Our Expert in Luxembourg
No results available
The Luxembourg AIFMD II implementation 2026 timeline is now live: the Law of 3 March 2026 transposed Directive (EU) 2024/927 into domestic legislation, and the revised AIFM Act and UCI Act became applicable on 16 April 2026. For authorised AIFMs, UCITS management companies, and their boards, the window for paper-based gap analysis is closed, operational compliance must be in place today. This checklist maps every material change to a responsible owner, a concrete deliverable, and a deadline so that general partners, compliance officers, fund operations teams, and depositaries can track progress against a single, practitioner-level reference document.
Certain complex provisions have been postponed to 16 April 2027, but the CSSF communication of 18 March 2026 makes clear that interim arrangements must already be documented and defensible.
Before working through each section below, fund managers should register three overarching action items that drive every downstream task in this Luxembourg AIFMD II implementation 2026 programme:
Industry observers expect the CSSF to prioritise reviews of liquidity management tool documentation and delegation frameworks in its 2026 supervisory programme, making early action on these two items the single highest-return investment of compliance resources.
The Law of 3 March 2026 simultaneously amended both the Luxembourg law of 12 July 2013 on alternative investment fund managers (the AIFM Act) and the law of 17 December 2010 on undertakings for collective investment (the UCI Act). It transposes the two core EU instruments: Directive (EU) 2024/927 (commonly called AIFMD II) and the parallel UCITS VI amendments. The transposition covers loan origination, liquidity management tools, delegation requirements, depositary obligations, regulatory reporting enhancements, and expanded investor disclosure rules.
| Milestone | Date | Significance |
|---|---|---|
| EU transposition deadline (Directive 2024/927) | 16 April 2026 | Member States required to have national legislation in force |
| Law of 3 March 2026 adopted (Luxembourg) | 3 March 2026 | Parliamentary adoption; publication in Mémorial A |
| Revised AIFM Act & UCI Act applicable | 16 April 2026 | Operational compliance required for all in-scope entities |
| CSSF communication to industry | 18 March 2026 | Supervisory expectations, reporting templates, interim guidance |
| Postponed provisions effective | 16 April 2027 | Specific complex provisions (see below); interim arrangements required |
The Law of 3 March 2026 defers a limited set of provisions to 16 April 2027, in line with the phased approach permitted under Directive (EU) 2024/927. Early indications suggest the postponed items relate to certain granular loan-origination reporting templates and specific elements of the expanded Annex IV data fields that require new ESMA technical standards to be finalised. The CSSF communication of 18 March 2026 confirms that managers must nonetheless adopt interim compliance arrangements and be prepared to demonstrate readiness to the supervisor upon request. Boards should minute their interim approach and schedule a formal review no later than Q4 2026.
The revised AIFM law 2026 Luxembourg framework introduces changes across seven operational pillars. Each one requires a distinct implementation workstream:
The revised delegation rules tighten the nexus between an AIFM’s Luxembourg substance and the functions it delegates to third-party managers or advisers in other jurisdictions. Managers that rely heavily on sub-delegation must now demonstrate, with documentary evidence reported to the CSSF, that they retain adequate human and technical resources in Luxembourg to supervise the delegated functions effectively. For cross-border passporting, the new framework aligns notification procedures and introduces a standardised information template that must accompany each passport notification, reducing the scope for divergent national authority interpretations across the EU.
The UCITS VI transposition and AIFMD II changes together broaden the depositary’s oversight mandate. Depositaries must now conduct enhanced due diligence on the entire custody chain, verify that sub-custodians meet minimum capital and organisational requirements, and report material findings to the AIFM and, where relevant, directly to the CSSF. The ABBL has noted that Luxembourg depositaries will need to upgrade their monitoring systems and data-extraction capabilities to comply with the revised safekeeping requirements, particularly for assets held in non-EU jurisdictions where local law may limit segregation.
This is the core operational section. Each sub-section identifies the responsible function, the required actions, the recommended deadline, and the deliverable that should be on file for CSSF inspection.
Regulatory reporting is among the most operationally intensive aspects of the Luxembourg AIFMD II implementation 2026 programme. The expanded Annex IV requirements and the new UCITS-level Annex V reporting demand significantly more data, more granular classifications, and, for larger managers, higher reporting frequency.
| Reporting Obligation | Entities in Scope | Frequency / First Due Date |
|---|---|---|
| Annex IV (AIFMD II, expanded) | AIFs managed by Luxembourg AIFMs, including RAIFs where the manager is a Luxembourg-authorised AIFM | Quarterly for large AIFMs; annual for sub-threshold managers, first reporting period: Q2 2026 (per CSSF guidance) |
| Annex V (UCITS VI related reporting) | UCITS and Luxembourg management companies | As per CSSF schedule, see CSSF communication (18 March 2026) |
| LMT notifications and liquidity-tools reporting | Open-ended AIFs and UCITS | Event-driven (activation/deactivation) and periodic, operational protocols required from 16 April 2026 |
| Loan-origination-specific reporting | Loan-originating AIFs | Aligned with Annex IV cycle, additional data fields on credit risk and concentration |
The revised Annex IV template introduces new fields covering borrowing and leverage breakdowns by instrument type, more detailed counterparty-exposure reporting, environmental and social characteristics where applicable, and granular liquidity-profile classifications. PwC Luxembourg has noted that the data-collection burden increases substantially for multi-strategy funds and funds-of-funds, where underlying data must be sourced from multiple sub-managers. Operationally, this means fund operations teams must map each new field to a data owner, establish automated extraction where possible, and build in reconciliation checkpoints before each submission deadline.
The CSSF communication of 18 March 2026 sets out the regulator’s expectations for the transition period. It confirms that reporting templates will be published on the CSSF eDesk portal, provides guidance on transitional arrangements for postponed provisions, and specifies the timeline for first submissions. The communication also signals the CSSF’s intention to conduct thematic reviews of LMT implementation and delegation substance during the second half of 2026. Managers should treat this communication as a binding supervisory instruction and incorporate its requirements into their compliance monitoring programme.
While AIFMD II and the UCITS VI transposition apply primarily at the level of the manager, the impact cascades differently depending on the vehicle type. Below are entity-specific action items:
The AIFMD II framework introduces enhanced disclosure obligations for variable remuneration, including carried interest arrangements. While the carried interest 8590 bill 2026 is a separate Luxembourg legislative initiative, the two workstreams interact: fund managers must ensure that carried interest structures disclosed under AIFMD II comply with both the new transparency requirements and any forthcoming domestic tax rules.
To accelerate implementation, the following templates should be developed, approved by the board, and made available to all relevant teams. These documents will also serve as evidence of compliance readiness during CSSF inspections:
Luxembourg AIFMD II implementation 2026 is not a one-off project, it is an ongoing compliance programme that will require iterative updates as ESMA technical standards, CSSF Q&A guidance, and the carried interest 8590 bill evolve over the coming months. Fund managers should begin by completing the role-by-role checklists in this article, preparing the templates described in the Appendices section, and scheduling a board resolution to formalise their approach. For managers that need to stress-test their implementation programme or require hands-on legal support for document amendments, CSSF filings, or reporting configuration, connecting with a specialist Luxembourg asset management lawyer is the logical next step.
The Global Law Experts lawyer directory allows you to filter by jurisdiction and practice area to find qualified advisers in Luxembourg.
Last reviewed: 2 May 2026. This article reflects the legal position as of the date of review. Readers should verify current CSSF guidance and Legilux publications before acting on the information provided.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Martin Hermanns-Couturier, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
posted 5 minutes ago
posted 30 minutes ago
posted 1 hour ago
posted 1 hour ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
posted 4 hours ago
posted 4 hours ago
posted 4 hours ago
posted 5 hours ago
No results available
Find the right Advisory Expert for your business
Sign up for the latest advisor briefings and news within Global Advisory Experts’ community, as well as a whole host of features, editorial and conference updates direct to your email inbox.
Naturally you can unsubscribe at any time.
Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.
Global Advisory Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional advisory services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced advisors, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.
Send welcome message