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Last updated: 20 June 2026
Understanding what is a golden power filing has become a non-negotiable step for any private equity fund targeting Italian assets. Italy’s golden power regime, the government’s authority to screen, impose conditions on, or outright block transactions that touch nationally strategic sectors, has expanded significantly since its original 2012 enactment, and 2026 has already delivered two developments that reshape deal planning: framework refinements effective January 2026 that broadened sector coverage and tightened notification obligations, and a landmark Council of State ruling on 16 April 2026 that narrowed filing requirements for certain share-pledge arrangements. Together, these changes mean that PE deal teams must revisit their FDI screening Italy playbooks before signing any letter of intent involving an Italian target.
This guide provides the practical thresholds, sector mapping, pre-notification workflow and checklist that transaction counsel and fund principals need to navigate the Italian golden power filing process with confidence.
A golden power filing is a mandatory notification to the Italian government, channelled through the Presidency of the Council of Ministers, whenever a proposed investment or corporate transaction affects companies that hold assets or operate in sectors deemed strategic to national security or public interest. The government reviews the notification and may clear the deal unconditionally, impose binding conditions and undertakings, or prohibit the transaction entirely.
In practical terms, three things matter immediately for PE acquirers:
The regime finds its statutory basis in Decree-Law No. 21 of 15 March 2012, converted into Law No. 56 of 11 May 2012, as subsequently amended. This primary legislation empowers the government to exercise “special powers”, poteri speciali, over transactions involving companies operating in defence and national security, as well as in sectors of strategic relevance including energy, transport, communications and, following successive expansions, 5G technology, artificial intelligence, cybersecurity, food security and financial infrastructure. A series of implementing regulations, notably the DPCM decrees, define the specific assets, activities and thresholds that trigger the notification obligation.
Italy’s golden power regulation also operates within the framework of the EU Foreign Direct Investment Screening Regulation (EU 2019/452), which established a cooperation mechanism between member states and the European Commission for reviewing FDI on security and public-order grounds. Italy’s implementation is considered one of the most expansive in the EU.
Effective January 2026, the Italian government introduced refinements to the golden power framework that have direct consequences for PE deal structuring. Early indications suggest the practical effect of these refinements centres on three areas: first, the list of strategic activities and assets subject to screening was updated to reflect evolving technology and supply-chain risks, bringing certain AI-driven industrial applications and critical-mineral processing activities more clearly within scope; second, notification procedures were tightened to require more granular disclosure of ultimate beneficial ownership chains, particularly for fund structures involving multiple limited partnerships; and third, the government’s review timeline was reinforced with clearer “stop-the-clock” provisions where additional information is requested.
Industry observers expect these changes to increase the volume of golden power filings in the technology and energy-transition sectors during 2026.
The most significant judicial development of 2026 arrived on 16 April, when the Council of State (Consiglio di Stato) issued a ruling that narrowed the circumstances in which the grant of a pledge or security interest over shares triggers an Italian golden power filing obligation. Prior government practice had treated virtually any share pledge in a strategic-sector company as a notifiable event, a position that created substantial compliance burden for leveraged financings and acquisition-finance structures. The Council of State’s ruling clarified that a pledge does not automatically constitute a notifiable transaction; the decisive factor is whether the security arrangement, taken as a whole, confers upon the pledgee effective decision-making power or de facto control over the management of strategic assets.
The likely practical effect for PE teams is that routine acquisition-finance share pledges, where the lender holds security but exercises no governance or voting rights absent an enforcement event, may fall outside the mandatory notification perimeter, provided the pledge documentation is carefully drafted to avoid conferring management influence. However, pledges that include step-in rights, board-appointment rights, or voting rights exercisable before default will remain firmly within scope.
| Date | Event | Practical Impact |
|---|---|---|
| 15 March 2012 | Decree-Law No. 21/2012 enacted | Established the golden power regime for defence, energy, transport and telecoms |
| 2019–2020 | COVID-era expansions (DL 23/2020) | Broadened scope to 5G, health, finance, food; lowered thresholds for EU investors |
| 2024 | Successive DPCM implementing decrees | Updated sector-specific asset lists, refined filing procedures |
| January 2026 | Framework refinements effective | Expanded AI/critical-mineral coverage; tightened UBO disclosure; clarified stop-the-clock |
| 16 April 2026 | Council of State ruling on share pledges | Narrowed pledge-filing obligation to pledges conferring de facto control or management influence |
Determining whether a specific PE transaction triggers a golden power filing requires a two-step analysis: first, does the target company operate in or hold assets within a strategic sector; and second, does the proposed transaction cross one of the statutory thresholds or structural triggers? The golden power thresholds Italy imposes differ depending on the sector, the nationality of the acquirer and the nature of the transaction.
The regime distinguishes between EU and non-EU acquirers and applies different trigger points accordingly. For transactions in the defence and national security sector, any acquisition that results in a change of ownership, control, or availability of the strategic assets may require notification regardless of the percentage acquired. For other strategic sectors, the notification obligation is triggered when an acquirer, particularly a non-EU investor, crosses certain shareholding thresholds. These thresholds have historically included the 10%, 15%, 20%, 25% and 50% levels of voting rights or capital, depending on the applicable implementing decree.
The January 2026 refinements reinforced the importance of looking through fund structures to identify the ultimate beneficial owner, meaning that a non-EU limited partner holding above the relevant threshold in a fund vehicle may itself trigger a filing, even if the GP is EU-based.
Beyond numerical thresholds, the regime captures qualitative triggers: acquiring de facto control, obtaining veto rights over strategic decisions, entering shareholders’ agreements that confer influence over asset management, or gaining access to classified information or critical technology.
| Transaction Type | Filing Threshold / Trigger | Typical PE Examples |
|---|---|---|
| Acquisition of controlling stake | Control or majority thresholds (varies by sector; typically >50% or de facto control) | Buyout of Italian target company |
| Minority share acquisition | Triggered at specific percentage crossings (10%, 15%, 20%, 25%) or where veto/governance rights are obtained; lower thresholds for defence | Minority buy-in with board seat or veto rights |
| Grant of pledge/security over shares | Filing risk where pledge confers de facto control or management influence (subject to 16 April 2026 Council of State clarifications) | Leveraged financing with lender share pledge |
| Asset transfer or lease (strategic asset) | Any transfer or grant of rights over strategic assets may trigger notification | Long-term lease of port infrastructure or energy concessions |
| Merger, demerger or corporate restructuring | Triggered where the restructuring results in change of control or management of strategic assets | Cross-border merger of portfolio companies with Italian strategic assets |
The scope of golden power Italy extends across a broad and growing number of sectors. Since the regime’s original focus on defence, energy and transport, successive legislative interventions, particularly during the COVID-19 period and through subsequent technology-focused expansions, have substantially widened the perimeter. The January 2026 refinements continued this trend. For PE deal teams, the critical exercise is mapping the target’s actual business activities and assets against the current sector definitions in the implementing decrees, rather than relying on the target’s own classification or SIC code.
| Sector | Typical Assets / Activities | Why Strategic (National Interest) |
|---|---|---|
| Defence and national security | Weapons systems, military technology, classified contracts | Sovereign security; protection of classified capabilities |
| Energy | Gas and electricity transmission networks, energy storage, critical-mineral processing | Energy supply security and grid stability |
| Telecommunications and 5G | Network infrastructure, spectrum assets, data centres | Integrity of communications infrastructure; cybersecurity |
| Transport | Ports, airports, rail infrastructure, logistics networks | Supply-chain continuity and critical infrastructure protection |
| Technology, AI and cybersecurity | AI-driven industrial applications, dual-use technologies, semiconductor supply | Technology sovereignty; prevention of hostile technology transfer |
| Financial infrastructure | Payment systems, clearing houses, banking platforms | Systemic stability and financial-data protection |
| Health and food security | Vaccine production, pharmaceutical supply chains, agricultural land | Public-health resilience and food-supply sovereignty |
Industry observers expect the technology and critical-minerals sectors to generate the highest volume of golden power notifications during 2026, reflecting both the January 2026 sector-list updates and broader EU-level emphasis on strategic autonomy. PE funds with portfolio companies that process rare earths or develop AI models trained on sensitive datasets should treat these investments as high-probability filing candidates.
Timing is one of the most consequential practical issues in any golden power filing. The notification must be submitted within a specified period, generally within ten business days of the execution of the binding agreement or, in certain circumstances, even before signing where the parties wish to obtain comfort on the government’s likely position. Getting the pre-notification golden power Italy process right can save weeks of deal delay and avoid the risk of closing a transaction that is subsequently unwound.
The regime contemplates two practical pathways. A mandatory notification is required within the statutory deadline following execution of a binding transaction document (SPA, merger agreement, or other definitive agreement). A pre-notification, an informal, voluntary engagement with the Presidency’s screening unit, is increasingly used by PE deal teams to test the government’s position before signing. Pre-notification is not formally regulated in the same way as the mandatory filing, but the government has developed an established practice of accepting and responding to pre-notification requests, particularly for complex or high-profile transactions.
For PE deals, the recommended approach is as follows:
| Phase | Typical Time Window | Key Documents Required |
|---|---|---|
| Pre-deal screening | Weeks 1–3 of due diligence | Sector-mapping analysis; target’s asset register; acquirer’s UBO chart |
| Pre-notification (voluntary) | 2–6 weeks before signing | Transaction summary; acquirer ownership structure; draft undertakings |
| Mandatory notification | Within 10 business days of signing | Full information pack: SPA, shareholder agreement, financing docs, UBO declarations, strategic-asset description |
| Government review | Up to 45 calendar days (extendable via stop-the-clock) | Responses to RFIs; supplementary evidence as requested |
| Outcome / clearance | End of review period | Government decree: unconditional clearance, conditional approval, or prohibition |
Not every PE transaction involves an outright buyout. Minority investments, co-investment structures, joint ventures and financing arrangements each raise distinct questions under the golden power notification requirements Italy 2026 deadline framework. The common thread is whether the transaction, regardless of the percentage acquired, confers upon the investor or lender effective influence over the management or disposition of strategic assets.
Minority investments are caught where they are accompanied by governance rights that exceed standard minority protections. A board seat, a veto over strategic-asset disposals, or the right to appoint key management personnel can each independently trigger a filing, even if the investor holds well below a controlling stake. Convertible instruments, such as convertible notes or preferred shares with conversion features, must be assessed on a fully diluted basis to determine whether post-conversion thresholds would be crossed.
The 16 April 2026 Council of State ruling is directly relevant to leveraged financing structures. Before this ruling, the prevailing government interpretation treated any share pledge in a strategic-sector company as potentially notifiable, creating uncertainty and compliance cost for routine acquisition-finance arrangements. The ruling established that the analysis must focus on substance over form: a pledge that exists solely as credit protection, with no voting rights, no step-in rights exercisable before enforcement, and no influence over the management of strategic assets, is unlikely to constitute a notifiable transaction.
| Entity Type | Typical Filing Risk | Practical Mitigation Steps |
|---|---|---|
| PE fund (majority acquirer) | High, control acquisition in strategic sector almost always triggers filing | File early; include LP/UBO disclosure; negotiate conditions proactively |
| Co-investor (minority with governance rights) | Medium to high, depends on veto, board and information rights | Map governance rights against filing triggers; consider limiting rights to avoid thresholds |
| Lender (share-pledge holder) | Lower after 16 Apr 2026 ruling, provided no de facto control or step-in rights pre-enforcement | Draft pledge to exclude pre-enforcement voting and management rights; document the carve-out clearly |
| JV partner | Medium, depends on JV governance structure and access to strategic assets | Structure JV agreement to delineate management of strategic vs non-strategic operations |
The government has three principal options upon reviewing an Italian golden power filing: unconditional clearance, conditional approval with binding undertakings, or outright prohibition of the transaction. Conditional approvals are the most common outcome for PE transactions that raise manageable concerns, typical conditions include commitments to maintain the target’s Italian headquarters, preserve employment levels, restrict the transfer of technology outside Italy, or ensure that certain board members hold Italian or EU nationality.
Failure to file carries severe consequences. The government may declare the transaction null and void, impose administrative fines calibrated to the value of the transaction, and require the forced unwinding of the acquisition. Reputational damage, particularly for PE funds active in other EU jurisdictions with linked FDI regimes, can be equally damaging. Early and proactive engagement with the screening authorities, ideally through a pre-notification, is the most effective risk-mitigation strategy.
Negotiating conditions is both an art and a legal exercise. Deal teams should prepare a “remedies offer” in advance, a package of voluntary undertakings that addresses likely government concerns while preserving the deal’s commercial logic. Industry observers note that the government is generally receptive to constructive engagement and that well-prepared filings with pre-agreed remedies significantly reduce review times.
The following ten-point checklist is designed for PE deal teams preparing for a potential Italian golden power filing. Treat it as a minimum, complex transactions will require additional steps.
For funds seeking specialist counsel for Italian PE transactions, browse the Global Law Experts lawyer directory to identify practitioners with golden power and FDI screening expertise.
Understanding what is a golden power filing, and acting on that understanding early, is now a prerequisite for any private equity transaction involving Italian assets. The 2026 changes have simultaneously widened the regime’s reach and introduced welcome clarity on pledge-related filings. Three actions should follow immediately from this guide: first, screen every Italian target at the earliest stage of deal origination against the current sector list and threshold triggers; second, engage specialist Italian counsel with demonstrable golden power experience before commercial terms are locked; and third, build protective deal provisions, golden power conditions precedent, realistic longstop dates and well-drafted remedies offers, into every SPA.
Those who treat golden power compliance as an afterthought risk deal failure, financial penalties and lasting reputational damage in one of Europe’s most active FDI screening jurisdictions.
For further guidance on structuring investment fund vehicles or understanding Italian regulatory developments such as pay-transparency obligations, explore the related resources on Global Law Experts.
This article reflects the legal position as at 20 June 2026. Given the pace of regulatory change in this area, practitioners should verify current requirements within 30 days of reading.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Marco Carbonara at Alpeggiani Avvocati Associati, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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