Deal
by Brandauer RA
Focus area

Business succession and transfer.

Who takes over and how the handover is done: succession planning, transfer agreement and transfer of business working together.

BRANDAUER Rechtsanwälte
Your law firm

BRANDAUER Rechtsanwälte

Salzburg law firm for corporate, company and transaction law

Every transaction is handled by a coordinated team of lawyers, legal staff and specialists. In company acquisition matters we look at structure, contract, tax and liability together.

The handover of a business decides on the work of a lifetime and on the future of the workforce. Whether succession stays within the family, is sold to third parties or is taken over by management: each route demands its own legal and tax structuring. We order the options and guide you through the transfer.

Succession is not a single contract but a process spanning several years. Early planning creates room to manoeuvre on taxes, liability and the choice of successor. We combine the transfer agreement, the transfer of business and tax reliefs into a coherent solution.

Assess your route

Which succession route fits your handover?

Answer one question about the planned route. You will receive a first, non-binding assessment of your situation.

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01 Question 1

Which route should the succession take?

A family handover, a sale to third parties and a management buy-out each follow their own legal and tax rules. The choice of route shapes the entire transfer.

All paths at a glance

Overview of all answers.

01

A family handover preserves continuity but requires clear rules on the compulsory portion, on balancing claims and on providing for the person handing over.

The handover within the family is frequently made gratuitously or against maintenance benefits such as a pension or a right of residence. These considerations should be set out precisely so that the person handing over is secured and the successor has planning certainty.

Central are the consequences under the law of compulsory portions for other heirs and a possible set-off of a gift. Early planning creates room for taxes and family harmony. We draft the transfer agreement and align it with the position under inheritance law.

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02

A sale to a third party brings a purchase price but shifts the weight to due diligence, the sale contract and the transfer of business.

In a sale to an external buyer, due diligence takes centre stage: the buyer reviews the company, and known and hidden risks are secured in the sale contract through a warranty catalogue and indemnities. The structure as a share deal or an asset deal is fixed early.

If the business is continued, the employment relationships pass to the buyer under the rules on transfer of business (AVRAG). The employees must be informed. We prepare the sale and guide you from the letter of intent to closing.

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03

A takeover by management secures know-how and customer relationships but raises questions of financing and of balancing interests.

In a management buy-out, senior employees take over the company, while in a management buy-in external management steps in. This route secures continuity in know-how and customer relationships but requires viable financing and often a step-by-step transfer of the shares.

Because the person handing over and the buyer have opposing interests here, the balancing of interests should be regulated cleanly: purchase price, transition phase, involvement of the person handing over and the security of the financing. We structure the transfer so that it remains calculable for both sides.

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The routes compared

Family handover, sale and MBO side by side

Each succession route distributes purchase price, liability and structuring effort differently. The table orders the key features and what to watch out for in each case.

The three succession routes compared across the central features
Route Feature What to watch
Family handover Family handover Handover to children or close relatives, often gratuitous or against maintenance Compulsory portion of other heirs, maintenance of the person handing over and tax reliefs
Sale to third parties Sale to third parties Sale to an external buyer for a purchase price, as a share deal or an asset deal Due diligence, warranty catalogue and transfer of business of the employees under AVRAG
MBO/MBI MBO/MBI Takeover by own or external management, frequently step by step Financing, balancing of interests and a clear arrangement for the transition phase

The table offers an overview and does not replace an examination of the individual case. Which route fits depends on the family, the business, the tax position and the time horizon.

Planning succession: family, sale or management

The first question is into whose hands the business should pass. Succession within the family preserves continuity but requires clear rules on the compulsory portion, on balancing claims among siblings and on providing for the person handing over. A sale to third parties brings a purchase price but ends the connection to the family entirely.

A third option is the management buy-out, in which senior employees take over the business. This route secures knowledge and customer relationships but raises questions of financing and of the transition phase. We examine with you which option suits the family, the business and the time horizon.

Transfer agreement, gift and transfer of business

Depending on the route, the handover is implemented through a sale agreement, a transfer agreement or a gift. Where the handover is made against maintenance benefits or against the grant of a right of residence, the mutual obligations must be set out precisely. With a gift, the consequences under the law of compulsory portions and possible set-offs have to be considered.

If the business is continued, the transfer of business under the AVRAG applies: the employment relationships pass to the transferee with all rights and obligations. The employees must be informed and a right of objection has to be observed. We draft the contracts so that the handover and the transfer of the employment relationships fit together.

Taxes and time horizon

The tax structuring is decisive for the success of the handover. For the gratuitous transfer of a business, income tax law provides reliefs, such as the continuation of book values. Where the handover is made for consideration, allowances and special tariff rules may apply. We clarify these questions together with your tax adviser.

The time horizon is decisive: those who plan succession years in advance can use the periods required for tax reliefs, train the successor and carry out the handover step by step. We recommend addressing the topic early, because a well-considered handover takes time and cannot be forced.

Process of the handover and required documents

A handover proceeds in stages: first the goal and the route are clarified, then the business is valued, then the contract and the financing are negotiated, and finally the handover is carried out. Even the early steps set cornerstones that are hard to move later. That is why the planning should begin early.

On the documents side you need, depending on the route, a transfer agreement or a sale agreement, the articles of association, a company valuation and, in a buy-out, the financing commitments. If the business is continued, the employee information under AVRAG must be prepared. We compile the documents and carry out the handover in an orderly way.

Warning signs and next steps

Caution is warranted when succession is begun too late, when the compulsory portion claims of other heirs remain unresolved, when the financing for a management buy-out is not in place or when the employee information under AVRAG is forgotten. Such gaps lead to dispute, delay and avoidable tax consequences.

The sensible next step is an early legal and tax alignment of your starting position. We order the suitable route, align it with your tax adviser and accompany the handover from planning to completion.

This page gives a general overview of Austrian law and does not replace advice in an individual case. The specific circumstances of your handover are always decisive.

FAQ

Common questions.

When should I start planning my succession? +
As early as possible, ideally several years before the planned handover. Early planning opens up tax structuring options and gives time to train the successor and to carry out the handover step by step.
Do employees automatically transfer when a business is handed over? +
If the business is continued, the employment relationships pass to the transferee under the AVRAG with all rights and obligations. The employees must be informed and, under certain conditions, they have a right of objection.
Is a handover to your own children possible as a gift? +
Yes, succession within the family is frequently made gratuitously or against maintenance benefits. The consequences under the law of compulsory portions for other heirs and possible set-offs have to be considered, which we clarify with you in advance.

Plan your succession in good time?

We guide the handover, the transfer of business and the tax structuring from a single source. Call us or send an email.

Contact

A direct line to the firm.

Address

BRANDAUER Rechtsanwälte GmbH Giselakai 51 5020 Salzburg