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Litigation lawyers Italy now face the most consequential shake-up of judicial governance in a generation. The confirmatory constitutional referendum held on March 22–23, 2026 introduced sweeping changes to the composition of the High Council of the Judiciary (Consiglio Superiore della Magistratura, or CSM), mandated the formal separation of judicial and prosecutorial careers, and restructured the mechanisms by which judges are assigned to civil and commercial cases. A pivotal Constitutional Court hearing scheduled for June 9, 2026 may further alter the scope and timing of these reforms, creating immediate uncertainty for active and planned commercial litigation across every Italian court tier.
For general counsel, in-house teams and international creditors, the practical question is urgent: what must change in your dispute strategy, enforcement planning and case management right now?
The confirmatory constitutional referendum Italy held on March 22–23, 2026 was the culmination of a multi-year legislative effort to reform the governance of the judiciary. Unlike an advisory vote, this confirmatory referendum gave binding constitutional force to a package of amendments that had already passed Parliament but lacked the supermajority needed to avoid a popular vote. The measures adopted touch the structural pillars of how judges are selected, how their careers progress and how the CSM itself is constituted, all of which have direct downstream consequences for civil and commercial litigation in Italy.
The reform package centres on three pillars with immediate relevance for commercial litigation Italy practitioners:
All levels of the Italian court system are touched by the reform. First-instance tribunals (Tribunali) will see the most immediate operational disruption, because judge-assignment protocols are administered locally under CSM oversight. Courts of appeal (Corti d’Appello) face transitional exposure if appellate judges previously assigned from prosecutorial backgrounds are subject to reassignment during career-separation implementation. The Court of Cassation (Corte di Cassazione), while more insulated, may experience secondary effects through changes to its internal section assignments and the scheduling of hearings dependent on Constitutional Court rulings.
For practitioners, the key takeaway is that no tier of the Italian judiciary is immune from reform-related disruption, and litigation lawyers in Italy must account for transition risk in every active case.
The CSM is the self-governing body of the Italian judiciary. It holds exclusive constitutional authority over judge appointments, transfers, promotions and disciplinary proceedings. Any change to its composition or decision-making processes ripples through every civil and commercial courtroom in the country. The judicial reform 2026 delivers the most significant restructuring of the CSM since the current constitutional framework was established.
Under the pre-reform system, judges were assigned to specific court sections, and therefore to specific types of cases, through CSM-administered tabelle (assignment tables) approved on a multi-year cycle. The reform introduces new requirements for these assignment tables:
For litigators managing active cases, the practical risk is that a presiding judge may be reassigned mid-proceedings. Italian civil procedure already permits recusal (ricusazione) and abstention (astensione) in defined circumstances, but an involuntary mid-case reassignment triggered by CSM administrative action is a different scenario, one for which the Code of Civil Procedure does not provide an explicit remedy. Industry observers expect an increase in interlocutory applications challenging such reassignments, at least until the Constitutional Court clarifies the boundaries.
The reform also alters the CSM’s disciplinary section, which adjudicates misconduct complaints against judges. The new composition tilts the balance toward lay members, a change that supporters argue enhances accountability but that judicial associations have criticised as compromising independence. From a litigation strategy perspective, the likely practical effect will be twofold: first, judges may adopt more cautious case-management approaches to avoid disciplinary exposure, potentially slowing proceedings; second, the disciplinary process itself may become a vector for strategic challenges by parties seeking to remove an unfavourable judge from a case.
Practitioners should document any unusual procedural developments, particularly mid-case reassignments or unexplained scheduling changes, in real time, building an evidentiary record that can support later challenges if needed.
Alongside the constitutional amendments, the government has issued the Tajani Decree, a package of executive administrative measures designed to bridge the gap between the referendum result and the full implementation of the reform. The Decree takes its name from the coordinating minister responsible for its promulgation and addresses the immediate operational challenges facing courts during the transition period.
The Tajani Decree authorises several measures with direct implications for case management in commercial litigation Italy:
The Tajani Decree itself is published in the Gazzetta Ufficiale, but implementing circulars, which contain the operational detail that matters most to practitioners, are issued by the Ministry of Justice and the individual court presidents. Litigation lawyers Italy-wide should:
One of the most pressing concerns for parties with active or contemplated litigation in Italy is the effect of the judicial reform 2026 on case timelines. Italian courts have historically carried significant backlogs, particularly at the appellate and Cassation levels. The reform’s proponents argue that career separation and new assignment protocols will ultimately improve efficiency; critics contend that transition disruption will compound existing delays. The reality, for the next 12–24 months at least, is likely to depend on the specific court, the case type and the resolution of the June 9, 2026 Constitutional Court hearing.
Pre-reform, a standard commercial dispute before a Tribunale typically required between 18 and 36 months from filing to first-instance judgment, with significant variation by district. Under the reform, three scenarios emerge:
| Scenario | First Instance (Tribunale) | Appeal (Corte d’Appello) | Cassation (Corte di Cassazione) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Optimistic, reform implementation proceeds smoothly; digitalisation gains offset staffing churn | 16–30 months | 18–30 months | 24–36 months |
| Baseline, partial disruption; existing timelines persist during transition | 18–36 months | 24–36 months | 30–48 months |
| Conservative, significant transition friction; judge reassignments cause restarts and adjournments | 24–42 months | 30–48 months | 36–60 months |
Assumptions: Estimates reflect ranges observed in Ministry of Justice statistical reports for 2023–2025, adjusted for anticipated reform effects. Actual timelines will vary by district and complexity.
The appellate courts face a particular pinch point. Career-separation rules may require certain judges with prosecutorial backgrounds to be reassigned, reducing available capacity precisely when appellate backlogs are at multi-year highs. The Cassazione, while nominally less affected, could see knock-on delays if lower courts produce more interlocutory orders requiring its urgent intervention, especially if the Constitutional Court hearing on June 9, 2026 generates fresh procedural questions.
Italian civil procedure offers several accelerated mechanisms that become more tactically valuable during periods of systemic delay:
Practitioners should evaluate every active case for eligibility under these accelerated tracks, particularly where enforcement of judgments may be time-sensitive.
The enforcement of judgments in Italy operates through a distinct procedural regime that is affected by the reforms in several ways. For both domestic and international creditors, understanding the new risk landscape is essential to protecting the value of existing and future judgments.
Domestic enforcement proceeds through the Ufficio Esecuzioni attached to the competent Tribunale. The typical process involves serving the enforceable title (titolo esecutivo) with a formal demand (precetto), followed by the commencement of execution proceedings, whether against movable assets, immovable property or third-party receivables. The Tajani Decree’s requirement that enforcement registries reconcile pending files with the new assignment framework introduces a 90-day window of potential administrative bottleneck.
Foreign judgments within the EU are recognised under the Brussels I Recast Regulation (Regulation 1215/2012), which operates largely independently of domestic judicial governance structures. However, applications for enforcement still require interaction with Italian court clerks and, in contested cases, with judges who may be subject to reassignment. For non-EU judgments, the recognition process under Italian private international law (Law 218/1995) involves a more substantive judicial review, making these cases more exposed to reform-related delays.
| Enforcement Route | Typical Timeline | Risk Mitigation |
|---|---|---|
| Domestic execution, movable assets | 3–6 months (pre-reform baseline) | File early; use provisional measures to freeze assets before registry reconciliation delays materialise. |
| Domestic execution, immovable property | 12–24 months (includes sale process) | Obtain mortgage registration (ipoteca giudiziale) immediately upon judgment to secure priority. |
| EU judgment recognition (Brussels I Recast) | 2–8 weeks (uncontested); 6–18 months (contested) | Prepare enforcement application in parallel with main proceedings; confirm court clerk acceptance of electronic filings. |
| Non-EU judgment recognition (Law 218/1995) | 12–30 months | Consider interim protective measures (sequestro conservativo) pending recognition; monitor judge assignment to avoid reassignment disruption. |
Early indications suggest that creditors who move swiftly to perfect enforcement formalities before the 90-day registry reconciliation window closes will be best positioned to avoid administrative queues.
The following action plan, structured in three time horizons, provides a framework for in-house counsel and their external litigation lawyers Italy advisors to manage transition risk systematically.
Build a simple escalation matrix: if a judge reassignment or procedural irregularity occurs, the external counsel should notify in-house within 24 hours, accompanied by a preliminary assessment of whether interlocutory relief is warranted. Escalation to board level should be triggered if the event materially affects the expected outcome, timeline or value of the dispute.
The reform environment changes the calculus for dispute resolution choices. The following risk matrix distils the key factors into a decision framework:
| Factor | Litigation Risk Under Reform | Recommended Response |
|---|---|---|
| Case timeline certainty | Reduced, transition disruption and potential for judge reassignment delays | Consider institutional arbitration (e.g., ICC, Milan Chamber) for new disputes requiring predictable timetables. |
| Interim / provisional relief | Courts retain exclusive jurisdiction for most urgent ex parte measures; reform does not alter Article 700 CPC | Continue to litigate urgent applications; use arbitration for the merits if interim relief is secured. |
| Enforcement certainty | Elevated risk of administrative delays during registry reconciliation | Front-load enforcement formalities; secure mortgage registrations and asset freezes early. |
| Cross-border element | EU recognition regime (Brussels I Recast) largely insulated; non-EU recognition more exposed | For non-EU counterparties, arbitration with a New York Convention award may offer more reliable enforcement. |
| Value at stake / complexity | High-value, complex cases are most vulnerable to judge-churn effects | Evaluate mediation or structured settlement negotiations to remove judicial-assignment risk entirely. |
The decision tree for new disputes should begin with two threshold questions: (1) Is urgent interim relief needed from an Italian court? If yes, commence court proceedings for the interim application, but consider bifurcating the merits to arbitration. (2) Is the counterparty located outside the EU? If yes, arbitration under recognised institutional rules may deliver a more enforceable outcome than an Italian court judgment during the transition period.
| Date | Reform Measure / Event | Immediate Litigation Impact |
|---|---|---|
| March 22–23, 2026 | Confirmatory constitutional referendum, measures on judiciary governance adopted | Changes to CSM composition and career separation take constitutional force; immediate uncertainty over judge-assignment protocols; implementing regulations pending. |
| June 9, 2026 | Constitutional Court hearing on measures related to the referendum (scheduled) | Potential stay or interpretive ruling that alters scope of reforms; litigators must prepare contingency motions and preserve procedural rights in advance. |
| TBD, 2026 | Tajani Decree implementing circulars (ongoing) | Short-term reallocation of judges and staff; possible temporary procedural rules, monitor Gazzetta Ufficiale and Ministry of Justice circulars. |
| 90 days post-Decree | Enforcement registry reconciliation deadline | Courts must align pending execution files with new judge-assignment framework; front-load enforcement formalities before this window closes. |
Italy’s 2026 judicial reform creates a period of significant operational uncertainty for everyone involved in civil and commercial litigation across the country. The three most urgent actions for in-house counsel and their litigation lawyers Italy advisors are: first, audit every active Italian proceeding for judge-assignment exposure and preserve all provisional measures; second, build a monitoring protocol for CSM circulars, Ministry of Justice announcements and the outcome of the June 9, 2026 Constitutional Court hearing; and third, evaluate whether new or high-value disputes should be directed to arbitration or structured settlement to mitigate judicial-transition risk. For an in-depth guide to international litigation practice, or to find litigation lawyers with deep experience in Italian civil and commercial disputes, consult our practitioner directory.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Alberto Lama at Alture Legal, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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