Hungary’s anti-corruption watchdog says Orbán’s former inner circle should be prosecuted over billions in missing EU funds

Péter Magyar is trying to convince Brussels that Hungary can be trusted with more than €10 billion in cash frozen over rule-of-law concerns.
hungary's anti-corruption watchdog says orbán's former inner circle prosecuted over billions missing eu funds · post hungarian then-prime minister viktor orban prior delivering speech during spring session parliament budapest hungary
Hungarian then-Prime Minister Viktor Orban prior to delivering a speech during the spring session of the Hungarian Parliament in Budapest, Hungary, on 23 February, 2026. Photo: Attila Kisbenedek/AFP/East News
Hungary’s anti-corruption watchdog says Orbán’s former inner circle should be prosecuted over billions in missing EU funds

Hungary's long reckoning with alleged graft is shifting from accusations to prosecutions, the country's anti-corruption watchdog has told Politico. Senior figures from Viktor Orbán's former government could face charges over EU money the authority believes was systematically misused. Those words arrive as Orbán's successor works to rebuild trust with Brussels and reclaim funds frozen for years.

The watchdog claims some of the EU money Orbán fought over was siphoned off at home. PM Magyar must still submit a credible reform plan before the end of August. Otherwise, Hungary risks losing €16.4 billion in newly unlocked funds. For years, then-Prime Minister Orbán blocked EU aid and loans to Ukraine. He used the bloc's money as leverage against Kyiv. Magyar has branded his predecessor corrupt over and over. His government dropped a two-year veto and released billions in EU arms payments for Ukraine. 

Senior officials in the crosshairs

Ferenc Pál Biró, who heads the Hungarian Integrity Authority, said top politicians "can and may well be prosecuted." He described it as an alleged effort to bilk EU taxpayers over the course of Orbán's 16 years in power. His team had flagged several criminal cases, he said. Biró wants Hungary to recover the money and have it repatriated, since most has already left the country. He stopped short of naming Orbán or anyone in his inner circle. 

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The alleged procurement scheme

The watchdog claims that three companies won most government contracts at artificially inflated prices. The key figures he laid out:

  • Roughly €10 billion paid to just three firms in four years
  • About €3.5 billion, the watchdog treats as overpricing tied to corruption risk
  • Everyday goods and services billed at multiples of their market value

Biró said tenders were manipulated and that the Hungarian state "became the largest entity on the market."

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The watchdog Orbán was made to create

Brussels required the Integrity Authority in 2022 as a condition for releasing frozen money. It monitors how EU funds are spent and sits independently of the government. The body should help unwind patronage empires built under Orbán, spanning construction, utilities, and media. Biró has led it since it launched. Hungary has had billions frozen over corruption and rule-of-law concerns. Orbán himself now faces corruption investigations under the new government.

Bribes and intimidation

Biró said the previous government targeted him while he investigated the scheme. He described attempts at bribery and politically motivated pressure. His wife was offered a job with high pay and no work, he said, though he would not say by whom. He was also held over an accusation of misusing his company car. 

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