[codicts-css-switcher id=”346″]

Global Law Experts Logo
squeeze-out procedure Germany

Step‑by‑step Guide to the Squeeze‑out Procedure in Germany, How to Force Out Minority Shareholders (2026 Update)

By Global Law Experts
– posted 2 hours ago

The squeeze‑out procedure in Germany enables a majority shareholder that controls at least 95 per cent of a company’s share capital to compel the remaining minority shareholders to sell their shares in exchange for fair cash compensation. German law provides three distinct statutory routes, under the Wertpapiererwerbs‑ und Übernahmegesetz (WpÜG), the Aktiengesetz (AktG), and the Umwandlungsgesetz (UmwG), each with different procedural mechanics, eligibility thresholds, and timelines. This guide walks majority shareholders, private‑equity sponsors, strategic buyers, and their advisers through every stage of the process, including the documents needed for a squeeze‑out, the realistic squeeze‑out timeline, indicative costs, and the practical changes introduced by the 2025 Higher Regional Court of Frankfurt rulings. Last reviewed: 18 June 2026.

Overview of the Squeeze‑Out Procedure in Germany and Who It Applies To

A squeeze‑out is the compulsory acquisition of minority‑held shares in a German stock corporation (Aktiengesellschaft or AG). It is the final step in many public takeovers and private consolidation transactions, allowing the majority shareholder to achieve 100 per cent ownership. The procedure is relevant for listed and unlisted AGs, and, via the merger squeeze‑out, also for companies undergoing structural transformations.

German law provides three different squeeze‑out procedures:

  • Takeover Act squeeze‑out (WpÜG §39a–§39c). A simplified route available after a public takeover offer where the bidder holds at least 95 per cent of the target’s voting shares. This route does not require a general meeting resolution and is therefore the fastest path.
  • Stock Corporation Act squeeze‑out (AktG §327a–§327f). The “classic” corporate‑law squeeze‑out, requiring the majority shareholder to hold at least 95 per cent of the share capital and to obtain a resolution at a general meeting of the target company.
  • Transformation Act squeeze‑out (UmwG §62(5)). A so‑called “merger squeeze‑out” available where a squeeze‑out is combined with a merger or other transformation. The shareholding threshold here is 90 per cent of the share capital.

In every case, minority shareholders are entitled to fair cash compensation, and they may challenge the adequacy of that compensation in court through a judicial appraisal proceeding known as a Spruchverfahren. The squeeze‑out resolution itself, however, is not blocked by any such challenge, the share transfer takes effect upon registration with the commercial register (Handelsregister), regardless of ongoing appraisal proceedings. Readers looking for corporate law advisers with experience in German squeeze‑outs can browse our global directory.

Squeeze‑Out Requirements: Eligibility and Prerequisites

Before initiating a squeeze‑out, the majority shareholder must confirm which statutory route is available. The eligibility for a squeeze‑out depends on the shareholding threshold, the company type, and the transactional context.

Shareholding thresholds by route

Route Statute Minimum shareholding Key condition
Takeover Act (simplified) WpÜG §39a 95% of voting shares Must follow a public takeover or mandatory offer; offer must have been accepted for at least 90% of the shares to which it related
Stock Corporation Act AktG §327a 95% of share capital General meeting resolution required; no prior public offer necessary
Transformation Act (merger) UmwG §62(5) 90% of share capital Must be combined with a merger; minority squeezed out as part of the merger resolution

Decision matrix: which route to use

Scenario Company listed? Recommended route
Public takeover completed, ≥95% acquired via offer Yes WpÜG §39a (fastest, no GM required)
No public takeover, majority shareholder holds ≥95% Listed or unlisted AktG §327a (classic shareholder squeeze‑out)
Planned merger or reorganisation, majority holds ≥90% Listed or unlisted UmwG §62(5) (merger squeeze‑out)
Majority holds 90–94.99% and no merger planned Either Creeper purchases or voluntary offer to reach 95%, then AktG or WpÜG route

The squeeze‑out requirements also include substantive obligations: the majority shareholder must determine and offer adequate cash compensation to the minority, typically established through an independent valuation. For the WpÜG route, the compensation must at least equal the offer price paid in the preceding takeover offer. For the AktG route, compensation must reflect the full intrinsic value of the shares, as confirmed by a court‑appointed auditor.

Step‑by‑Step Squeeze‑Out Procedure in Germany

The squeeze‑out steps vary depending on the statutory route chosen. Below is a detailed walkthrough for each of the three tracks.

Route A, Takeover Act Squeeze‑Out (WpÜG §39a–§39c)

  1. Confirm the 95 per cent threshold. The bidder’s legal team verifies, using share‑register extracts and custodian confirmations, that the bidder holds at least 95 per cent of the target’s voting shares after settlement of the public offer.
  2. File the squeeze‑out application with the court. The bidder applies to the Regional Court (Landgericht) at the registered seat of the target company for a transfer order. The application must be filed within three months of the expiry of the acceptance period of the takeover offer.
  3. Serve the application on minority shareholders. The court serves the application on the remaining minority shareholders and grants them an opportunity to respond.
  4. Court issues transfer order. If the requirements are satisfied, the court orders the transfer of all minority shares to the bidder in exchange for the specified compensation. No general meeting is required.
  5. Pay compensation and register the transfer. The bidder pays the compensation (or deposits it with the court where shareholders cannot be located) and registers the transfer with the commercial register. Share transfer takes effect upon registration.
  6. Minority may initiate Spruchverfahren. Dissenting shareholders who consider the compensation inadequate may file a Spruchverfahren to seek a judicial increase of the compensation amount. This does not delay the transfer.

Route B, Stock Corporation Act Squeeze‑Out (AktG §327a–§327f)

  1. Submit the squeeze‑out request (Verlangen) to the management board. The majority shareholder formally demands that the management board of the target company place a squeeze‑out resolution on the agenda of the next general meeting.
  2. Commission an independent valuation. The majority shareholder engages a valuation expert to prepare a report on the appropriateness of the proposed cash compensation. Simultaneously, the court appoints a separate auditor to review the compensation under AktG §327c.
  3. Convene and hold the general meeting. The company must observe the statutory notice period of at least 30 days (AktG §123). The squeeze‑out resolution is passed with the votes of the majority shareholder; no separate majority of minority shareholders is required.
  4. Register the resolution with the Handelsregister. The resolution is filed for registration with the commercial register. Minority shares are transferred to the majority shareholder upon registration, and compensation becomes due.
  5. Minority may challenge or initiate Spruchverfahren. Minority shareholders may contest the resolution (Anfechtungsklage) or initiate Spruchverfahren to challenge the adequacy of compensation. A challenge does not automatically prevent registration if the company obtains a court clearance order (Freigabeverfahren under AktG §327e).

Route C, Transformation Act Squeeze‑Out (UmwG §62(5))

  1. Prepare the merger plan and transformation documents. The boards of the merging entities prepare a merger agreement, a merger report, and an expert examination report. The merger plan must explicitly provide for the squeeze‑out of minority shareholders.
  2. Convene general meeting(s) and approve the transformation. The shareholders of both entities approve the merger. The squeeze‑out resolution is passed concurrently with the merger approval. The threshold here is 90 per cent of share capital.
  3. Register the merger with the Handelsregister. Upon registration, the merger takes effect and the minority shares are transferred. Compensation becomes due.
  4. Address dissenting shareholders via Spruchverfahren. As with the other routes, minority shareholders may seek a judicial review of compensation through a Spruchverfahren.

Consolidated squeeze‑out steps, timeline table

Step Who does it Typical duration
1. Confirm ownership and assemble evidence (share register, nominee lists, custodian statements) Bidder legal team / registrar / custodian banks 1–2 weeks
2. Commission independent valuation and court‑appointed auditor review Majority shareholder / court (AktG route) 4–8 weeks
3. Prepare and publish squeeze‑out resolution or file court application Bidder counsel + target board / Landgericht (WpÜG) 1–3 weeks
4. Convene general meeting and pass resolution (AktG/UmwG routes) Company management / shareholders 4–6 weeks (including 30‑day notice period)
5. Register transfer with the commercial register Company / notary / Handelsregister 1–4 weeks after resolution or court order
6. Pay compensation to minority shareholders Majority shareholder / paying agent Immediately upon or shortly after registration
7. Spruchverfahren (if initiated by minority) Minority shareholders / competent court 3–12 months (can extend further in complex cases)
8. Delisting and corporate registry clean‑up Company + stock exchange + commercial register 2–6 weeks after completion

Documents Needed for a Squeeze‑Out in Germany

Thorough documentation is essential. Incomplete evidence, particularly regarding shareholding proof, is one of the most common reasons for delays. The documents needed for a squeeze‑out vary slightly by route but broadly include the items below. Where a company has issued bearer shares, additional custodian confirmations are critical because the share register may not fully reflect beneficial ownership. Germany permits bearer shares for stock corporations, and in practice, custodian banks hold the vast majority of listed bearer shares in collective safe custody (Girosammelverwahrung). The bidder must therefore obtain confirmations from Clearstream Banking AG or the relevant custodian to verify the ownership threshold.

Document Notes
Updated share register / shareholder list Issued by the company registrar or transfer agent; must reflect pre‑ and post‑offer holdings accurately
Custodian / nominee confirmations (ISIN + holdings) Issued by custodian banks (e.g., Clearstream); essential where bearer shares or nominee holdings are involved
Board resolution authorising the squeeze‑out steps Prepared by the company secretary or board; resolves to place the squeeze‑out on the GM agenda (AktG) or to support the court application (WpÜG)
General meeting notice and resolution text Must comply with AktG §121–§128 notice requirements; include the proposed compensation amount and reference to the valuation report
Offer document (WpÜG route only) The original public takeover offer document; must comply with WpÜG disclosure rules
Independent valuation report / expert opinion Prepared by an independent valuation expert; typically applies a DCF analysis supplemented by market multiples; essential for defending compensation in a Spruchverfahren
Court‑appointed auditor report (AktG route) Appointed by the court under AktG §327c to review the appropriateness of the compensation
Proof of publication in the Bundesanzeiger Publication receipts confirming that the GM notice and squeeze‑out resolution were published in the Federal Gazette
Registration application to the Handelsregister Notarised copies as required; for merger squeeze‑outs, includes the full merger documentation
Proof of payment / escrow instructions Bank confirmations that the compensation has been paid or deposited; essential for registration

Squeeze‑Out Timeline and Key Deadlines

The squeeze‑out timeline depends heavily on which statutory route is used and whether minority shareholders contest the compensation. The illustrative timelines below give a realistic planning framework.

Illustrative timeline, WpÜG route (fastest path)

Stage Statutory period / typical duration
Takeover offer acceptance period 4–10 weeks (minimum acceptance period under WpÜG §16: 4 weeks; may be extended)
Settlement and threshold confirmation 1–2 weeks after acceptance period closes
File squeeze‑out application with Regional Court Within 3 months of expiry of acceptance period (WpÜG §39a)
Court proceedings and transfer order 4–12 weeks (depending on court workload and minority responses)
Registration and share transfer 1–3 weeks after court order
Total (excluding Spruchverfahren) Approximately 4–6 months from offer launch

Illustrative timeline, AktG route

Stage Statutory period / typical duration
Squeeze‑out request (Verlangen) and valuation preparation 4–8 weeks
General meeting convocation notice (AktG §123) Minimum 30 days before the meeting
General meeting and resolution 1 day (the meeting itself)
Potential Freigabeverfahren (if resolution is challenged) 4–12 weeks
Registration with the commercial register 1–4 weeks after clearance
Total (excluding Spruchverfahren) Approximately 3–6 months
Spruchverfahren (if initiated) 3–12+ months additional

Industry observers expect that the evidentiary standards set by the 2025 Higher Regional Court of Frankfurt rulings will add 2–4 weeks to the valuation preparation phase, as bidders now invest more time in assembling a comprehensive evidence package upfront to reduce the risk of adverse findings in any subsequent Spruchverfahren. Counsel should build this additional preparation time into project plans from the outset.

Squeeze‑Out Cost: Fees, Expenses, and Tax Considerations

The total squeeze‑out cost is driven by the size and complexity of the target company, the route chosen, and whether the compensation is contested. All amounts below are indicative and should be verified against current fee schedules.

Cost item Indicative range Who typically pays
Independent valuation expert report €10,000 – €150,000+ Majority shareholder
Court‑appointed auditor fees (AktG route) €5,000 – €50,000+ Target company
Court fees (squeeze‑out application / Spruchverfahren) €5,000 – €100,000+ Majority shareholder (application); costs in Spruchverfahren allocated by court
Notary and commercial‑register fees Based on statutory fee scales (percentage of capital value) Target company
Publication fees (Bundesanzeiger / stock exchange) €500 – €25,000 Target company
Legal advisory fees (bidder and target counsel) Varies widely, fixed‑fee and hourly models common Each party bears own costs; bidder typically funds target counsel in takeovers
Compensation to minority shareholders Determined by valuation / Spruchverfahren Majority shareholder, this is the largest single outlay

From a tax perspective, the cash compensation received by minority shareholders is generally treated as a disposal of shares and may be subject to capital gains tax (Abgeltungsteuer at 25 per cent plus solidarity surcharge for individuals, or corporate income tax for corporate holders). The majority shareholder should also consider that additional compensation awarded in a Spruchverfahren attracts interest from the date of share transfer, which can materially increase the total cost if proceedings are prolonged. Advisers at leading German law firms can model the tax and interest exposure for specific transactions.

What Changes in 2025–2026: Practice Updates for the Squeeze‑Out Procedure in Germany

The ruling of the Higher Regional Court of Frankfurt, reported in April 2025, increased legal certainty in the context of Takeover Act squeeze‑outs and clarified several previously controversial issues regarding the evidentiary standard and burden of proof. Early indications suggest that the likely practical effect is a higher bar for the quality and granularity of the bidder’s evidence package, particularly in relation to the valuation supporting the compensation amount.

As a result, 2026 takeover practice guides now recommend that bidders prepare the following additional evidence items:

  • Detailed trading‑volume analysis. Records of share‑price and volume data for the reference period to demonstrate market liquidity and fair‑price benchmarks.
  • Independent fair‑value bridge. A reconciliation document linking the offered compensation to an enterprise‑value analysis, including DCF, comparable‑transactions, and comparable‑companies methodologies.
  • Comparable‑transactions data set. A comprehensive set of precedent transaction multiples, including sector‑specific adjustments.
  • Custodian‑level ownership trace. End‑to‑end documentation of beneficial ownership through the custodian chain, particularly where nominees hold bearer shares.

These enhanced requirements do not change the statutory framework but represent a shift in judicial expectations. Industry observers expect courts to scrutinise valuation evidence more closely in Spruchverfahren proceedings initiated during 2026 and beyond.

Common Pitfalls and How to Avoid Them

  • Failing to verify beneficial ownership above 95 per cent. Nominee and custodian structures can obscure actual holdings. Mitigation: conduct a custodial reconciliation exercise with all relevant depositaries before filing.
  • Inadequate offer or publication wording. Non‑compliance with WpÜG disclosure requirements can invalidate the squeeze‑out application. Mitigation: use a WpÜG compliance checklist reviewed by specialist counsel.
  • Under‑preparing valuation evidence before Spruchverfahren. A weak valuation report invites a costly and protracted appraisal challenge. Mitigation: commission the valuation early, using multiple methodologies, and prepare a detailed fair‑value bridge.
  • Missing the statutory notice period for the general meeting. The AktG requires at least 30 days’ notice. Mitigation: calendar the notice deadline at the start of the project and coordinate with the notary.
  • Ignoring nominee and indirect holdings. Indirect or foreign‑held shares may not appear on the German share register. Mitigation: obtain confirmations from Clearstream and all known custodians.
  • Failing to plan for tax consequences. Both the majority shareholder and the minority receive tax‑relevant payments that must be properly structured. Mitigation: involve tax counsel from the outset.
  • Poor shareholder communications. Unclear messaging creates opposition and increases the risk of litigation. Mitigation: prepare a stakeholder communications plan before any public announcement.
  • Under‑budgeting for Spruchverfahren contingencies. Courts may award higher compensation plus interest. Mitigation: set a contingency reserve of 10–20 per cent above the offered compensation, modelled with interest accrual.

Conclusion: Planning a Successful Squeeze‑Out Procedure in Germany

Executing a squeeze‑out in Germany is a multi‑stage process that rewards early preparation, rigorous documentation, and strategic route selection. Whether the transaction follows a public takeover (WpÜG route), a standalone corporate resolution (AktG route), or a combined merger transaction (UmwG route), the common thread is the need for clean ownership evidence, a robust valuation, and strict compliance with statutory timelines. The 2025–2026 practice developments, particularly the Higher Regional Court of Frankfurt clarifications, have raised the bar for valuation evidence, making early engagement of specialist counsel and independent valuers more important than ever.

For majority shareholders and their advisers considering the squeeze‑out procedure in Germany, the practical playbook above provides a foundation for planning; however, every transaction has unique features that require tailored legal advice.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Torsten Bergau at FRANKUS Wirtschaftsprufer Steuerberater Rechtsanwalte, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Wertpapiererwerbs‑ und Übernahmegesetz (WpÜG), Gesetze im Internet
  2. Aktiengesetz (AktG), Gesetze im Internet
  3. Umwandlungsgesetz (UmwG), Gesetze im Internet
  4. Baker McKenzie, Squeeze‑out of Minority Shareholders (Global Public M&A Guide)
  5. Heuking, Key Questions in Connection with the Takeover Squeeze‑Out Clarified
  6. Mayer Brown, Public Takeovers in Germany
  7. CMS, Takeovers in Germany
  8. BDO Germany, Squeeze‑out (Capital Markets)
  9. Bundesanzeiger (Federal Gazette)
  10. IBA, Germany Takeover Guide

FAQs

What is the squeeze‑out threshold in Germany?
The standard threshold for a squeeze‑out under the Stock Corporation Act (AktG §327a) and the Takeover Act (WpÜG §39a) is 95 per cent of the share capital or voting shares, respectively. For a merger squeeze‑out under the Transformation Act (UmwG §62(5)), the threshold is lower at 90 per cent of the share capital.
A Spruchverfahren typically takes between 3 and 12 months at first instance, though complex cases, particularly those involving large listed companies, can take considerably longer. The duration depends on court backlog, the complexity of the valuation evidence, and whether expert witnesses are appointed. Bidders should budget for a prolonged proceeding and model the interest exposure on any additional compensation that might be awarded.
Cash compensation in euros is the default and most common form. Under the WpÜG squeeze‑out route, the compensation must at least equal the consideration offered in the preceding takeover bid. Under the AktG route, compensation must reflect the full intrinsic value of the shares, as reviewed by a court‑appointed auditor.
Yes. Foreign bidders may use all three statutory routes provided they hold the required shareholding in the German target company and comply with German law. Practical challenges for foreign bidders include assembling custody evidence across jurisdictions, complying with cross‑border tax obligations, and coordinating with German notaries and courts.
Missing a critical deadline, such as the three‑month filing window for a WpÜG squeeze‑out application or the 30‑day notice period for a general meeting, can invalidate the procedure or cause significant delays. In some cases, the majority shareholder may need to restart the process from scratch. Counsel should implement a detailed compliance calendar from the project start.
The valuer should be instructed as early as possible, ideally during the planning stage and before any public offer or general meeting notice. An early valuation provides time to address data gaps, test multiple methodologies, and prepare the fair‑value bridge that courts increasingly expect in Spruchverfahren proceedings. Commissioning a valuation after the squeeze‑out has been announced creates time pressure and may result in a weaker evidence package.
Jasminka Čorda Truhar: Pioneering Construction Law in Croatia with Global Law Experts | GLE News
By Global Law Experts

posted 52 minutes ago

By Awatif Al Khouri

posted 5 hours ago

By Kerwin Tan

posted 5 hours ago

By Kerwin Tan

posted 5 hours ago

Find the right Legal Expert for your business

The premier guide to leading legal professionals throughout the world

Specialism
Country
Practice Area
LAWYERS RECOGNIZED
0
EVALUATIONS OF LAWYERS BY THEIR PEERS
0 m+
PRACTICE AREAS
0
COUNTRIES AROUND THE WORLD
0
Join
who are already getting the benefits
0

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.

About Us

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 App

Now Available on the App & Google Play Stores.

Social Posts
[wp_social_ninja id="50714" platform="instagram"]
[codicts-social-feeds platform="instagram" url="https://www.instagram.com/globallawexperts/" template="carousel" results_limit="10" header="false" column_count="1"]

See More:

Contact Us

Stay Informed

Join Mailing List
About Us

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.

Social Posts
[wp_social_ninja id="50714" platform="instagram"]
[codicts-social-feeds platform="instagram" url="https://www.instagram.com/globallawexperts/" template="carousel" results_limit="10" header="false" column_count="1"]

See More:

Global Law Experts App

Now Available on the App & Google Play Stores.

Contact Us

Stay Informed

GLE

Lawyer Profile Page - Lead Capture
GLE-Logo-White
Lawyer Profile Page - Lead Capture

Step‑by‑step Guide to the Squeeze‑out Procedure in Germany, How to Force Out Minority Shareholders (2026 Update)

Send welcome message

Custom Message