC rate depends on asset class (2 % on real estate; 1 % on movables); VAT-able transfers generally PCC-exempt |
| VAT cash exposure | Typically no VAT (outside scope) | 23 % VAT on taxable assets unless ZCP/OPE exemption applies, potential immediate cash outlay |
| Buyer’s tax basis / depreciation | No step-up; historic depreciation base persists | Step-up to acquisition cost; new depreciation deductions reduce future CIT |
| Typical legal and registration costs | Lower, corporate DD focus, limited registrations | Higher, multiple assignments, consents, land-register entries, notarial fees |
Under the VAT Act (Ustawa o podatku od towarów i usług, consolidated text Dz. U. 2025 pos. 775), a transfer of shares is not treated as a supply of goods or services and therefore falls outside the scope of VAT entirely. An asset sale, by contrast, is ordinarily a taxable supply at 23 %. The critical exception is the transfer of an organised part of an enterprise (zorganizowana część przedsiębiorstwa, or ZCP), Poland’s implementation of the EU going-concern rules. If the bundle of assets being sold constitutes a ZCP, the transaction is outside the scope of VAT, mirroring the share-deal treatment.
Qualifying as a ZCP requires the assets to be organisationally and financially separated within the seller’s business and capable of independently performing economic tasks. Tax authorities scrutinise these qualifications closely; failing to meet them retroactively exposes the buyer to 23 % VAT plus interest.
The 1 % PCC (podatek od czynności cywilnoprawnych) on a share transfer is one of the most predictable costs in a Polish M&A deal. The buyer is the statutory taxpayer. The tax base is the market value of the shares at the date of the transaction, not necessarily the contractual price, though the two will usually align where the deal is arm’s length. The buyer must file the PCC-3 declaration and pay the tax within 14 days of the transaction date. Late payment triggers interest at the statutory rate. Market value is established by reference to the company’s net asset value, recent comparable transactions, or a professional valuation. For official filing guidance, see the gov. pl PCC payment portal.
Where an asset deal is structured so that the transferred items are subject to VAT, PCC generally does not apply to those items, the two taxes are mutually exclusive under Polish law.
This dimension often drives the structure choice more than tax. In a share deal, the buyer inherits everything, including tax audits in progress, environmental remediation obligations, pending employee claims and undisclosed liabilities. The buyer’s protection comes from the SPA: representations and warranties, specific indemnities (especially for tax), escrow accounts or holdbacks, and increasingly, warranty & indemnity (W&I) insurance. Standard market practice in Poland is to size the escrow at 10–20 % of the purchase price with a survival period of 18–24 months for general warranties and up to the statutory limitation period for tax and title warranties.
In an asset deal the buyer can ring-fence pre-closing liabilities by simply not assuming them. Statutory successor liability rules still apply in limited categories, notably employee obligations where a ZCP transfer occurs, and potentially certain tax liabilities, but the buyer’s exposure is structurally narrower. Sellers, predictably, prefer the share deal for its clean-break quality; buyers lean towards asset deals where the target has a messy liability profile.
Share deals close faster. A single share-transfer agreement, notarial certification of signatures and KRS filing can bring a deal to completion within weeks if regulatory approvals are not required. Asset deals take longer because each asset category demands its own formality: notarial deed for real estate, land-register entries, IP recordals, contract assignments (each requiring counterparty consent) and, where employees transfer, consultation with works councils or trade unions. The additional professional fees (notary, registry, specialist counsel) typically make an asset deal more expensive to execute, even before VAT and PCC differences are factored in.
Both structures may trigger competition clearance (UOKiK) if the relevant turnover thresholds are met. Beyond that, the structure choice affects sector-specific approvals differently:
Where the target holds licences that are critical to the business’s value, a share deal is almost always the safer choice because the licence stays with the corporate entity.
The consolidated text of the VAT Act published in early 2025 (Dz. U. 2025 pos. 775) brought no headline-rate changes but did incorporate accumulated interpretive guidance on ZCP qualification. Industry observers expect that the National Revenue Administration (KAS) will continue to apply a strict, substance-over-form test when assessing whether an asset sale qualifies as a ZCP, making it harder for parties to claim the going-concern exemption without robust documentation. Separately, the gov. pl PCC payment portal has streamlined electronic filing, reducing procedural risk for buyers in share deals but also making late-payment detection faster.
The likely practical effect for 2026 transactions is this: buyers who cannot demonstrate clear ZCP status face a binary choice between fronting 23 % VAT on an asset deal or paying the comparatively modest 1 % PCC on a share deal. That calculus is pushing more mid-market acquirers towards the share-deal structure.
The right structure depends on a handful of identifiable priorities. Use the framework below to match your transaction’s facts to the optimal structure, then validate the choice with local M&A counsel.
| If Your Priority Is… | Choose |
|---|---|
| Minimise immediate VAT cash outlay | Share deal, share transfer is outside the scope of VAT entirely |
| Avoid inheriting historic tax, environmental or employment liabilities | Asset deal, exclude unwanted obligations in the APA; obtain seller indemnities for residual statutory successor risk |
| Avoid the 1 % PCC cost on total equity value | Asset deal, but model the offsetting VAT and registration costs before deciding |
| Preserve existing contracts, licences and permits | Share deal, the company continues; no assignment or reissuance required |
| Obtain a stepped-up tax depreciation basis | Asset deal, buyer records assets at acquisition cost and claims new CIT deductions |
| Close quickly with minimal third-party consents | Share deal, one transfer, limited registrations |
Choose a share deal when:
Choose an asset deal when:
The share deal vs asset deal Poland structure choice is not a decision to make on a spreadsheet alone. Engage experienced M&A counsel when any of the following triggers apply:
The most cost-effective engagement model for this type of structuring work is a fixed-fee scoping session (typically two to four hours) in which counsel reviews the deal outline, models the tax and cost implications of both structures, and delivers a written recommendation. This upfront investment routinely saves multiples of its cost by preventing structural missteps that cannot be unwound after signing.
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.
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