The Board of Directors (Yönetim Kurulu) is the central governance body of a Turkish Anonim Şirket (A.Ş.) — responsible for managing the company’s affairs, representing the company in dealings with third parties, and exercising strategic decision-making authority delegated by shareholders. Governed primarily by Turkish Commercial Code (TTK) Articles 359–402, the board structure in Turkish A.Ş.s is functionally similar to common-law director boards but with several distinct features reflecting Turkish corporate-law tradition and the influence of continental European governance models.
Composition and qualification requirements include: minimum one director (no maximum statutory limit, typically 3–9 in practice depending on company size and ownership structure); natural-person OR legal-entity directors (legal entities must designate a natural-person representative); no Turkish nationality or residency requirement (foreign directors permitted, supporting international JVs and VC-backed structures); no requirement to be shareholders (independent directors common in larger companies); and minimum-share-ownership requirement removed by 2011 TTK reforms (historically directors had to hold qualifying shares).
Board powers in Turkish A.Ş.s are extensive — TTK delegates broad authority to manage and represent the company subject to matters expressly reserved for general assembly. General-assembly-reserved matters include: amendments to articles of association, capital increase/decrease (with limited delegation possible), distribution of dividends, election/removal of directors and auditors, approval of annual financial statements, dissolution, mergers and major divestitures. Board-authorized matters include: day-to-day management, contract execution, employee hiring, capital deployment within authorization, related-party transactions (subject to disclosure), and routine business decisions.
Modern A.Ş. governance practice for VC-backed and growth-stage companies typically includes: preferred-shareholder board seats (rights granted in shareholder agreements and articles); independent director seats (especially for governance maturity and pre-IPO preparation); committee structures (audit committee mandatory for public/large companies, risk and nomination committees common); director D&O insurance (increasingly standard for VC-backed companies given personal-liability exposure); and protective-provisions integration (board decisions on enumerated significant matters require preferred-director approval).
Director liability under Turkish law is substantial: TTK Article 553 establishes joint-and-several director liability for damages caused to the company, shareholders, or creditors through fault or negligence. Specific exposures include: tax liability (directors personally liable for unpaid corporate taxes under VUK Article 10); social-security liability (SGK premiums); employment-law liability (severance, notice obligations); environmental liability for regulated activities; and insolvency-related liability for failure to file timely concordat or bankruptcy. Vircon Legal advises Turkish A.Ş.s on board composition design, director-appointment documentation, governance-policy frameworks, D&O insurance procurement, and the strategic balancing of director-protection mechanisms with operational decision-making efficiency.