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share exchange rules finland

Share Exchange Rules Finland 2026: Cash Consideration, Share‑exchange Tests & Minority Protections

By Global Law Experts
– posted 1 hour ago

The share exchange rules Finland reformed with effect from 1 January 2026 have materially altered how M&A transactions are structured, introducing a new 50% permitted cash‑consideration ceiling and recalibrated qualifying tests that affect tax‑neutral rollover treatment. For board members, general counsels, CFOs and transaction advisers active in Finnish M&A in 2026, these amendments demand immediate attention, not only to capture commercial flexibility but also to manage minority‑protection exposure and ensure shareholder agreements remain fit for purpose. Complementary tax and incentive clarifications announced by the Finnish government in April–May 2026 have further refined valuation principles and filing obligations, making this a pivotal moment to revisit deal mechanics across every live and prospective share‑exchange transaction.

Quick Answers

  • Effective date: Amendments took effect on 1 January 2026, with supplementary tax guidance issued by Vero in April–May 2026.
  • Cash ceiling: Up to 50% of total consideration may now be paid in cash while retaining tax‑neutral share‑exchange treatment, up from the previous 10% limit.
  • Tax neutrality at risk: Exceeding the 50% threshold converts the entire transaction into a taxable disposal, triggering capital‑gains tax and transfer tax obligations.
  • Shareholder agreements: Existing tag/drag, squeeze‑out and pre‑emption clauses should be reviewed and updated to reflect the new cash‑consideration mechanics.
  • Transfer tax: Transfer tax of 1.6% applies to the consideration for shares in Finnish limited‑liability companies where a qualifying share‑exchange exemption is not met.

1. What Changed in 2026, Statutory and Tax Overview of Finland’s Share Exchange Rules

Finland’s 2026 share‑exchange reform package had two principal components. First, amendments to the Income Tax Act (Tuloverolaki) raised the permissible cash portion of share‑exchange consideration from 10% to 50% of the total nominal value of the shares issued as consideration. This single change, effective 1 January 2026, significantly widened the structural options available to acquirers, particularly in private‑equity‑backed transactions where sellers demand partial liquidity. Second, the Finnish Tax Administration (Vero) published updated guidance in early 2026 clarifying valuation methodology, filing obligations for shares acquired via share exchange, and the interaction between the new cash rule and existing anti‑avoidance provisions.

The government’s policy intent, as set out in the legislative consultation published on PreLex, was to align Finland’s share‑exchange regime more closely with the EU Merger Directive while stimulating entrepreneurial exits and succession planning, changes that industry observers expect could affect thousands of owner‑managed businesses. Complementary announcements in April–May 2026 addressed incentive arrangements for employee share plans and confirmed that the 50% cash ceiling also applies to cross‑border share‑exchange transactions meeting the directive’s conditions.

Key Legislative Dates and References

  • 1 January 2026: Amended Income Tax Act provisions on share exchanges enter force.
  • Q1 2026: Vero publishes revised filing instructions for shares acquired in a share exchange.
  • April–May 2026: Government supplementary notices on valuation principles and cross‑border application.

Who Is Affected, Private and Listed Companies

The amendments apply to both private limited companies (osakeyhtiö, Oy) and publicly listed companies (julkinen osakeyhtiö, Oyj). For private companies, the principal impact is on shareholder‑agreement mechanics and exit planning. For listed entities, the share‑exchange rules intersect with the Finnish Companies Act (Osakeyhtiölaki, 624/2006) provisions on squeeze‑outs and with FIN‑FSA notification obligations for major shareholdings, adding layers of regulatory compliance that must be sequenced alongside deal execution.

2. The Cash Consideration Rule: 50% Explained, Tests and Examples

Under the revised share exchange rules, the cash portion of total consideration may not exceed 50% of the nominal value of the new shares issued by the acquiring company. This is a significant departure from the prior 10% ceiling, which had long been criticised as commercially restrictive, particularly in family‑succession deals where selling shareholders needed partial cash proceeds to fund personal tax liabilities or diversify wealth.

The calculation is straightforward in principle: total consideration equals the fair market value of the new shares issued plus any cash component. The cash component must be measured against the nominal (or, where shares have no nominal value, the accounting par equivalent) of the shares issued. If the cash element exceeds 50% of that benchmark, the entire transaction falls outside the tax‑neutral regime, and the exchange is treated as a taxable disposal for the selling shareholders.

Calculation Examples

Scenario Shares Issued (Nominal Value) Cash Paid Cash as % of Nominal Tax‑Neutral?
A, Conservative structure €2,000,000 €600,000 30% Yes
B, At the ceiling €2,000,000 €1,000,000 50% Yes
C, Over the limit €2,000,000 €1,200,000 60% No, fully taxable

Scenario C illustrates a critical trap: exceeding the 50% threshold by even a small margin does not merely render the excess taxable, the entire consideration becomes a taxable event. Deal teams must therefore build adequate buffers and consider earn‑out mechanics carefully. Contingent or deferred cash payments linked to post‑completion performance milestones may be counted toward the cash component depending on their certainty at completion, a point on which Vero’s updated guidance advises caution and, where in doubt, an advance ruling.

Tax and Transfer Tax Consequences of Exceeding the Limit

Where the share exchange fails the 50% test, selling shareholders face capital‑gains taxation at Finland’s standard rate (currently 30% on gains up to €30,000, and 34% above that threshold). Additionally, a transfer tax of 1.6% on the total consideration becomes payable, a cost that, in practice, the parties must allocate by contract. Vero’s filing instructions require the acquirer to report the share exchange on its corporate tax return and the seller to report the disposal on personal or corporate returns, as applicable.

3. Qualifying Tests and Safe Harbours for Share‑Swap Transactions

Meeting the 50% cash ceiling is necessary but not sufficient. Finland’s share exchange rules require the transaction to satisfy a series of qualifying tests rooted in the EU Merger Directive and implemented through the Income Tax Act. These share‑swap rules operate as cumulative conditions, failure on any single test removes the transaction from the tax‑neutral regime.

The core statutory tests can be summarised as numbered steps:

  1. Control test: The acquiring company must, after the exchange, hold more than 50% of the voting rights in the target company, or, if it already held that majority, increase its holding.
  2. Consideration composition test: The consideration must consist wholly or partly of new shares issued by the acquiring company, with any cash element not exceeding the 50% nominal‑value ceiling.
  3. Genuine commercial rationale test: The transaction must have a valid business purpose beyond tax savings. Vero retains the right to deny tax neutrality under anti‑avoidance provisions where the primary motive is tax‑driven.
  4. Continuity of shareholding: Selling shareholders must retain the shares received for a reasonable period; immediate disposal may prompt Vero to reassess the transaction’s commercial rationale.

Board and Resolution Checklist

  • Board resolution of the acquiring company authorising the share issuance and the terms of the exchange.
  • Shareholder meeting approval (where required by the articles of association or the Finnish Companies Act) for issuing new shares.
  • Independent valuation report supporting the fair market value of both the target shares and the shares issued as consideration.
  • Board‑level documentation of commercial rationale, a contemporaneous memorandum is strongly advisable.

Documentation and Valuation Evidence Required

Vero’s updated guidance emphasises that valuation evidence must be prepared at the time of the transaction, not retrospectively. Acceptable evidence includes an independent third‑party valuation, a recent arm’s‑length transaction in the same shares, or, for listed securities, a volume‑weighted average price over an appropriate reference period. The documentation must be retained for at least six years and made available upon request during a tax audit.

4. Tax, Transfer Tax and Filing Implications, Practical Steps

Where all qualifying tests are satisfied, the share exchange is treated as a tax‑neutral rollover: selling shareholders defer their capital gain until they eventually dispose of the shares received, carrying over the original acquisition cost. This is the fundamental incentive driving the use of share‑exchange structures in M&A Finland 2026 transactions. However, several practical filing obligations attach to this treatment.

Transfer Tax Calculation

A qualifying share exchange is exempt from transfer tax. If the transaction fails the qualifying tests, transfer tax of 1.6% is levied on the total consideration (cash plus the fair market value of shares issued). For securities admitted to trading on a regulated market, the rate is 0.2% if the transaction is intermediated through a securities intermediary. The buyer is the statutory debtor, but contractual allocation, typically via a transfer tax indemnity clause in the share‑purchase agreement, is standard practice.

Filing Process and Timing

  1. At completion: The acquiring company files a notification with Vero, including the share‑exchange agreement, valuation report and board resolutions.
  2. Annual tax return (selling shareholders): Selling shareholders must report the shares received, the deemed acquisition cost and the deferred gain on their next tax return, following Vero’s detailed instructions on filing shares acquired in a share exchange.
  3. Transfer tax return (if applicable): Where the exchange is not tax‑neutral, the transfer tax return must be filed and the tax paid within two months of the transaction date.
  4. Advance ruling (optional): Parties may request an advance ruling from Vero’s Central Tax Board (Keskusverolautakunta) before completion. Early indications suggest this is advisable where the cash component is close to the 50% ceiling or where earn‑outs or contingent payments are involved.

5. Minority Protections and Squeeze‑Out Mechanics Under Finland’s Share Exchange Rules

Share‑exchange transactions frequently result in a concentrated post‑transaction shareholding, raising acute questions of minority protection in Finland. The Finnish Companies Act provides both structural protections (equal treatment obligations, appraisal rights) and procedural safeguards (disclosure, notification) that interact with the 2026 amendments. Shareholders’ agreements should complement these statutory protections with bespoke mechanisms tailored to the deal.

Squeeze‑Out Thresholds and Procedures

Under Chapter 18 of the Finnish Companies Act, a shareholder holding more than nine‑tenths (90%) of all shares and votes in a company has the right, and the obligation, if so demanded by a minority shareholder, to redeem the remaining shares at fair value. The squeeze‑out price is determined by an arbitral tribunal appointed by the Central Chamber of Commerce of Finland unless the parties agree otherwise. For listed companies, the Securities Markets Act and FIN‑FSA rules layer additional procedural requirements onto this process, including mandatory bid obligations once control thresholds are crossed.

Notification Obligations and Remedies

For listed companies, the holder of a major shareholding must notify both the issuer and FIN‑FSA when its holding reaches, exceeds or falls below specified thresholds. These thresholds, set by FIN‑FSA, include 5%, 10%, 15%, 20%, 25%, 30%, 50% and 90% (and two‑thirds) of voting rights or total shares. Failure to notify carries administrative sanctions and may delay or invalidate the exercise of voting rights attached to undisclosed shares. Minority shareholders also retain general remedies under the Companies Act, including the right to demand a special audit or to bring a claim for damages where the majority has acted in breach of its fiduciary obligations.

Comparison: Protections and Obligations by Entity Type

Entity Type Key Notification / Squeeze‑Out Threshold Practical Implication for Minorities
Private limited company (Oy) 90% squeeze‑out right under Companies Act Ch. 18; no mandatory public disclosure of holdings Protections are largely contractual, shareholder agreement provisions (tag/drag, pre‑emption, deadlock) are essential to protect minorities
Listed company (Oyj) FIN‑FSA major‑holdings notification at 5%, 10%, 15%, 20%, 25%, 30%, 50%, 90%; mandatory bid at 30% and 50% Mandatory disclosure regime and takeover rules provide procedural safeguards; squeeze‑out interacts with securities‑law procedures and arbitral valuation
Cross‑border target (non‑EU shareholder mix) Varies by jurisdiction; Finnish squeeze‑out applies to Finnish target; withholding and CGT obligations in shareholders’ home jurisdictions Must model cross‑border tax outcomes; comfort letters or advance rulings recommended; consider treaty relief and any double‑taxation agreements

6. Drafting Checklist and Sample Clauses, Practical Toolkit for Shareholder Agreements in Finland

The 2026 share exchange rules demand that boards and their advisers revisit existing shareholder agreements and SPAs. The clauses below provide a practical starting point. Each template is annotated with negotiation notes from both the buyer’s and seller’s perspective. These are illustrative and must be adapted to the specific transaction.

Sample Cash‑Consideration Clause

Sample clause, negotiation notes:

“The Consideration shall comprise [●] newly issued Shares in the Acquiring Company and a cash payment of €[●], provided that the aggregate cash component shall not exceed 50% of the nominal value of the Shares issued. In the event that any adjustment, earn‑out payment or deferred consideration would cause the cash component to exceed such threshold, the excess shall be satisfied by the issuance of additional Shares at their fair market value as at the adjustment date.”

  • Buyer tilt: Include a cap‑and‑conversion mechanic (as above) to preserve tax neutrality automatically.
  • Seller tilt: Negotiate for a floor value on additional shares issued, to prevent dilution if the acquirer’s share price declines between signing and adjustment.

Sample Squeeze‑Out and Appraisal Clause

Sample clause, negotiation notes:

“If, following completion of the Share Exchange, the Acquiring Company holds 90% or more of the shares and votes in the Target, the Acquiring Company shall be entitled (and, upon request by any remaining minority shareholder, obligated) to acquire the remaining shares at Fair Value determined in accordance with Chapter 18 of the Finnish Companies Act. The parties agree that Fair Value shall be determined by reference to an independent valuation prepared by [agreed valuation firm] within [30] business days of the trigger event.”

  • Buyer tilt: Specify a pre‑agreed valuation methodology (e.g., discounted cash‑flow with defined assumptions) to reduce arbitration risk.
  • Seller tilt: Preserve the right to appoint a co‑valuer and to challenge the valuation before the arbitral tribunal.

Transfer Tax Indemnity Clause

Sample clause, negotiation notes:

“In the event that the Share Exchange is determined by Vero or any competent tax authority not to qualify for transfer tax exemption, the Buyer shall indemnify and hold harmless each Selling Shareholder in respect of any transfer tax, interest and penalties arising from such determination, provided that the Selling Shareholder shall have complied with its notification and filing obligations under this Agreement.”

  • Buyer tilt: Condition the indemnity on the seller’s compliance with all filing obligations and representations regarding tax status.
  • Seller tilt: Seek an uncapped, unconditional indemnity, or, at minimum, ensure the indemnity survives for at least the six‑year statutory limitation period.

Additional clauses that should be reviewed and, where necessary, updated include: pre‑emption rights (to accommodate the new share issuance mechanics), share‑capital adjustments, material adverse change triggers, and termination provisions that reference the share exchange rules specifically. A comprehensive clause‑by‑clause review of the shareholder agreement Finland market standard is essential for any transaction signed after 1 January 2026.

7. Deal Process Timeline and Board Actions

The following step‑by‑step timeline provides a practical checklist for boards executing a share‑exchange transaction under the 2026 framework:

Pre‑Closing Diligence Checklist

  1. Letter of intent (LOI): Include indicative cash/share split and reference to the 50% ceiling.
  2. Due diligence: Verify target’s share register, articles of association and existing shareholder‑agreement provisions.
  3. Independent valuation: Commission a third‑party valuation of target shares and acquiring company shares.
  4. Advance ruling decision point: If cash consideration is near 50% or earn‑outs are involved, apply to Vero’s Central Tax Board, allow 6–8 weeks for a ruling.
  5. Board resolution (acquirer): Approve share issuance, exchange terms, and commercial‑rationale memorandum.
  6. Shareholder meeting (if required): Obtain approval for new share issuance under the Companies Act or articles.
  7. SPA/exchange agreement execution: Finalise all consideration mechanics, indemnities and conditions precedent.
  8. Regulatory notifications: For listed targets, notify FIN‑FSA of major‑holdings changes; submit merger‑control filings if thresholds are met.

Post‑Closing Filings

  1. Vero notification: File share‑exchange documentation (agreement, valuation, board minutes) with Vero.
  2. Trade register: Register the share issuance with the Finnish Trade Register (PRH).
  3. Annual tax returns: Selling shareholders report deferred gain; acquirer reports the transaction on its corporate return.

8. Conclusion and Recommended Next Steps

The 2026 amendments to Finland’s share exchange rules represent the most significant structural reform to share‑exchange mechanics in over a decade. For boards and their advisers, three actions are now urgent:

  1. Audit existing shareholder agreements and SPAs for any transaction signed before 1 January 2026 to ensure cash‑consideration, squeeze‑out and pre‑emption clauses reflect the new rules.
  2. Model the tax impact of the 50% cash ceiling on current and pipeline transactions, and seek an advance ruling from Vero where the cash component approaches the threshold.
  3. Update board governance templates, commercial‑rationale memoranda, valuation‑evidence retention policies and resolution templates, to embed compliance with the qualifying tests into standard deal process.

The share exchange rules Finland enacted for 2026 offer genuine commercial flexibility, but that flexibility comes with material compliance and minority‑protection obligations. Proactive legal review is the most effective way to capture the benefits while managing the risks.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Jari Sotka at Attorneys-at-Law Sotka Lagal, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Finnish Tax Administration (Vero), New Regulations on Share Exchanges in Limited Liability Companies
  2. Vero, Instructions on How to File Shares Acquired in a Share Exchange on the Tax Return
  3. Roschier, Finland Introduces Tax Law Changes Simplifying M&A Transactions
  4. PwC, Finland: Corporate Income Determination (Tax Summaries)
  5. FIN‑FSA (Finanssivalvonta), Notification of Major Holdings
  6. PreLex, Government Proposes Changes to Taxation of Share Exchanges
  7. Finlex, Finnish Companies Act (Osakeyhtiölaki, 624/2006)

FAQs

What changed in Finland's share‑exchange rules in 2026?
Amendments effective 1 January 2026 raised the permitted cash component of share‑exchange consideration from 10% to 50% of the nominal value of shares issued. Complementary tax guidance was issued by Vero in early 2026, with further clarifications in April–May 2026 covering valuation principles and cross‑border application.
Up to 50% of the nominal value of the new shares issued by the acquiring company. The calculation is based on nominal value (or accounting par equivalent), not fair market value. Exceeding this threshold makes the entire transaction taxable.
In most cases, yes. Existing agreements drafted under the former 10% ceiling may contain outdated caps, formulae or references. Tag/drag provisions, pre‑emption rights and squeeze‑out mechanics should all be reviewed and, where necessary, updated to reflect the new cash‑consideration flexibility.
A qualifying share exchange is exempt from transfer tax. If the exchange fails the qualifying tests, transfer tax of 1.6% applies to the total consideration for shares in Finnish limited‑liability companies. The buyer is the statutory debtor, though contractual allocation via indemnity clauses is standard practice.
An advance ruling from the Central Tax Board is advisable when the cash component is close to the 50% ceiling, when earn‑outs or contingent payments are involved, or when the commercial rationale may be questioned. Applications should be submitted at least 6–8 weeks before the anticipated completion date.
The entire share exchange loses tax‑neutral status. Selling shareholders become liable for capital‑gains tax on the full gain realised, and transfer tax of 1.6% becomes payable on the total consideration. There is no partial relief, the threshold operates as an all‑or‑nothing test.
The core share‑exchange tax rules apply to both. However, listed companies face additional obligations: FIN‑FSA major‑holdings notifications, mandatory bid rules when control thresholds are crossed, and securities‑law disclosure requirements. Squeeze‑out procedures for listed entities also interact with the Securities Markets Act.
Include an explicit squeeze‑out and appraisal mechanism referencing Chapter 18 of the Finnish Companies Act, a pre‑agreed valuation methodology, and the right for minority shareholders to appoint a co‑valuer. Tag‑along and drag‑along provisions should be recalibrated to reflect the new cash/share mix possibilities introduced by the 2026 amendments.

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Share Exchange Rules Finland 2026: Cash Consideration, Share‑exchange Tests & Minority Protections

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