Foundations, architecture and legal status of the trade agreements between the European Union, EFTA States and MERCOSUR
The three legal orders governing the agreements
Founding treaty of MERCOSUR, signed by Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay and Uruguay. It establishes the Southern Common Market with the objective of free movement of goods, services and factors of production, adoption of a common external tariff (CET) and coordination of macroeconomic and sectoral policies.
Art. 1 (common market), Art. 5 (transition instruments), Art. 18-24 (accession and denunciation)
Grants MERCOSUR the capacity to negotiate trade agreements as a regional bloc
Detailed chapter and annex structure of each agreement
Positive commitment schedules (modes 1-4), financial services, telecommunications
357 EU GIs protected, patents, trademarks, designs
Paris Agreement as essential element, deforestation, labour rights
Signature, ratification, provisional application and CJEU proceedings
Signed — 16.01.2026
Bruxelles
CJEU referral — 21.01.2026
European Parliament requests compatibility opinion with EU Treaties. Estimated timeline: 12-18 months.
Provisional application — 26.02.2026
The Commission announces provisional application of the iTA, alongside the CJEU referral — unprecedented legal situation.
MERCOSUR ratifications
Uruguay and Argentina have ratified. Brazil and Paraguay pending.
Regulation (EU) 2026/687
Additional agricultural safeguards adopted by the Council.
Signed — 16.01.2026
Ratification by 27 member states required
Process that may take several years.
Signed — 16.09.2025
Rio de Janeiro
Ratification underway by each EFTA and MERCOSUR State
Switzerland: Federal Council message to Parliament expected. Norway, Iceland, Liechtenstein: national procedures underway.
Fundamental differences between the two agreements
| Criterion | EU-MERCOSUR (iTA/EMPA) | EFTA-MERCOSUR (FTA) |
|---|---|---|
| Legal nature | Two instruments: EMPA (mixed association agreement, Art. 217 TFEU) + iTA (trade agreement, Art. 207 TFEU) | Single free trade agreement (intergovernmental, EFTA Convention Art. 43) |
| Ratification | iTA: EP consent + Council (no national ratification). EMPA: + ratification by 27 member states | Individual ratification by each EFTA State (CH, NO, IS, LI) + each MERCOSUR State |
| Chapters | 23 chapters + preamble + 40+ annexes | 16 chapters + 19 annexes + bilateral appendices per country |
| Investment | No investment chapter in the iTA (planned in EMPA) | Substantive Chapter 9 with specific commitments per country (Annexes XV-XVI) |
| Services | Chapter 10: positive commitment schedules, 10 annexes | Chapter 8: bilateral appendices per country (8 countries), financial services and telecoms in separate annexes |
| Geographical Indications (GIs) | 357 EU GIs protected (Annexes 13B-E), comprehensive system with prior user lists | List of protected EFTA GIs (Annex XVII Appendix), more limited scope |
| Sustainable Development | Chapter 18: Paris Agreement as essential element, sanctions mechanism, Regulation (EU) 2026/687 on agricultural safeguards | Chapter 13 + Record of Understanding on TSD, cooperative approach without sanctions mechanism |
| Dispute Settlement | Chapter 21: arbitration panels, code of conduct, mediation (3 annexes) | Chapter 14: rules of procedure (Annex XIX), similar structure |
| Government Procurement | Chapter 12: coverage per party (Annexes 12A-N), thresholds, adjustment formulas | Chapter 11: coverage (Annex XVIII), comparable scope |
| Political dialogue and cooperation | EMPA only: political pillar covering human rights, climate, digital transformation, migration, counter-terrorism | Absent — the EFTA FTA is strictly commercial |
Alessandro Brenci
Attorney at law specialised in international trade law
The legal architecture of the EU-MERCOSUR and EFTA-MERCOSUR agreements reflects two distinct philosophies of international economic law. On one side, the European Union opted for an unprecedented split between a comprehensive association agreement (EMPA) and an interim trade agreement (iTA), responding to the political need to accelerate the entry into force of trade provisions without waiting for ratification by all 27 member states. This split, based on the distinction between exclusive competence (Art. 207 TFEU) and shared competence (Art. 217 TFEU), constitutes a major precedent in EU treaty practice.
On the other side, EFTA maintained a classic approach with a single, intergovernmental free trade agreement where each member state retains its trade sovereignty. The structural advantage of the EFTA FTA lies in its Chapter 9 on investment — a substantive area absent from the EU iTA and deferred to EMPA whose entry into force remains uncertain. For businesses planning direct investments between Europe and MERCOSUR, this asymmetry creates an immediate competitive advantage for EFTA States, particularly Switzerland.
The referral of EMPA and iTA to the Court of Justice of the European Union by the European Parliament (21 January 2026) adds a considerable layer of legal uncertainty. The CJEU opinion, expected within at least one year, will address the agreements' compatibility with EU Treaties, particularly regarding competence allocation and the procedure followed. If the Court finds incompatibility, the agreements will need to be amended before they can enter into force. Meanwhile, the European Commission announced on 26 February 2026 that it would proceed with provisional application of the iTA, creating an unprecedented legal situation where an agreement is simultaneously subject to compatibility review and provisional application.
For practitioners of international trade law, this duality of agreements requires systematic cross-reading. The economic operator wishing to optimise their access to MERCOSUR must evaluate, for each transaction, which agreement offers the most favourable conditions: the EU iTA for volume and geographical indications, the EFTA FTA for investment and bilateral flexibility. This complexity is precisely what makes specialised legal guidance indispensable, capable of navigating between the two treaty architectures and identifying exploitable synergies.
European Commission — DG Trade: all iTA chapters and annexes
Commission CIRCABC library: direct access to each chapter and annex in PDF
European Council summary on the procedure and content of the agreements
EFTA Secretariat: main agreement, annexes and bilateral appendices
State Secretariat for Economic Affairs (Switzerland): Swiss perspective on the EFTA-MERCOSUR FTA
MERCOSUR: founding treaty (1991)
MERCOSUR: institutional structure and legal personality (1994)
WTO: multilateral framework for free trade areas and customs unions
We analyse the legal structure applicable to your export, investment or establishment project between Europe and MERCOSUR.
Request a legal opinion