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Construction Lawyers Belgium 2026: Book 7, Fixed‑price Contracts, Price Revision & Contractor Liability

By Global Law Experts
– posted 4 hours ago

Belgium’s reformed Civil Code Book 7, which codifies the law of “special contracts” and is expected to enter into force in 2026, fundamentally changes the legal framework that construction lawyers Belgium‑wide have relied on for decades. The reform introduces statutory provisions on contractual fairness, codifies a right to request price revision in cases of unforeseen changed circumstances, and reallocates liability between main contractors and subcontractors. For project owners, contractors and in‑house counsel, the question is no longer whether to prepare but how quickly existing templates, insurance programmes and subcontract flow‑downs can be brought into compliance. This guide explains the key changes, provides clause templates for the most common scenarios, and sets out a practical action plan.

Executive Summary: The Immediate Compliance Decision for Contractors and Owners

Under the reformed Belgian Civil Code Book 7, every construction contract signed after the date of entry into force will be subject to new default rules on price, performance and liability. Fixed‑price agreements remain lawful, but their enforceability is now qualified by a statutory mechanism allowing courts to intervene when unforeseen circumstances make performance manifestly more onerous. Parties that have not expressly addressed this mechanism in their contracts risk having a judge recalibrate the price, or even dissolve the agreement, on terms they did not negotiate.

The practical decision facing contractors and project owners is straightforward: review every active fixed‑price contract, identify whether its price and liability provisions will survive Book 7’s new default tests, and amend where necessary. Contracts signed before entry into force are governed by the old rules unless the parties have agreed otherwise, but industry observers expect that courts will increasingly refer to the Book 7 framework as persuasive authority even in transitional disputes.

Immediate next steps:

  • Contract audit. Review all active and pipeline fixed‑price construction contracts against Book 7’s unforeseen‑circumstances provisions and the new good‑faith obligations.
  • Insurer notification. Alert professional indemnity and decennial liability insurers to the revised liability allocation and confirm that policy wording aligns with Book 7 duties.
  • Subcontractor communication. Issue formal notices to subcontractors explaining the changed chain‑liability framework and request updated indemnity and insurance certificates.

Background: Book 7 Reform Timeline and Key Legal Changes

Book 7 is the latest instalment in Belgium’s decades‑long project to modernise the Civil Code originally inherited from the Napoleonic Code Civil of 1804. Where earlier books reformed property law (Book 3, in force since 2020) and the law of obligations (Book 5, in force since 2023), Book 7 tackles “special contracts”, including service contracts, works contracts and, by extension, the construction agreements that drive much of Belgian commercial activity.

Period Reform element Practical effect
2019–2023 Books 1, 3 and 5 adopted and in force New general obligations framework (Book 5) introduces codified unforeseen‑circumstances doctrine (imprévision), good‑faith duties and abuse‑of‑right tests that form the foundation for Book 7.
2024–2025 Drafting and parliamentary review of Book 7 Industry consultations and early firm alerts from practices such as Dentons and Altius warned of key changes to service and works contracts.
Expected 2026 Entry into force of Book 7 New statutory tests on contractual fairness, codified price‑revision mechanism and updated liability rules for construction and service contracts.
2026 onward Transitional application Existing contracts governed by old rules unless parties opt in; new contracts must adopt Book 7‑compliant wording from day one.

The core Book 7 provisions that affect construction law in Belgium cluster around three themes. First, the codification of imprévision, the doctrine that allows a party to seek renegotiation or judicial revision when unforeseen circumstances fundamentally alter the balance of a contract, now applies as a default rule to works contracts unless the parties explicitly exclude it. Second, enhanced good‑faith obligations require both contractor and owner to cooperate in adapting performance when external conditions change. Third, the rules on liability for defects, acceptance procedures and the ten‑year (decennial) liability regime have been clarified and, in certain respects, extended.

Fixed‑Price Contracts Under Book 7, Enforceability, Interpretation and Court Approach

Belgian Civil Code Book 7 does not prohibit fixed‑price contracts. Contractual autonomy remains a cornerstone of Belgian law, and parties are free to agree on a lump‑sum price for defined works. What changes is the legal safety net beneath that agreement: where the old code contained no general right to request price adaptation, Book 7, building on the imprévision doctrine already codified in Book 5, gives the disadvantaged party a statutory pathway to renegotiation or, failing that, judicial intervention.

For construction lawyers Belgium‑wide, the critical question is how courts will balance the sanctity of a fixed‑price clause against the new statutory default. Early indications suggest that Belgian courts will apply a three‑step test: (1) was the change in circumstances unforeseeable at the time of contracting? (2) is the change not attributable to the party invoking it? and (3) does the change make performance manifestly more onerous, not merely less profitable?

When Fixed‑Price Is Still Safe

A fixed‑price clause will generally remain enforceable where the parties have expressly excluded the imprévision mechanism. Book 7 treats the doctrine as a default (suppletief) rule, meaning an opt‑out clause, clearly and unambiguously drafted, can restore the pre‑reform certainty. In addition, fixed‑price contracts are less vulnerable where:

  • The project duration is short (under six months), limiting exposure to macro‑economic swings.
  • The contractor has priced in an explicit contingency margin and the contract records this.
  • Material procurement is locked in through pre‑purchase agreements or framework supply contracts executed before the works contract was signed.

Scenario, private residential renovation: A homeowner contracts with a builder for a kitchen renovation at a fixed price of €35,000, works to be completed within eight weeks. The short timeline and limited material scope make a successful imprévision claim by the contractor highly unlikely, even without an explicit opt‑out clause.

When Fixed‑Price Is at Risk

Conversely, fixed‑price arrangements are most exposed to judicial revision when:

  • The project spans multiple years with no escalation mechanism, common in large infrastructure and commercial builds.
  • A macro‑economic shock (energy crisis, steel‑price spike, supply‑chain disruption) occurs after contract execution.
  • The contract does not contain an express, unambiguous opt‑out from the imprévision doctrine.
  • The contractor can demonstrate that performing at the original price would cause a loss disproportionate to the profit margin normally expected in the sector.

Scenario, public infrastructure project: A road‑works contractor enters into a 30‑month fixed‑price contract. Eighteen months in, an unforeseen European regulatory change doubles the cost of bituminous materials. The contractor has not excluded imprévision. Under Book 7, the contractor may formally request renegotiation and, if the owner refuses, petition the court for a price adjustment or contract dissolution on judicially determined terms.

Decision checklist, keep fixed price or add revision clauses?

  • Project duration exceeds 12 months? → Consider a price‑revision clause.
  • Material costs represent more than 40 % of contract value? → Consider indexation or formula‑based escalation.
  • No pre‑purchase agreements in place for key materials? → A cost‑plus hybrid or cap‑and‑collar clause is advisable.
  • Both parties prefer certainty? → Keep fixed price but add an express, negotiated opt‑out from imprévision with a defined contingency margin.

Price Revision Clauses: Permitted Mechanisms, Drafting Patterns and Redlines

Under Book 7, price revision clauses in construction contracts are not only permitted but actively encouraged as a means of allocating cost risk transparently. Courts are expected to look favourably on contracts that anticipate changed circumstances through bespoke revision mechanisms, rather than relying on the statutory default of judicial intervention.

Permitted Legal Models Under Book 7

  • Index‑based escalation. The contract price adjusts automatically by reference to an official index, commonly the Belgian ABEX index (for construction costs) or the Statbel consumer price index. This model is simple, transparent and widely accepted.
  • Formula‑based escalation. A bespoke formula weights the contribution of specific cost drivers (labour, steel, energy, transport) and adjusts the contract price periodically. This offers more precision than a single index and is standard in large commercial projects.
  • Cost‑plus with cap. The contractor is reimbursed for actual costs plus a fixed fee or percentage, subject to a maximum ceiling. This transfers cost risk primarily to the owner but caps total exposure.
  • Emergency revision mechanism. A contractual “safety valve” triggered only when cumulative cost increases exceed a defined threshold (typically 10–15 %), at which point the parties must renegotiate in good faith before either may invoke judicial revision.

Clause Templates

Template A, Simple formula‑index clause:

“The Contract Price shall be adjusted on each Adjustment Date by applying the following formula: P1 = P0 × (I1 / I0), where P0 is the original Contract Price, I0 is the ABEX index published for the quarter in which the Contract was signed, and I1 is the ABEX index published for the quarter in which the Adjustment Date falls.”

Why this wording: Tying the adjustment to an independently published Belgian index removes the need for cost verification and minimises disputes. The ABEX index is updated biannually and is widely recognised by Belgian courts.

Template B, Contractor cost‑plus with cap:

“The Owner shall reimburse the Contractor for Documented Project Costs plus a fixed management fee of [X] %. The aggregate amount payable shall not exceed the Contract Price Cap of €[amount]. If Documented Project Costs would cause the aggregate to exceed the Contract Price Cap, the Contractor shall notify the Owner in writing, and the parties shall negotiate in good faith an adjustment to the scope or specifications sufficient to bring the cost within the Cap.”

Why this wording: The cap protects the owner against cost overruns while the cost‑plus mechanism removes the incentive for the contractor to cut corners on materials. The mandatory good‑faith negotiation clause aligns with Book 7’s enhanced cooperation duty.

Template C, Emergency revision mechanism:

“If, as a result of circumstances that were not reasonably foreseeable at the date of this Contract, the Contractor’s aggregate cost of performing the Works increases by more than [10/15] % relative to the cost assumptions set out in Annex [X], either party may give written notice requesting renegotiation of the Contract Price. The parties shall negotiate in good faith for a period of [30] days. If no agreement is reached, either party may refer the matter to [mediation/the competent court] in accordance with Clause [Y].”

Why this wording: This clause mirrors the structure of Book 7’s statutory imprévision mechanism but gives parties control over the trigger threshold, the negotiation period and the dispute‑resolution pathway, reducing the risk of an unpredictable judicial outcome.

Negotiation and “Fairness” Tests

When drafting price escalation clauses, Belgian construction lawyers should ensure the clause satisfies Book 7’s implicit fairness standard. Industry observers expect courts to invalidate revision clauses that are manifestly one‑sided, for example, a clause that allows the contractor to increase prices but provides no reciprocal right for the owner if costs fall. A balanced clause should:

  • Apply equally to cost increases and decreases.
  • Reference an objective, verifiable index or documented cost base.
  • Include a good‑faith negotiation step before any unilateral price adjustment takes effect.
  • State clearly whether the imprévision default is supplemented, modified or excluded by the clause.

Contractor Liability and Subcontracting Chain: New Allocations, Insurance and the 15‑Year VAT Rule

Book 7 clarifies and, in several respects, strengthens the liability framework for construction professionals in Belgium. Contractor liability Belgium rules have long been anchored in the ten‑year (decennial) liability regime for serious structural defects under Articles 1792 and 2270 of the old Civil Code, but Book 7 integrates these rules into a broader, modernised framework.

Liability for Defects and Statutory Limitation Windows

Under Book 7, liability for construction defects operates on three tiers:

  • Visible defects. Must be raised at provisional acceptance or, at the latest, at final acceptance. Failure to object constitutes implicit waiver.
  • Hidden (latent) defects. Subject to a reasonable discovery period, with an absolute limitation period that Book 7 aligns with the general ten‑year prescription under Book 5. The contractor must be notified within a reasonable time of discovery.
  • Serious structural defects (decennial liability). The existing ten‑year regime is preserved but explicitly codified in Book 7, removing historical ambiguity about its scope. It applies to defects that affect the stability, solidity or watertightness of the building or a major component.

Subcontracting Chain Liability

One of the most consequential changes for construction lawyers Belgium practitioners advise on is the treatment of subcontracting chain liability. Under the reformed rules, the main contractor remains primarily liable to the project owner for defects in the works, including those caused by subcontractors. However, Book 7 codifies the main contractor’s right of recourse against the subcontractor and introduces clearer rules on direct actions (action directe) that the owner may bring against a subcontractor in limited circumstances.

Practical controls for managing chain liability include:

  • Back‑to‑back flow‑down clauses in subcontracts that mirror the liability, notice and cure provisions of the main contract.
  • Mandatory professional indemnity and decennial insurance certificates from each subcontractor, verified before works commence.
  • Joint inspection and acceptance protocols that involve the subcontractor at both provisional and final acceptance stages.

Insurance and Indemnities

Belgium’s existing mandatory decennial insurance obligation (the Wet Peeters, applicable since 2018 for residential construction) continues under Book 7. Industry observers expect the reform to prompt a review of policy coverage, particularly for projects involving complex subcontracting chains. Contractors should verify that:

  • Decennial insurance covers the full scope of works, including subcontracted elements.
  • Professional indemnity policies reflect the enhanced good‑faith duties and the risk of judicial price revision.
  • Contractual indemnities from subcontractors align with the main contractor’s exposure under the owner contract.

VAT 15‑Year Renovation Rule, Contract and Accounting Implications

Separately from the Civil Code reform, Belgium has extended the VAT review period for “durable” renovations from the previous standard to 15 years. This means that if a renovation initially qualifies for a reduced VAT rate (currently 6 % for residential renovations meeting certain age and use conditions), a change in the building’s use or status within 15 years may trigger a VAT recapture obligation.

For contractors, this has three direct implications:

  • Price quotations. Offers that assume a reduced VAT rate must flag the 15‑year risk to the client, with a contractual allocation of the recapture cost if the client changes the building’s use.
  • Retention and warranty periods. Where a renovation contract includes a retention fund, the fund’s release timeline should account for the possibility of a VAT review within the 15‑year window.
  • Accounting adjustments. Contractors performing renovation works should maintain records sufficient to demonstrate the reduced‑rate conditions were met at the time of invoicing, even years after completion.
Entity Key liability exposure under Book 7 Recommended contract clause to mitigate
Main contractor Primary liability for all defects, including subcontractor work; exposure to judicial price revision if imprévision not excluded Back‑to‑back subcontract flow‑downs; express imprévision opt‑out or bespoke revision clause; decennial insurance verification
Subcontractor Recourse liability to main contractor; potential direct action by owner for serious defects Mirror clause aligning liability caps and notice periods with main contract; own professional indemnity and decennial insurance
Project owner Obligation to cooperate in good faith on price revision; VAT recapture risk on renovations within 15‑year review window Contractual right to approve subcontractors; VAT allocation clause shifting recapture risk; staged acceptance protocol

Practical Drafting: Sample Redlines, Negotiation Playbook and Risk Allocation Checklist

Bringing existing contract templates into compliance with Book 7 requires targeted amendments rather than a wholesale rewrite. The following redline examples and negotiation guidance address the most common clauses that Belgian construction lawyers will need to update.

Redline example, fixed‑price clause (before and after):

  • Before: “The Contract Price is a fixed lump sum of €[amount]. No adjustment shall be made for any reason whatsoever.”
  • After: “The Contract Price is a fixed lump sum of €[amount]. The parties expressly agree that the statutory right to request renegotiation on grounds of unforeseen changed circumstances (Book 5, Article 5.74 and Book 7 [applicable article]) is excluded. The Contractor confirms that a contingency of [X] % has been included in the Contract Price to address foreseeable cost fluctuations.”

Why the change: The additional language makes the imprévision opt‑out explicit and records the contractor’s risk pricing, reducing the chance that a court will override the fixed price on fairness grounds.

Redline example, price revision clause (before and after):

  • Before: “The Contractor may increase the Contract Price if material costs rise.”
  • After: “The Contract Price shall be adjusted biannually in accordance with the formula set out in Annex [X], applying both increases and decreases. If the cumulative adjustment exceeds [15] % of the original Contract Price, either party may request renegotiation in accordance with Clause [Y].”

Why the change: The revised clause is bilateral, formula‑based and includes a good‑faith renegotiation step, all features that align with Book 7’s fairness expectations.

Negotiation guidance:

  • Owner’s position: Push for a narrow index (e.g., ABEX only), short adjustment intervals (quarterly), and a cap on aggregate price increases.
  • Contractor’s position: Seek a multi‑factor formula reflecting actual cost drivers, a lower trigger threshold for the emergency revision clause, and a right to suspend works if the owner refuses to negotiate.
  • Common ground: Both parties benefit from a clear, documented escalation pathway that keeps the contract alive rather than forcing judicial intervention.

Procurement team checklist:

Contract clause Risk transferred to Recommended mitigation
Fixed price with no revision Contractor bears all cost risk Express imprévision opt‑out + documented contingency margin
Index‑linked escalation Shared (owner bears index movements) Bilateral adjustment; cap on aggregate increase; quarterly review
Subcontractor indemnity Subcontractor bears defect cost Back‑to‑back flow‑down; insurance certificate on file; joint acceptance
VAT allocation (renovation) Owner bears recapture risk Clause requiring owner to maintain qualifying use for 15 years or reimburse contractor for VAT differential
Performance bond Contractor’s surety bears completion risk Bond amount aligned with revised contract price after escalation; automatic uplift clause

Dispute Resolution, Remedies and Termination for Price Increases

When price negotiations fail, Book 7 provides a structured menu of remedies. Understanding these options is essential for any party operating under construction law in Belgium.

Available remedies:

  • Specific performance. The court may order the disadvantaged party to continue performing, with or without an adjusted price.
  • Judicial price recalculation. Where imprévision applies and the parties have not excluded it, the court may reset the contract price on terms it considers equitable.
  • Contract dissolution. As a last resort, the court may dissolve the contract on terms it determines, including compensation for work already performed.
  • Contractual termination for price increases. A well‑drafted termination clause may allow either party to exit the contract if cumulative price increases exceed a defined ceiling and good‑faith renegotiation has failed. Safe drafting requires a written notice period (typically 30–60 days), a mandatory cure or renegotiation window, and provisions for payment of work completed to date.

Interim Measures and Urgent Injunctions

In urgent situations, for example, where a contractor suspends works pending a price dispute, Belgian courts can grant interim relief through summary proceedings (kort geding). The applicant must demonstrate urgency and a prima facie right. In construction disputes, industry observers expect courts to consider whether the requesting party made a good‑faith attempt to negotiate before seeking judicial intervention, consistent with Book 7’s cooperative ethos.

For Belgian construction disputes, parties should note that arbitration clauses are common in larger commercial contracts and are enforceable under Belgian law. The Belgian Centre for Arbitration and Mediation (CEPANI) administers construction arbitrations under rules that align well with the Book 7 framework. Mediation, while not mandatory, is increasingly favoured as a first step, particularly given Book 7’s emphasis on good‑faith renegotiation.

Construction Lawyers Belgium: Recommended Immediate Actions

The reforms introduced by Belgian Civil Code Book 7 require prompt, structured action from every party involved in construction projects. Belgian construction lawyers, contractors, subcontractors and project owners should treat the following checklist as a minimum compliance programme:

  • Audit all active fixed‑price contracts. Identify which contracts contain an express imprévision opt‑out and which are exposed to the new statutory default.
  • Update standard contract templates. Incorporate bilateral price‑revision clauses, explicit imprévision treatment and back‑to‑back subcontractor flow‑downs.
  • Notify insurers. Confirm that decennial insurance, professional indemnity and performance bond wordings are compatible with Book 7’s revised liability allocation.
  • Conduct subcontractor and vendor audits. Verify insurance certificates, update indemnity provisions and align acceptance protocols across the supply chain.
  • Prepare an amendment schedule. For contracts that cannot be immediately replaced, negotiate targeted amendments or side letters addressing price revision and liability.
  • Consult specialist counsel. Engage a qualified construction lawyer to review contract portfolios, advise on transitional provisions and represent your interests in renegotiations. Find a Belgian 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 Wim Nackaerts at Strada Legale, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Belgian Official Legislation, Moniteur Belge (e‑Justice)
  2. Dentons, Belgian Civil Code Book 7 client alert
  3. Altius, analysis on duty of care and Book 7 implications
  4. BDO Belgium, VAT advisory on the 15‑year renovation rule
  5. FPS Finance Belgium, VAT guidance and administrative interpretation
  6. Legal 500, Belgium Real Estate and Construction rankings

FAQs

Q: What does Book 7 change for fixed‑price construction contracts?
A: Book 7 makes the imprévision doctrine, allowing judicial price revision when unforeseen circumstances make performance manifestly more onerous, a default rule for works contracts. Fixed‑price clauses remain valid, but parties must expressly opt out of this default to maintain full price certainty.
A: Only if the contract includes a price‑revision clause or the contractor successfully invokes the imprévision mechanism. Routine inflation alone is unlikely to meet the “unforeseeable and manifestly onerous” threshold; an extraordinary cost spike, well beyond normal market expectations, would be required.
A: An enforceable clause should be bilateral (covering both increases and decreases), reference an objective index or documented cost base, include a good‑faith negotiation step, and specify whether it supplements, modifies or replaces the statutory imprévision default.
A: Belgium has extended the VAT review period for qualifying “durable” renovations to 15 years. If the building’s use changes within that window, the reduced 6 % VAT rate may be recaptured at the standard rate. Contractors should include a contractual allocation of this recapture risk and maintain invoicing records for the full period.
A: The main contractor remains primarily liable for subcontractor defects, but Book 7 codifies the main contractor’s right of recourse and clarifies the project owner’s limited right of direct action against subcontractors. Back‑to‑back flow‑down clauses, joint acceptance protocols and verified insurance certificates are essential mitigation tools.
A: Termination is lawful where the contract expressly permits it upon exceeding a defined price‑increase threshold and the terminating party has complied with notice and good‑faith renegotiation requirements. Absent such a clause, termination requires judicial authorisation following a failed imprévision procedure.
A: A qualified Belgian construction lawyer with experience in Book 7 compliance can review your contract portfolio, draft compliant clauses and advise on transitional risk. Search the Global Law Experts lawyer directory for construction law specialists in Belgium.

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Construction Lawyers Belgium 2026: Book 7, Fixed‑price Contracts, Price Revision & Contractor Liability

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