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Turkey’s digitalisation of company governance took a decisive step forward with the Industrial Registry Communiqué SGM 2026/4, published in the Official Gazette and introducing mandatory and optional frameworks for electronic general assemblies in Turkey. The Communiqué accelerates a shift already rooted in the Turkish Commercial Code (Law No. 6102), which first permitted electronic shareholder participation for joint-stock companies. For publicly held companies, the practical effect is immediate: boards must verify EGKS readiness, update articles of association where necessary, and ensure shareholders can authenticate before the late-2026 effective dates. This guide provides the step-by-step compliance checklist, sample wording and risk notes that general counsel, company secretaries and board members need to act now.
The following checklist distils the core actions every affected company should complete before the Communiqué’s late-2026 operative date. Each item is expanded in the sections below, with sample wording and templates.
Industry observers expect the majority of publicly held companies to complete these steps by Q3 2026, with private joint-stock companies following on a voluntary timetable.
The legal foundation for electronic shareholder meetings in Turkey rests on the Turkish Commercial Code (Law No. 6102), which governs the formation, governance and dissolution of commercial companies. The TCC introduced provisions enabling joint-stock companies (anonim şirket) to hold general assemblies through electronic means, provided certain procedural safeguards, quorum verification, secure authentication and proper minute-keeping, are observed. These provisions represented a permissive framework; the Communiqué now builds operational detail on top of them.
The Ministry of Trade’s Trade Registry Directorate has regulatory oversight of company registration and record-keeping obligations. The Industrial Registry Communiqué SGM 2026/4, published in the Resmî Gazete, sets out specific requirements for the transition to digital share registers and formalises the infrastructure for e-general-meeting compliance across company types.
The short answer is yes, but the formalities depend on company type and listing status. Under the TCC, joint-stock companies have express statutory permission to conduct general assembly business through electronic means, including voting and deliberation. The Capital Markets Board (SPK) has reinforced this for listed companies by mandating EGKS participation as the standard channel for shareholder engagement at electronic shareholder meetings.
For non-public joint-stock companies, electronic participation is permissive rather than mandatory. These companies must ensure their AoA explicitly authorises e-assembly procedures; a silent AoA creates litigation risk, as a challenged resolution could be deemed procedurally defective. Limited liability companies (limited şirket) are not governed by the EGKS framework and must rely on their own AoA provisions and general TCC rules to conduct remote meetings, a distinct legal basis with separate requirements.
Electronic general assemblies must satisfy the same quorum thresholds as physical meetings. The TCC sets minimum attendance and voting percentages that vary by resolution type (ordinary vs. qualified majority). The critical compliance point is that the e-assembly platform must be capable of verifying quorum in real time and producing an auditable log of attendee identities and shareholdings.
Minutes of electronic meetings must be recorded in a form that meets the TCC’s notarisation and filing requirements. In practice, this means generating a digital minutes document, time-stamped, signed electronically by the meeting chair and the Ministry-appointed representative (where required), and filing it with the relevant trade registry. Vote logs, authentication records and system access data should be archived separately as supporting evidence.
The Electronic General Assembly System (EGKS), sometimes referenced as the e-GEM platform, is the centralised infrastructure through which publicly held companies must channel shareholder participation at electronic meetings. The system is operated under the oversight of the Central Securities Depository (MKK), which also maintains the central share registry for listed companies.
For companies, the first practical step is confirming that they have an active EGKS account and that their share data within MKK is current and reconciled. For shareholders, the process involves registering with the platform and completing identity verification using an accepted secure electronic identification method.
Shareholders attending via EGKS must authenticate using one of the recognised e-signature or secure e-ID methods. The BTK sets the technical standards for electronic signatures in Turkey, distinguishing between simple, advanced and qualified electronic signatures. For general assembly voting purposes, the likely practical requirement, consistent with the Communiqué’s e-signature thresholds, is an advanced or qualified e-signature, or authentication through the MKK’s own identity verification procedures.
Company secretaries should communicate the authentication steps to shareholders at least 30 days before the scheduled e-assembly, providing clear instructions, technical support contacts and a deadline for completing registration. A pre-meeting test session is strongly recommended.
SGM 2026/4 formalises the transition from paper-based share ledgers to digital share registers for Turkish companies. For publicly held companies already integrated with MKK, the digital share register in Turkey is effectively the MKK’s central electronic record. Private joint-stock companies, however, must now ensure their own registers meet the Communiqué’s data-integrity and format standards, a change that may require new software, updated internal processes and reconciliation procedures.
The Communiqué also opens the door to blockchain share registry pilots. Early indications suggest that the Ministry of Trade and MKK are monitoring distributed-ledger approaches to share registration, though no formal regulatory approval for blockchain as the sole register of record has been issued. Companies exploring blockchain pilots should treat them as supplementary to, not replacements for, the legally mandated register format.
The evidential weight of a digital share register in Turkish courts depends on its integrity, auditability and consistency with official records. Courts will examine whether the register was maintained in compliance with the TCC and the Communiqué, whether entries are time-stamped and attributable, and whether the company can demonstrate an unbroken chain of custody.
For companies considering blockchain registries, the key risk is that Turkish law does not yet expressly grant blockchain entries the same evidential presumption as conventionally maintained registers. Mitigation strategies include maintaining a parallel conventional register, notarising periodic snapshots of the blockchain record, and ensuring that all entries are reconciled with MKK data. Tax reporting obligations must also be aligned: share transfers recorded digitally must flow through to tax declarations in the same manner as paper-recorded transfers, and any discrepancy between the digital register and tax filings creates enforcement risk.
This section provides the sample texts and step-by-step templates that company secretaries and in-house counsel need to implement e-general-meeting compliance. Each template should be adapted to the company’s specific circumstances and reviewed by qualified Turkish counsel before adoption.
Template, adapt to your company’s circumstances:
“RESOLVED that the Board of Directors of [Company Name] A.Ş. hereby authorises the holding of general assembly meetings of the Company by electronic means, in accordance with the Turkish Commercial Code (Law No. 6102) and Industrial Registry Communiqué SGM 2026/4.
FURTHER RESOLVED that [Name/Title] is designated as the responsible officer for coordinating EGKS registration, shareholder authentication, vendor engagement and compliance with all applicable notice and record-keeping requirements.
FURTHER RESOLVED that the Board instructs management to prepare and submit for shareholder approval the necessary amendments to the Company’s Articles of Association to expressly permit electronic general assemblies and electronic voting.
Adopted by [unanimous/majority] vote on [Date].”
Template, insert as a new article or amend existing general assembly article:
“Article [X], Electronic General Assembly
General assembly meetings of the Company may be held wholly or partially by electronic means, including through the Electronic General Assembly System (EGKS), in accordance with the Turkish Commercial Code and applicable secondary legislation.
Shareholders may exercise their attendance, speaking and voting rights electronically, provided they have completed the required authentication and registration procedures. Electronic votes shall have the same legal effect as votes cast in person.
The Board of Directors shall determine the technical platform, authentication methods and procedural details for each electronic meeting and shall include full electronic-participation instructions in the meeting notice.”
Template, include with the standard meeting notice:
“NOTICE OF ELECTRONIC PARTICIPATION
The General Assembly meeting of [Company Name] A.Ş. scheduled for [Date] will be available for electronic participation via [EGKS / specified platform].
Shareholders wishing to attend and vote electronically must:
1. Complete EGKS/platform registration by [deadline, at least [X] days before the meeting].
2. Authenticate their identity using [qualified e-signature / MKK secure e-ID / specified method].
3. Test their connection and access by [test date].
Technical support: [contact details]. For registration assistance: [contact details].
Shareholders who do not complete registration by the deadline will not be able to participate electronically but may attend in person at [venue address].”
The following comparison table summarises the electronic general assemblies in Turkey framework by company type, availability and key compliance steps. Use it alongside the quarterly calendar below to plan your implementation.
| Company Type | E-Assembly Availability (2026) | Key Compliance Steps & Timeline |
|---|---|---|
| Publicly held joint-stock companies (listed) | Mandatory use of EGKS for shareholder participation (per SGM 2026/4 and Capital Markets Board guidance) | Update AoA if needed; board resolution; notify MKK and ensure EGKS readiness; shareholder notice; vendor test. Action: start immediately, complete by Q4 2026. |
| Non-public joint-stock companies (private) | Optional (may elect e-assembly); Communiqué facilitates but does not mandate | Board resolution to authorise e-assembly; AoA amendment recommended; vendor due diligence; shareholder consent process. Start: now, complete before intended e-meeting. |
| Limited liability companies (Ltd.) | Not governed by EGKS (not joint-stock), e-meetings may be possible via AoA but different rules apply | Review AoA; obtain shareholder consent; record minutes and voting securely; consider hybrid formats. Start: as needed; consult counsel. |
Recommended quarterly calendar:
The transition to electronic shareholder meetings and digital share registers introduces specific litigation traps that companies must anticipate. The most common disputes in company governance in Turkey arising from e-assemblies involve procedural defects that shareholders can use to challenge the validity of resolutions.
To mitigate these risks, implement the following internal controls before every electronic general assembly:
Electronic general assemblies in Turkey are no longer a future ambition, they are a present-day compliance requirement for listed companies and a strategic opportunity for private joint-stock companies seeking more efficient governance. The window for implementation before the late-2026 operative date is narrowing, and the companies that act earliest will face the least disruption and the lowest litigation risk.
Boards should prioritise three immediate actions: audit the AoA, pass the authorising board resolution, and confirm EGKS registration and vendor readiness. The sample templates provided in this guide offer a practical starting point but should be tailored to each company’s structure, shareholder base and listing status with the assistance of qualified Turkish commercial counsel.
For companies exploring digital share register upgrades or blockchain pilot programmes, the additional compliance layer introduced by SGM 2026/4 makes early legal and technical advice essential. The cost of remediation after a challenged resolution or a regulatory audit finding significantly exceeds the cost of getting the process right from the outset.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Ece Nihan Günen at Bağ & Günen Law Office, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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