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how to enforce foreign judgments in the netherlands

How to Enforce Foreign Judgments in the Netherlands: Exequatur, Instructing a Bailiff and Collecting Dutch Assets

By Global Law Experts
– posted 2 hours ago

If you hold a court judgment from outside the Netherlands and need to collect against a Dutch debtor, understanding how to enforce foreign judgments in the Netherlands is essential before you can touch a single euro. The enforcement route depends on where the judgment was issued: EU member-state judgments benefit from near-automatic recognition under the Brussels I Recast Regulation, while non-EU judgments must typically pass through a Dutch court procedure known as exequatur under Article 431 of the Dutch Code of Civil Procedure.

This guide walks foreign litigants, in-house counsel and cross-border debt-recovery specialists through every practical step, from filing the initial petition, to instructing a deurwaarder (Dutch bailiff), to locating and seizing Dutch assets including bank accounts, immovable property and vessels.

Can I Enforce a Foreign Judgment in the Netherlands? The Short Legal Test

The short answer is yes, but the path depends on the origin of the judgment and any applicable treaties. Dutch law does not automatically treat foreign court decisions as enforceable. Instead, it channels recognition and enforcement of foreign judgments through three principal routes, each with different procedural requirements and timelines.

Three recognition routes at a glance

  • EU judgments (Brussels I Recast). Regulation (EU) No 1215/2012 abolished the need for exequatur for judgments handed down in EU member states (excluding Denmark under certain protocols). The judgment creditor can proceed directly to enforcement by presenting the judgment and a certificate issued under Article 53 of the Regulation to a Dutch deurwaarder.
  • Treaty or convention routes. Where a bilateral or multilateral treaty exists between the Netherlands and the state of origin, or where a convention such as the Lugano Convention applies, recognition follows the streamlined or simplified procedure set out in the relevant instrument.
  • Non-EU / non-treaty judgments (Article 431 Dutch Code of Civil Procedure). Where no EU regulation or treaty applies, the judgment creditor must petition a Dutch district court under Article 431 of the Wetboek van Burgerlijke Rechtsvordering (Dutch Code of Civil Procedure) for a declaration of enforceability, the exequatur procedure.

Quick cheat sheet: when is exequatur needed?

If the judgment was issued in an EU member state and falls within the scope of Brussels I Recast, no exequatur is required. For virtually all other foreign judgments, including those from the United States, China, Russia, and (since Brexit) the United Kingdom, an exequatur petition under Article 431 is the standard route.

Two Enforcement Routes to Enforce Foreign Judgments in the Netherlands: EU vs Non-EU

The practical difference between the two main routes is significant. Understanding the distinction early allows you to budget accurately, set realistic timelines and avoid wasted procedural steps.

Route When it applies Practical effect
Brussels I Recast (EU) Judgments from EU member states (excluding Denmark under certain protocols) Directly enforceable in the Netherlands without exequatur; the creditor presents the judgment and an Article 53 certificate to the bailiff, who can commence enforcement immediately
Article 431 Dutch Code (exequatur) Non-EU judgments or judgments where no applicable treaty exists The Dutch court reviews the judgment on limited grounds and, if satisfied, grants a declaration of enforceability; only then can the bailiff act
Treaty / convention routes Specific bilateral or multilateral treaties (e.g., Lugano Convention where applicable) Fast-tracked or simplified recognition depending on treaty text; procedural requirements vary by instrument

When arbitration awards differ

Foreign arbitration awards follow a separate regime. The Netherlands is a party to the 1958 New York Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards, which provides its own streamlined enforcement path through the president of the competent district court. Arbitral award enforcement is outside the scope of this guide but shares many of the same practical enforcement steps once leave is granted.

Step-by-Step: The Exequatur Procedure Under Article 431 (Practical Checklist)

For creditors holding a non-EU judgment, the exequatur process under Article 431 of the Dutch Code of Civil Procedure is the gateway to enforcement. The procedure is not a full re-litigation of the merits; rather, the Dutch court conducts a limited review to satisfy itself that the foreign judgment meets certain threshold requirements.

Step 1, Identify the competent court and file the petition

The petition is filed at the district court (rechtbank) in the district where the debtor is domiciled or, if the debtor has no known Dutch domicile, in the district where enforcement is sought (for example, the location of the assets). The proceedings are initiated by issuing a writ of summons (dagvaarding) through a Dutch-qualified lawyer (advocaat). Representation by a Dutch lawyer is mandatory for court proceedings.

Step 2, Assemble the required documents

The following documents are typically required for the petition:

  1. Certified copy of the foreign judgment, authenticated or apostilled in accordance with the Hague Apostille Convention (where applicable).
  2. Certificate of enforceability, a document from the court of origin confirming that the judgment is final and enforceable in the country where it was rendered.
  3. Sworn Dutch translation, all foreign-language documents must be translated into Dutch by a sworn translator.
  4. Power of attorney, authorising the Dutch lawyer to act on behalf of the judgment creditor.
  5. Evidence of proper service, proof that the debtor was properly served in the original proceedings and had an opportunity to defend.
  6. Identity documents / corporate extracts, establishing the legal identity and standing of the parties.

Step 3, The court’s review: what the judge examines

Dutch case law has developed a set of criteria that the court applies when reviewing an exequatur petition. The court will typically examine whether:

  • The foreign court had jurisdiction on grounds that are internationally acceptable.
  • The foreign judgment was rendered in proceedings that comply with principles of due process (proper service and the right to be heard).
  • The foreign judgment is not contrary to Dutch public policy (openbare orde).
  • The foreign judgment is not irreconcilable with a Dutch judgment between the same parties.

The court does not review the merits of the underlying dispute. This limited scope of review keeps proceedings relatively focused.

Step 4, Possible defences the debtor may raise

Debtors commonly resist exequatur on the following grounds:

  • Lack of jurisdiction, arguing that the foreign court had no internationally recognised basis for jurisdiction.
  • Due process violation, claiming that service was defective or that they had no adequate opportunity to defend.
  • Public policy, asserting that recognition would violate fundamental principles of Dutch law.
  • Res judicata / conflicting judgment, pointing to an existing Dutch judgment between the same parties on the same subject.

Typical timeline for exequatur proceedings

Stage Typical duration
Preparation and filing of the petition 2–4 weeks
Service of summons on the debtor 2–6 weeks (longer if service abroad is required)
Court hearing and judgment (uncontested) 4–8 weeks after appearance deadline
Court hearing and judgment (contested) 3–9 months depending on complexity and defence
Appeal period 3 months from service of the judgment

Industry observers expect that uncontested exequatur petitions are typically resolved within three to five months from filing. Contested matters can extend to twelve months or longer if the debtor raises substantive defences and seeks an appeal.

Instructing a Deurwaarder (Dutch Bailiff): Powers, Limits and Practical Steps

Once you hold an enforceable title, whether a Dutch exequatur judgment or an EU judgment accompanied by an Article 53 certificate, the next step is to instruct a deurwaarder (judicial bailiff). The deurwaarder is a public officer authorised by law to perform enforcement acts. No enforcement in the Netherlands takes place without a deurwaarder.

The writ of execution (grosse) and its role

Under Article 430 of the Dutch Code of Civil Procedure, enforcement can only be carried out on the basis of an enforceable title issued in the prescribed form, the grosse (executorial copy). For Dutch court judgments and exequatur decisions, the grosse bears the words “In naam van de Koning” (In the name of the King). For EU judgments enforced under Brussels I Recast, the judgment itself combined with the Article 53 certificate serves the same function.

What a deurwaarder can do

  • Serve documents, formal service (betekening) of the enforceable title on the debtor, which is the mandatory first step before any enforcement measure.
  • Garnish bank accounts, seize funds held by the debtor at Dutch banks through a garnishment order (derdenbeslag).
  • Seize movable assets, attach and, if necessary, arrange public sale of the debtor’s tangible property.
  • Attach wages and other periodic payments, direct the debtor’s employer or pension fund to withhold and remit amounts.
  • Seize immovable property, register an attachment on real estate in the land registry (Kadaster), leading to forced sale if the debt remains unpaid.
  • Arrest vessels, in coordination with the harbour master, arrest ships in Dutch ports as security for or enforcement of maritime and non-maritime claims.

What a deurwaarder cannot do

A deurwaarder cannot break into a debtor’s private residence without prior judicial authorisation. Certain assets are exempt from seizure, including essential household items and tools required for the debtor’s livelihood. The deurwaarder must also respect statutory minimum amounts that the debtor is entitled to retain from wages or benefits (the beslagvrije voet).

Practical steps to instruct a deurwaarder

  1. Provide the deurwaarder with the original grosse (enforceable title) or certified copy.
  2. Supply full debtor details: name, address, date of birth (for natural persons) or Chamber of Commerce number (for legal entities).
  3. Indicate known assets, bank account numbers, property addresses, employer details, vessel names and registration numbers.
  4. Agree on the scope of enforcement, which assets to target first and in what order of priority.
  5. Confirm fee arrangements, the deurwaarder charges a combination of fixed statutory fees and variable costs.

Locating and Securing Dutch Assets for Enforcement

Effective enforcement depends on knowing where the debtor’s assets are. Locating Dutch assets for enforcement requires a combination of public registry searches, professional investigations and, in some cases, court-assisted disclosure orders.

Priority asset targets

  • Bank accounts, the most liquid and fastest to seize. The deurwaarder can serve garnishment orders on all major Dutch banks simultaneously.
  • Wages and benefits, attachable through the debtor’s employer or benefits agency, providing a recurring payment stream.
  • Shares and securities, held in custody accounts or registered on the debtor’s name; attachable through the custodian or the company itself.
  • Immovable property (real estate), searchable via the Kadaster and subject to forced sale under court supervision.
  • Vessels, registered in the Dutch shipping register and subject to arrest in Dutch ports under both the 1952 Brussels Arrest Convention and domestic law.

Tools and registries for asset tracing

  • KVK / Handelsregister (Chamber of Commerce), search the Dutch trade register for company details, directors, shareholders and registered addresses of the debtor’s business.
  • Kadaster (Land Registry), query the Dutch land registry to identify real estate owned by the debtor, including mortgage details and encumbrances.
  • Dutch shipping register, check vessel ownership, flags and registered mortgages through the Kadaster‘s ship registration division.
  • Beneficial ownership register (UBO register), may reveal the debtor’s interests in Dutch entities, assisting in piercing corporate structures.
  • Private investigation firms, for complex cases, licensed investigators can conduct asset-tracing exercises, trace bank relationships and identify hidden holdings.

Early and thorough asset tracing is critical. Where there is a risk that the debtor will dissipate assets before enforcement concludes, a pre-judgment attachment (conservatoir beslag) may be obtained on an ex parte basis from the preliminary relief judge (voorzieningenrechter).

Methods of Seizure and Enforcement in the Netherlands

Once the deurwaarder has been instructed and debtor assets have been identified, enforcement proceeds through specific legal mechanisms. The method chosen depends on the type of asset seized.

Bank garnishment (derdenbeslag)

The deurwaarder serves a garnishment order on the bank, which is legally obliged to freeze the debtor’s funds up to the amount claimed. The bank must file a declaration within four weeks confirming what funds it holds. If the debtor does not contest the garnishment within the statutory period, the frozen funds are released to the creditor.

Seizure of movables and forced sale

The deurwaarder may physically enter business premises (and, with court authorisation, residential premises) to inventory and seize movable assets. Seized goods are sold at public auction, with proceeds applied to the judgment debt after deduction of enforcement costs.

Vessel arrest: a brief overview

The Netherlands is a major maritime jurisdiction, and the arrest of vessels in Dutch ports is a powerful enforcement tool. Ships can be arrested to enforce both maritime claims (arising from ship operations, cargo damage, crew wages) and non-maritime money judgments. The arrest is executed by the deurwaarder in cooperation with the harbour master, effectively immobilising the vessel until the claim is satisfied or security is posted. Vessel arrest in the Netherlands is governed by specific maritime enforcement rules that warrant dedicated guidance.

Enforcing UK Judgments in the Netherlands: Post-Brexit Practicalities

Since the United Kingdom’s departure from the EU, UK judgments no longer benefit from the Brussels I Recast regime. Enforcing a UK judgment in the Netherlands now requires the creditor to follow the exequatur route under Article 431 of the Dutch Code of Civil Procedure, the same path as any other non-EU judgment.

The practical consequence is that UK judgment creditors must petition a Dutch district court, submit all required documents (including certified translations and proof of enforceability in England and Wales, Scotland or Northern Ireland), and satisfy the Dutch court on the standard review criteria. Early indications suggest that Dutch courts are applying the same recognition tests to UK judgments as they do to other non-treaty judgments, meaning that well-prepared petitions are generally granted without a full rehearing of the merits.

Creditors holding UK judgments should plan for the additional time and cost of the exequatur process and consider obtaining pre-judgment attachments in the Netherlands to secure assets while the petition is pending.

Timing, Likely Costs and Recoverability When You Enforce Foreign Judgments in the Netherlands

Understanding the costs of enforcement in the Netherlands is essential for budgeting a cross-border recovery. The principal cost components are court fees, lawyer fees and bailiff fees.

  • Court fees (griffierecht), these vary depending on the amount in dispute and the type of party (natural person vs legal entity). For enforcement-related petitions, fees are published annually by De Rechtspraak.
  • Lawyer fees, Dutch lawyers typically charge hourly rates. For a straightforward uncontested exequatur, legal costs are generally moderate. Contested proceedings increase costs substantially.
  • Bailiff fees, the deurwaarder charges a combination of regulated statutory fees (for service acts, garnishments and seizures) and additional costs for travel, storage and auction arrangements. Many enforcement costs are ultimately recoverable from the debtor.

The likely practical effect for most creditors is a total timeline of three to six months for an uncontested exequatur followed by immediate bailiff enforcement, with total professional costs ranging from several thousand euros for straightforward matters to significantly higher amounts for contested or complex multi-asset enforcements. Recovery of enforcement costs from the debtor is generally possible under Dutch procedural law, although full indemnification of legal fees is not always awarded.

Risks, Common Defences and How to Minimise Delay

Even well-prepared enforcement actions can face obstacles. The most common defences encountered in practice are:

  • Jurisdictional challenges, the debtor argues that the foreign court lacked internationally recognised jurisdiction. Mitigate by ensuring the original judgment clearly establishes the jurisdictional basis.
  • Due process objections, claims of defective service or denial of a fair hearing. Mitigate by retaining meticulous proof of service and procedural compliance from the original proceedings.
  • Public policy (openbare orde), the debtor invokes fundamental Dutch legal principles. This defence succeeds only in exceptional cases involving punitive damages grossly disproportionate to compensatory norms or judgments obtained through fraud.
  • Asset dissipation, the debtor moves or hides assets during the recognition process. Counter this by applying for pre-judgment attachment (conservatoir beslag) at the outset, which freezes assets before the exequatur judgment is granted.

The single most effective step a creditor can take to minimise delay is to begin asset tracing and seek conservatory attachments before or simultaneously with filing the exequatur petition.

Conclusion: Your Practical Checklist to Enforce Foreign Judgments in the Netherlands

Successfully enforcing a foreign judgment in the Netherlands requires a clear understanding of the applicable legal route, careful preparation of documents, and decisive action through a qualified Dutch lawyer and deurwaarder. Use the following summary checklist:

  1. Determine whether your judgment falls under Brussels I Recast (EU), a treaty route, or the Article 431 exequatur procedure.
  2. Engage a Dutch-qualified lawyer to advise on the appropriate route and represent you in court if exequatur is required.
  3. Assemble all required documents, certified judgment, certificate of enforceability, sworn translations, powers of attorney and proof of service.
  4. Consider applying for pre-judgment attachment (conservatoir beslag) to secure Dutch assets while the recognition process is underway.
  5. Once you hold an enforceable title, instruct a deurwaarder with full debtor and asset details.
  6. Prioritise liquid assets, bank accounts first, then wages, shares, immovables and vessels.
  7. Monitor enforcement progress and be prepared to escalate if the debtor resists or conceals assets.

For creditors holding foreign judgments who need to collect against Dutch assets, professional guidance from a specialist in enforcement and attachment law is strongly recommended. Find a lawyer in the Netherlands through our directory to begin the process.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Edwin H.J. Slager at Van Emstede & Slager Advocaten, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Dutch Code of Civil Procedure (Wetboek van Burgerlijke Rechtsvordering), Articles 430–434
  2. De Rechtspraak, Enforcement / NCC
  3. EUR-Lex, Regulation (EU) No 1215/2012 (Brussels I Recast)
  4. OSK Advocaten, ENF25 Chapter 17: Netherlands
  5. Houthoff, Enforcement of Judgments and Arbitral Awards in The Netherlands
  6. Buren Legal, Enforcement of Foreign Judgments in the Netherlands
  7. Kadaster (Dutch Land Registry)
  8. KVK, Dutch Chamber of Commerce / Handelsregister

FAQs

How do I enforce a court decision in the Netherlands?
You must first obtain an enforceable title, either through direct recognition (for EU judgments under Brussels I Recast) or through an exequatur petition at a Dutch district court under Article 431 of the Dutch Code of Civil Procedure. Once granted, a deurwaarder (bailiff) carries out the actual enforcement.
Yes. EU judgments are directly enforceable without exequatur. Non-EU judgments require a Dutch court to grant a declaration of enforceability after reviewing jurisdiction, due process and public policy compliance.
A deurwaarder can serve documents, garnish bank accounts, seize movable and immovable property, attach wages, and arrest vessels. The deurwaarder cannot enter a private residence without court authorisation and must respect statutory exemptions on essential assets.
You typically need a certified copy of the foreign judgment, a certificate of enforceability, sworn Dutch translations, a power of attorney, proof of service in the original proceedings, and identification documents or corporate extracts for the parties.
An uncontested exequatur typically takes three to five months. Contested proceedings may take up to twelve months. Costs include court fees, lawyer fees (hourly) and statutory bailiff fees. Many enforcement costs are recoverable from the debtor.
Yes, but UK judgments no longer benefit from the Brussels I Recast regime. They must follow the exequatur route under Article 431, the same procedure used for other non-EU judgments. Expect additional time and cost compared to the pre-Brexit era.
Vessels in Dutch ports can be arrested by a deurwaarder in cooperation with the harbour master. This applies to both maritime and non-maritime claims. The arrest immobilises the vessel until the debt is paid or adequate security is posted. Maritime enforcement involves specific procedural rules under Dutch law and international conventions.
By Cem Arda Tepe

posted 23 minutes ago

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How to Enforce Foreign Judgments in the Netherlands: Exequatur, Instructing a Bailiff and Collecting Dutch Assets

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