The Council of the European Union has granted approval to Hungary’s adjusted recovery and resilience plan, enabling access to up to €10 billion in EU funds but maintaining payments conditional on achieving reforms and investment goals. This decision provides financial opportunities for Budapest while emphasizing rule-of-law implementation, public-procurement transparency, and judicial independence as key elements for the next phase.
EU ministers approved a new recovery and resilience plan for Hungary, which permits the disbursement of approximately €6.5 billion in grants and €3.5 billion in loans via the bloc’s post-pandemic recovery facility.
This approval does not signify an immediate transfer of funds. Under the Recovery and Resilience Facility, payments are based on performance, meaning the European Commission releases funds only when milestones and targets are successfully met. This condition is politically crucial for Hungary due to previous EU concerns over corruption, judicial independence, and safeguarding the Union’s financial interests, which had obstructed or deferred significant funding flows.
The Council indicated that the delays in achieving the “super milestones” in Hungary’s previous plan rendered it unfeasible, citing cost escalations tied to energy-price volatility, geopolitical changes, implementation hurdles, and time constraints. The revised plan serves both as a rescue initiative for projects needing financing and as a governance structure for Hungary’s effort to rebuild trust with Brussels.
The European Commission’s review of Hungary’s recovery plan highlights measures to enhance anti-corruption agencies, increase public procurement transparency and competitiveness, broaden access to public information, and fortify judicial independence. It also involves green, digital, education, health, transport, and social-inclusion investments.
Timing is crucial. Member states need to complete their reforms and investments by August 2026 to fully benefit from the facility, leaving Hungary little leeway for administrative delays, legal uncertainties, or political showmanship. This also places a clear responsibility on the Commission and Council to thoroughly assess delivery beyond just the legislative passage.
The decision holds significant implications for Hungarian citizens both practically and institutionally. Recovery funds target financing public services, infrastructure, energy efficiency, digitalization, and social cohesion. If correctly implemented, these funds can benefit households, schools, healthcare, and local development. However, insufficient oversight risks reviving concerns about opaque procurement and politicized state capacity that initially led to the funding dispute.
Therefore, the decision should not be perceived merely as Brussels moving on. The new plan offers Hungary the opportunity to demonstrate that reforms are tangible, enduring, and rights-respecting, while imposing a fresh accountability burden on EU institutions to assure taxpayers that financial solidarity is associated with credible safeguards.
The broader political climate remains sensitive. Hungary’s institutional repair goes beyond budgetary concerns, as The European Times has discussed in its coverage of Hungary’s comprehensive rule-of-law reset. Confidence restoration demands more than just unlocking funds; it necessitates visible changes in institutions that shield citizens from corruption, secrecy, weak legal remedies, and governmental overreach.
The Council’s decision thus creates a conditional opportunity rather than a definitive resolution. Hungary has achieved a path back to recovery funding, while Brussels has acquired a renewed framework for influence. The ensuing question is whether the reforms tied to these funds will be executed in a manner that earns trust from citizens, courts, civil society, and EU auditors.














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