Our Expert in Bulgaria
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Last reviewed: 11 May 2026
Bulgaria officially adopted the euro on 1 January 2026, replacing the Bulgarian lev (BGN) as legal tender and triggering immediate obligations for every business operating under Bulgarian-law contracts. For in-house counsel, CFOs and procurement teams, euro adoption commercial contracts Bulgaria is no longer a theoretical planning exercise, it is a live compliance event requiring contract amendments, re-denominated guarantees, updated invoicing systems and revised tender documents. This guide delivers a prioritised, contract-level checklist covering commercial supply agreements, construction contracts (including FIDIC forms), public procurement securities and VAT/pricing rules, together with sample redline clauses that practitioners can adapt immediately.
Whether you manage a portfolio of BGN-denominated service agreements or oversee a multi-million-euro FIDIC construction project, the action items below map precisely to the obligations arising from Bulgaria’s changeover legislation and the supporting guidance published by the European Commission and the official Evroto changeover portal.
The euro became Bulgaria’s sole legal tender on 1 January 2026. All references to BGN in legislation, contracts and corporate documents are subject to mandatory conversion at the irrevocably fixed exchange rate. The practical impact on commercial and construction contracts is substantial, and the compliance window is already running.
Key takeaways:
Your six priority contract-level actions:
Is Bulgaria approved to join the eurozone in 2026? Yes. Bulgaria became the 21st member of the euro area on 1 January 2026, following confirmation by the European Commission, the European Central Bank (ECB) and the Council of the EU. The European External Action Service (EEAS) formally announced Bulgaria’s accession, and the official Bulgarian changeover portal, Evroto, published detailed implementation guidance for businesses, consumers and public bodies.
| Date | Instrument / Source | Immediate Effect (Who Must Act) |
|---|---|---|
| 1 January 2026 | Bulgaria adopts the euro, ECB/EC announcements and national changeover legislation | Euro becomes legal tender; automatic BGN→EUR conversion applies in registries and banking; dual-pricing rules take effect. All businesses must be prepared to transact, invoice and report in EUR. |
| January–February 2026 | Evroto accounting and invoicing instructions (Evroto.bg PDF guidance) | Detailed accounting and invoicing instructions published; statutory deadlines for corporate-document amendments confirmed. Finance teams must align bookkeeping immediately. |
| Within 12 months of adoption (by 31 December 2026) | Company Registry guidance (Schoenherr summary / registry notices) | Companies must update articles of association, share-capital denominations and other statutory filings. Board resolutions and registry submissions required, steps vary by entity type. |
The Bulgarian Company Registry has indicated that statutory documents, including articles of association and share-capital entries, must be converted to EUR within the prescribed period following the changeover date. According to guidance summarised by Schoenherr, the process involves board (or shareholder) resolutions authorising the conversion, preparation of amended constitutional documents, and formal filing with the registry. Industry observers expect that companies delaying beyond the statutory window may face administrative sanctions or restrictions on subsequent filings. Early preparation of board resolutions is strongly recommended.
Understanding the mechanics of the euro conversion is essential before amending any contract. The irrevocably fixed exchange rate for converting BGN to EUR is 1 EUR = 1.95583 BGN. This rate, derived from Bulgaria’s existing currency-board arrangement, applies to every conversion, contractual, corporate and fiscal, without exception.
Rounding rules: Converted amounts must be rounded to the nearest cent (two decimal places). If the third decimal is exactly 5, the amount rounds up. These rules follow standard EU changeover practice as documented by the ECB and reiterated by the Evroto portal.
Worked example:
Sample conversion clause (for guidance only):
“With effect from [date], all monetary amounts expressed in Bulgarian leva (BGN) in this Agreement shall be converted to euro (EUR) at the irrevocably fixed exchange rate of 1 EUR = 1.95583 BGN, rounded to the nearest cent in accordance with the applicable changeover legislation. The converted amounts shall have the same legal force and effect as the original BGN amounts.”
Automatic conversions have been implemented in certain registries, including bank accounts and some public-registry entries. However, contractual amounts are not automatically amended, parties must execute formal amendments or addenda. The Evroto guidance confirms this distinction, and practical advisory notes from EY Bulgaria reinforce the need for proactive contract-portfolio review.
How should businesses convert existing commercial and construction contracts to euros? The answer depends on the contract type, but the core process involves a three-step protocol: (1) audit and classify all active BGN-denominated agreements, (2) determine whether each contract requires a negotiated amendment or can be converted mechanically at the fixed rate, and (3) execute the amendment using a standardised conversion addendum. Below is a contract amendment checklist Bulgaria practitioners can use, organised by contract category.
Construction contracts present particular complexity because of their long duration, milestone-based payment structures, fluctuation clauses and performance-security requirements. For projects governed by FIDIC conditions or similar standard forms, the following FIDIC euro conversion clauses and redline suggestions apply.
Contract price and payment clauses: The Accepted Contract Amount (Sub-Clause 14.1 in FIDIC Yellow Book 2017) must be restated in EUR. Every interim payment certificate, advance payment and retention amount requires conversion at the fixed rate. Where the contract contains a price-adjustment or fluctuation formula (Sub-Clause 13.7/13.8), the base-date indices and currency weightings must also be reviewed, the removal of the BGN/EUR exchange-rate variable may simplify certain formulae.
Sample FIDIC redline, conversion clause (for guidance only):
“The Accepted Contract Amount stated in the Contract Agreement as [BGN amount] is hereby converted to EUR [converted amount] at the irrevocably fixed exchange rate of 1 EUR = 1.95583 BGN, with effect from [date]. All references to ‘BGN’ or ‘Bulgarian leva’ in the Conditions of Contract, Particular Conditions, Schedules and Appendices shall be read as references to ‘EUR’ at the same fixed rate, rounded to the nearest cent. This conversion does not constitute a Variation under Clause 13.”
Sample FIDIC redline, payment and invoice language (for guidance only):
“Interim Payment Certificates issued after [date] shall express all amounts in EUR. The Contractor’s Statements (Sub-Clause 14.3) shall be submitted in EUR and shall include, in an appendix, a reconciliation showing the original BGN amount and the converted EUR amount for each line item.”
Sample FIDIC redline, currency risk allocation (for guidance only):
“For the avoidance of doubt, the conversion from BGN to EUR at the fixed rate shall not give rise to any claim by either Party for additional payment, extension of time, or compensation under the Contract. Any rounding differences arising from the application of the fixed rate shall be borne by the Party receiving the payment.”
Additional FIDIC action items:
Do public procurement contracts and performance securities need amendment after the euro conversion? Yes. Contracting authorities and tenderers alike must address several areas to ensure compliance with both the changeover legislation and the Public Procurement Act.
Sample procurement amendment clause (for guidance only):
“The Contract Price and all financial thresholds, penalty amounts and guarantee values stated in this Public Procurement Contract are hereby converted from BGN to EUR at the irrevocably fixed exchange rate of 1 EUR = 1.95583 BGN. The Contracting Authority confirms that this conversion does not modify the substantive terms of the Contract and does not constitute a material amendment within the meaning of Article 116 of the Public Procurement Act.”
What are the key VAT and reporting changes for businesses in Bulgaria in 2026? While the standard VAT rate itself has not changed as a direct consequence of euro adoption, the mechanics of VAT reporting, invoicing and accounting have been significantly affected. The Evroto accounting-instructions PDF sets out the transitional rules for bookkeeping and financial reporting, and EY Bulgaria’s euro-adoption guide provides practical implementation steps for finance teams.
| Entity Type | Required Action | Deadline |
|---|---|---|
| All VAT-registered businesses | Issue invoices in EUR; VAT base and VAT amount expressed in EUR; retain dual-currency records during the transition period | Immediate (from 1 January 2026) |
| Businesses using accounting software | Update accounting systems to EUR as the functional currency; reconfigure chart of accounts and tax-reporting modules | Immediate, no later than the first reporting period in 2026 |
| Employers (payroll) | Convert all payroll figures, social-security contributions and withholding-tax calculations to EUR | January 2026 payroll cycle |
| Companies filing annual financial statements | Prepare 2026 annual financial statements in EUR; 2025 comparative figures must be restated in EUR at the fixed rate per the Evroto accounting instructions | By statutory filing deadline for 2026 accounts |
Practical invoicing example: A Bulgarian supplier who previously invoiced a recurring monthly fee of BGN 10,000 plus 20% VAT (BGN 2,000) now invoices EUR 5,112.92 (net) plus EUR 1,022.58 (VAT), totalling EUR 6,135.50. The Evroto guidance requires that, during the dual-pricing period, the invoice also shows the original BGN equivalent for consumer-facing transactions.
Finance teams should also verify that cross-border commercial arrangements previously denominated in BGN, such as intra-group service agreements or transfer-pricing documentation, are updated to reflect EUR values consistently across all jurisdictions. Deloitte’s CEE advisory note flags this as a common implementation risk for multinational groups with Bulgarian subsidiaries.
Can parties increase prices because of euro adoption? No, the changeover legislation and the European Commission’s consumer-protection guidance expressly prohibit using the currency conversion as a pretext for unjustified price increases. The official Evroto portal and the Recht BG legal commentary confirm that:
For businesses operating investment-linked services in Bulgaria, the consumer-protection amendments are particularly relevant where marketing materials or fee schedules previously quoted BGN amounts.
The euro changeover creates a predictable category of disputes: disagreements over rounding, alleged price increases, the validity of conversion addenda, and the re-denomination of damages claims. Practitioners should take proactive steps to minimise dispute risk.
Use the following condensed checklist to track progress across your contract portfolio. Each item maps to the detailed guidance in the sections above.
Immediate (January 2026):
Within 0–3 months:
Within 3–12 months:
This checklist is available as a downloadable resource, contact the GLE Lawyer directory for a tailored version and bespoke redlines for your contract portfolio.
Bulgaria’s euro adoption affects virtually every commercial relationship governed by Bulgarian law. The compliance window is already running, and early action significantly reduces dispute risk and administrative burden. Whether you need bespoke contract redlines for a FIDIC construction project, a portfolio-wide amendment protocol for commercial supply agreements, or procurement-specific guidance on re-denominating guarantees and tender documents, specialist legal support can accelerate the process.
Global Law Experts maintains a network of qualified Bulgarian commercial and construction-law practitioners who can assist with:
To connect with a specialist, visit the GLE Lawyer directory or use the contact form below.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Yavor Tankov at Penkova & Partners, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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