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Every private equity deal touching Denmark now carries an additional layer of regulatory exposure. The consolidation of the Danish Competition Act in late 2024 and the Danish Competition and Consumer Authority’s (DCCA) first use of its discretionary call‑in power in 2025 have fundamentally changed the calculus around merger control Denmark compliance. Deal teams can no longer treat Danish notification thresholds as a binary pass/fail gate; instead, below‑threshold transactions may be pulled into review at the regulator’s discretion. This guide provides a practical, transaction‑focussed playbook for private equity buyers, buy‑side counsel and lenders, covering the central question every sponsor must answer early: notify proactively, or structure and contract around the risk while preparing for a potential DCCA call‑in.
Before engaging external counsel or modelling regulatory delay into a financing timetable, deal teams should screen every Danish target through the following framework. The matrix is designed to be applied at term‑sheet stage, early enough to influence SPA architecture and financing structure.
| Threshold / Risk Signal | Typical Examples | Practical Action |
|---|---|---|
| Danish turnover thresholds met (combined aggregate DKK 900m+ and at least two parties each with DKK 100m+ turnover in Denmark) | Mid‑market platform acquisition where both buyer portfolio companies and target generate significant Danish revenue | Mandatory notification to the DCCA, build Phase I review period (25 working days) plus potential Phase II (additional 90 working days) into deal timeline and long‑stop date |
| Below Danish thresholds but market‑share concentration flags (combined share >30 % in a relevant Danish market) | Bolt‑on acquisition in a concentrated sector (e.g., food processing, telecoms infrastructure, pharma distribution) | High call‑in risk, prepare a voluntary pre‑notification submission and proactive market‑share analysis; draft SPA with conditional‑completion and call‑in long‑stop provisions |
| EU thresholds met (combined worldwide turnover >€5bn and EU‑wide turnover of each of at least two parties >€250m) | Large cross‑border PE platform deal with Danish operations | One‑stop‑shop: notify to the European Commission, Danish filing not required unless the EC refers back under Art. 9 EUMR |
| No thresholds met, no concentration flags | Small bolt‑on with negligible Danish overlap | Monitor; retain market‑share memo in data room for rapid response if DCCA enquires |
Run this screening at the indicative‑offer or exclusivity stage. If the outcome is “mandatory notification” or “high call‑in risk,” the deal timeline, financing commitment letter and SPA must all accommodate regulatory delay from the outset. Retrofitting merger‑control conditionality after signing is far more expensive and creates execution risk that lenders will price in.
Part 4 of the Danish Competition Act establishes the framework for merger notification in Denmark. The statute was consolidated in late 2024, incorporating amendments that, among other things, introduced the call‑in mechanism that has since reshaped deal planning for private equity sponsors and corporates alike. The DCCA administers and enforces the merger control regime, with the Competition Council acting as the decision‑making body for substantive assessments.
A merger notification Denmark obligation arises when both of the following conditions are met:
Turnover is calculated on a group‑wide basis, which for private equity buyers means including revenue from all portfolio companies within the same fund structure, a point frequently underestimated during early screening. The DCCA follows principles broadly aligned with the European Commission’s Consolidated Jurisdictional Notice when determining which entities’ turnover to attribute.
Where EU merger thresholds under the EU Merger Regulation (Council Regulation (EC) No 139/2004) are met, the “one‑stop‑shop” principle applies and the transaction is notified exclusively to the European Commission, unless the Commission refers the case back to Denmark under Article 9 EUMR.
The most consequential development for deal teams navigating merger control Denmark in 2025–26 has been the introduction, and first exercise, of the DCCA’s call‑in power. Under the amended Danish Competition Act, the DCCA may order the notification of a completed or anticipated merger that falls below the standard turnover thresholds, provided the transaction is liable to significantly impede effective competition, in particular by creating or strengthening a dominant position. The authority’s discretion here is broad and subject to limited judicial review on substantive grounds.
In 2025, the DCCA exercised this power for the first time, signalling to the market that below‑threshold transactions in concentrated sectors face genuine regulatory exposure. Industry observers expect the authority to apply the tool selectively but firmly, particularly in sectors where national market conditions diverge meaningfully from broader European dynamics, such as grocery retail, domestic logistics and specialised manufacturing.
The Danish merger control regime captures any transaction that results in a lasting change of control over an undertaking or part of an undertaking. For private equity, this definition carries several practical traps:
A minority stake does not automatically escape scrutiny. Under the Danish Competition Act, control includes the possibility of exercising decisive influence over an undertaking. For PE sponsors, the following structures create risk:
The practical takeaway is that minority investments with governance upside, a hallmark of growth‑equity and co‑investment structures, must be screened through the merger control Denmark lens at structuring stage.
Deal teams should apply the following rapid screening questions at the indicative‑offer stage:
An affirmative answer to any of these questions should trigger a detailed competition assessment before proceeding to binding documentation.
The call‑in mechanism allows the DCCA to require notification of a transaction that would not otherwise meet the standard turnover thresholds. The authority can exercise this power where it has reasonable grounds to believe that the merger is liable to significantly impede effective competition in Denmark. The power can be exercised in respect of both anticipated and completed transactions, meaning that closing does not insulate a buyer from subsequent regulatory intervention.
Practically, the DCCA will typically become aware of below‑threshold transactions through market intelligence, complaints from competitors or customers, press coverage, or its own monitoring of concentrated sectors. Once called in, the transaction is subject to the standard Phase I and (if necessary) Phase II review timelines, which can add months of uncertainty to a deal that was originally structured without regulatory conditionality.
The DCCA’s first exercises of the call‑in power in 2025 provided important signals for deal teams. While the specific facts of those transactions remain partially confidential, publicly available commentary from leading Danish competition practices identifies several recurring themes:
| Event | Statutory / Expected Timeline | Practical Buyer Action |
|---|---|---|
| DCCA issues call‑in order | No fixed deadline for authority to act; may occur before or after closing | Engage Danish competition counsel immediately; issue hold‑separate notice to management |
| Notification filed (post call‑in) | As directed by DCCA (typically short deadline once order issued) | Submit pre‑prepared market‑share memo and document pack |
| Phase I review | 25 working days from complete notification | Respond to information requests promptly; maintain operational separation if transaction completed |
| Phase II review (if initiated) | Up to 90 additional working days | Model financial impact of extended delay; negotiate remedies in parallel with review |
| Decision (clearance / remedies / prohibition) | At end of Phase I or Phase II | Execute remedies or trigger reverse termination / unwind provisions if necessary |
Where a deal is likely to attract DCCA scrutiny, sponsors can reduce the competitive overlap, and therefore the regulatory risk, through structural measures embedded in the transaction itself:
The share purchase agreement is the primary contractual vehicle for allocating merger‑control risk. The following clauses should be considered as standard in any transaction with a Danish nexus that triggers the screening matrix above:
Lenders and sponsors must align the financing documentation with the regulatory timeline from the outset. Key drafting considerations include:
Proactive preparation is the single most effective risk‑mitigation strategy for below‑threshold transactions in concentrated markets. The following materials should be compiled during due diligence and maintained in a dedicated regulatory sub‑room:
If engagement with the DCCA becomes necessary, present the evidence file with a clear narrative: the transaction either does not give rise to a significant impediment to effective competition, or any such concerns can be addressed through targeted remedies that preserve the deal’s core commercial rationale. Efficiency arguments should be quantified where possible and supported by third‑party expert analysis. The DCCA is receptive to well‑prepared submissions that anticipate the authority’s analytical framework rather than reacting to information requests piecemeal.
The first 48 hours after receiving a call‑in notification are critical. Deal teams should execute the following steps without delay:
Once the notification is filed following a call‑in, the standard DCCA review timetable applies. Phase I takes 25 working days from the date the DCCA confirms the notification is complete, not from the date it is submitted, which in practice means the clock may not start for several weeks if the authority requests supplementary information. If Phase II is initiated, the additional review period can extend up to 90 working days. Extensions may be granted if the parties offer commitments or if the DCCA requires additional market testing. Deal teams should proactively manage the timetable by submitting complete and well‑documented notifications and responding to information requests within days rather than weeks.
Where the DCCA identifies potential competition concerns, it may accept commitments, either structural (divestiture of specific assets or operations) or behavioural (undertakings to maintain supply, pricing access or service levels), in lieu of prohibition. Early engagement on remedy design is critical. Industry observers expect the DCCA to prefer structural remedies in cases involving horizontal overlaps, while behavioural commitments may be accepted for vertical or conglomerate concerns. Sponsors should prepare a remedies package in parallel with the substantive defence and present it proactively during Phase I to maximise the chance of clearance without escalation to Phase II.
Where a transaction meets the thresholds under the EU Merger Regulation, the one‑stop‑shop principle applies and the European Commission has exclusive jurisdiction. Danish national notification is not required in these circumstances. However, deal teams should remain alert to two scenarios in which Danish merger control Denmark exposure can re‑emerge even in an EU‑level filing: first, the Commission may refer all or part of the case to the DCCA under Article 9 EUMR if the transaction threatens to significantly affect competition in a distinct Danish market; second, the DCCA itself may request a referral.
Timing coordination is essential in multi‑jurisdictional filings, PE sponsors should align the EC and any parallel national filing timetables to avoid scenarios in which Danish clearance becomes the critical path to closing.
To support deal teams in applying the framework set out in this guide, the following resources are recommended:
These materials are available on request and can be tailored to the specifics of any transaction with Danish merger control Denmark implications.
Merger control Denmark is no longer a threshold‑driven binary exercise. The DCCA’s call‑in power, exercised for the first time in 2025, means that every PE transaction with a Danish nexus, regardless of size, requires early competition screening, proactive SPA and financing architecture, and contingency planning for regulatory intervention. Deal teams should integrate the screening matrix into their standard investment‑committee process, engage Danish competition counsel at term‑sheet stage, and treat the evidence file as a core due‑diligence workstream rather than an afterthought.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Hans-Christian Ohrt at Andersen Partners, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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