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Last reviewed: 5 May 2026
Foreign creditors holding a final money judgment or arbitral award often need to know whether, and how quickly, they can convert that entitlement into enforceable relief against assets located in Taiwan. The answer, guided by Commercial Litigation lawyers Taiwan 2026 practice, is a qualified yes: Taiwan permits recognition and compulsory enforcement of foreign judgments through a court “approval action” governed primarily by Article 4‑1 of the Compulsory Enforcement Act, while foreign arbitral awards follow a parallel but distinct route under Taiwan’s Arbitration Act and the principles of the New York Convention. Clarifications in court practice during 2024–2025 have refined the documentary and procedural expectations that foreign judgment creditors must satisfy, making accurate preparation more important than ever.
This guide provides the step‑by‑step process, required documents, realistic timelines, cost estimates and tactical recommendations that international creditors and their counsel need to make an informed enforcement decision in Taiwan today.
Yes, a foreign creditor can enforce a foreign money judgment in Taiwan, provided the judgment is final and binding in the originating jurisdiction and clears the gatekeeping conditions set out in Article 4‑1 of the Compulsory Enforcement Act. The creditor must file an “approval action” (認可之訴) before a Taiwanese district court, and only after the court grants approval can compulsory enforcement measures, garnishment, seizure or judicial sale, proceed against the debtor’s assets.
Before engaging local counsel, creditors should work through four threshold checks: (1) confirm that the judgment or award is final and no longer subject to ordinary appeal in the originating jurisdiction; (2) verify that none of the Article 4‑1 exclusionary grounds apply (lack of jurisdiction, violation of Taiwanese public policy, absence of reciprocity, or failure of due process); (3) gather and certify all required documents, translations and apostilles or consular legalisations; and (4) consider whether provisional preservation measures, such as a freezing order over the debtor’s Taiwanese bank accounts, should be sought before or simultaneously with the approval action.
Industry observers expect the 2025–2026 practice trend to continue favouring well‑prepared applications, with Taiwanese courts granting approval more efficiently where document packages are complete at the time of filing. Early engagement with experienced cross-border enforcement counsel in Taipei remains the single most effective way to compress the timeline and avoid costly procedural resets.
Understanding the distinction between recognition and enforcement is fundamental for any creditor considering cross-border judgment enforcement Taiwan proceedings. Recognition (approval) is the judicial act by which a Taiwanese court declares that a foreign judgment has legal effect within Taiwan’s domestic legal order. Enforcement (compulsory execution) is the separate procedural step that empowers the court’s enforcement division to seize assets, garnish accounts and compel payment. A foreign judgment cannot be directly enforced in Taiwan; it must first be approved by a court.
The principal statute is the Compulsory Enforcement Act (強制執行法). Article 4‑1 provides the gateway: a foreign judgment may serve as an enforcement title only after it has been approved by a Taiwanese court through a civil action. The court’s approval is not a re‑trial on the merits; it is a procedural review that checks whether the foreign judgment satisfies the conditions set out in Articles 402 of the Code of Civil Procedure, which addresses recognition of foreign judgments Taiwan.
Those conditions require that (a) the foreign court had jurisdiction under international jurisdictional standards, (b) the losing party was properly served or appeared voluntarily, (c) the judgment does not contravene Taiwanese public order or good morals, and (d) there is reciprocity between Taiwan and the originating jurisdiction.
Although Taiwan is not a formal state party to the 1958 New York Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards, it has incorporated the Convention’s principles into domestic law through the Arbitration Act (仲裁法). Articles 47–51 of the Arbitration Act establish the framework for recognising and enforcing foreign arbitral awards, mirroring the Convention’s pro‑enforcement bias. A foreign award rendered in a jurisdiction that affords reciprocal treatment to Taiwanese awards may be recognised and enforced by application to a Taiwanese court. This route is generally faster and more predictable than the approval action required for foreign court judgments, as discussed further below.
Any natural person or legal entity that holds a final, binding foreign judgment or arbitral award, and is named as the prevailing party or its lawful successor, has standing to file an approval action in Taiwan. Assignees of judgment debts may also apply, provided the assignment is valid under the governing law of the judgment and properly evidenced.
The approval action is filed as an ordinary civil action before the district court with jurisdiction over the debtor’s domicile, principal place of business, or the location of the assets targeted for enforcement. In practice, the Taipei District Court handles the majority of cross-border enforcement cases because many debtors maintain bank accounts, real property or registered offices in the capital. If the debtor has no known domicile or assets in Taiwan, the creditor may petition the court with jurisdiction over the location of discoverable assets. Foreign creditors must appoint a Taiwan‑qualified attorney (律師) to act as litigation representative; pro se filing by a foreign party is not permitted for approval actions.
Service on the debtor within Taiwan follows standard civil procedure rules, though where the debtor is also domiciled abroad, international service through letters rogatory or the Hague Service Convention may be required, adding weeks or months to the timeline.
The process to enforce a foreign judgment Taiwan can be broken into three phases: pre‑filing preparation, the approval action itself, and post‑approval compulsory execution. Each phase has distinct documentary requirements, procedural milestones and tactical considerations that Commercial Litigation lawyers Taiwan 2026 practitioners routinely navigate.
The approval action is initiated by filing a civil complaint (起訴狀) with the competent district court. The petition should include the following core sections:
After filing, the court assigns the case and schedules a hearing, typically within four to eight weeks. The hearing is generally limited to examining whether the recognition conditions are met; the court does not re‑examine the merits of the underlying dispute. If the debtor contests the application, the court may schedule one or two additional hearings. An uncontested approval action Taiwan court proceedings can yield a judgment within three to six months from filing.
| Filing type | Typical documents required | Who certifies |
|---|---|---|
| Approval action (foreign court judgment) | Certified copy of judgment, finality certificate, certified Chinese translation, apostille/consular legalisation, power of attorney, corporate identity documents | Originating court clerk; ROC consular office or apostille authority; certified translator |
| Recognition application (foreign arbitral award) | Original or certified copy of award, arbitration agreement, certified Chinese translation, authentication of award, evidence of reciprocity | Arbitral institution; notary public; certified translator |
| Provisional attachment (假扣押) | Application stating grounds for urgency, evidence of debtor’s assets, security bond deposit | Applicant’s Taiwan counsel; court |
Once the court issues an approval judgment and it becomes final (either because the debtor does not appeal within twenty days, or the appellate court affirms), the creditor obtains a certified copy of the approval judgment bearing the court’s enforcement clause. This document serves as the enforcement title (執行名義) under Article 4 of the Compulsory Enforcement Act. The creditor then files an enforcement application with the enforcement division of the district court where the debtor’s assets are located. Available enforcement measures for foreign money judgment enforcement include garnishment of bank accounts and receivables, seizure and judicial sale of movable and immovable property, and attachment of shares or other financial instruments.
Foreign creditors holding an arbitral award benefit from a streamlined process compared to those seeking to enforce a foreign court judgment. Under Articles 47–51 of the Arbitration Act, a party may apply directly to a Taiwanese court for recognition of a foreign arbitral award. The court’s review focuses on a narrower set of grounds for refusal that closely mirror those in Article V of the New York Convention: invalidity of the arbitration agreement, lack of proper notice, the award exceeding the scope of the submission, irregularity in the composition of the tribunal, the award not yet being binding, and contravention of public policy.
The practical effect is that applications to enforce arbitral award Taiwan proceedings tend to move faster, industry observers report typical timelines of two to four months for uncontested applications, and face a lower threshold for approval. Unlike the approval action for foreign judgments, there is no separate reciprocity requirement for arbitral awards from jurisdictions whose arbitration laws are considered broadly compatible with international standards.
The most frequently invoked ground for resisting enforcement of both foreign judgments and arbitral awards remains public policy (公共秩序). Taiwanese courts interpret this narrowly, refusing enforcement only where the result would fundamentally offend domestic legal principles, for example, by enforcing punitive damages of a magnitude that the court considers grossly disproportionate. In 2024–2025 practice, courts have continued to reject broad public-policy objections, reinforcing Taiwan’s reputation as a generally enforcement‑friendly jurisdiction. Lack of proper service on the debtor and absence of jurisdiction in the originating forum remain live issues, particularly where default judgments are involved.
Documentary deficiencies are the single most common cause of delay in approval actions. The checklist below reflects current 2026 practice expectations. Creditors should prepare every item before instructing Taiwan counsel to file.
| Document | Requirements | Common errors to avoid |
|---|---|---|
| Certified copy of the foreign judgment or arbitral award | Must be an official court‑sealed or institution‑certified copy; photocopy is insufficient | Submitting an uncertified photocopy or a draft judgment |
| Certificate of finality (or non‑appeal certificate) | Issued by the originating court clerk or registrar; must confirm the judgment is final and enforceable | Omitting this document entirely; relying on counsel’s letter alone |
| Certified Chinese translation of the judgment | Translated by a court-certified or notarised translator; bound together with the original | Using an uncertified translator; failing to translate exhibits or appendices referenced in the judgment |
| Apostille or consular legalisation | If the originating country is a Hague Apostille Convention member, apostille suffices; otherwise, consular legalisation through the nearest ROC representative office | Confusing apostille requirements with notarisation; not obtaining legalisation for supporting documents |
| Power of attorney for Taiwan counsel | Executed by the creditor (or authorised representative), notarised in the creditor’s jurisdiction and consularised or apostilled | Signing without notarisation; failing to include specific authorisation for enforcement proceedings |
| Corporate identity documents (for corporate creditors) | Certificate of incorporation, good standing certificate and board resolution authorising enforcement | Submitting expired certificates; omitting the board resolution |
| Evidence of reciprocity | Legal opinion or prior court decisions demonstrating that the originating jurisdiction enforces Taiwanese judgments | Assuming reciprocity without evidence; relying on outdated case law |
Each document in a language other than Chinese must be accompanied by a certified Chinese translation. Translations should be prepared by a translator whose credentials the Taiwanese court will accept, typically a translator registered with the court or a translation attested by a ROC representative office abroad. Industry observers recommend having the translation reviewed by Taiwan counsel before filing, as inconsistencies between the translated text and the original are a frequent basis for the court to request supplementation, causing delays of four to six weeks.
One of the most frequent questions from foreign creditors concerns how long recognition and enforcement will take and what it will cost. The table below provides practical estimates based on current practice. All figures are indicative and will vary with case complexity, whether the debtor contests the application, and the caseload of the relevant district court.
| Action | Typical timeline | Typical cost range (USD) |
|---|---|---|
| Pre‑filing preparation (documents, translations, certifications) | 4–8 weeks | $3,000–$8,000 (translation, notarisation, legalisation) |
| Approval action, uncontested | 3–6 months from filing | $15,000–$35,000 (counsel fees + court filing fees) |
| Approval action, contested (with oral hearings) | 6–12 months from filing | $30,000–$70,000 (counsel fees + court filing fees) |
| Appeal by debtor (if approval is granted) | Additional 6–12 months | $20,000–$40,000 (appellate counsel fees) |
| Compulsory enforcement (post‑approval) | 2–6 months (bank garnishment fastest; property sale slowest) | $5,000–$15,000 (enforcement fees + ancillary costs) |
| Provisional attachment (假扣押), if sought | 1–3 weeks for court order; security bond required (typically one‑third of claimed amount) | $5,000–$10,000 (counsel fees) + bond amount |
Court filing fees for the approval action are calculated as a percentage of the amount in dispute, following the same fee schedule as ordinary civil litigation. For high‑value claims, filing fees alone can be substantial. Creditors should also budget for potential translation supplementation requests and, where the debtor appeals, for appellate representation. The likely practical effect of thorough pre-filing preparation is a material reduction in overall cost and duration, cases that proceed without documentary deficiencies typically resolve at the lower end of the ranges above.
Debtors in Taiwan routinely invoke a predictable catalogue of defences to resist enforcement. Effective creditors anticipate these arguments and pre-empt them in their approval petition. The most common defences include:
Where there is credible evidence that the debtor may transfer, encumber or dissipate assets during the approval process, the creditor should apply for provisional attachment (假扣押) before or simultaneously with the approval action. This is an ex parte application; the court can issue the attachment order without notifying the debtor, provided the creditor posts a security bond, typically set at approximately one-third of the claimed amount. Once the attachment order is issued, the court’s enforcement division immediately notifies banks, land registries and securities depositories to freeze the debtor’s assets.
This is a powerful tool, and early indications suggest that Taiwanese courts continue to grant provisional attachment readily where the creditor demonstrates both a prima facie claim and a concrete risk of asset dissipation.
Recent enforcement practice in Taiwan illustrates both the opportunities and pitfalls confronting foreign creditors:
These examples reflect the broader 2025–2026 trend: Taiwanese courts are willing to approve foreign judgments and recognise arbitral awards efficiently, but they hold creditors to a high standard of documentary completeness. The likely practical effect of filing with incomplete or inconsistent documents is not outright dismissal, but rather procedural delays that can extend the timeline by months.
Foreign creditors weighing enforcement in Taiwan should work through the following six-point decision checklist:
Cross-border judgment enforcement Taiwan proceedings reward thorough preparation and decisive action. With the right strategy and local expertise, foreign creditors can convert their judgments and awards into real recoveries against Taiwanese assets.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Wei Yang-Hung at Apollo Attorneys at Law, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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