California Adopts Uniform Premerger Notification Law, Forcing Dealmakers to Navigate New State-Level Antitrust Scrutiny

California Adopts Uniform Premerger Notification Law, Forcing Dealmakers to Navigate New State-Level Antitrust Scrutiny


TL;DR

California enacted the Uniform Antitrust Premerger Notification Act (SB 25), effective January 1, 2027, requiring parties making a federal Hart-Scott-Rodino (HSR) filing to also notify the California Attorney General if they have a significant state nexus. Key provisions include a non-suspensory waiting period, a filing fee up to $1,000, and potential daily non-compliance penalties of $25,000. This development significantly increases the compliance burden and antitrust risk profile for deals involving California-based assets or sales, forcing dealmakers to integrate state-level antitrust analysis into their earliest diligence phases.


Regulatory Brief

Regulation Name
California Uniform Antitrust Premerger Notification Act (SB 25)
Jurisdiction
California
Regulator
California Attorney General
Signed into Law
February 10, 2026
Effective Date
January 1, 2027
Affected Parties
HSR filers with a specified California nexus
Nexus Test
Principal place of business in CA, or CA sales of relevant goods/services >20% of the federal HSR size-of-transaction threshold
Filing Deadline
Within one business day of federal HSR submission
Waiting Period
Non-suspensory
Filing Fee
Up to $1,000
Penalty for Non-Compliance
Up to $25,000 per day
Cure Period
Three business days after written notice

California has officially joined the growing cohort of states imposing mandatory premerger notification requirements, a development that significantly alters the compliance checklist for M&A transactions with a nexus to the nation’s largest state economy. Governor Gavin Newsom signed Senate Bill 25 (SB 25), the California Uniform Antitrust Premerger Notification Act (the Act), into law on February 10, 2026. This move solidifies a trend of state attorneys general seeking earlier visibility into major transactions that might impact local competition. For investment professionals and corporate development executives, this mandates a new layer of antitrust risk management ahead of closing.

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Effective January 1, 2027, the Act requires certain parties who already file under the federal Hart-Scott-Rodino (HSR) Act to submit a copy of that filing to the California Attorney General (AG) within one business day of the federal submission. Importantly, California is the third state to adopt such a regime modeled on the Uniform Law Commission’s Uniform Antitrust Premerger Notification Act, following similar laws enacted in Colorado and Washington.

Defining the California Nexus for HSR Filers

The California requirement is explicitly tethered to the federal HSR framework, avoiding the creation of an independent, parallel review regime with its own novel thresholds or forms. The obligation is triggered for any person making an HSR filing if they meet one of two specific California nexus tests:

  • The filing party has its **principal place of business in California**.
  • The filing party, or an entity it controls, had annual net sales in California of the goods or services involved in the transaction that equal or exceed **20% of the operative federal HSR size-of-transaction threshold**.

Because the sales threshold is tied directly to the annually adjusted HSR threshold—which stood at a transaction size minimum of $133.9 million as of mid-February 2026—dealmakers must incorporate state-level sales data analysis early in their M&A compliance planning. Counsel must now integrate this nexus analysis directly alongside their federal HSR compliance checklists.

Key Procedural Differences and Compliance Costs

While the Act mirrors its counterparts in structure, California has established distinct financial and procedural implications for non-compliance:

Feature California SB 25 Comparison Note
Effective Date January 1, 2027 Gives deal teams time to prepare for the new compliance step.
Waiting Period Non-suspensory Closing is not automatically halted pending state review.
Filing Fee Up to $1,000 A departure from Colorado and Washington, which do not charge fees under their versions of the Uniform Act.
Civil Penalty (Non-Compliance) Up to $25,000 per day Significantly higher than the $10,000 per day cap in Washington and Colorado.
Cure Period Three business days after written notice Mitigates risk of immediate, substantial penalties for inadvertent errors.

The potential for steep daily fines underscores the need for robust internal transaction planning to ensure adherence to the one-business-day deadline following the federal filing.

Strategic Implications: Scrutiny and Information Sharing

The primary motivation for SB 25 is providing the California AG with earlier access to transaction details, facilitating coordination with federal antitrust enforcers like the FTC and DOJ. While the law is non-suspensory—meaning a deal can technically close without state approval—the early notification increases the risk profile for transactions impacting California markets.

The new regime allows the AG to initiate civil investigative demands or file suit under existing antitrust statutes based on information received sooner in the deal lifecycle. Furthermore, the Act includes reciprocity provisions, allowing the California AG to share the submitted information with other states that have adopted the Uniform Act or a substantively equivalent statute (like Washington and Colorado), provided confidentiality standards are met.

For private equity firms and strategic acquirers targeting companies with significant California operations, this development signals several actionable items:

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  1. Early Nexus Assessment: Transaction due diligence must now include a detailed calculation of California sales relative to the HSR threshold as soon as the deal structure is formalized.
  2. Gun-Jumping Vigilance: Heightened state-level review emphasizes the criticality of avoiding “gun-jumping” violations—improper information exchange during negotiations—as more regulators will be reviewing the submitted documents.
  3. Regulatory Timeline Expansion: While the *closing* is not suspended, the administrative burden and the potential for subsequent state investigation mean deal timelines must account for this concurrent state-level compliance step.

Given California’s immense economic footprint, legal experts suggest its new premerger notification mandate will have a more substantial impact than similar laws in other states. Investment bankers advising on cross-border M&A trends and technology sector transactions must proactively budget time and resources to satisfy these state-level disclosure mandates beginning in 2027.

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Frequently Asked Questions

What triggers the new California premerger notification requirement?

The requirement applies to parties already filing under the federal HSR Act who meet one of two California nexus tests. The first is having a principal place of business in California. The second is having annual net sales in California of the goods or services involved in the deal that exceed 20% of the operative federal HSR size-of-transaction threshold. This direct link to the HSR framework means deal teams must now conduct state-specific sales analysis as a standard part of their M&A compliance checklist.

Can the California Attorney General block a deal from closing under this new law?

No, the waiting period under the California Uniform Antitrust Premerger Notification Act is non-suspensory. This means a transaction is not automatically halted pending the state’s review, and the parties can legally close the deal. However, the early notification provides the Attorney General with information to initiate other actions, such as a civil investigative demand or a lawsuit under existing antitrust statutes, creating a new layer of potential regulatory friction even if the closing itself is not delayed.

What are the penalties for failing to file in California?

Non-compliance with California’s new premerger notification law carries a significant financial risk. The state can impose a civil penalty of up to $25,000 for each day of non-compliance. This is substantially higher than the $10,000 per day penalties in similar laws in Washington and Colorado. The law does provide a three-business-day cure period after receiving written notice of a failure to file, which mitigates the risk of immediate penalties for inadvertent errors but underscores the need for robust compliance procedures.

How does the California law differ from similar laws in other states?

While modeled on the same Uniform Act as laws in Colorado and Washington, California’s version has key differences. California imposes a filing fee of up to $1,000, whereas the other states do not charge a fee. Most notably, California’s civil penalty for non-compliance is up to $25,000 per day, more than double the $10,000 cap in Washington and Colorado. These distinctions establish a higher-stakes compliance environment for deals with a California nexus.

What is the primary strategic purpose of California’s new premerger filing requirement?

The law’s main goal is to give the California Attorney General earlier visibility into transactions that could affect competition within the state. By receiving a copy of the HSR filing concurrently with federal regulators, the AG can more effectively coordinate with the FTC and DOJ on antitrust reviews. For dealmakers, this means that transactions with a California nexus face a higher probability of coordinated multi-jurisdictional scrutiny from the outset.