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Germany’s regulatory landscape for board duties compliance has shifted decisively in 2026. A convergence of national transpositions of EU directives, recalibrated Geldwäschegesetz (GWG) obligations, and a more assertive enforcement posture by public prosecutors and BaFin has created new personal-liability exposure for management board members and supervisory directors alike. This practitioner briefing provides a structured, action-oriented roadmap covering the legal changes, compliance programme design, AML readiness, M&A due diligence adjustments, and internal investigation protocols that every German board needs to address now. It is designed for Vorstand and Aufsichtsrat members, general counsel, compliance officers, and PE/M&A decision-makers seeking practical tools rather than abstract commentary.
Before reading the detailed analysis below, every board should have these four priorities on its agenda for the next one to three months. Each represents a concrete step to close the most urgent gaps created by the 2026 reforms.
The 2026 reforms are not a single legislative act but a cluster of interconnected changes. Understanding the full picture is essential for any management board seeking to discharge its duties effectively. Three pillars define the new landscape: corporate criminal liability adjustments, AML/GWG recalibrations, and a shift in enforcement culture. Together, these changes make board duties compliance in Germany materially more demanding than in any prior year.
Germany has historically relied on the Ordnungswidrigkeitengesetz (OWiG), specifically § 30 OWiG, to impose fines on legal entities for offences committed by their management or supervisory personnel. The 2026 reforms strengthen this framework by incorporating principles from EU-level directives on corporate accountability, raising the ceiling for administrative fines, and codifying the relevance of compliance management systems (CMS) as a mitigating factor in sanctioning decisions. Prosecutors and courts now have clearer statutory guidance to consider the adequacy of a company’s compliance programme when determining corporate penalties, a development that fundamentally links programme quality to financial exposure.
The Geldwäschegesetz has been updated to align with EU Anti-Money Laundering Directive requirements and to prepare for the transition to the EU Anti-Money Laundering Authority (AMLA) supervisory architecture. Key changes include expanded risk-based CDD obligations, tighter beneficial-ownership transparency requirements, and enhanced SAR reporting standards. BaFin’s supervisory posture has shifted toward more frequent on-site inspections and thematic reviews, particularly for non-financial obliged entities that were previously subject to lighter supervision.
Industry observers note a marked increase in cross-agency coordination between BaFin, the Financial Intelligence Unit (FIU), and state prosecutors. The likely practical effect is that compliance failures, particularly systemic ones, will be identified faster and prosecuted more aggressively. Boards that cannot demonstrate documented, risk-proportionate oversight face elevated exposure to both corporate fines under § 30 OWiG and personal liability claims. As broader global corporate law trends confirm, Germany is following a wider international trajectory toward holding boards personally accountable for compliance architecture.
| Date / Period | Change | Board Implication |
|---|---|---|
| Q1 2026 | Amended § 30 OWiG provisions enter force; CMS recognised as mitigating factor | Boards must document and evidence their CMS; inadequate programmes increase corporate fine exposure |
| Q1–Q2 2026 | GWG amendments transposing latest EU AML Directive requirements | Update CDD procedures, beneficial-ownership registers, SAR workflows, and sanctions screening |
| Ongoing 2026 | BaFin intensifies thematic AML inspections for non-financial obliged entities | Mid-caps and SMEs in high-risk sectors must prepare for on-site reviews and document readiness |
| H2 2026 onwards | Cross-agency enforcement coordination (BaFin, FIU, state prosecutors) formalised | Compliance failures are more likely to trigger parallel administrative and criminal proceedings |
Germany’s mandatory two-tier board structure divides responsibilities in a way that has direct implications for compliance accountability. The Vorstand (management board) bears operational responsibility for establishing, maintaining, and enforcing an effective compliance programme. Under the German Corporate Governance Code (DCGK), compliance is an explicit management board duty, it cannot be fully delegated to a subordinate function without the Vorstand retaining residual oversight. The Aufsichtsrat (supervisory board) is responsible for monitoring the Vorstand’s discharge of its duties, including compliance-related ones. The 2026 reforms reinforce this division: both tiers must now document their respective oversight activities more rigorously to demonstrate that corporate governance duties are being fulfilled.
A board may delegate day-to-day compliance management to a CCO or Chief Risk Officer (CRO), but delegation does not extinguish board-level responsibility. To qualify as “reasonable” delegation under the current framework, the following conditions must be met and documented:
| Delegation Element | What to Document | Board Residual Duty |
|---|---|---|
| Selection of delegate | Qualifications, experience, independence assessment | Verify competence at appointment; reassess annually |
| Scope of delegation | Written mandate specifying tasks, authority, budget | Approve mandate; ensure no gaps in coverage |
| Reporting obligations | Frequency, format, escalation triggers | Review reports; act on red flags within defined timelines |
| Resources and tools | Budget allocation, IT systems, headcount | Ensure adequacy; approve resource requests |
| Ongoing supervision | Audit results, KPIs, incident logs | Discuss at board meetings; record resolutions in minutes |
Director liability in Germany has always been a serious consideration, but the 2026 reforms sharpen the risk profile. Boards that fail to implement adequate compliance structures may face both civil claims from the company itself (or its shareholders) and, in extreme cases, criminal prosecution for supervisory negligence.
Civil liability under § 93 AktG requires the board member to have breached a duty of care and caused damage to the company. The standard is whether a diligent and conscientious manager in the same position would have acted differently. Criminal liability, under § 130 OWiG (failure to supervise) or general criminal law provisions, requires a higher threshold of culpability: typically wilful neglect or recklessness. Early indications suggest that prosecutors are increasingly willing to test the boundaries of § 130 OWiG against individual board members where compliance failures are systemic and well-documented warnings were ignored.
D&O insurance remains a critical risk-transfer tool, but boards should be aware that policies typically exclude coverage for intentional misconduct and may contain sub-limits or exclusions for regulatory fines. In light of the 2026 reforms, boards should review policy terms to ensure coverage for defence costs in regulatory and criminal investigations, confirm that side-A (individual-only) coverage is adequate, and negotiate provisions addressing the expanded definition of supervisory offences.
This checklist represents the decisive steps a board should take to mitigate director liability in Germany under the 2026 framework:
An effective compliance program in Germany must satisfy both the general duty-of-care standard under corporate law and the specific regulatory requirements introduced or strengthened in 2026. The following framework breaks the programme into its core components, each of which should be addressed in a board-approved compliance charter.
| KPI | Measurement | Reporting Frequency |
|---|---|---|
| Training completion rate | % of mandatory compliance training completed by all staff | Quarterly |
| Whistleblower reports received | Number of reports; breakdown by category | Quarterly |
| Average investigation closure time | Days from report to resolution | Quarterly |
| Sanctions screening hit rate | % of transactions flagged; false-positive rate | Monthly |
| Policy update cycle | Date of last review per policy area | Annually |
| Audit findings, open items | Number of unresolved audit findings; ageing analysis | Quarterly |
AML compliance in Germany has moved from a back-office function to a board-level priority. The 2026 GWG amendments demand a more granular, risk-sensitive approach to customer due diligence, and BaFin has signalled that Geldwäschegesetz compliance will be a supervisory focus area across both financial and non-financial obliged entities.
The updated GWG aligns German law with the latest EU AML framework, including enhanced requirements for beneficial-ownership identification, expanded obligations for non-financial gatekeepers (lawyers, notaries, real estate agents, dealers in high-value goods), and strengthened SAR reporting standards. The law also prepares the ground for the future supervisory role of the EU AMLA, which is expected to assume direct supervisory responsibilities for certain high-risk obliged entities.
Under the revised GWG, obliged entities must calibrate CDD intensity to the assessed risk of each customer relationship. Simplified CDD remains available for lower-risk relationships, but the criteria for qualifying as “lower risk” have been tightened. Enhanced CDD is now required for a broader range of scenarios, including relationships involving complex ownership structures, high-risk third countries, and politically exposed persons (PEPs). Boards must ensure that CDD policies reflect these changes and that staff are trained on the updated risk categories.
Recordkeeping periods under the GWG require retention of CDD documentation and transaction records for a defined statutory period from the end of the business relationship or the completion of the transaction. Sanctions screening must be conducted against all applicable EU and national sanctions lists, with results documented and escalated where hits are identified. Boards should verify that screening technology is updated in real time as sanctions lists are amended.
The GWG obligations intersect with the EU sanctions framework, which has expanded significantly in recent years. Boards must ensure that sanctions compliance is integrated into the AML programme rather than treated as a separate workstream. This means unified screening processes, coordinated escalation protocols, and joint training for AML and sanctions staff.
| Entity Type | Minimum AML Controls (2026) | Typical Supervisory Consequence |
|---|---|---|
| Large bank / financial institution | Full CDD, automated transaction monitoring, SAR reporting, annual independent audit | High likelihood of on-site inspection, fines, remedial orders |
| Mid-cap non-financial company (export/import) | Risk-based CDD for high-risk customers, sanctions screening, periodic training | Supervision via targeted audits; potential fines and management reprimands |
| Small enterprise / SME | Simplified CDD, basic sanctions screening, documented risk assessment | Guidance and warnings; elevated enforcement if systemic failures detected |
The 2026 reforms have direct implications for how compliance due diligence is scoped, conducted, and documented in German M&A transactions. Buyers who fail to account for the expanded compliance framework risk inheriting material liabilities, and sellers who cannot demonstrate adequate programmes may face price adjustments or deal failure.
Compliance due diligence must now extend beyond the target company’s internal policies to encompass third-party risk, supply chain compliance, and the adequacy of AML and sanctions programmes. Acquirers should verify whether the target has a functioning CMS, documented risk assessments, up-to-date CDD records, and a clean enforcement history. Where the target operates in high-risk sectors or jurisdictions, enhanced due diligence, including interviews with compliance personnel and review of investigation files, is becoming standard practice. For deeper analysis of warranty mechanisms, see our guide on why disclosure letters are crucial in M&A deals.
Template SPAs should be updated to include specific representations covering: the existence and adequacy of the target’s CMS, compliance with GWG/AML obligations, absence of pending or threatened enforcement actions, and confirmation that no material compliance incidents have been concealed. Indemnities should address post-closing discovery of pre-existing compliance failures, with defined baskets, caps, and survival periods calibrated to the target’s risk profile.
For higher-risk transactions, acquirers should negotiate remediation holdbacks, a portion of the purchase price retained in escrow to fund compliance remediation if deficiencies are identified post-closing. The escrow mechanics should specify release conditions, dispute resolution procedures, and a defined remediation timeline. This approach is increasingly expected by PE sponsors and strategic acquirers navigating the updated compliance landscape.
When compliance failures surface, whether through whistleblower reports, audit findings, or regulatory inquiries, boards must act decisively. The 2026 framework rewards proactive response and penalises delay. For a broader overview of investigation methodology, see our guide on white-collar crime investigations and forensic techniques.
Self-reporting to authorities should be considered, after obtaining legal advice, where an internal investigation reveals systemic misconduct, involvement of senior management, ongoing criminal activity, or material regulatory breaches with significant public or market impact. Voluntary disclosure is increasingly recognised as a mitigating factor in enforcement proceedings under the revised framework, but it must be approached strategically and with full legal privilege protections in place.
Investigations should be led by external counsel to maximise privilege protection. Establish a clear investigation mandate, define the scope, secure and preserve relevant documents, and conduct interviews under privilege. Report investigation findings to the Vorstand (and, where appropriate, the Aufsichtsrat) with recommendations for remediation and, if applicable, self-reporting.
Post-investigation remediation should include root-cause analysis, disciplinary action where warranted, policy and procedure updates, enhanced monitoring for the affected area, and, where negotiated with authorities, an independent monitorship or compliance verification engagement. Boards should insist on a written remediation plan with milestones, assign accountability for implementation, and track progress through the compliance KPI dashboard.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Markus Bauer at RITTERSHAUS Rechtsanwalte PartmbB, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
To translate the guidance above into board-room action, the following six deliverables should be developed, approved, and maintained as standing governance documents:
The 2026 reforms to board duties compliance in Germany are not incremental, they represent a step-change in regulatory expectations and personal-liability risk. Boards that act decisively now will be positioned to demonstrate the documented, risk-proportionate oversight that prosecutors and regulators expect. Three actions stand above all others: first, commission and document a comprehensive compliance gap analysis against the 2026 framework; second, ensure that AML/Geldwäschegesetz compliance programmes are updated, tested, and board-approved; and third, update M&A due diligence and warranty frameworks to reflect the expanded scope of compliance obligations. German boards that treat compliance as a governance priority, rather than a delegated back-office function, will be best protected against the enforcement risks that lie ahead.
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