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enforce arbitral award in Morocco 2026

How to Enforce Arbitral Awards in Morocco (2026): Practical Guide for Foreign Investors & Counsel

By Global Law Experts
– posted 3 hours ago

Morocco’s modernised arbitration and mediation code, passed in 2025 and now fully in force, has reshaped how parties enforce arbitral awards in Morocco in 2026, expanding exequatur provisions, clarifying the grounds for refusal, and aligning domestic procedure more closely with the New York Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards (1958). For foreign investors, in-house counsel and international arbitration practitioners, the reforms arrive at a moment of strategic opportunity: Casablanca is positioning itself as a leading African arbitration hub, commercial court benches are gaining specialist enforcement experience, and the regulatory environment is decidedly pro-enforcement.

This guide provides a step-by-step roadmap, covering the exequatur procedure, required documents, interim measures, execution remedies, common grounds for refusal and practical timelines, so that counsel and investors can navigate the enforcement of awards procedure in Morocco with confidence.

Quick Summary, Can Foreign Arbitral Awards Be Enforced in Morocco in 2026?

Yes. Foreign arbitral awards are enforceable in Morocco through the exequatur procedure. The key points every practitioner should know are:

  • New York Convention party. Morocco is a signatory to the 1958 New York Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards, which provides the primary treaty basis for enforcing foreign awards in the country.
  • Exequatur required. A foreign award cannot be directly executed in Morocco. The award-creditor must obtain an exequatur order from the competent Moroccan court, confirming that the award meets enforceability requirements under Morocco arbitration law 2026.
  • Pro-enforcement stance. Under the 2025–2026 reforms, Moroccan courts apply a limited review standard: they verify formal compliance, public-policy compatibility and procedural fairness, but do not re-examine the merits of the dispute.
  • Interim measures available. Both the arbitral tribunal and Moroccan courts can order conservatory and interim measures in Morocco arbitration proceedings, protecting assets while enforcement is pending.
  • Specialist courts. Commercial courts in Casablanca, Rabat, Marrakech, Fez and other major cities handle most international arbitration enforcement petitions and are increasingly familiar with complex cross-border disputes.

Legal Framework and 2025–2026 Reforms Affecting Enforcement

To enforce a foreign arbitral award in Morocco, practitioners must understand the interplay between the domestic statutory framework and Morocco’s international treaty obligations. The 2025–2026 reforms represent the most significant overhaul of the country’s arbitration regime in over a decade.

Treaty Framework: The New York Convention and Bilateral Agreements

Morocco acceded to the New York Convention (1958) and applies it to awards rendered in the territory of other contracting states. The Convention obliges Moroccan courts to recognise and enforce foreign arbitral awards unless specific, narrowly defined grounds for refusal are established. Morocco has also entered bilateral judicial cooperation agreements with numerous countries across Africa, Europe and the Middle East, which may provide additional or parallel recognition routes depending on the award’s country of origin.

Where a bilateral treaty provides more favourable enforcement terms than the New York Convention, the award-creditor may rely on the more advantageous instrument, a principle known as the “most-favourable-right” provision under Article VII of the Convention.

Key Reform Changes That Materially Affect Enforcement

The modernised arbitration and mediation code introduced several changes with direct practical consequences for enforcement, as noted by leading international practice guides including the CMS Expert Guide to International Arbitration, Morocco:

  • Clarified exequatur grounds. The reformed code codifies the limited grounds on which a Moroccan court may refuse exequatur, bringing domestic law into closer alignment with Articles V(1) and V(2) of the New York Convention.
  • Expanded jurisdiction provisions. The reforms refine the allocation of exequatur jurisdiction among commercial courts and courts of appeal, reducing forum-shopping risk and improving procedural predictability.
  • Registry filing obligations. New provisions require that arbitral awards be deposited with the court registry within prescribed periods, ensuring a clear evidentiary chain for enforcement.
  • Recognition of electronic communications. The updated framework addresses the validity of arbitration agreements concluded electronically and, in line with broader MENA-region trends identified by Wolters Kluwer’s analysis of e-award enforcement, provides a basis for recognising awards transmitted and stored in electronic form.

Timeline of Reforms

Date / Year Reform or Milestone Practical Enforcement Effect
2024–2025 Drafting and parliamentary passage of the modernised arbitration and mediation code Modernised arbitration provisions; codified and clarified exequatur grounds; introduced electronic-communications provisions
2025 Initial implementing measures and updated registry rules published New award-filing procedures; court liaison protocols for international cases; updated fee schedules
2026 Full entry into force of the reformed arbitration framework Courts applying the updated code; pro-enforcement judicial practice consolidating; Casablanca commercial bench increasingly handling complex cross-border enforcement

Recognition and Exequatur Procedure, Step-by-Step Practical Checklist

The exequatur is the judicial procedure by which a Moroccan court grants legal force to a foreign (or domestic) arbitral award, enabling its execution on Moroccan territory. Below is the step-by-step process under the exequatur Morocco 2026 framework.

Step 1: Pre-Filing Checks

Before filing, counsel should verify the following:

  • Award finality. Confirm that the award is final and binding under the law of the seat. If the award is subject to a pending set-aside application at the seat, consider whether to proceed or wait, Moroccan courts may stay exequatur proceedings if a set-aside challenge is pending, although they are not obliged to do so.
  • Jurisdictional basis. Identify the applicable treaty (New York Convention, bilateral agreement or domestic law) and confirm that Morocco recognises awards from the relevant jurisdiction.
  • Party capacity and status. Verify that the award-debtor is a legal entity registered or with assets in Morocco, and that any corporate changes (mergers, dissolutions) since the award have been documented.
  • Asset identification. Conduct preliminary due diligence on the debtor’s assets in Morocco, bank accounts, real estate, commercial receivables, shares in Moroccan companies, to inform both the enforcement strategy and any interim-measure applications.

Step 2: Required Documents

The exequatur petition must be accompanied by a prescribed set of documents. The table below summarises the standard requirements:

Document Who Provides It Certification / Legalisation Requirement
Original arbitral award (or certified copy) Arbitral institution or tribunal secretariat Apostille (if Hague Convention state) or consular legalisation; notarised certified copy
Original arbitration agreement (or certified copy) Claimant’s counsel / arbitral file Same apostille or consular legalisation requirements
Certified Arabic translation of the award Sworn translator registered with a Moroccan court Must be certified by a sworn translator (traducteur assermenté)
Certified Arabic translation of the arbitration agreement Sworn translator Same as above
Proof of service of the award on the award-debtor Arbitral institution / claimant’s counsel Notarised copy; evidence of delivery method
Power of attorney for Moroccan counsel Award-creditor Notarised and apostilled / legalised
Corporate documentation (extracts, registration certificates) Award-creditor and award-debtor (as available) Apostille or consular legalisation; certified translation

Practical tip: Engage a Moroccan sworn translator early. Translation backlogs can add weeks to the filing timeline, especially for lengthy awards. Counsel should also confirm whether the award was rendered electronically, if so, ensure that the certified copy includes metadata or attestation confirming authenticity, consistent with the reformed code’s electronic-communications provisions.

Step 3: Filing the Petition

The exequatur petition is filed with the competent court. For international arbitration Morocco enforcement, the relevant court is typically:

  • Commercial Court, in the jurisdiction where enforcement is sought (commonly Casablanca for major commercial disputes) or where the award-debtor’s principal assets or registered office are located.
  • Court of Appeal, in certain circumstances, particularly where the domestic arbitration code directs that international award exequatur applications be heard at the appellate level.

The petition is submitted to the court registry along with all required documents, the applicable court fees (which are modest by international standards), and a concise memorandum explaining the legal basis for enforcement and the absence of any grounds for refusal.

Step 4: Court Hearing, Judgment and Grounds for Refusal

The court examines the petition without reviewing the merits of the underlying dispute. Under the reformed framework, the judge verifies:

  • The existence and validity of the arbitration agreement
  • The composition of the arbitral tribunal in accordance with the agreement and applicable rules
  • Compliance with due process (proper notice, opportunity to present one’s case)
  • The arbitrability of the subject matter under Moroccan law
  • Compatibility with Moroccan international public policy (ordre public international)

If the court is satisfied, it issues the exequatur order, at which point the award becomes enforceable in Morocco in the same manner as a domestic court judgment.

How Long Does the Exequatur Process Typically Take?

Stage Fast Estimate Typical Estimate Worst Case
Document preparation and translation 2–3 weeks 4–6 weeks 8–12 weeks
Filing and court assignment 1 week 2–3 weeks 4–6 weeks
Court review and hearing 4–6 weeks 8–12 weeks 16–24 weeks
Issuance of exequatur order 1–2 weeks 2–4 weeks 4–8 weeks
Total (filing to order) 8–12 weeks 16–25 weeks 32–50 weeks

Industry observers expect that the typical timeline will shorten as commercial courts gain experience with the reformed code and registry procedures are digitised further. Contested petitions, where the award-debtor actively opposes enforcement, will inevitably fall toward the longer end of the range.

Interim and Conservatory Measures, Court Practice vs Arbitral Tribunal Orders

Interim measures in Morocco arbitration proceedings are available from both the arbitral tribunal and the state courts, and they serve a critical function: protecting the award-creditor’s rights and preserving assets while the exequatur process runs its course.

Tribunal-Ordered Interim Measures

Under the reformed framework, arbitral tribunals seated in Morocco (or applying Moroccan arbitration law) have broad power to order provisional and conservatory measures, including orders to preserve evidence, maintain the status quo, or provide security for costs. The practical challenge lies in enforcement: tribunal-ordered interim measures are not self-executing. If the opposing party does not comply voluntarily, the award-creditor must apply to a Moroccan court for enforcement of the tribunal’s order.

Early indications suggest that Moroccan courts are increasingly willing to give effect to tribunal-ordered interim measures, particularly where the order is clearly reasoned, proportionate and does not conflict with Moroccan public policy. However, counsel should anticipate that enforcement of an interim tribunal order may require a separate, and potentially time-consuming, court application.

Court-Ordered Interim Measures

Moroccan courts retain independent authority to order conservatory measures in support of arbitration, even where the arbitration is seated abroad. Practical options include:

  • Conservatory attachment (saisie conservatoire). A pre-judgment attachment freezing the debtor’s bank accounts, movable property or receivables. This is the most commonly used interim remedy in enforcement practice.
  • Judicial freezing orders. Orders preventing the debtor from disposing of specified assets (real estate, shares, intellectual property) pending enforcement.
  • Injunctions. Orders requiring the debtor to take or refrain from taking specific actions where urgent and irreparable harm would otherwise result.

Tactical tips for investors: Apply for conservatory measures at the earliest opportunity, ideally before or simultaneously with filing the exequatur petition. Courts hearing urgent applications (référé) can issue attachment orders within days. Ensure that the application is supported by detailed evidence of the debtor’s assets, the risk of dissipation, and the existence of a prima facie enforceable award. Asset intelligence gathered during the pre-filing stage (Step 1 above) is essential here.

Enforcing Foreign Monetary Awards, Execution and Enforcement Remedies

Once the exequatur order is granted and becomes final, the award-creditor holds a Moroccan enforcement title equivalent to a domestic court judgment. This opens the full range of execution remedies available under Moroccan procedural law to enforce the arbitral award in Morocco.

Practical Tips on Enforcement Against Corporate Debtors, Real Estate and Bank Accounts

  • Attachment of bank accounts (saisie-attribution). The most efficient execution route for monetary awards. A court bailiff (huissier de justice) serves the exequatur order and attachment notice on the debtor’s bank, which freezes the account and remits funds to the creditor within the prescribed period.
  • Seizure and sale of movable property. A bailiff may seize movable assets (equipment, inventory, vehicles) and sell them at public auction to satisfy the award.
  • Enforcement against real estate. Real-property enforcement (saisie immobilière) involves registration of the exequatur order at the land registry (Conservation Foncière), followed by a court-supervised sale if the debtor does not satisfy the award voluntarily. This process is slower and more procedurally complex.
  • Garnishment of receivables. Where the debtor is owed sums by third parties (trade receivables, contract payments), the creditor can obtain a garnishment order directing those third parties to pay the creditor directly.
  • Enforcement against state entities. Awards against Moroccan state entities or state-owned enterprises raise sovereign immunity considerations. While the New York Convention does not exempt state parties from enforcement, practical obstacles, including restrictions on seizure of state assets, may require strategic navigation and, potentially, diplomatic channels.
  • Interest. Moroccan courts typically enforce the interest rate specified in the award. Where the award is silent, the legal interest rate under Moroccan law applies from the date of the exequatur order.

Common Grounds to Resist Enforcement, Moroccan Practice and How to Counter Them

Award-debtors in Morocco typically rely on a narrow set of statutory grounds when opposing exequatur. Understanding these grounds, and preparing to rebut them, is essential for any party seeking to enforce a foreign arbitral award in Morocco.

  • Invalid arbitration agreement. The debtor argues that the arbitration clause was void, inoperative or incapable of being performed. Counter: Submit the original agreement with certified translation and evidence of the parties’ conduct confirming acceptance of arbitration.
  • Lack of due process. The debtor claims inadequate notice of the appointment of arbitrators or of the arbitral proceedings. Counter: Provide complete correspondence records, proof of service, and the tribunal’s procedural orders demonstrating that both parties were given a full opportunity to present their case.
  • Excess of jurisdiction. The debtor contends that the tribunal decided issues beyond the scope of the arbitration agreement. Counter: Reference the terms of reference or tribunal order delineating the scope, and the award’s reasoning confining relief to issues properly before it.
  • Public policy (ordre public). The most frequently invoked ground. The debtor argues that the award violates Moroccan international public policy. Counter: Moroccan courts interpret this ground narrowly; demonstrate that the award does not offend fundamental principles of Moroccan law, fairness or morality.
  • Non-arbitrability. The debtor claims that the subject matter of the dispute is not capable of settlement by arbitration under Moroccan law. Counter: Confirm that the dispute involves commercial or contractual matters (which are broadly arbitrable) and is not among the limited categories reserved exclusively for Moroccan courts.

The likely practical effect of the 2025–2026 reforms will be to further narrow the scope for meritless opposition. As reported in the Lex Africa Guide to Enforcement of Foreign Judgments and Arbitral Awards, Morocco is increasingly regarded as an enforcement-friendly jurisdiction within the region.

Practical Checklist and Sample Exequatur Filing Timeline

The following consolidated checklist summarises the key steps and documents required to enforce an arbitral award in Morocco in 2026. Counsel may use this as a working template when preparing an exequatur filing.

  1. Confirm award finality and identify applicable treaty or statutory basis
  2. Obtain certified copies of the arbitral award and arbitration agreement
  3. Arrange apostille or consular legalisation of all foreign-origin documents
  4. Commission certified Arabic translations from a Moroccan sworn translator
  5. Prepare power of attorney for Moroccan counsel (notarised and legalised)
  6. Conduct asset due diligence on the award-debtor in Morocco
  7. Assess whether to apply for conservatory measures (saisie conservatoire) before or simultaneously with the exequatur filing
  8. Draft the exequatur petition and supporting memorandum
  9. File the petition, documents and court fees at the registry of the competent commercial court
  10. Serve the award-debtor and attend the court hearing
  11. Obtain the exequatur order and serve it on the debtor
  12. Engage a bailiff to commence execution (bank attachment, property seizure or garnishment)

Contact checklist for foreign counsel:

  • Local Moroccan arbitration counsel, find a specialist via the Morocco lawyer directory
  • Moroccan sworn translator (traducteur assermenté)
  • Court bailiff (huissier de justice) in the enforcement jurisdiction
  • Asset-investigation firm (if debtor’s assets require tracing)
  • Notary and apostille authority in the award’s country of origin

Strategic Considerations for Choosing Casablanca as Seat and Enforcement Implications

Casablanca is actively seeking to establish itself as an African arbitration hub, as reported by Medias24. The Casablanca Finance City (CFC) ecosystem, combined with specialist commercial court benches, a bilingual (Arabic/French) legal environment and Morocco’s strategic geographic position bridging Europe and Africa, creates a compelling enforcement proposition for international parties.

For counsel drafting arbitration clauses, choosing Casablanca as the seat offers several advantages: awards rendered domestically benefit from a streamlined exequatur process; the local judiciary has growing experience with complex international arbitration enforcement; and Morocco’s extensive network of bilateral treaties can facilitate onward enforcement across Africa and the Middle East. Industry observers expect Casablanca’s profile as a Casablanca arbitration hub to strengthen further as the reformed code’s pro-enforcement jurisprudence consolidates over the coming years.

Conclusion and Recommended Next Steps

The 2025–2026 reforms have made it materially easier to enforce an arbitral award in Morocco in 2026. The modernised code, combined with New York Convention obligations and an increasingly specialist commercial judiciary, provides foreign investors and counsel with a reliable enforcement pathway. To maximise the chances of efficient enforcement:

  • Begin document preparation (translations, legalisation) well in advance of filing
  • Apply for conservatory measures early to protect against asset dissipation
  • Engage experienced Moroccan arbitration counsel who can navigate local court practice
  • Anticipate and prepare responses to the standard grounds for opposing enforcement

For guidance tailored to a specific enforcement matter, consult a specialist listed in the Morocco lawyer directory or explore the full arbitration practice area on Global Law Experts.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Azzedine Kettani at Kettani Law Firm, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. CMS Expert Guide, International Arbitration (Morocco)
  2. Aceris Law, International Arbitration in Morocco
  3. Medias24, Casablanca Arbitration Hub Coverage
  4. Wolters Kluwer, Inkless Justice: Enforcing E-Awards in GCC and MENA
  5. Lex Africa, Guide to Enforcement of Foreign Money Judgments and Arbitral Awards
  6. New York Convention (1958), Official Text

FAQs

How are foreign arbitral awards enforced in Morocco under the 2026 framework?
Foreign awards are enforced through the exequatur procedure. The award-creditor files a petition, accompanied by the award, arbitration agreement and certified Arabic translations, with the competent commercial court. The court verifies formal compliance, due process and public-policy compatibility without re-examining the merits, then grants (or refuses) the exequatur order.
The exequatur procedure involves filing a petition at the court registry with the original or certified copy of the award, the arbitration agreement, certified Arabic translations by a sworn translator, apostilled or legalised documents, proof of service on the debtor, and a power of attorney for Moroccan counsel. A supporting memorandum explaining the legal basis for enforcement is also recommended.
Yes. Moroccan courts can order conservatory attachments, freezing orders and injunctions in support of arbitration, even where the arbitration is seated abroad. Applications are made to the president of the commercial court sitting in urgent proceedings (référé), and orders can be issued within days when supported by evidence of asset-dissipation risk.
Investors should conduct early asset due diligence, apply for conservatory measures (bank attachments, property freezes) before or alongside the exequatur petition, engage local counsel and a court bailiff, and prepare all documents, including translations and legalisation, well ahead of filing to minimise delays.
The reformed code addresses electronic communications in arbitration, providing a basis for recognising awards transmitted and stored electronically. Counsel should ensure that any e-award includes attestation of authenticity and that the certified copy presented to the court includes relevant metadata or digital-signature verification to satisfy the court’s formal requirements.
Yes. Morocco is a party to the New York Convention and applies it to awards rendered in the territory of other contracting states. The Convention provides the primary treaty basis for recognition and enforcement, subject to the limited grounds for refusal in Article V.
Timelines vary depending on complexity and whether the debtor opposes. A straightforward, uncontested exequatur can be obtained in approximately 8 to 12 weeks from filing. Typical contested matters take 16 to 25 weeks, while complex or heavily opposed cases may extend to 32 weeks or more.
The most frequently invoked grounds are: invalid arbitration agreement, lack of due process, tribunal exceeding its jurisdiction, non-arbitrability and violation of Moroccan international public policy. Counsel can pre-empt these by submitting comprehensive documentary evidence of the valid agreement, complete procedural records, and a memorandum demonstrating that the award does not offend fundamental Moroccan legal principles.

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How to Enforce Arbitral Awards in Morocco (2026): Practical Guide for Foreign Investors & Counsel

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