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how to enforce a foreign judgment in morocco

How to Enforce a Foreign Judgment in Morocco (2026): Exequatur Procedure, Documents & Enforcement Steps

By Global Law Experts
– posted 2 hours ago

Last updated: May 20, 2026

Understanding how to enforce a foreign judgment in Morocco is essential for any creditor, in-house counsel or international law firm seeking to collect on a cross-border obligation in the Kingdom. Morocco’s 2026 legislative framework, anchored in the revised provisions of Article 451 of the Code of Civil Procedure, has reshaped the recognition and enforcement landscape, introducing clearer conditions for granting exequatur while reinforcing judicial safeguards around public policy and jurisdictional review. This guide walks through every stage of the exequatur process, from preparing the initial filing dossier to executing a seizure order against the debtor’s assets, giving practitioners and creditors an actionable roadmap that reflects the current state of the law.

Whether you hold a final commercial judgment from a European court or a family-law order from a Middle-Eastern jurisdiction, the procedural steps below apply to virtually every category of foreign decision that requires Moroccan recognition.

What You Need to Know Right Now, Key Takeaways

  • Exequatur is mandatory. A foreign judgment has no enforceable effect in Morocco until a Moroccan court grants an exequatur order under the Article 451 framework.
  • Competent court. Petitions are filed at the Court of First Instance, or at a specialised commercial court in Morocco for commercial disputes, in the district where enforcement is sought.
  • Core documents. You will need an authenticated copy of the foreign judgment, a certified Arabic translation, legalisation or apostille, a power of attorney and proof that the debtor was served.
  • Typical timeline. Industry observers report that exequatur proceedings in Morocco take between three and twelve months depending on court location, complexity and whether the debtor contests the petition.
  • Post-recognition enforcement. Once exequatur is granted, all standard Moroccan enforcement steps for a foreign judgment become available: bank-account attachment, seizure of movables and immovables, garnishment of receivables and judicial sale.

Legal Framework & Article 451, Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Judgments in Morocco

The recognition and enforcement of foreign judgments in Morocco is governed primarily by Articles 430–432 and, following the 2026 reforms, Article 451 of the Moroccan Code of Civil Procedure (Code de Procédure Civile). The foundational principle is straightforward: a judgment rendered by a foreign court cannot be executed on Moroccan territory unless and until a Moroccan court has verified that it meets a series of substantive and procedural conditions and has clothed it in an enforceable formula through the exequatur procedure.

Article 451 Morocco codifies the conditions that the reviewing court must examine before granting or refusing exequatur. The court does not retry the merits of the underlying dispute. Instead, it conducts a limited review to satisfy itself that several core requirements are met:

  • Jurisdiction of the originating court. The foreign tribunal must have had competent jurisdiction under the rules applicable in its own legal system, and the exercise of that jurisdiction must not conflict with Moroccan rules on exclusive jurisdiction.
  • Finality. The judgment must be final and enforceable (passée en force de chose jugée) in the country of origin.
  • Due process. The parties, particularly the defendant, must have been properly summoned and afforded an opportunity to present their defence.
  • Public policy. The judgment must not conflict with Moroccan international public order (ordre public international marocain).
  • No fraud. The judgment must not have been obtained by fraud (fraude à la loi).

Reciprocity and Public Policy Under Article 451 Morocco

A question that arises repeatedly is whether reciprocity is a formal statutory prerequisite. Under the revised Article 451 framework, reciprocity is not framed as an absolute bar; rather, it functions as one of the factors the court may consider in its overall assessment. In practice, Moroccan courts have granted exequatur for judgments originating in countries with which Morocco has no bilateral judicial-cooperation treaty, provided all other conditions, finality, jurisdiction, public policy and due process, are satisfied. That said, the existence of a bilateral convention (Morocco has agreements with France, Spain, Belgium, Germany, Italy, Egypt, Tunisia, Algeria, Senegal and others) can simplify the process and influence the court’s analysis favourably.

When Exequatur Is Not Required, Arbitral Awards and Special Regimes

Foreign arbitral awards follow a distinct enforcement route. Morocco is a signatory to the 1958 New York Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards, and domestic arbitration is governed by Law 08-05 (integrated into the Code of Civil Procedure). Arbitral awards are therefore recognised through a separate, often more streamlined procedure before the president of the Commercial Court or the Court of First Instance. The exequatur procedure described in this article applies specifically to foreign court judgments; practitioners dealing with arbitral awards should consult the dedicated arbitration-enforcement framework.

Topic Foreign Court Judgment (Exequatur) Foreign Arbitral Award
Primary enforcement route Exequatur, recognition by Moroccan court under Article 451 framework New York Convention route, recognition under Law 08-05 (often streamlined)
Governing norms Code of Civil Procedure (Articles 430–432, 451) + bilateral treaties New York Convention + Law 08-05 (Code of Civil Procedure, Title VIII)
Scope of court review Jurisdiction, finality, due process, public policy, fraud, no review of merits Narrower review, limited to Convention grounds (Article V)
Typical timeline 3–12 months; longer if contested or appealed Generally faster if award meets Convention criteria
Competent court Court of First Instance (or Commercial Court for commercial matters) President of the Commercial Court or Court of First Instance

How to Get an Exequatur in Morocco, Step-by-Step Procedure

Exequatur proceedings in Morocco follow a structured sequence. The numbered steps below represent the standard workflow that practitioners encounter in Casablanca, Rabat and other major court districts. Individual courts may have minor procedural variations, but the core sequence is consistent across the Kingdom.

  1. Engage local Moroccan counsel. Foreign creditors cannot file directly; a Moroccan avocat enrolled at the relevant bar must represent the petitioner. The lawyer prepares the exequatur petition (requête en exequatur) and manages all filings. Select counsel with demonstrated experience in cross-border enforcement.
  2. Obtain an authenticated copy of the foreign judgment. Secure a certified copy of the judgment from the originating court’s registry. The copy must be complete, operative part, reasoning and any annexes, and bear the court’s official seal or certification.
  3. Arrange certified translation into Arabic. All foreign-language documents must be translated into Arabic by a certified sworn translator (traducteur assermenté) recognised by a Moroccan Court of Appeal. French-language judgments from francophone jurisdictions still require formal translation; Moroccan courts will not accept untranslated exhibits.
  4. Legalise or apostille all documents. If Morocco and the originating country are both parties to the 1961 Hague Apostille Convention, an apostille suffices. Otherwise, documents must pass through the full legalisation chain: notarisation in the country of origin, authentication by the foreign affairs ministry, then legalisation by the Moroccan consulate. Moroccan courts routinely reject filings with incomplete legalisation.
  5. Prepare the supporting dossier. Assemble the full set of required documents for exequatur (see the detailed checklist below), including the power of attorney, proof of service on the debtor in the original proceedings, and evidence that the judgment is final and enforceable in the country of origin.
  6. File the exequatur petition at the court registry. The petition is lodged at the greffe (court registry) of the competent Court of First Instance or commercial court in Morocco, together with court filing fees. The registry stamps the petition, assigns a case number and opens a procedural file.
  7. Serve the debtor. The judgment debtor must be served with the exequatur petition and all supporting documents through a Moroccan huissier de justice (judicial officer). If the debtor is domiciled abroad, service may need to comply with the Hague Service Convention or the applicable bilateral treaty. Defective service is one of the most common grounds for delay or refusal.
  8. Consider provisional or conservatory measures. If there is a risk that the debtor will dissipate assets during the exequatur proceedings, the creditor can apply for conservatory attachment (saisie conservatoire) or other provisional measures before the president of the court. This step is optional but highly advisable when asset flight is a concern.
  9. Attend the hearing. The court schedules one or more hearings at which both parties, or their counsel, present arguments. The debtor may contest the petition on any of the statutory grounds (lack of jurisdiction, public policy, fraud, absence of finality or defective service). The creditor’s counsel must be prepared to rebut each objection with documentary evidence.
  10. Obtain the exequatur judgment and enforcement writ. If the court is satisfied that all conditions are met, it issues a judgment granting exequatur. The creditor then obtains the grosse (enforceable copy) from the court registry, which carries the enforcement formula (formule exécutoire). The foreign judgment is now treated as if it were a Moroccan judgment for enforcement purposes.

Sample Procedural Timeline for Exequatur Proceedings Morocco

Step Action Responsible Party Typical Timeframe
1–5 Document preparation, translation, legalisation, dossier assembly Creditor + local counsel 4–8 weeks
6 Filing at court registry Local counsel 1–3 days
7 Service on debtor Huissier de justice 2–6 weeks (longer if abroad)
8 Provisional measures (if needed) Local counsel + court president 1–3 weeks
9 Court hearing(s) Court, counsel for both parties 2–6 months from filing
10 Judgment + enforceable copy Court registry 2–4 weeks after final hearing

Court Forms and Fees, Practical Note

Moroccan courts do not publish standardised petition templates for exequatur. The petition is drafted by counsel in free form, following established practice. Court filing fees (taxe judiciaire) are relatively modest and calculated based on the value of the claim. Counsel should also budget for translation costs, legalisation fees, huissier charges and, where applicable, conservatory-measure deposits. Early fee estimation avoids administrative delays at the registry window.

Required Documents for Exequatur in Morocco, Detailed Checklist

The required documents for exequatur form the backbone of any successful petition. Missing or improperly prepared items are the single most frequent cause of procedural delay. The table below lists each document, its purpose and practical notes on preparation.

Document Purpose Where to Obtain Notes
Authenticated copy of the foreign judgment Proves the existence, content and finality of the decision Registry of the originating court Must be certified and sealed; include all pages and annexes
Certificate of finality / enforceability Confirms the judgment is final and enforceable in country of origin Originating court or competent authority Some jurisdictions issue a separate certificate; others endorse the judgment itself
Certified Arabic translation Required for all non-Arabic documents filed in Moroccan courts Sworn translator registered with a Moroccan Court of Appeal French-language judgments also require translation; do not use uncertified translations
Legalisation or apostille Authenticates the foreign official documents for use in Morocco Foreign affairs ministry + Moroccan consulate (legalisation) or competent authority (apostille) Check whether the originating country is party to the Hague Apostille Convention
Power of attorney (PoA) Authorises Moroccan counsel to act on behalf of the petitioner Prepared by creditor, often notarised and legalised Must specifically reference the exequatur petition and court; legalise if executed abroad
Proof of service on debtor in original proceedings Demonstrates that the debtor had notice and opportunity to defend Originating court or process-serving authority Critical, defective proof of service is a leading ground for refusal
Identity documents of the petitioner Establishes the creditor’s legal identity and standing National ID, passport or corporate registration extract Corporate petitioners should provide articles of association and proof of authority to sue
Contractual evidence (if applicable) Supports the underlying claim and jurisdictional basis Creditor’s files Relevant for commercial disputes where the court examines jurisdictional clauses
Exequatur petition (requête) Formal request to the Moroccan court for recognition and enforcement Drafted by Moroccan counsel Free-form; must reference applicable legal provisions (Articles 430–432, 451)

Practitioners should assemble the dossier in the order listed above and prepare two complete copies, one for the court file and one for service on the debtor. Retaining a third working copy for counsel’s records is standard practice.

Which Court Handles Exequatur? Competent Court and Venue in Morocco

Identifying the competent court is a threshold question in any exequatur proceeding. Under the Moroccan Code of Civil Procedure, jurisdiction over exequatur petitions belongs to the Court of First Instance (Tribunal de Première Instance) of the district where enforcement is sought, typically the district where the debtor resides, has assets or maintains a place of business.

For disputes of a commercial nature, Morocco’s specialised Commercial Courts (Tribunaux de Commerce) have jurisdiction. If the underlying foreign judgment resolved a commercial dispute, a supply-contract claim, a corporate-liability matter, an international-trade dispute, the exequatur petition should be directed to the commercial court in Morocco in the relevant district. Casablanca, as the country’s economic capital, handles a disproportionate share of commercial exequatur applications.

Where the debtor contests jurisdiction or the commercial nature of the dispute, the court will rule on its own competence before proceeding to the substance of the exequatur review. Jurisdictional objections can add several weeks to the timeline. Appeals against first-instance exequatur judgments are heard by the relevant Court of Appeal (Cour d’Appel), and cassation review before the Court of Cassation (Cour de Cassation) is available on points of law.

Timelines and Likely Outcomes of Exequatur Proceedings in Morocco

Realistic timeline expectations are critical for creditors budgeting time and resources. The table below reflects ranges that industry observers report from Moroccan court practice.

Milestone Typical Timeframe Notes
Dossier preparation (documents, translation, legalisation) 4–8 weeks Longer if documents require multi-step legalisation
Filing to first hearing 4–12 weeks Varies by court workload; Casablanca commercial courts tend toward the longer end
Hearing phase (if uncontested) 1–3 hearings over 2–4 months Uncontested petitions may be decided in a single hearing
Hearing phase (if contested) 3–6 hearings over 4–10 months Debtor objections on jurisdiction, public policy or service require evidentiary responses
Judgment delivery 2–4 weeks after final hearing Court issues written judgment; enforceable copy obtained from registry
Appeal period 30 days from notification of judgment The debtor (or creditor, if refused) may appeal within this window

Early indications suggest that the 2026 reforms have not materially shortened hearing timelines, but the codification of clearer grounds in Article 451 is expected to reduce the scope and duration of contested arguments over time. Practitioners should plan for an overall timeline of three to twelve months from initial filing to enforceable exequatur judgment, with contested cases trending toward the upper end.

Enforcement Steps After Recognition, Seizure, Attachment, Provisional Measures and Alternatives

Once a Moroccan court grants exequatur, the foreign judgment is clothed with the domestic enforcement formula and all standard enforcement steps for a foreign judgment become available. The creditor may pursue any of the following measures through a Moroccan huissier de justice (enforcement officer):

  • Attachment of bank accounts (saisie-arrêt). The huissier serves an attachment order on the debtor’s bank, freezing funds up to the amount of the judgment. The bank must comply immediately and declare the balance held.
  • Seizure of movable assets (saisie mobilière). Physical goods, vehicles, inventory and equipment at the debtor’s premises can be seized and, if the debt remains unpaid, sold at judicial auction.
  • Seizure of immovable property (saisie immobilière). Real-estate assets can be seized, though this involves a more complex procedure including registration at the Conservation Foncière (land registry) and a mandatory auction process.
  • Garnishment of receivables. Amounts owed to the debtor by third parties, clients, tenants, contractual counterparties, can be garnished through a saisie-arrêt served on the third party.
  • Astreinte (penalty payments). Where the judgment requires the debtor to perform a specific obligation (delivery of goods, transfer of documents), the court may impose a daily penalty (astreinte) for non-compliance.

Provisional Measures Before Exequatur

Creditors concerned about asset dissipation should not wait until the exequatur is granted. Moroccan law permits conservatory attachments (saisie conservatoire) on an urgent basis, even before the exequatur petition is heard. The creditor applies to the president of the competent court, demonstrating the existence of the claim and the risk of dissipation. If granted, assets are frozen pending the outcome of the exequatur proceedings. This pre-emptive step is one of the most important practical tools available to foreign creditors seeking to enforce a judgment in Morocco.

Contractual Claims, Practical Enforcement Tools

Where the underlying claim is contractual, a breach-of-contract judgment, an unpaid-invoice award, creditors can combine the exequatur enforcement tools above with contractual remedies available under Moroccan commercial law. These may include exercising a right of retention over goods, enforcing a contractual guarantee or bank guarantee on Moroccan soil, or pursuing parallel actions against local guarantors or co-debtors. Coordinating these remedies with the exequatur timetable requires experienced local counsel.

Practical Tips, Common Pitfalls and Sample Filing Checklist

The difference between a smooth exequatur and a protracted battle often comes down to preparation. The following practice tips reflect common pitfalls observed in Moroccan exequatur proceedings:

  1. Start legalisation and translation early. Multi-country legalisation chains (notary → foreign ministry → Moroccan consulate) can take six to eight weeks. Begin the process as soon as the foreign judgment is final.
  2. Verify whether an apostille suffices. Morocco acceded to the Hague Apostille Convention. If the originating country is also a party, a simple apostille replaces the full legalisation chain, saving weeks.
  3. Obtain a standalone certificate of finality. Some courts issue separate certificates; others endorse the judgment. Moroccan courts expect clear, unambiguous proof that no ordinary appeal is pending.
  4. Use a sworn translator registered in Morocco. Translations by foreign translators are regularly rejected. Engage a traducteur assermenté enrolled with a Moroccan Court of Appeal.
  5. Serve the debtor properly, and prove it. Defective service in the original foreign proceedings is the single most effective objection a debtor can raise. Ensure proof of service is comprehensive.
  6. Anticipate public-policy objections. Debtors routinely invoke Moroccan ordre public. Prepare a brief showing that the judgment does not conflict with fundamental Moroccan legal principles.
  7. Secure assets early with conservatory measures. Apply for a saisie conservatoire at the outset if the debtor has reachable assets in Morocco and there is any risk of dissipation.
  8. File a complete dossier. Incomplete filings are returned by the registry, resetting the timeline. Use the checklist below to verify completeness before submission.
  9. Budget for multiple hearings. Even in straightforward cases, Moroccan courts frequently schedule two or three hearings. Contested cases may require more.
  10. Engage counsel with cross-border experience. Exequatur intersects private international law, Moroccan procedural law and enforcement practice. Counsel should be experienced in all three domains. The Morocco lawyer directory can assist in identifying qualified practitioners.

Sample Filing Order, Court Submission Checklist

When submitting the exequatur dossier to the Moroccan court registry, arrange documents in the following order:

Order Document Copies Required
1 Cover letter addressed to the President of the Court 2
2 Exequatur petition (requête en exequatur) 2
3 Authenticated copy of the foreign judgment (with apostille or legalisation) 2
4 Certificate of finality / enforceability 2
5 Certified Arabic translation of judgment and certificate 2
6 Power of attorney (legalised or apostilled) 2
7 Proof of service on debtor in original proceedings 2
8 Identity documents of the petitioner (passport, corporate extract) 2
9 Contractual evidence or supporting exhibits (if applicable) 2
10 Proof of payment of court filing fees 1 (original receipt)

Cover Letter to the Court, Suggested Headings

  • Name and address of the petitioner (creditor)
  • Name and address of the judgment debtor
  • Reference number and date of the foreign judgment
  • Court and country of origin
  • Summary of the claim and amount sought
  • Legal basis for the exequatur request (Articles 430–432, 451 of the Code of Civil Procedure)
  • List of attached documents
  • Name, bar registration and signature of Moroccan counsel

Conclusion, Navigating Exequatur in Morocco Under the 2026 Framework

Understanding how to enforce a foreign judgment in Morocco requires careful attention to the procedural formalities of the exequatur system, thorough document preparation and strategic use of provisional measures. The 2026 reforms centred on Article 451 have brought greater clarity to the grounds for recognition and refusal, but they have not eliminated the need for meticulous compliance with documentary and service requirements. Creditors who invest the time to assemble a complete dossier, engage experienced Moroccan counsel and consider early asset-preservation measures position themselves for the most efficient path to enforcement. For complex or high-value claims, the guidance of a specialist litigation practitioner familiar with Moroccan court practice is not merely advisable, it is essential.

Need Legal Advice?

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

Sources

  1. ConflictOfLaws, “The New Moroccan Framework on International Jurisdiction and Foreign Judgment Enforcement”
  2. Global Law Experts, Enforcement of Foreign Judgments in Morocco
  3. AvocatMarocain, “Exequatur of Foreign Judgments”
  4. Chambers, Morocco Dispute Resolution Overview
  5. Baker McKenzie, Cross-Border Enforcement Handbook
  6. Jus Mundi, Morocco Country Notes (Enforcement of Awards)
  7. Comparative Procedural Law and Justice, Recognition & Enforcement of Judgments

FAQs

How do I obtain an exequatur for a foreign judgment in Morocco?
File an exequatur petition at the competent Moroccan court, typically the Court of First Instance or commercial court, together with an authenticated copy of the judgment, certified Arabic translation, legalisation or apostille, power of attorney and proof of service. The court reviews jurisdiction, finality and public policy before granting the enforceable order.
Reciprocity is not an absolute statutory bar under the Article 451 framework. Moroccan courts consider it among other factors, including jurisdiction, finality, due process and public policy. Judgments from countries with bilateral conventions enjoy a presumption in favour of recognition, but exequatur has been granted even without a treaty in place.
No. Foreign arbitral awards are enforced through a separate procedure under the New York Convention and Morocco’s domestic arbitration law (Law 08-05). This route is typically faster and involves a narrower scope of judicial review than the exequatur procedure for court judgments.
The Court of First Instance in the district where enforcement is sought has general jurisdiction. For commercial disputes, the specialised commercial court in Morocco hears the petition. The choice depends on the nature of the underlying claim. Appeals go to the Court of Appeal.
At minimum: an authenticated copy of the foreign judgment, a certificate of finality, a certified Arabic translation by a Moroccan sworn translator, legalisation or apostille, a power of attorney authorising Moroccan counsel, proof of service on the debtor in the original proceedings, and identity documents of the petitioner.
The likely practical effect is a timeline of three to twelve months from filing to enforceable judgment. Uncontested petitions at less congested courts may be resolved in three to five months. Contested cases, particularly where the debtor raises jurisdictional or public-policy objections, can take eight to twelve months or longer if appealed.
Yes. Moroccan law permits conservatory attachments (saisie conservatoire) on an urgent basis before the exequatur is decided. The creditor must apply to the president of the competent court and demonstrate the existence of the claim and a risk of asset dissipation.
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How to Enforce a Foreign Judgment in Morocco (2026): Exequatur Procedure, Documents & Enforcement Steps

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