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Every cross‑border acquisition involving German employees forces the same threshold question: do you brief a dedicated employment lawyer, or can your corporate M&A counsel handle the labour dimension in‑house? The answer directly affects deal timing, purchase‑price allocation, works‑council strategy, and post‑closing integration risk. For in‑house counsel, CFOs, and PE deal teams running a live process in Germany, the stakes of choosing wrongly, or choosing too late, are material. This article provides a concrete, dimension‑by‑dimension decision framework for the employment lawyer vs corporate M&A counsel Germany choice, maps deal stages to the right specialist, and identifies the 2026 trigger points that increasingly tilt the recommendation toward earlier labour counsel involvement.
An employment specialist, sometimes called labour counsel, brings deep, practice‑specific expertise in German statutory employment law to each phase of a deal. Their core value in an M&A context is not general transactional skill but granular knowledge of the Betriebsverfassungsgesetz (BetrVG, Works Constitution Act), §613a BGB (transfer of undertakings), the Kündigungsschutzgesetz (KSchG, Protection Against Unfair Dismissal Act), collective bargaining agreements, and the procedural mechanics of works‑council co‑determination.
This specialist is indispensable when an acquisition involves a German target with any of the following features: a sitting works council, workforce restructuring plans, collective agreements governing pay or hours, defined benefit pension obligations, outstanding employment litigation, or mass termination scenarios. In asset deals where §613a BGB triggers the automatic transfer of employment relationships, the employment specialist interprets which rights and liabilities transfer, quantifies exposure, and designs enforceable remedies inside the SPA.
The employment specialist’s engagement in a German cross‑border deal normally spans the following workstreams:
Corporate M&A counsel can coordinate these workstreams, but they rarely have the practitioner depth to lead works‑council negotiations or interpret complex collective‑agreement overlaps. Where employment complexity is present, trying to economise by omitting the specialist typically shifts cost downstream, into post‑closing disputes, delayed integration, or mispriced indemnities.
Corporate M&A counsel is the natural lead on transaction structuring, SPA drafting, commercial due diligence, and risk allocation across all deal dimensions, including a baseline layer of employment review. For many smaller acquisitions or deals where the German target has a modest, non‑unionised workforce and no works council, M&A counsel can handle the employment dimension adequately without specialist input.
The sweet spot for relying on corporate M&A counsel alone is a deal where: the German entity has fewer than roughly 50 employees, employment contracts are largely standard, there is no works council, no collective bargaining agreement applies, pension obligations are defined‑contribution or minimal, and there is no material history of employment litigation. In this scenario, M&A counsel integrates a streamlined employment review into the broader commercial diligence, flags any anomalies, and drafts proportionate SPA protections.
The limitation surfaces when employment complexity exceeds the transactional baseline. Specifically:
When any of these features is present, hiring labour counsel for M&A in Germany is not a luxury, it is a risk‑management imperative. The question is not whether to engage a specialist, but how early.
| Dimension | Employment Specialist (Labour Counsel) | Corporate M&A Counsel |
|---|---|---|
| Primary focus | Deep labour law, works‑council strategy, collective bargaining, transfer of undertakings (§613a BGB) | Transaction structuring, SPA drafting, commercial risk allocation |
| Best deal stages to lead | Pre‑sign targeted DD; pre‑closing works‑council plan; employment‑specific SPA schedules; integration | Pre‑sign commercial DD, SPA negotiation, tax & corporate structuring |
| Works‑council / co‑determination | Lead adviser, drafts notices, runs negotiations, manages statutory timelines | Support role, coordinates with deal team; not lead on co‑determination law |
| Transfers of undertakings (§613a BGB) | Interprets applicability, maps liabilities, designs enforceable remedies | Identifies transfer risk; drafts SPA protections but limited on remedy detail |
| Employee litigation & claims | Runs claim‑specific DD, quantifies exposure, designs mitigation | Flags litigation risk and negotiates SPA price adjustments |
| Cost (advisory fees) | Higher hourly rate; justified when quantum of claims or works‑council risk is material | More cost‑efficient for basic DD and SPA drafting; may miss deep issues |
| Timing impact | May add pre‑sign time but reduces post‑sign surprises and integration delays | Faster early signature; higher risk of post‑closing adjustments |
| Remedies (indemnities / insurance) | Advises on employment‑specific indemnities, escrow sizing, R&W suitability | Drafts SPA remedies; may lack granular view for insurance placement |
| Enforceability | Designs enforceable works‑council and termination strategies | Designs contractual remedies; defers technical enforcement to specialists |
| When to choose | Works council present, collective agreements, §613a triggered, mass terminations plausible | Employee exposure low, workforce small / no works council, timeline or fees prioritised |
Three dimensions are typically decisive. First, the presence (or likely formation) of a works council almost always demands a specialist lead. Second, any asset‑deal structure triggers §613a BGB, making specialist interpretation essential. Third, where aggregate employment claims or pension liabilities could materially shift the purchase price, only a labour counsel can quantify the risk with the precision the SPA needs. In the absence of all three triggers, corporate M&A counsel can usually manage the employment dimension alone.
The single most common mistake in German cross‑border M&A is engaging employment counsel too late, after signing, when the SPA remedies are already locked. Involve a labour specialist pre‑sign when any of these triggers exists:
For low‑risk deals (small team, no works council, standard contracts), a post‑sign targeted review, conducted between signing and closing, can be proportionate. But the default for any deal with material German employment exposure should be pre‑sign engagement, starting with a targeted employment due diligence Germany checklist and HR data‑room request list.
Under the Betriebsverfassungsgesetz, works councils have statutory information and consultation rights on matters including operational changes (Betriebsänderungen), mass dismissals, and changes to working conditions. In an M&A context, these rights can directly affect deal timing: a works council that has not been properly consulted can delay integration, challenge restructuring, or negotiate a costly social plan (Sozialplan).
Employment counsel should lead when works‑council co‑determination is engaged. Their scope includes:
Corporate M&A counsel coordinates the broader deal timeline around these milestones but should not substitute for the specialist on substance.
§613a BGB provides that, on a transfer of a business or part of a business (typically an asset deal), all existing employment relationships transfer automatically to the acquirer, along with all rights and obligations arising from those contracts. The transferor and transferee are jointly liable for obligations that arose before the transfer for a period of one year.
In share deals, §613a BGB does not apply directly because the employer entity itself does not change. However, post‑closing restructurings that move business units between group entities can trigger the provision. Key SPA‑drafting points include:
Employment counsel should draft or closely review these provisions; M&A counsel alone may underestimate the granularity required for employee risk allocation in the SPA.
Targeted employment due diligence in Germany should cover, at minimum, the following data‑room items:
For workforces of 25 or fewer, a 100% contract review is standard. For larger workforces, sampling by contract type and seniority is typically proportionate, with full review reserved for management contracts and any contracts with non‑standard clauses. Materiality thresholds should be agreed with the deal team at the outset, industry observers expect buyers to flag individual claims or legacy pension obligations that could exceed a pre‑agreed monetary threshold as a proportion of enterprise value.
Three mechanisms are commonly used to manage employment risk in the SPA. The choice between employment indemnities vs insurance is not binary, deals frequently layer all three:
Where aggregate employment exposure is significant, insist on employment counsel negotiating these items directly, not as a downstream review of M&A counsel’s draft.
The table below provides indicative fee ranges for specialist employment input versus standard M&A counsel coverage. All figures are approximate and depend on deal complexity, workforce size, and jurisdiction.
| Item | Employment Specialist | Corporate M&A Counsel |
|---|---|---|
| Targeted DD (small / focused) | €3,000 – €15,000 (one expert, targeted covenant + claims review) | €2,000 – €8,000 (integrated with M&A DD; less depth) |
| Deep DD + works‑council strategy | €20,000 – €100,000+ (team, countrywide, negotiations) | N/A, requires external employment specialist input |
| R&W insurance placement (bespoke) | Specialist advises on insurability; premium typically 1–3% of limit for standard risks (employment exposures often higher or carved out) | M&A counsel coordinates but rarely leads placement |
| Escrow sizing for employment claims | 3–12 months of payroll or a percentage of max quantified claims (deal dependent) | Negotiated by M&A counsel but needs specialist quantification |
The core trade‑off is straightforward: spending €10,000–€30,000 on targeted employment DD and works‑council strategy pre‑sign is almost always cheaper than managing a post‑closing works‑council dispute, voided terminations, or an uninsured pension shortfall that can run into six or seven figures.
Several developments in 2026 are increasing the likelihood that employment issues will materially affect cross‑border deal value in Germany, making the question of when to hire an employment lawyer in Germany more pressing than ever:
The likely practical effect of these trends is that the “employment lawyer vs corporate M&A counsel” decision will tilt further toward early specialist engagement in the majority of mid‑market and large German acquisitions.
Use the table below to match your deal profile to the right counsel. Each row is a single actionable trigger condition.
| If your priority is… | Choose |
|---|---|
| Minimise legal spend; workforce < 10 employees, no works council, no collective agreements, no complex pension issues | Corporate M&A counsel only |
| Avoid post‑sign surprises where works council, §613a, mass redundancies, or legacy litigation could change deal value | Employment specialist leads (early, pre‑sign) |
| Fast signature (tight timetable) and residual employment risk is small or insurable | Corporate M&A counsel leads with targeted employment check and conditional SPA protections; specialist briefed for flagged items |
| You need an enforceable social plan or must consult / negotiate with a works council | Employment specialist must lead, statutory timing and process are critical |
| Asset‑deal structure that triggers §613a BGB transfer of employment relationships | Employment specialist to interpret scope, liabilities, and SPA remedies |
| Foreign acquirer without German HR presence or local payroll infrastructure | Employment specialist pre‑sign, local obligations (payroll, social security, works council) require German‑law expertise from day one |
For a quick operational flow, use this trigger‑action checklist:
The framework is deliberately binary at the decision point. Once you know whether employment complexity exceeds the transactional baseline, the choice of when to use an employment specialist is clear, and delay is the primary risk.
Not every deal needs both specialists from the outset, but certain moments in the transaction lifecycle should trigger a formal engagement decision. Brief counsel, or escalate to specialist input, at these points:
When engaging counsel, request deliverables on a fixed‑fee or capped basis wherever possible, particularly for the DD memo and consultation‑notice package. This improves cost predictability and aligns incentives. The Global Law Experts lawyer directory can help identify German‑qualified employment and M&A specialists filtered by practice area and jurisdiction.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Tim Schwarzburg at KUNZ.law, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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