[codicts-css-switcher id=”346″]

Global Law Experts Logo
contractor stop Denmark 2026

Denmark 2026: What to Do if Arbejdstilsynet Issues a "Contractor Stop", Legal Steps, Contract Risk Allocation & Dispute Options

By Global Law Experts
– posted 3 hours ago

The contractor stop Denmark 2026 regime represents one of the most significant expansions of regulatory enforcement power in the Danish construction sector in recent years. From 1 January 2026, the Danish Working Environment Authority (Arbejdstilsynet) gained the power to order a complete halt of a contractor’s work on construction sites placed under intensified supervision where serious and repeated breaches of working environment rules are identified. This stop work order goes beyond existing prohibition notices by targeting the contractual relationship between the client and the main contractor, effectively shutting down all of that contractor’s activities on a given site.

For main contractors, subcontractors, clients and their legal advisers, the commercial and legal consequences are immediate and substantial, touching programme delays, cost overruns, insurance triggers, contractual liability chains and dispute strategy.

Legal Basis, Timeline and Grounds for a Contractor Stop Denmark 2026

Arbejdstilsynet may order a contractor stop on construction sites under intensified supervision when it identifies serious and repeated breaches of the Danish Working Environment Act. The power entered into force on 1 January 2026, following amendments adopted by the Danish parliament on 12 December 2025. The Danish Ministry of Employment subsequently announced expanded criteria for intensified supervision, broadening the pool of construction sites that fall within the scope of these enforcement measures.

When Can a Stop Be Issued?

A contractor stop can be issued when a construction site is already subject to Arbejdstilsynet’s “intensified supervision” programme and the authority identifies that the contractor responsible for the site has committed serious and repeated violations. According to Arbejdstilsynet’s published guidance, the triggers that may lead to intensified supervision, and ultimately a contractor stop, include the following:

  • Repeated serious safety breaches. Multiple violations of fall protection, scaffolding, excavation safety, or heavy-machinery protocols identified across inspections.
  • Failure to comply with prior enforcement orders. Non-compliance with previously issued improvement notices or prohibition orders on the same site.
  • Social dumping indicators. Evidence of wage and conditions violations, undeclared labour, or systematic circumvention of collective bargaining obligations that compromise working environment standards.
  • Systemic organisational failures. Absence of a functioning safety organisation, missing workplace assessments (APV), or inadequate coordination between multiple contractors on-site.

Who Is the Stop Directed To?

The contractor stop is directed at the contractor that holds the direct contractual agreement with the client, in most cases, the main contractor. This is a deliberate design choice: it places responsibility on the party with the greatest contractual and practical power to organise safe working conditions site-wide. Subcontractors are not directly named in the stop order. However, the practical consequence is that all subcontracted work under the main contractor’s scope ceases when the order takes effect.

Scope of the Stop, Whole Site or Partial?

Arbejdstilsynet’s guidance indicates that the contractor stop applies to all work performed by the named contractor on the relevant construction site. The stop is not necessarily limited to specific activities or zones, it covers the full scope of the contractor’s engagement. However, where multiple main contractors operate under separate contracts with the same client, the stop applies only to the contractor named in the order. Other contractors with distinct contractual relationships may continue work, provided their own compliance is satisfactory.

Date Instrument / Event Practical Effect
12 December 2025 Amendment to the Working Environment Act adopted by parliament Legislative basis for contractor stops established
1 January 2026 New contractor stop powers enter into force Arbejdstilsynet can order full work stoppages on supervised sites
February 2026 Ministry of Employment expands intensified supervision criteria Broader range of construction sites subject to stop powers

Immediate Action Plan (0–72 Hours) for a Contractor Stop Denmark 2026 Order

Contractors and clients must act within hours of receiving an Arbejdstilsynet contractor stop. The following triage sequence addresses both the regulatory obligations and the commercial imperatives of cost preservation and claim documentation.

0–24 Hours: First Response Checklist

  • Accept and record the AT order. Obtain a copy of the written stop order, note the inspector’s name, date, time and stated grounds. Do not obstruct the inspector.
  • Notify the client immediately. Issue a formal written notification under the contract, describing the order and its scope. Trigger any contractual notice provisions relating to regulatory events, force majeure or variations.
  • Suspend affected crews and secure the site. Demobilise workers safely. Ensure plant, materials and partially completed works are protected from weather, theft and degradation.
  • Engage the safety adviser/coordinator. Instruct the site safety adviser to attend, prepare an initial assessment and begin developing a remediation plan.
  • Preserve all evidence. Photograph the site. Secure daily logs, sign-in sheets, toolbox-talk records, prior AT correspondence and all subcontractor compliance documentation.
  • Notify insurers. Contact your construction all-risks, professional indemnity and employer’s liability insurers without delay. Many policies require immediate notification of regulatory intervention.

24–72 Hours: Remediation and Cost Capture

  • Prepare a detailed remediation plan. Identify each breach cited in the stop order and propose corrective actions with a timeline. Submit the plan to Arbejdstilsynet for review.
  • Begin contemporaneous cost recording. Open a separate cost code for all stop-related expenditure: idle labour, extended plant hire, additional supervision, remediation works and professional fees.
  • Issue notices to subcontractors. Serve formal back-to-back notices requiring subcontractors to cooperate with remediation and to provide their own compliance evidence.
  • Develop a communication plan. Coordinate messaging to the client, subcontractors, supply chain and (where relevant) the public or media, ensuring consistency and legal privilege protection.

Communication and Safety Obligations

The main contractor bears the primary obligation to communicate with Arbejdstilsynet and implement remedial measures. Clients with statutory coordination duties under Danish construction safety regulations must also cooperate, failure to do so may shift liability. All parties should document every communication in writing to support future claims or defences.

Evidence Preservation and Documentation Best Practices

Contemporaneous records are the single most important asset in any subsequent claim. Maintain timestamped photographs, daily site diaries, resource allocation logs and records of all interactions with the authority. Preserve electronic communications (including messages sent via project management platforms) in their original format.

Liability, Delay Costs and Who Pays After a Contractor Stop

Determining who pays delay costs after a contractor stop is the central commercial question for every party on a Danish construction project in 2026. The answer depends on the intersection of statutory obligations, contractual allocation and the specific cause of the stop.

Statutory Exposure, Fines, Enforcement and Chain Liability Denmark

Arbejdstilsynet can impose administrative fines alongside a contractor stop order. In cases of wilful or grossly negligent breaches, criminal prosecution under the Working Environment Act remains possible. The chain liability dimension is particularly relevant where social dumping is a contributing factor: Danish law permits authorities to pursue multiple parties in the supply chain, and industry observers expect enforcement to intensify following the February 2026 expansion of intensified supervision criteria. A contractor stop does not automatically extinguish the main contractor’s obligation to complete the works, the contractor remains bound by its contract unless that contract is terminated.

Contractual Allocation Under Standard Forms

Danish construction projects commonly use the AB 18 (general conditions for works and supplies in building and construction) or ABT 18 (turnkey) standard forms. These forms allocate risk through mechanisms including extensions of time, variation provisions and default/termination clauses. Neither AB 18 nor ABT 18 was drafted with the 2026 contractor stop power specifically in mind, meaning the allocation of delay and cost risk arising from a stop will often turn on the interpretation of general provisions, and on any bespoke amendments the parties have negotiated. Under FIDIC and NEC forms, which are less common in Denmark but used on international projects, equivalent provisions (such as FIDIC Sub-Clause 8.

5 on employer-caused suspension and NEC Option X2 on changes in law) may provide clearer allocation, though they too require careful adaptation to capture the new Danish regime.

Practical Apportionment Scenarios

The likely practical effect of the contractor stop rules on cost allocation can be illustrated through four common scenarios:

Scenario Likely Responsible Party Practical Claim Route
Serious safety breaches by the contractor (repeated non-compliance) Main contractor (and its insurers) Delay and prolongation claims denied; client may engage replacement contractor; liquidated damages may apply
Failures in the client’s safety coordination duties Client Contractor entitled to extension of time and recovery of costs; pursue direct claim under the construction contract
Stop caused by a subcontractor’s non-compliance Depends on contract, main contractor typically bears risk for subcontractor performance Main contractor seeks back-to-back recovery from subcontractor; chain liability and contractual flow-down provisions are critical
Systemic social dumping triggers across multiple parties Shared, depends on who controlled the non-compliant labour arrangements Complex multi-party claims; audit trails and payroll documentation are decisive evidence

In every scenario, all parties bear a duty to mitigate. A contractor that fails to promptly implement corrective measures, or a client that obstructs remediation, risks losing entitlement to recover costs or defend against claims. Insurers will scrutinise whether the insured party took reasonable steps to limit losses, immediate notification and proactive remediation are essential to preserving coverage.

Construction Contract Clauses Denmark: Drafting for the Contractor Stop Regime

Construction contract clauses in Denmark must now address the contractor stop regime explicitly. Reliance on general force majeure or “change in law” provisions is insufficient given the specificity of Arbejdstilsynet’s new powers. The following clause bank provides a starting framework, all suggested wording should be reviewed and adapted to the specific project and contractual structure.

Recommended Clause Bank

Clause 1, Regulatory Stoppage (Contractor Stop) Definition and Allocation of Delay. Suggested drafting: “Where the Contractor’s work is suspended by an order of Arbejdstilsynet pursuant to the Working Environment Act (a ‘Contractor Stop’), the Contractor shall not be entitled to an extension of time or compensation for delay to the extent that the Contractor Stop results from the Contractor’s own breach of statutory obligations. Where the Contractor Stop results from a breach attributable to the Client or to circumstances outside the Contractor’s control, the Contractor shall be entitled to an extension of time and reasonable additional costs.” Drafting note: Use where the parties wish to distinguish between contractor-caused and client-caused stops.

 

Clause 2, Allocation of Cost and Remedy. Suggested drafting: “All costs of remediation works required to lift a Contractor Stop shall be borne by the party whose act or omission caused the underlying breach. Where the cause is attributable to a subcontractor, the Contractor shall recover such costs from the relevant subcontractor pursuant to the back-to-back provisions of this contract.” Drafting note: Ensures clear cost flow-down and avoids ambiguity about remediation responsibility.

 

Clause 3, Notice and Mitigation. Suggested drafting: “The Contractor shall notify the Client in writing within 24 hours of receiving a Contractor Stop order, providing a copy of the order and an initial assessment of its scope. Both parties shall use reasonable endeavours to mitigate the consequences of the stop, including cooperating with Arbejdstilsynet and expediting remedial works.” Drafting note: Contractual notice deadlines should mirror practical reality, 24 hours is appropriate for the urgency of a site halt.

 

Clause 4, Subcontractor Flow-Down for Compliance and Penalties. Suggested drafting: “The Contractor shall include in all subcontracts an obligation requiring the subcontractor to comply with all applicable working environment legislation and to indemnify the Contractor against any costs, losses or delays arising from a Contractor Stop caused by the subcontractor’s non-compliance.” Drafting note: Essential for preserving back-to-back recovery rights. Without this clause, the main contractor may have no contractual basis to recover from the subcontractor.

 

Clause 5, Insurance and Indemnity. Suggested drafting: “Each party shall maintain insurance policies that respond to losses arising from regulatory stoppages, including business interruption and third-party liability cover. The Contractor shall provide evidence of such cover upon request.” Drafting note: Check existing policy wordings carefully, many standard construction all-risks policies do not automatically cover regulatory stoppage losses.

 

Clause 6, Termination and Step-In Rights. Suggested drafting: “If a Contractor Stop is not lifted within [30] calendar days, the Client shall be entitled to terminate the Contractor’s engagement and to engage a replacement contractor at the Contractor’s cost, provided the Contractor Stop was caused by the Contractor’s breach.” Drafting note: The number of days should reflect the project’s critical path sensitivity. Negotiate carefully, contractors will resist short periods.

Tender Requirement Checklist

Clients should update pre-qualification and tender evaluation criteria to mitigate the risk of a construction site halt in 2026:

  • Safety competence verification. Require tenderers to demonstrate a clean enforcement record with Arbejdstilsynet and documented safety management systems.
  • Payroll and employment verification. Request evidence of compliant employment arrangements, collective bargaining adherence and chain liability insurance to counter social dumping risks.
  • Subcontractor approval process. Reserve the right to approve all subcontractors and to audit their working environment compliance during the project.

Practical Negotiation Points

Early indications suggest that the contractor stop regime is shifting negotiation dynamics on Danish projects. Contractors are seeking caps on liability for stop-related delay damages. Clients are demanding enhanced audit rights and the power to remove non-compliant subcontractors directly. Both parties should consider agreeing on a clearly defined glossary of terms to reduce ambiguity in bespoke clauses addressing regulatory stoppages.

Appeals, Interim Relief and Dispute-Resolution Options After a Contractor Stop

A contractor stop issued by Arbejdstilsynet takes immediate effect, and appealing an Arbejdstilsynet decision does not automatically suspend the order. Parties therefore face the twin challenges of seeking regulatory relief while simultaneously pursuing contractual remedies against each other.

Administrative Appeal to Arbejdstilsynet

The first route is an administrative complaint to Arbejdstilsynet itself or to the relevant appeals board. This process typically takes several weeks, during which the stop order remains in force. The practical chances of success are limited unless the contractor can demonstrate that the factual basis for the stop was materially incorrect or that the authority exceeded its statutory powers. Nonetheless, filing a formal complaint preserves the contractor’s legal position and creates a contemporaneous record of its objections.

Judicial Review, Seeking an Injunction

A contractor may apply to the Danish District Court (byretten) for an interim injunction to suspend the contractor stop. Courts will assess whether the applicant has a prima facie case that the order was unlawful and whether the balance of harm favours suspension. Industry observers expect Danish courts to be cautious about overriding safety-motivated regulatory orders, particularly where serious breaches have been documented. Nonetheless, judicial review remains a viable option where the factual foundation of the stop order is contested or where disproportionate economic harm can be demonstrated.

Arbitration and Emergency Arbitrator Options

Where the construction contract contains an arbitration clause, as is common under AB 18, ABT 18 and FIDIC, disputes between the contractor and the client about who bears the costs of the stop will be resolved through arbitration rather than the courts. Many institutional arbitration rules (including those of the Danish Institute of Arbitration and the ICC) provide for emergency arbitrator proceedings, which can deliver interim relief within days. However, an emergency arbitrator’s order is contractual in nature: it binds the parties to the arbitration but cannot directly override a public authority’s enforcement order. Emergency arbitration is therefore most useful for securing interim payment, preserving assets or obtaining declarations about contractual entitlements pending the main arbitral proceedings.

Route Speed Typical Scope of Interim Relief Enforceability vs AT Order
Administrative appeal (AT internal / appeals board) Slow (weeks) Reconsideration of grounds; order may be modified or revoked Low, order remains in force pending outcome
Judicial injunction (District Court) Medium (days to weeks) Can suspend enforcement of the stop order Medium, courts will weigh safety considerations heavily
Emergency arbitrator Fast (days) Contractual relief only (payment, preservation, declarations) Low vs public authority; effective between contractual parties

Claims Strategy, Documenting Entitlement, Quantum and Proof

Successfully claiming an extension of time and recovery of prolongation costs after a contractor stop requires meticulous contemporaneous documentation. For a comparative perspective on how construction delay claims are structured internationally, the principles discussed in the context of project delay claims and compensation for developer delays illustrate similar evidential standards that Danish arbitral tribunals and courts will apply.

Required Evidence

  • The AT stop order itself, including all grounds cited and any written communications from inspectors.
  • Remediation plan and timeline, demonstrating the contractor’s diligence in restoring compliance.
  • Contemporaneous cost records, resource histograms, daily labour allocation sheets, plant hire invoices, professional fees and subcontractor claims, all linked to the stop event.
  • Programme impact analysis, updated programme showing delay to the critical path caused by the stop, using accepted delay analysis methodologies (such as time impact analysis or as-planned vs as-built comparison).
  • Witness statements and daily site logs, first-hand accounts of the stop event, remediation activities and restart.
  • Formal contractual notices, copies of all notices issued under the contract, demonstrating compliance with contractual notification requirements.

Sample Notice Wording for Extension of Time and Cost Claim

“Pursuant to Clause [X] of the Contract, the Contractor hereby gives notice that it has been the subject of a Contractor Stop order issued by Arbejdstilsynet on [date]. The order requires cessation of all works on [site]. The Contractor considers that this event entitles it to an extension of time and to recovery of additional costs incurred, and intends to submit a detailed claim within [Y] days of the order being lifted. All costs are being recorded contemporaneously.”

Typical Evidentiary Pitfalls

  • Failing to separate stop-related costs from general project costs, use a dedicated cost code from day one.
  • Issuing late or non-compliant contractual notices, check every notice requirement in the contract immediately upon receiving the stop order.
  • Relying on reconstructed records, tribunals give significantly greater weight to contemporaneous evidence. Notes drafted weeks later carry far less probative value.

Restart Checklist and Practical Templates

Once Arbejdstilsynet confirms that the grounds for the contractor stop have been remedied, the following restart protocol should be followed to ensure a safe and legally defensible resumption of work:

  1. Obtain written confirmation from Arbejdstilsynet that the stop order has been lifted or that the authority is satisfied with the remediation.
  2. Conduct a full site safety inspection before remobilising any crews. Document findings with timestamped photographs and a written report.
  3. Reconfirm subcontractor compliance, require each subcontractor to certify in writing that their working practices and documentation comply with the corrective actions implemented.
  4. Update the project programme and issue revised milestone dates to all parties, noting the delay period attributable to the stop.
  5. Submit the formal extension of time and cost claim to the client within the contractual deadline, supported by the evidence package described above.

Key daily log template fields to maintain throughout the stop period include: date; weather conditions; personnel on site (names, roles); activities performed (remediation only); Arbejdstilsynet correspondence and inspector visits; photographs; costs incurred; and any instructions received from the client.

Conclusion

The contractor stop Denmark 2026 framework fundamentally changes the risk landscape for construction projects. All parties, clients, main contractors and subcontractors, must update their contracts, compliance systems and incident-response protocols before a stop order arrives. Those who prepare now, with robust construction contract clauses, clear allocation of delay and cost risk, and a documented immediate action plan, will be far better positioned to manage the commercial fallout and pursue or defend claims effectively. For specialist guidance on contract drafting, claims strategy or dispute resolution under the new regime, contact a construction lawyer through the Global Law Experts directory.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Christian Johansen at Bruun & Hjejle, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

 

Sources

  1. Arbejdstilsynet, Intensified Supervision & Contractor Stop (Official)
  2. Arbejdstilsynet, Intensified Supervision (Danish Page)
  3. Ministry of Employment (BM.dk) Press Release
  4. NJORD Law Firm, New Rules on Contractor Stop
  5. DLA Piper, Bill on Amendments to the Danish Working Environment Act
  6. Littler, New Legislation on Contractor Stop
  7. Lexology, Summary of the Bill
  8. Bech-Bruun, Practical Guidance on Contractor Stop
  9. Chambers / ICLG Construction Law Denmark 2025
  10. Workplacedenmark, Safety in Building & Construction

FAQs

Can Arbejdstilsynet stop an entire construction site, and on what grounds?
Yes. From 1 January 2026, Arbejdstilsynet can order a contractor stop on construction sites under intensified supervision where there are serious and repeated breaches of working environment rules. The stop applies to all work performed by the named contractor on the site.
It depends on the cause. If the contractor’s own non-compliance triggered the stop, the contractor bears the costs and cannot claim an extension of time. If the stop resulted from a client’s failure to fulfil coordination duties, the contractor is typically entitled to time and money. Subcontractor-caused stops require back-to-back contractual provisions for recovery.
Within 24 hours: accept and record the order, notify the client in writing, suspend affected crews, secure the site, engage your safety adviser, preserve all evidence, and notify your insurers. Within 72 hours: prepare a remediation plan, begin contemporaneous cost recording, and issue notices to subcontractors.
Yes, through three routes: an administrative complaint to Arbejdstilsynet or the appeals board (slow, order remains in force); a judicial injunction from the District Court (medium speed, courts weigh safety considerations heavily); or emergency arbitration for contractual relief between the parties (fast, but cannot override a public authority order).
Include specific clauses addressing regulatory stoppages, allocation of delay and cost based on fault, mandatory notice periods, subcontractor compliance flow-downs, insurance requirements covering regulatory intervention, and client step-in or termination rights for prolonged stops.
Coverage depends on the specific policy wording. Many standard construction all-risks policies do not automatically extend to regulatory stoppage losses. Review your policy immediately, notify insurers within the required timeframe, and consider procuring specific extensions for business interruption arising from enforcement action.
Generally, the client’s contractual relationship is with the main contractor, not subcontractors. However, chain liability in Denmark, particularly in the social dumping context, can extend statutory obligations down the supply chain. Contractually, the main contractor must have appropriate flow-down provisions to recover from subcontractors, and clients should include subcontractor approval and audit rights in the main contract.
By Awatif Al Khouri

posted 5 hours ago

By Simon Reid-Kay

posted 5 hours ago

Find the right Legal Expert for your business

The premier guide to leading legal professionals throughout the world

Specialism
Country
Practice Area
LAWYERS RECOGNIZED
0
EVALUATIONS OF LAWYERS BY THEIR PEERS
0 m+
PRACTICE AREAS
0
COUNTRIES AROUND THE WORLD
0
Join
who are already getting the benefits
0

Sign up for the latest legal briefings and news within Global Law Experts’ community, as well as a whole host of features, editorial and conference updates direct to your email inbox.

Naturally you can unsubscribe at any time.

Newsletter Sign Up
About Us

Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.

Global Law Experts App

Now Available on the App & Google Play Stores.

Social Posts
[wp_social_ninja id="50714" platform="instagram"]
[codicts-social-feeds platform="instagram" url="https://www.instagram.com/globallawexperts/" template="carousel" results_limit="10" header="false" column_count="1"]

See More:

Contact Us

Stay Informed

Join Mailing List
About Us

Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.

Social Posts
[wp_social_ninja id="50714" platform="instagram"]
[codicts-social-feeds platform="instagram" url="https://www.instagram.com/globallawexperts/" template="carousel" results_limit="10" header="false" column_count="1"]

See More:

Global Law Experts App

Now Available on the App & Google Play Stores.

Contact Us

Stay Informed

Join Mailing List

GLE

Denmark 2026: What to Do if Arbejdstilsynet Issues a "Contractor Stop", Legal Steps, Contract Risk Allocation & Dispute Options

Send welcome message

Custom Message