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FTC Announces 2026 Revised Thresholds and Filing Fees for HSR Filings

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Blog

FTC Announces 2026 Revised Thresholds and Filing Fees for HSR Filings

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3 Min Read

Authors

Richard FalekConor ReidyMilcah A. ZewdieMeredith Stonitsch

Related Topics

Antitrust Intelligence
M&A
Federal Trade Commission (FTC)

Related Capabilities

Antitrust Transactions
Antitrust/Competition
Mergers & Acquisitions
Private Equity

January 15, 2026

The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) announced on Wednesday the increased Hart-Scott-Rodino (HSR) Act thresholds for 2026. These thresholds increase the minimum value of transactions that must be notified under the HSR Act to $133.9 million. The new thresholds will become effective for transactions 30 days after publication in the Federal Register.

The HSR Act requires all persons or entities contemplating certain mergers or acquisitions that meet or exceed the jurisdictional thresholds of the Act to file notifications of that transaction with the FTC and the Department of Justice. Once both parties have submitted their HSR filings, the enforcement agencies have up to 30 days to decide whether to seek additional information—commonly known as a “Second Request.” The parties also have the option to request “Early Termination,” which, if granted, will shorten the 30-day waiting period. If the 30-day waiting period expires without the issuance of a Second Request, or if Early Termination is granted, the parties are free to close the transaction. If the reviewing agency issues a Second Request, the agency has 30 days from the date the parties substantially comply with the request to decide whether to allow the transaction to proceed or seek to block it in court.

2026 Jurisdictional Thresholds

The FTC adjusts the HSR Act filing thresholds annually, based on changes to the gross national product. Due to the 2026 growth in the gross national product, the FTC will increase the “size of transaction” threshold from $126.4 million to $133.9 million. Any transaction valued below $133.9 million (for HSR purposes) need not be reported. For transactions valued between $133.9 million and $535.6 million (up from $505.8 million), the “size of person” test further determines whether the parties need to make a filing. For an HSR filing to be required in this range, one party must have annual net sales or total assets of at least $267.8 million (up from $252.9 million) and the other party must have annual net sales or total assets of at least $26.8 million (up from $25.3 million). If a transaction is valued above $535.6 million, the “size of person” test does not apply.

Below is a table displaying the original dollar amount thresholds of the HSR Act, the current (2025) thresholds, and new 2026 thresholds:

Original Threshold2025 Threshold2026 Threshold
$10 million$25.3 million$26.8 million
$50 million$126.4 million$133.9 million
$100 million$252.9 million$267.8 million
2026 Filing Fee Thresholds

The filing fee amounts the parties must pay as well as the thresholds for those fees will change to the following:

2025 Filing Fee

2025 Applicable Size of Transaction

2026 Adjusted Filing Fee[1]

2026 Adjusted Applicable Size of Transaction

$30,000

Less than $179.4 million

$35,000 ($5,000 increase)

Less than $189.6 million

$105,000

Not less than $179.4 million but less than $555.5 million

$110,000 ($5,000 increase)

Not less than $189.6 million but less than $586.9 million

$265,000

Not less than $555.5 million but less than $1.111 billion

$275,000 ($10,000 increase)

Not less than $586.9 million but less than $1.174 billion

$425,000

Not less than $1.111 billion but less than $2.222 billion

$440,000 ($15,000 increase)

Not less than $1.174 billion but less than $2.347 billion

$850,000

Not less than $2.222 billion but less than $5.555 billion

$875,000 ($25,000 increase)

Not less than $2.347 billion but less than $5.869 billion

$2,390,000

$5.555 billion or more

$2,460,000 ($70,000 increase)

$5.869 billion or more

The HSR thresholds are only one part of the analysis to determine whether an HSR filing is required. Please contact one of the authors with any questions regarding the reportability of a transaction. Winston lawyers regularly advise parties regarding the reportability of transactions, as well as guide clients through the reporting process and any government investigation that may follow.


[1] Following passage of the Merger Filing Fee Modernization Act, the filing fee amounts have been updated based on changes to the Consumer Price Index.

Related Professionals

Related Professionals

Richard Falek

Conor Reidy

Milcah A. Zewdie

Meredith Stonitsch

Richard Falek

Conor Reidy

Milcah A. Zewdie

Meredith Stonitsch

This entry has been created for information and planning purposes. It is not intended to be, nor should it be substituted for, legal advice, which turns on specific facts.

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