EU unlocks €16.4bn for Hungary under new PM’s reform pledge
The European Commission has conditionally released €16.4bn in frozen funds for Hungary after Prime Minister Péter Magyar pledged sweeping judicial and anti-corruption reforms. Ursula von der Leyen called the move a 'wind of change' but tied the money to strict oversight.
The European Commission has greenlit the release of €16.4 billion in previously frozen EU funds for Hungary, but only if Prime Minister Péter Magyar’s government delivers on a series of long-postponed reforms within tight deadlines. Ursula von der Leyen, the Commission’s president, described the decision as a historic 'wind of change' during a tense meeting in Brussels on Monday, while warning that Brussels would monitor progress in real time.
The funds, part of the bloc’s cohesion policy, had been suspended in late 2022 over concerns about Hungary’s judicial independence and corruption controls. Magyar, who took office in May after defeating Viktor Orbán’s Fidesz party in a landslide, has framed the reforms as a national renewal project. But diplomats in Brussels and Budapest say the real test begins now—with the first compliance review scheduled for October 15.
Key Conditions
- ✅ Judicial reform within six months
- ⚡ Anti-corruption agency independence by year-end
- 💡 Media pluralism safeguards by December 31
Von der Leyen’s team insisted the unlocking was not a political favor but a direct response to concrete legislative plans submitted last week. Sources close to the negotiations say the Commission had initially demanded stricter preconditions, but Magyar’s team negotiated softer triggers tied to progress rather than full implementation. The deal also includes a €500 million down payment released immediately to address Hungary’s chronic water treatment infrastructure failures.
| Reform Area | Deadline | Trigger for Release |
|---|---|---|
| Judicial appointments | December 31, 2024 | Legal framework enacted |
| Anti-corruption agency | March 31, 2025 | Appointment of independent leadership |
| State media oversight | June 30, 2025 | New regulator operational |
The breakthrough comes as Hungary faces austerity pressures and rising public debt, with Magyar warning that without the funds, key public services would collapse. Critics in Budapest, however, argue the reforms are cosmetic and fear Brussels’ oversight will weaken after the initial tranches are paid. The European Parliament’s budget committee will vote on final approval on September 10, with final disbursement expected by October if no further disputes arise.
💡 Pro Tip
Watch Hungary’s next Supreme Court appointments—Brussels will fast-track sanctions if judicial independence is compromised, according to senior EU officials.
In parallel, Magyar’s government has quietly begun restructuring the National Bank of Hungary to comply with EU demands for greater transparency. The central bank confirmed it will publish monthly reports on foreign currency reserves starting October 1, a move analysts say signals deeper alignment with EU financial governance standards. Meanwhile, the opposition Democratic Coalition party has filed a motion in parliament to challenge the legality of the reform package, arguing it violates Hungary’s constitutional sovereignty.
📋 By The Numbers
- €500 million — Immediate release for water infrastructure
- 72 hours — Deadline for first judicial reform draft law
- 4 — Number of EU member states publicly opposing the deal
The stakes are high: failure to meet the terms could see the remaining €15.9 billion frozen indefinitely, while full compliance may unlock an additional €3.2 billion in cohesion funds earmarked for 2026. As diplomats shuttle between Budapest and Brussels, one question lingers: Can a government built on anti-establishment rhetoric now deliver the systemic changes it once derided?