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European insolvency law is undergoing significant changes. Following the 2019 Restructuring Directive, on the basis of which the WHOA (Dutch Scheme) was introduced in the Netherlands, the EU is taking the next step towards harmonisation with Directive (EU) 2026/799. The Directive establishes common minimum rules in six areas: avoidance actions, tracing of assets belonging to insolvency estates, pre-pack proceedings, the duty of directors to submit a request for the opening of insolvency proceedings, creditors’ committees, and key information factsheets. The implications for the Netherlands are significant: the Bankruptcy Act will need to be fundamentally revised in several respects. This involves minimum harmonisation — Member States may maintain or introduce stricter rules — but the definitions of ‘insolvency’ and ‘director’ are expressly determined by national law. The implementation deadline is 22 January 2029.
Directors: timely action is now mandatory
One of the most far-reaching changes will be the obligation for directors to submit a request for the opening of insolvency proceedings within three months in the event of insolvency. Upon implementation, the Dutch legislature will need to define the concept of ‘insolvency’ in more detail and may also opt for a shorter timeframe. Failure to submit the request in time may result in lower recovery rates for the general body of creditors, and the directors may be held personally liable for such a deterioration. The Netherlands currently has no statutory obligation to submit such a request in this sense, meaning that its introduction represents a significant break with the existing regime.
The obligation allows for some flexibility. It may be suspended if the directors take measures that are designed to avoid damage to the creditors of the insolvent company and that ensure a level of protection for the general body of creditors that is equivalent to the protection provided by the duty to submit a request for the opening of insolvency proceedings. An example of this would be measures taken by the owners of the company to restore the company’s solvency. Anyone who makes use of this suspension option and for whom things ultimately go wrong remains liable for the damage caused to creditors that would not otherwise have been caused had the request for the opening of insolvency proceedings been submitted in a timely manner. A possibility of exoneration exists for directors who can demonstrate, on the basis of objective circumstances, that the measures taken were reasonably likely to secure an equivalent or better outcome for creditors.
The pre-pack procedure: from practical tool to legal framework
The pre-pack proceedings — whereby a buyer is sought in confidence prior to the formal insolvency proceedings — lack a legal basis in the Netherlands. Following, amongst other things, the Heiploeg judgment of the Court of Justice of the European Union, such a basis proved indispensable, particularly for the position of employees in the event of a going concern. The Directive now provides the necessary framework: the liquidation phase is regarded as insolvency proceedings instituted with a view to the liquidation of the assets of the transferor under the supervision of a competent public authority, so that employees do not automatically become employed by the purchaser in the event of a pre-pack sale from insolvency.
Member States are obliged to introduce pre-pack proceedings comprising two phases: a preparation phase, the aim of which is to find an appropriate buyer for the debtor’s business, and a liquidation phase, the aim of which is to approve and execute the sale and to distribute the proceeds to the creditors. During the preparation phase, the sale process must be competitive, transparent and fair and meet market standards. The preparation phase starts when a monitor is appointed at the initiative of the debtor; the monitor must be independent from the debtor and any party closely related to the debtor. The company largely retains its management powers during the preparation phase. Upon the commencement of the liquidation phase, the court or the competent authority authorises the sale on the recommendation of the monitor, either via a public auction or following approval by the creditors. The key criterion is the best-interest-of-creditors test: no creditor may be worse off under the pre-pack proceedings than they would be in a piecemeal liquidation.
The framework offers clear advantages to acquirers. The acquirer takes over the business free of debts and liabilities, unless the acquirer expressly consents to bear those debts and liabilities. Executory contracts which are necessary for the continuation of the business are assigned to the acquirer without the counterparty’s consent — unless the acquirer is a competitor of that counterparty. Interim financing is protected against avoidance actions. Parties closely related to the debtor are eligible to act as acquirers, but only under stricter conditions: they must disclose their relationship in their bid to the monitor. Should they fail to do so, the court or the competent authority may revoke the benefits of the debt-free transfer.
Avoidance actions: clear time limits replace the open-ended standard
The bankruptcy clawback provision — referred to in the Directive as ‘avoidance actions’ — is being radically revised. Whereas current Dutch law does not specify fixed suspect periods and the burden of proof regarding knowledge of the prejudicial transaction is complex, the Directive introduces clear retrospective periods.
The Directive distinguishes between three categories.
1. Preferences within three months of the submission of the request for the opening of insolvency proceedings
If (i) the debtor is unable to pay its debts, and (ii) without being obliged to do so, (iii) the debtor satisfies an individual creditor or provides security within three months of the bankruptcy petition, then this transaction may be set aside. In the case of compulsory settlement of the debt – that is, in a manner as agreed – an additional requirement applies (iv) that the creditor knew the debtor was insolvent.
2. Legal acts in exchange for no or manifestly inadequate consideration
For legal acts performed in exchange for no or manifestly inadequate consideration, a suspect period of twelve months applies, without a requirement of knowledge.
3. Legal acts intentionally detrimental to creditors
In the case of legal acts by which the debtor has intentionally caused a detriment to the general body of creditors, the period is extended to two years, and both the debtor’s intent and the other party’s knowledge of that intent must be proven.
In the case of parties closely related to the debtor, the requisite knowledge is presumed. That presumption is rebuttable.
A successful avoidance action obliges the beneficiary to return the actual benefits themselves or to pay their monetary equivalent. The insolvency practitioner has a maximum of three years from the commencement of the insolvency proceedings to bring such a claim.
Insolvency practitioners: broader powers to trace assets
The Directive strengthens the position of insolvency practitioners in tracing assets belonging to insolvency estates or that are the subject of avoidance actions.
At the request of the insolvency practitioner, designated courts or authorities are empowered to obtain direct and immediate access to bank account information — both nationally and, via the European BARIS interconnection system, across borders — provided that the information is necessary for the identification and tracing of assets belonging to the insolvency estate or which are the subject of avoidance actions. Once it has been verified that these conditions have been met, the designated courts or authorities shall transmit the bank account information obtained to the insolvency practitioner who requested it.
Insolvency practitioners shall be granted timely access to central beneficial ownership registers without the entity or ultimate beneficial owner concerned being notified. In addition, insolvency practitioners shall be guaranteed direct and expeditious access to national registers and databases, such as land registers and intellectual property registers, without the intervention of a court or authority acting as an intermediary. Insolvency practitioners appointed in another Member State must not be subject to substantive access conditions that are less favourable than those applicable to domestic insolvency practitioners.
Creditors’ committees and the key information factsheet
The Directive requires Member States to allow for the establishment of a creditors’ committee following the opening of insolvency proceedings, at the request of the general meeting of creditors or of individual creditors. The creditors’ committee represents the interests of the creditors as a whole and has the right to hear and be heard by the insolvency practitioner on important decisions, the right to be heard in the proceedings, and the right to request and receive information. Members are, in principle, exempt from personal liability, unless there is intent or gross negligence.
In addition, the Directive requires each Member State to draw up a key information factsheet on essential elements of national law on insolvency proceedings. The content of key information factsheets shall be concise, accurate, clear and non-technical, and shall include: the conditions for the opening of insolvency proceedings, the rules governing the lodging, verification and admission of claims, the rules governing the ranking of creditors’ claims and the distribution of proceeds, and the average reported length of insolvency proceedings. This key information factsheet is made available via the European e-Justice Portal. For creditors with cross-border claims and for investors wishing to assess the risk of foreign insolvency proceedings, this represents a welcome improvement in transparency.
What next?
The transposition deadline is 22 January 2029, with a later date of 10 July 2029 for the provisions on cross-border access to bank account information via BARIS. The new rules on avoidance actions apply exclusively to legal acts carried out after the transposition date — there is no retroactive effect. The Dutch legislature will need to draft an implementing act in the coming years. Stakeholders will be given the opportunity to provide input through a public consultation. Directors, insolvency practitioners, creditors and other interested parties are advised to continue monitoring developments and to assess how the new rules will affect their position.