Buying Distressed Assets in Portugal

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When the owner of a business, a real estate, a shareholding, or another asset is insolvent or in likelihood of insolvency or facing a situation of crisis, it often needs to dispose of its assets in order recovering liquidity useful for settling its debts or carrying on the business.

Potential buyers may seize good opportunities, but they have to consider the risks they may face, and the possible solutions to avoid or limit such risks provided by the relevant jurisdiction.

This online guide is intended to provide a definition of distressed assets and insolvency or likelihood of insolvency and to highlight the risks and possible solutions in various jurisdictions around the world, thus helping potential buyers to approach the transaction in an informed manner.

PortugalLast update: 12 de junio de 2026

What is a distressed asset under Portuguese law?

Portuguese law contains no autonomous statutory definition of a “distressed asset.” The expression is economic and transactional, not a category of positive law. In a Portuguese law guide it should therefore be defined functionally, by reference to the owner's financial condition, the context of the sale and the legal risks that attach to the transfer.

For the purposes of this guide, a distressed asset is any asset, business, claim or shareholding whose value, sale process, transferability or risk profile is materially affected by the owner's financial distress, imminent insolvency, actual insolvency, enforcement pressure or restructuring process. The notion may cover, by way of example:

  • a going concern, a commercial establishment, a production unit, a portfolio of contracts or an intellectual-property package;
  • individual assets such as real estate, equipment, inventory, vehicles, receivables, trademarks or software;
  • shares or quotas in a distressed company;
  • non-performing loans, security packages and litigation claims;
  • assets sold in enforcement, in insolvency, within a PER or RERE, or under a restructuring plan; and
  • assets sold outside any formal procedure by a debtor already under liquidity stress or creditor pressure.


Two distinctions are decisive. First, the asset need not be legally defective: it may be a valuable hotel, a working factory or a respected brand. The distress usually lies in the seller's situation, in the urgency of the sale, in the encumbrances over the asset, or in the risk that creditors later challenge the deal.

Second, Portuguese law clearly distinguishes the route by which the asset is sold — a private sale by a company in difficulty, a sale negotiated in an out-of-court or preventive restructuring context (RERE or PER), a sale by the insolvency administrator after the insolvency declaration, a transfer under an insolvency plan, or an enforcement sale outside insolvency. The safest analysis therefore begins by classifying both the asset and the sale route, because a share acquisition, a going-concern acquisition and a single-asset acquisition produce very different effects for labour, tax, regulatory approvals, contractual continuity and inherited liabilities.

When is a company in imminent insolvency or insolvency?

Portuguese law does not generally use “likelihood of insolvency” as an operative term. Three concepts are key: actual insolvency, merely imminent insolvency and a situation of economic difficulty.

Actual insolvency

A debtor is insolvent when it is unable to meet its due obligations. For legal persons and autonomous estates for whose debts no individual bears unlimited personal liability, insolvency is also deemed to exist where liabilities manifestly exceed assets on a proper valuation basis. In practice, the cash-flow test is central — can the company pay its debts as they fall due? — while the balance-sheet test becomes particularly relevant where liabilities clearly exceed assets.

Merely imminent insolvency

Merely imminent insolvency is the stage preceding the actual inability to pay, where that inability is reasonably foreseeable in the near future. Its relevance is largely functional: it allows the debtor to use preventive tools, such as the PER or the RERE, before value is destroyed.

Situation of economic difficulty

A company is in economic difficulty where it faces serious difficulty in meeting its obligations on time, in particular through lack of liquidity or inability to obtain credit. A company in economic difficulty or in merely imminent insolvency, but still recoverable, may resort to the PER.

Warning signs for buyers

The buyer should treat the following as red flags rather than as a mechanical checklist:

  • a general suspension of payments, or selective payment of critical creditors only;
  • material arrears to the tax authority, social security, employees, landlords or secured lenders;
  • unsatisfied enforcement proceedings, attachment of bank accounts or inability to provide collateral;
  • accelerated debt, covenant breaches, standstill requests or failed refinancing;
  • asset stripping, rushed sales, related-party transfers or sales below market value;
  • delay in approving or filing accounts, going-concern qualifications, or loss of banking support; and
  • pending insolvency petitions, PER, RERE, enforcement sales or creditor negotiations.


The law also imposes on the debtor a duty to file for insolvency within 30 days of the date on which it became, or should have become, aware of the state of insolvency. This matters to the buyer, because a transaction entered into after that point tends to be scrutinised more intensely, especially if it is prejudicial to creditors.

What are the legal risks for the buyer?

The main risk is not merely that the asset may be worth less than expected. It is that the buyer may pay for an asset that is later challenged, encumbered, not fully transferable, or accompanied by liabilities it did not price. The risk profile differs between private sales, restructuring sales and insolvency sales.

Authority, validity and title risk

  • The seller may lack corporate authority, a shareholder resolution, board approval, banking consent or the power to dispose of the asset.
  • After the insolvency declaration, the insolvent debtor is immediately deprived of the powers to administer and dispose of estate assets, which pass to the insolvency administrator.
  • If the buyer contracts with the debtor rather than the insolvency administrator after the declaration, the transaction may be ineffective against the insolvent estate.
  • Title may be affected by mortgages, pledges, retention of title, finance leases, liens, tax attachments, pending enforcement, registration defects or competing restitution or separation claims.
  • For real estate and registrable assets, title and release mechanics must be checked before closing, not only after payment.


Clawback, avoidance and creditor challenge

A private sale by a distressed debtor may be attacked if the debtor later becomes insolvent. Under the CIRE, acts harmful to the estate carried out within the two years before the opening of insolvency proceedings may be set aside in favour of the estate. Harmful acts are those that reduce, frustrate, hinder, endanger or delay creditor satisfaction. Outside the strict CIRE framework, civil-law remedies such as the actio pauliana and the rules on simulation may also be relevant. The buyer's risk is higher where one or more of the following features is present:

  • a sale below market value or without an independent valuation;
  • an insider or related-party buyer;
  • payment by set-off of old debt or by selective assumption of liabilities, rather than in cash;
  • creation of security for pre-existing debt close to insolvency;
  • a deal that removes the debtor's core operating assets without a credible restructuring rationale;
  • unequal treatment of creditors, or evidence that the buyer knew of the insolvency or its imminence; and
  • the absence of a transparent process, of records or of creditor support.


Procedural risk in insolvency sales

A sale by the insolvency administrator is generally more robust than a private sale by a distressed debtor, but it is not risk-free. In insolvency, acts of special relevance require the consent of the creditors' committee or, in its absence, the creditors' meeting. The sale of the business, of establishments, of all inventory or of material assets commonly falls within this category. Secured creditors must be heard in relation to the assets over which their security bears. The buyer should also ascertain whether any restitution, separation or ownership claim is pending in relation to the asset.

The buyer should not assume that a Portuguese insolvency sale is equivalent to a U.S.-style “free and clear” order. The sale may effectively dispose of the estate's interest and of the distribution of proceeds, but specific encumbrances, registrations, statutory liabilities, labour rules, licences and third-party rights must still be reviewed.

Assumption of liabilities and statutory succession

A share deal normally imports the company with all its liabilities, including hidden ones. An asset deal is more selective, but the buyer may still inherit or be exposed to specific liabilities by operation of law or contract. The most relevant categories are employment liabilities, where the assets amount to a business, establishment or economic unit that retains its identity; tax costs and contingencies, including VAT, transfer tax (IMT) and stamp duty; environmental, planning, health-and-safety or sector-specific obligations attached to the asset or activity; contractual liabilities where contracts are assigned, novated or continued with the buyer; licence conditions and regulatory approvals in sectors such as energy, financial services, health, telecoms, transport or concessions; data-protection, intellectual-property and cybersecurity liabilities where operating systems or customer databases are transferred; and merger-control obligations where the acquisition of assets or rights amounts to an acquisition of control.

Criminal, director-liability and reputational risk

The buyer is not exposed to criminal liability merely because it buys distressed assets. Risk arises where the buyer participates in, or knowingly benefits from, fraudulent asset stripping, simulated consideration, concealment of assets, destruction of creditor value, preferential treatment of selected creditors or conduct capable of falling within the offences of wilful or negligent insolvency. A transparent process, a defensible price and contemporaneous evidence of the commercial rationale are therefore essential.

Commercial and evidentiary risk

Distressed sellers can rarely give normal warranties, indemnities or transitional support. Time pressure, incomplete data rooms and a cash-flow crisis often mean that the accounts, inventories, licences, technical records, HR files, maintenance logs and customer-contract files are incomplete. The buyer should assume that the contractual warranty package will not substitute for due diligence and closing mechanics.

 

How can risks be limited outside formal procedures?

A private distressed acquisition can be lawful and efficient, but it must be structured as an arm's-length transaction that is defensible against the debtor, the creditors, a future insolvency administrator and regulators. The buyer's goal is to convert uncertainty into documented risk allocation.

Status and solvency diligence

  • Check whether the seller is already subject to insolvency, PER, RERE, ordinary enforcement, tax enforcement or asset attachments.
  • Review payment arrears, maturities, banking defaults, tax and social-security certificates, payroll arrears and pending litigation.
  • Assess whether the sale itself would leave the seller unable to continue trading or to satisfy its creditors.
  • Identify related-party features or conflicts of interest at seller, lender and buyer level.
  • Confirm whether the transaction requires board, shareholder, bank, bondholder, secured-creditor or counterparty consent.


Title, encumbrance and asset-perimeter diligence

  • Conduct land, commercial, vehicle and intellectual-property registry searches, and pledge and security searches, where relevant.
  • Identify retention-of-title goods, leased assets, consignment stock and assets belonging to customers or suppliers.
  • Prepare an asset schedule precise enough to distinguish owned assets from leased, licensed or third-party assets.
  • For receivables, test assignability, debtor notices, set-off rights, defences, limitation periods and documentary evidence.
  • For contracts, check assignment restrictions, termination triggers, insolvency clauses, change-of-control clauses and essential-supply protections in a PER.


Valuation and creditor fairness

The central defence against later challenge is a properly evidenced market-value transaction. In practice, the buyer should obtain or request an independent valuation or market benchmarking; evidence of a competitive process, where feasible; board minutes explaining the seller's commercial rationale and the use of proceeds; consents from creditors, especially secured creditors, where value is material or assets are core; payment into an account or escrow that discharges the secured debt or agreed creditor claims; and a closing file evidencing that the buyer did not knowingly participate in prejudice to creditors.

Contractual protections

The acquisition agreement should be lean enough for a distressed context yet precise enough to close cleanly. Common protections include conditions precedent for releases, registrations, third-party consents and regulatory approvals; a closing-deliverables schedule comprising payoff letters, release documents, tax and social-security certificates, employee information and evidence of asset handover; escrow or direct-payment mechanics, especially for secured assets; limited but targeted warranties on title, authority, encumbrances, taxes, employees, licences, data, intellectual property and litigation; specific indemnities only where the seller has real capacity to perform or where security or escrow is available; termination rights tied to objectively verifiable events, while respecting the PER and insolvency restrictions on ipso facto clauses; undertakings not to dissipate assets between signing and closing; and post-closing transition services, data migration, access to records and cooperation with registrations.

Labour, tax and regulatory structuring

  • If a business or economic unit is transferred, comply with the information and consultation duties and assess the automatic transfer of employees.
  • Characterise the deal as an asset sale, going-concern transfer, share sale, business lease, assignment of contracts or debt acquisition.
  • Assess the VAT treatment, in particular whether the transfer of an establishment or autonomous branch of activity falls outside VAT as a transfer of a totality of assets to a VAT taxable person.
  • Check transfer-tax (IMT), stamp-duty and municipal property-tax implications where real estate is involved.
  • Review merger-control thresholds and sector approvals before signing, or at least before closing.
  • Where distress is material and a creditor challenge is foreseeable, consider moving the transaction into a RERE, PER or insolvency-plan framework rather than relying on a purely private sale.

How can risks be limited through restructuring or insolvency procedures?

Formal or semi-formal restructuring procedures do not remove all buyer risk, but they can materially improve enforceability, transparency and creditor acceptance. The main Portuguese routes are the RERE, the PER and insolvency proceedings, including the insolvency plan.

RERE — out-of-court restructuring

The RERE is a voluntary, ordinarily confidential, out-of-court restructuring regime. It is available to a debtor in economic difficulty or imminent insolvency, provided the debtor is recoverable, and it governs negotiations and restructuring agreements between the debtor and one or more creditors who expressly and unanimously submit those negotiations or that agreement to the regime. For a distressed-asset buyer, the RERE is useful where a sale of assets or of part of the business forms part of a wider restructuring agreed with key creditors. Its limitation is contractual: by itself, it does not bind non-participating creditors. The RERE is therefore strongest where the participating creditors control the relevant debt, collateral and consents. A RERE-based sale should include creditor support, valuation evidence, a clear use-of-proceeds clause, security-release mechanics and, if needed, a pathway into a PER should wider binding effects become necessary.

PER — judicial preventive restructuring

The PER is a court-supervised preventive restructuring process for a company in economic difficulty or merely imminent insolvency, but still recoverable and not yet actually insolvent. It is designed to allow negotiations with creditors towards a recovery agreement. The process is urgent and involves a provisional judicial administrator. The PER can reduce enforcement pressure, coordinate creditor negotiations and allow the sale of assets, of a business line or of the entire business to be embedded in a recovery plan. Once the plan is approved by creditors and confirmed by the court, the buyer benefits from a more robust procedural framework than in a purely private sale. The buyer should nonetheless verify asset title, labour transfer, tax, regulatory approvals and any conditions in the plan. During the PER, acts of special relevance typically require the intervention or authorisation set out in the CIRE; the buyer should verify the provisional judicial administrator's role and obtain written evidence that the transaction is authorised in the required form.

Insolvency — sale by the insolvency administrator

Once insolvency is declared, the insolvency administrator controls the administration and disposal of the estate's assets. After the judgment becomes final and the report-assessment meeting has taken place, the administrator should proceed promptly to sell the assets, unless creditor resolutions prevent it; early sale is possible for assets subject to deterioration or depreciation. In insolvency, the business comprised in the estate should preferably be sold as a whole, unless there is no satisfactory offer or a separate sale is more advantageous. The administrator must normally dispose of assets preferably by electronic auction, but may, with stated reasons, choose another, more convenient method. Acts of special relevance require the consent of the creditors' committee or, in its absence, the creditors' meeting, and secured creditors must be heard in relation to the assets over which their security bears. This route is often the cleanest for the buyer where the debtor is already insolvent, because the seller is a court-appointed office-holder and the sale is embedded in the statutory liquidation process. It is not, however, a substitute for due diligence.

Insolvency plan and transfer to a new vehicle

An insolvency plan may provide for liquidation, recovery, the transfer of the business to another entity, debt-to-equity conversion, new financing, asset sales and other restructuring measures. Portuguese law expressly contemplates restructuring by transfer (saneamento por transmissão), under which one or more new companies may be incorporated to operate establishments acquired from the insolvent estate against adequate consideration.[4] This is useful for going-concern acquisitions, loan-to-own strategies and transactions in which the buyer injects new money or acquires control through the plan. The plan route usually takes longer and involves creditor-voting dynamics, but it confers greater legitimacy and a better-aligned capital structure.

A typical acquisition process on a formal route

In practical terms, an acquisition on a formal route ordinarily follows these steps: identify the procedural status (no procedure, RERE, PER, insolvency, enforcement sale or insolvency plan); identify the competent seller or decision-maker (corporate bodies, secured creditor, provisional judicial administrator, insolvency administrator, creditors' committee, creditors' meeting or court); sign a non-disclosure agreement and obtain a focused data room, recognising that distressed data will often be incomplete; submit a non-binding indication of interest identifying the asset perimeter, the price basis, the assumptions and the approvals required; provide a binding offer with price, deposit, conditions, labour and regulatory assumptions, desired closing date and treatment of encumbrances; obtain consents and procedural approvals (creditor-body consent for acts of special relevance, the hearing of secured creditors, PER or RERE approvals, court confirmation where applicable and sector approvals); close with payment to the correct account, release and cancellation documents, title instruments, registrations, employee-transfer documentation and transition arrangements; and keep a complete closing file as a future defence against challenges.

Buyer liabilities in pre-insolvency or insolvency procedures

The buyer's liability depends on the transaction structure, the asset perimeter and the procedure used. Portuguese law should not be approached with the simplistic assumption that “an asset sale means no liabilities” or that “an insolvency sale cleans everything.”

Share deal versus asset deal

In a share deal, the buyer acquires the company and thereby assumes its full historical liability profile: tax, labour, environmental, contractual, litigation, regulatory and contingent liabilities remain within the company. This route may preserve licences and contracts more easily, but it imports all hidden liabilities unless they are restructured by a plan or otherwise discharged. In an asset deal, the buyer generally acquires specified assets and assumes only the liabilities it expressly assumes or that pass by law. Statutory succession and asset-linked obligations may nonetheless be significant.

Employment liabilities

Where the transaction transfers a business, an establishment or a part of a business that constitutes an economic unit retaining its identity, the position of employer in the relevant employment contracts transfers to the buyer. Employees keep their contractual and acquired rights, in particular remuneration, seniority, professional category and functional content. The transferor is jointly and severally liable for employee claims that fell due up to the transfer date, and for the corresponding social charges, for the two subsequent years. The regime is fact-sensitive, and its interaction with insolvency sales should be analysed carefully. The buyer should not assume that an insolvency sale automatically excludes transfer-of-undertaking effects. The safe approach is to map the economic unit, the employees, the consultation duties, the employees' right to object and the accrued claims before pricing the transaction.

Tax liabilities and VAT

The tax treatment depends on the structure. The transfer of a commercial establishment, of a totality of assets or of a part capable of constituting an independent branch of activity is not treated as a supply for VAT purposes if the acquirer is, or becomes by reason of the acquisition, a VAT taxable person of the relevant type. This is a VAT non-supply rule, not a general exemption from all taxes or all liabilities. Real-estate acquisitions may trigger IMT and stamp duty, and asset transactions may have corporate-tax consequences for the seller. The buyer should obtain tax and social-security information and be alert to sham transactions, business-succession arguments, hidden permanent-establishment issues, unpaid payroll taxes, VAT regularisations and real-estate tax liens or charges.

Environmental, licences and regulated assets

Environmental remediation duties, planning obligations, licence conditions and sector approvals may follow the asset or the operator of the activity. The buyer should review permits, inspections, administrative proceedings, non-compliance notices, licence transferability, change-of-control rules and the conditions for continued operation.

Contractual continuity and essential contracts

The acquisition of assets does not automatically transfer all contracts. Assignment may require consent, novation, notice or regulatory approval. In a PER, special protections may prevent counterparties from terminating or altering essential executory contracts solely because of pre-stay non-payment or the opening of the preventive process. In insolvency, ipso facto clauses tied only to the insolvency declaration may be restricted by the CIRE. Transaction documents should therefore distinguish asset transfer, contract assignment, contract novation and operational continuity.

Competition law

Acquiring assets, rights of use or control over part of a business may be a concentration if it creates a lasting change of control. Portuguese merger-control thresholds combine market-share and turnover criteria. Where notification is required, the transaction must be notified to the Competition Authority after signing and before implementation. Gun-jumping risk should be considered even in urgent distressed acquisitions.

Is a public tender mandatory?

No public tender is generally mandatory merely because the assets are distressed or because the seller is in a PER, RERE or insolvency. The sale method must, however, fit the procedure and be defensible as value-maximising and creditor-protective.

In insolvency proceedings, the statutory preference is sale by electronic auction. The insolvency administrator may nevertheless, with stated reasons, choose another method admitted in enforcement proceedings or another that it considers more convenient. Private negotiations, sealed bids, bilateral sale processes and going-concern sales are therefore possible, particularly where speed, asset complexity, confidentiality, the preservation of jobs or going-concern value justify them. For acts of special relevance — including the sale of the business, of establishments or of all inventory — the consent of the creditors' committee or, failing that, of the creditors' meeting is required, and secured creditors have a specific right to be heard and to react to the projected price or sale method in relation to the assets over which their security bears.

A public or competitive process is nevertheless often advisable, even where not mandatory: it helps demonstrate market value, protects the administrator, reduces clawback and challenge risk, and improves creditor acceptance. Separate public-procurement rules may apply where the seller or the transaction is itself subject to public-contracting rules, but those rules do not arise merely because a private company is distressed.

Conclusions and practical takeaways

The notion of a “distressed asset” should be defined functionally. It is not a Portuguese statutory category but a transaction affected by financial distress, legal pressure and procedural risk. The first legal question is always the seller's status: no procedure, RERE, PER, insolvency, enforcement or plan implementation.

Private distressed sales require careful evidence of market value, authority, fairness among creditors, use of proceeds and title; otherwise a later insolvency may expose the buyer to clawback or other challenges. The safest routes for core assets are often a sale by the insolvency administrator, a sale embedded in a confirmed PER or insolvency plan, or a RERE or PER transaction supported by key creditors.

No buyer should rely on the label “asset sale” as a full liability shield. Labour transfer, tax, environmental, regulatory, competition and contractual-continuity issues must each be separately diligenced. Portuguese insolvency sales are not automatically equivalent to a broad “free and clear” order: releases, consents and registrations should be built into closing. Speed matters in distressed M&A, but the buyer's closing file is its future defence — valuation evidence, authority evidence, creditor-approval evidence and payment-flow evidence should all be preserved.

In short, in Portugal the acquisition of distressed assets is best analysed not as the acquisition of a special type of asset, but as an acquisition from — or in relation to — a debtor in economic difficulty, imminent insolvency or insolvency. The legal quality of the acquisition depends primarily on the sale route, the seller's authority, the value-formation process, the impact on creditors and the liabilities that attach to the asset or business acquired.

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