 Three Legal Traps of May for Startups: What Actually Changed April 2026 brought three events that directly hit compliance in startups. One is a real breakthrough, the second is a quiet court victory, and the third is a myth that could cost you a fine. The Constitutional Court, by ruling No. 26-P of April 22, changed the rules for returning remote goods. If your startup operates in e-commerce, it's time to rewrite old offer templates. The Supreme Court established a precedent for EFS-1: if the main report is submitted on time, but subsection 1.2 is sent late, the fine is unlawful. For startups with outsourced accounting, this removes the risk of double penalties. And the most insidious one. A rumor is circulating on social media about the repeal of Article 15.5 of the Code of Administrative Offenses (fine for late tax return filing). This is false. The article is still in effect — the latest revision is from April 29, 2026. Don't let your guard down. ASI Biont analyzes legislative changes in seconds and compiles a personalized digest for your business. Register at asibiont.com and get 1500 tokens for compliance automation.