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VC & Private Equity Exit Strategies in Lithuania 2026: Share Sale vs Asset Sale, Earn‑outs & Holding Structures

By Global Law Experts
– posted 2 hours ago

Lithuania’s venture capital and private equity ecosystem has matured rapidly, and 2026 marks a decisive inflection point for deal teams planning VC private equity exits in Lithuania. Two overlapping legislative changes, the 2026 tax reform that took effect on 1 January 2026, and the Companies Law amendments whose key share‑transfer provisions commence on 1 July 2026, have materially altered the economics and mechanics of every exit route available to investors. Whether a fund is weighing a share sale against an asset sale, negotiating earn‑out milestones, or evaluating whether a Lithuanian holding company still delivers net benefits after the new anti‑abuse rules, the calculus has shifted.

This guide provides a practical, deal‑level playbook for PE/VC partners, founders, CFOs and general counsel who need to structure exits efficiently under the new regime.

Executive Summary, TL;DR for Deal Teams

Before diving into the detail, the following decision anchors capture the headline conclusions that inform structuring PE exits in Lithuania in 2026:

  • Share sale remains the default exit route for most PE/VC transactions. It transfers the entire corporate wrapper, liabilities included, in a single step and, for corporate sellers, preserves the participation exemption on capital gains where applicable. Individual sellers must now model the progressive PIT bands introduced on 1 January 2026 to determine net proceeds.
  • Asset sale is preferable when the buyer needs to cherry‑pick specific assets, when significant contingent liabilities sit in the target, or when the buyer can benefit from stepping up the tax base of acquired assets. However, VAT and transfer‑tax friction make this route more expensive in most scenarios.
  • Earn‑outs require tighter drafting in 2026 because of the way deferred consideration interacts with progressive PIT thresholds for individual sellers. KPI definitions, audit rights and dispute‑resolution clauses are now the most heavily negotiated provisions in Lithuanian SPAs.
  • Lithuanian holding companies still work, but substance scrutiny has intensified. The new anti‑abuse provisions and CFC rules demand genuine local management, employees and decision‑making. Paper‑only structures will be challenged.
  • Timeline check: any closing that straddles 1 July 2026 must account for the new Companies Law share‑transfer formalities. Adjust signing‑to‑closing timelines accordingly.

How the 2026 Reforms Change the VC & PE Exit Landscape in Lithuania

Two legislative packages reshape how investors, founders and acquirers approach exits. The first, the 2026 tax reform, recalibrated personal income tax bands, adjusted the treatment of capital gains for individuals using investment accounts, and tightened anti‑avoidance provisions. The second, the Companies Law amendments, modernised share‑transfer procedures, clarified board and shareholder approval mechanics, and shortened certain registry timelines. Together, they create both opportunities and traps for deal teams that fail to update their playbook.

Key Legislative Dates and Immediate Consequences

Date Change Practical Impact for Exits
1 January 2026 2026 Tax reform, progressive PIT rework, capital gains changes, new investment‑account rules Affects individual sellers’ net proceeds and timing of distributing exit proceeds; may change preferred use of earn‑outs vs lump sum. Corporate sellers should re‑verify participation exemption eligibility.
1 July 2026 Companies Law amendments, revised share‑transfer formalities, streamlined registry procedures Shorter and clearer share‑transfer formalities; affects timing of closings and notary/registry steps, buyer and seller should adjust closing mechanics in SPAs signed after mid‑2026.

For corporate sellers, typically PE/VC fund vehicles, the standard corporate income tax (CIT) rate remains at 15 %. The participation exemption continues to shelter qualifying capital gains from CIT where the seller holds at least 10 % of the target’s shares for a continuous period of at least two years. Individual sellers and founders, however, now face progressive PIT rates on capital gains, meaning that a large one‑off exit payment may push a significant portion of proceeds into a higher bracket. Industry observers expect this to incentivise the use of instalment structures and earn‑outs for founder sellers, though the drafting complexity that entails should not be underestimated.

On the corporate‑law side, the Companies Law 2026 Lithuania amendments simplify certain notarisation requirements and reduce the standard registry processing window. For deal teams, this means that the gap between signing and effective legal transfer of shares can be compressed, but only if documents are prepared to the new standard from the outset.

Share Sale vs Asset Sale, Decision Framework for PE/VC Exits in Lithuania

The choice between a share sale and an asset sale is the foundational structuring decision in any exit. Under Lithuania’s 2026 regime, each route carries distinct tax, liability and operational consequences that must be modelled before indicative terms are agreed.

When a Share Sale Is Preferable

A share sale transfers the entire legal entity, assets, contracts, employees, permits and liabilities, to the buyer. For PE/VC sellers, the advantages are considerable:

  • Tax efficiency for corporate sellers. Where the participation exemption applies (≥ 10 % holding, ≥ 2 years), the capital gain is exempt from CIT. This makes the share sale the most tax‑efficient route for fund vehicles structured as Lithuanian or EU‑resident entities.
  • Simplicity and speed. A share sale requires fewer individual transfer steps, no asset‑by‑asset conveyance, no re‑assignment of each customer contract, no separate employee consultation process (unless a change‑of‑control clause triggers it).
  • Preservation of permits and licences. Regulated businesses (fintech, payment institutions, energy) retain their licences because the legal entity continues. This avoids potentially lengthy re‑licensing.
  • Treaty access. Cross‑border exits Lithuania routes benefit from Lithuania’s double tax treaty network when structured as a share sale, because the gain is typically taxable only in the seller’s jurisdiction (subject to treaty provisions).

When an Asset Sale Is Preferable

Buyers may insist on an asset deal, and sellers may agree, where the target carries material risks:

  • Cherry‑picking assets. The buyer acquires only the assets it values (IP, contracts, equipment) and leaves behind problematic liabilities such as pending litigation or environmental obligations.
  • Stepped‑up tax base. The buyer records acquired assets at fair market value, generating higher future depreciation deductions. This can materially improve the buyer’s post‑acquisition cash‑flow projections.
  • Avoiding hidden liabilities. Where due diligence reveals undisclosed or difficult‑to‑quantify liabilities, an asset sale ring‑fences the buyer from successor liability.
  • Tax loss utilisation. If the target has accumulated tax losses that cannot be used post‑acquisition (because of change‑of‑activity restrictions), an asset sale may be the more rational route.

The primary disadvantage of an asset sale is friction: VAT applies to the transfer of individual assets (unless the transfer qualifies as a going‑concern exemption), stamp duty or notary fees may be higher for real‑estate‑heavy targets, and each contract and employment relationship must be individually assigned or transferred. Transaction costs and timeline are almost always longer.

Worked Example, After‑Tax Proceeds Comparison

The following illustrative example compares net proceeds for a corporate PE fund selling 100 % of a Lithuanian target for EUR 10 million. Assumptions: acquisition cost EUR 3 million; holding period three years; seller is an EU‑resident fund vehicle; CIT rate 15 %; participation exemption conditions met for the share sale scenario; no treaty‑reduced withholding. All figures are simplified and for guidance only, seek professional tax advice for deal‑specific modelling.

Item Share Sale (Corporate Seller) Asset Sale (Corporate Seller)
Sale proceeds EUR 10,000,000 EUR 10,000,000
Acquisition cost / tax base EUR 3,000,000 EUR 3,000,000 (book value of assets)
Capital gain EUR 7,000,000 EUR 7,000,000
CIT on gain EUR 0 (participation exemption) EUR 1,050,000 (15 % CIT at target level)
VAT on transfer Not applicable Potentially applicable (21 % unless going‑concern exemption)
Estimated transaction costs ~EUR 150,000 ~EUR 250,000 (higher due to asset‑by‑asset transfer)
Net proceeds (approx.) EUR 9,850,000 EUR 8,700,000 (before dividend distribution tax)

The delta in this simplified scenario, roughly EUR 1.15 million, demonstrates why the share sale is the dominant exit structure for PE/VC funds where the participation exemption conditions are met. For individual founders selling directly, the progressive PIT bands introduced by the 2026 tax reform erode the advantage of a share sale, but it typically remains more efficient than an asset sale once VAT and transaction costs are factored in.

Earn‑Outs and Deferred Consideration, Drafting, Tax and Enforcement in Lithuania

Earn‑outs have become a standard feature of VC private equity exits in Lithuania, particularly where buyer and seller disagree on valuation or where the founder is expected to remain post‑closing to drive growth. The 2026 tax changes introduce new complexity for earn‑out structures, making precise drafting more important than ever.

Essential Earn‑Out Clauses

Deal teams should treat the following provisions as non‑negotiable in any earn‑out arrangement:

  • KPI definition. Define performance metrics (revenue, EBITDA, user milestones) with granular accounting policies. Specify which IFRS or local GAAP adjustments are included or excluded. Ambiguity in KPI definition is the single most common source of post‑closing disputes.
  • Measurement period and reporting. Set a clear calendar window (e.g., financial year ending 31 December 2027) and require the buyer to deliver audited management accounts within a defined period, typically 60–90 days.
  • Audit and verification rights. The seller should have the right to appoint an independent auditor to verify KPI calculations. Establish a dispute‑escalation mechanism (expert determination followed by arbitration) to avoid costly litigation.
  • Anti‑manipulation protections. Prohibit the buyer from taking actions designed to suppress earn‑out metrics (e.g., shifting revenue to affiliates, loading costs onto the target). Include a “conduct of business” covenant for the earn‑out period.
  • Escrow and security. Consider requiring the buyer to place a portion of the purchase price in escrow or provide a bank guarantee to secure earn‑out payments.

Tax Treatment and Timing for Sellers

Under Lithuanian tax rules, earn‑out payments are generally taxed when received. For corporate sellers, each tranche is treated as additional consideration for the share sale and assessed against the original acquisition cost. Where the participation exemption applies, subsequent earn‑out receipts also benefit from the exemption, provided the conditions were met at the time of the initial disposal.

For individual sellers, the 2026 progressive PIT rates mean that each earn‑out tranche is aggregated with other income in the year of receipt. A large final tranche could push the recipient into the highest PIT bracket. Industry observers note that this creates a strong incentive to spread earn‑outs across multiple tax years, though sellers must balance tax optimisation against the commercial risk of prolonged buyer dependency. There is no VAT on earn‑out payments that are properly characterised as deferred purchase consideration for shares. However, if an earn‑out is recharacterised as a service fee (e.g., tied to the founder’s continuing employment), it may attract both PIT at employment rates and employer social‑security contributions, a significantly worse outcome.

Using Lithuanian Holding Companies in Cross‑Border Exits

Lithuania’s combination of a 15 % CIT rate, broad participation exemption, and an extensive double tax treaty network has historically made it an attractive jurisdiction for holding company Lithuania structures. The 2026 reforms have not eliminated these advantages, but they have raised the substance bar and tightened anti‑abuse provisions.

Substance Checklist for a Lithuanian Holding

A holding company that exists only on paper will not withstand scrutiny from Lithuanian or foreign tax authorities. The following substance indicators are now considered essential:

  • Physical office. A real, staffed office in Lithuania, not a virtual address or a shared‑desk arrangement.
  • Local board and management. At least a majority of board members should be Lithuanian‑resident and should demonstrably exercise strategic decision‑making from Lithuania. Board minutes should be prepared locally and reflect genuine deliberation.
  • Qualified employees. At least one full‑time employee with relevant qualifications (finance, legal, investment management) who handles the holding’s affairs on a day‑to‑day basis.
  • Local banking and accounting. Primary bank accounts maintained with Lithuanian or EU‑based banks; annual accounts prepared and filed in Lithuania; compliance with local beneficial‑ownership reporting obligations.
  • Decision trail. Investment committee minutes, internal memos and approval workflows should originate from Lithuania. Decisions rubber‑stamped from another jurisdiction undermine the substance argument.

Repatriation Options and Withholding Tax Considerations

Dividends paid by a Lithuanian holding company to an EU‑resident parent are generally exempt from withholding tax under the EU Parent‑Subsidiary Directive, provided the recipient holds at least 10 % for a continuous period. For non‑EU recipients, Lithuania’s treaty network typically reduces withholding to 5–15 %, depending on the treaty and the recipient’s status. Capital gains realised by the holding on the disposal of subsidiaries benefit from the participation exemption under the same conditions as direct sales. The likely practical effect of the 2026 anti‑abuse provisions is that treaty‑shopping structures, where a Lithuanian holding is interposed solely to access a favourable treaty rate, will face denial of benefits.

Deal teams should document a commercial rationale for the holding that extends beyond tax savings.

Transaction Process, Deal Timeline and Practical Negotiation Levers

A well‑executed exit in Lithuania follows a predictable timeline, but the 2026 reforms introduce adjustments that deal teams must factor into their planning. The typical signing‑to‑closing window for a share sale is four to eight weeks, depending on regulatory approvals and the complexity of conditions precedent. For transactions closing after 1 July 2026, the revised Companies Law formalities should streamline registry processing, but deal teams should build in a buffer during the initial implementation period.

Indemnity caps and disclosure letters are among the most heavily negotiated provisions. Lithuanian market practice has broadly aligned with Western European norms: general warranty caps typically range from 15–30 % of the enterprise value, with carve‑outs for fundamental warranties (title, capacity, authority) that are capped at 100 % of the purchase price. Disclosure letters should be prepared in parallel with the SPA to avoid last‑minute disputes over the scope of seller disclosures.

Due Diligence Priority Checklist

The following ten items represent the highest‑priority due diligence focuses for PE/VC exits in Lithuania:

  1. Tax compliance history and open tax audits (VMI correspondence)
  2. Employment contracts, collective agreements, and pending labour disputes
  3. IP ownership and assignment chain (especially for tech targets)
  4. Regulatory permits and licence conditions (fintech, energy, data protection)
  5. Material contracts, change‑of‑control clauses and assignability
  6. Real‑estate title and encumbrances (if applicable)
  7. Related‑party transactions and transfer pricing documentation
  8. Pending or threatened litigation and contingent liabilities
  9. Data protection compliance (GDPR, Lithuanian ADPT requirements)
  10. Environmental obligations and compliance history

Post‑Closing Integration, Liabilities and Dispute Resolution

In a share sale, employees transfer automatically with the entity and their existing terms are preserved. The buyer should plan for integration communications and align employment policies promptly to avoid attrition of key personnel, a risk that is particularly acute in Lithuania’s competitive tech labour market. Ongoing warranties typically survive for 18–24 months (general) and up to seven years (tax and fundamental warranties).

For earn‑out disputes, the recommended approach is a two‑tier mechanism: independent expert determination for accounting disputes, escalating to institutional arbitration (Vilnius Court of Commercial Arbitration or ICC) for legal disputes. Governing law should be Lithuanian for domestic deals; for cross‑border exits Lithuania structures, parties often choose Lithuanian law for the SPA with an international arbitration seat (Stockholm or Vilnius). Including a mediation step before arbitration can reduce costs and preserve commercial relationships where the founder remains in the business post‑closing.

Practical Annexes and Templates

The following illustrative clause snippets are provided for reference only. They are not a substitute for qualified legal advice and should be adapted to the specific transaction and applicable law.

  • Earn‑out KPI clause (illustrative): “The Earn‑Out Amount shall be calculated as [X] % of the Target’s consolidated EBITDA for the Measurement Period, determined in accordance with IFRS as applied in the Reference Accounts, excluding (i) any non‑recurring items, (ii) intercompany management fees, and (iii) restructuring costs not approved by the Seller Representative.”
  • Escrow release clause (illustrative): “The Escrow Agent shall release [Y] % of the Escrow Amount to the Seller on each anniversary of Closing, provided no Unresolved Claim Notice has been served by the Buyer. Any Disputed Amount shall be retained until final determination in accordance with the dispute‑resolution procedure set out in Clause [Z].”
  • Purchase price adjustment formula (illustrative): “The Final Purchase Price shall be adjusted upward or downward by the amount by which the Closing Net Working Capital exceeds or falls below the Target Net Working Capital, as determined by the Completion Accounts prepared within [90] days of Closing.”

Note: A downloadable PDF checklist covering due diligence priorities, earn‑out clause templates and share‑transfer formalities under the Companies Law 2026 Lithuania amendments is planned as a companion resource.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Rokas Jankus at Motieka & Audzevicius, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Ministry of Finance, Investor Presentation (April 2026)
  2. Audita, Tax Changes 2026
  3. PwC, Worldwide Tax Summaries
  4. Sorainen, Private Equity & Venture Capital
  5. Lithuanian Private Equity & Venture Capital Association (VCA)
  6. StartUp Lithuania, Lithuania Tech Ecosystem Report 2024
  7. BaltCap, PE Exit Press Release
  8. IBANet, Lithuania M&A Guide

FAQs

What is the tax treatment of capital gains from selling shares in Lithuania after the 2026 reform?
Capital gains treatment depends on the seller type. Corporate sellers that meet the participation exemption conditions (at least 10 % shareholding held for at least two years) pay no CIT on the gain. Individual sellers are subject to progressive PIT rates introduced on 1 January 2026, meaning larger gains may be taxed at the highest marginal rate. Users of investment accounts follow specific rules that may defer taxation until withdrawal.
In most PE/VC scenarios, a share sale is preferable. It offers cleaner liability transfer, potential participation exemption for corporate sellers, preservation of permits and licences, and lower transaction costs. An asset sale is better when the buyer needs to exclude specific liabilities, step up the tax base of acquired assets, or where the target carries material undisclosed risks. Use the decision framework and worked example above to model the net‑proceeds difference for your specific transaction.
Earn‑out payments are generally taxed when received. For corporate sellers, they are treated as additional sale consideration and may benefit from the participation exemption. For individuals, each tranche is aggregated with other income in the year of receipt, subject to progressive PIT. Enforcement depends heavily on how KPIs are drafted, vague metrics lead to disputes. Independent audit rights and a dispute‑escalation mechanism (expert determination followed by arbitration) are strongly recommended.
Yes, but the 2026 reforms have tightened substance and anti‑abuse requirements. A Lithuanian holding company must demonstrate genuine local management, employees and decision‑making to access the participation exemption and treaty benefits. Paper‑only structures risk denial of benefits. Deal teams should document commercial rationale beyond tax savings and test the structure against CFC rules in the investor’s home jurisdiction.
The key provisions, effective 1 July 2026, streamline notarisation requirements and reduce registry processing times for share transfers. Board and shareholder approvals remain necessary where articles of association require them. Deal teams closing after 1 July 2026 should prepare transfer documentation to the new standard and allow a transitional buffer during the first months of implementation. Pre‑existing SPAs may need amendment to reflect the updated procedural steps.
The standard corporate income tax rate remains 15 %. A reduced 5 % rate applies to small companies and agricultural cooperatives that meet specified conditions. Withholding tax on dividends paid to non‑treaty/non‑EU residents is generally 15 %, though this can be reduced under applicable double tax treaties or eliminated under the EU Parent‑Subsidiary Directive for qualifying EU recipients.

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VC & Private Equity Exit Strategies in Lithuania 2026: Share Sale vs Asset Sale, Earn‑outs & Holding Structures

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