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enforcement of foreign judgments in denmark

Enforcement of Foreign Judgments in Denmark: Grounds, Fogedret Steps & Nordic Convention Routes

By Global Law Experts
– posted 2 hours ago

Last updated: 22 May 2026

Securing a favourable judgment abroad is only half the battle, the enforcement of foreign judgments in Denmark requires creditors and their counsel to navigate a distinct set of statutory routes, procedural hurdles and refusal grounds that differ markedly from those in most other European jurisdictions. Denmark’s opt-out from key parts of EU judicial cooperation means that neither the Brussels I Recast Regulation nor the EU Enforcement Order regime applies automatically, placing the country in an unusual position among its Nordic and European neighbours. Recent Danish Supreme Court activity in 2024–2025, including a closely watched decision refusing enforcement on due-process grounds, has sharpened the practical risk assessment for cross-border recovery teams.

This guide delivers the concrete steps, document checklists, venue selection logic and refusal-risk analysis that international arbitration and dispute-resolution professionals need to plan and execute enforcement in Denmark with confidence.

Quick Summary: What This Article Covers and How to Choose Your Route

Enforcement of a foreign judgment in Denmark means obtaining a Danish court order that compels compliance with the original ruling, whether that means payment, asset seizure, or specific performance, so the judgment produces domestic legal effect. Recognition, by contrast, asks the Danish court only to accept the foreign judgment as binding (for example, to establish a defence of res judicata) without ordering compulsory execution.

Before diving into procedural detail, use the decision checklist below to identify which enforcement route applies to your situation:

  • Judgment from a Nordic state (Sweden, Norway, Finland or Iceland). The Nordic Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Judgments provides the fastest, most streamlined route. Proceed to Section 3A.
  • Arbitral award (domestic or foreign). Awards from New York Convention signatories follow a dedicated recognition-and-enforcement track under the Danish Arbitration Act and the Retsplejeloven. Proceed to Section 3D.
  • Judgment from an EU Member State. Denmark’s EU opt-out means the Brussels I Recast Regulation does not apply directly. However, the 2005 Hague Choice of Court Convention and certain bilateral treaties may offer a treaty-based route. Proceed to Section 3B.
  • Judgment from a non-Nordic, non-EU state with no applicable treaty. The creditor must seek ordinary recognition and enforcement under the general rules of the Danish Administration of Justice Act (Retsplejeloven). This is the most discretionary, and most contested, path. Proceed to Section 3C.
  • Ready for asset seizure after recognition. Once a foreign judgment or award is recognised, apply to the fogedret (bailiff’s court) for levy against the debtor’s Danish assets. Proceed to Section 5.

Legal Foundations: Statutes, Conventions and Courts in Denmark

Understanding the recognition and enforcement of foreign judgments in Denmark starts with the legal framework that governs it. Danish law does not contain a single comprehensive statute on foreign-judgment enforcement. Instead, the applicable rules depend on the origin of the judgment and any treaty relationship between Denmark and the rendering state.

Key Legislation

  • Danish Administration of Justice Act (Retsplejeloven). This is Denmark’s primary procedural code, governing civil litigation, enforcement proceedings and the operation of the fogedret. Part 45 through Part 48 of the Act address enforcement measures, including the rules on seizure of assets (udlæg), while broader principles on recognition of foreign decisions are drawn from general Danish procedural and private-international-law doctrine.
  • Danish Arbitration Act (Voldgiftsloven, Act No. 553 of 24 June 2005). Based on the UNCITRAL Model Law, this Act governs the recognition and enforcement of arbitral awards, both domestic and foreign, and incorporates Denmark’s obligations under the 1958 New York Convention.
  • Act on Nordic Civil Judgments. Implements the Nordic Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Judgments in Civil Matters, providing a simplified enforcement mechanism for judgments from Sweden, Norway, Finland and Iceland.

International Conventions

  • Nordic Convention on Recognition and Enforcement of Judgments (1977, as amended). Covers civil and commercial judgments among the five Nordic states.
  • 1958 New York Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards. Denmark is a signatory, making arbitral-award enforcement comparatively predictable.
  • 2005 Hague Choice of Court Convention. Denmark acceded to this convention, which applies where parties have entered an exclusive choice-of-court agreement designating the courts of a contracting state.
  • HCCH 2019 Judgments Convention. As of mid-2026, Denmark has not yet ratified this convention, though the EU signed on behalf of its Member States. Industry observers expect the convention’s eventual entry into force to provide an additional treaty-based route, but it is not currently available for enforcement in Denmark.

Court Hierarchy and the Fogedret

Denmark’s court system comprises 24 district courts (byretter), two High Courts (landsretter) and the Supreme Court (Højesteret). Recognition applications are typically filed at the district court in the jurisdiction where the debtor has assets or is domiciled. Once recognition is granted, the creditor applies to the fogedret, the enforcement division of the district court, for seizure or levy against specific assets. The fogedret functions as a specialised bailiff’s court in Denmark and handles all compulsory execution, including seizure of bank accounts, real property and movable assets.

Enforcement of Foreign Judgments in Denmark: Which Routes Exist and When to Use Each

Not every foreign judgment follows the same path to enforcement. The route depends on the rendering state, the type of decision and whether a treaty applies. The comparison table below summarises the three main pathways for cross-border judgment enforcement in Denmark.

Route When Available Key Documents & Typical Timeline
Nordic Convention (Nordic Civil Judgments) Judgment from Sweden, Norway, Finland or Iceland in a civil or commercial matter Certified judgment copy, proof of service on the defendant, Danish or Scandinavian-language translation; typical court handling: 4–12 weeks once documents are complete
Arbitral award (New York Convention / Voldgiftsloven) Awards from New York Convention signatories; domestic and foreign arbitral awards Original award (or certified copy), arbitration agreement, court application for recognition; fogedret levy available immediately after recognition, 4–16 weeks
Ordinary recognition under the Administration of Justice Act Where no treaty applies; especially judgments from non-EU, non-Nordic third states Certified copies of the judgment, evidence of jurisdiction and finality, authenticated translations into Danish; process length: 3–9 months (varies significantly)

A. Nordic Convention Enforcement in Denmark

The Nordic Convention offers the most efficient route. Judgments from the other Nordic states benefit from near-automatic recognition, provided the judgment is final, the rendering court had jurisdiction under the Convention’s rules, and the defendant received proper notice. No exequatur is required, the creditor files the recognised judgment directly with the fogedret for levy. Translations into Danish are preferred, though Swedish and Norwegian texts are generally accepted by Danish courts without certified translation.

B. Treaty and Convention Routes (Hague Choice of Court, Bilateral Treaties)

Where parties designated an exclusive forum through a choice-of-court clause, the 2005 Hague Choice of Court Convention may provide a basis for enforcement. Denmark’s accession to this convention means that judgments from other contracting states rendered pursuant to a valid exclusive choice-of-court agreement must be recognised and enforced, subject to narrow refusal grounds. For EU Member State judgments outside the Hague Convention’s scope, Denmark’s position is complicated by its EU justice opt-out, the Brussels I Recast Regulation does not apply. A parallel agreement between Denmark and the EU on jurisdiction and judgments (modelled on the earlier Brussels I Regulation) partially fills this gap, but its scope is narrower than the Recast.

C. Ordinary Recognition Under the Retsplejeloven

For judgments from states with no applicable treaty, including most non-European jurisdictions, the creditor must apply for recognition based on general Danish private-international-law principles. Danish courts assess jurisdiction, finality, proper service and compliance with Danish public policy. This route is inherently discretionary, and outcomes are less predictable than under treaty-based paths. The Danish Administration of Justice Act enforcement provisions do not guarantee recognition; rather, courts exercise a case-by-case evaluation rooted in established Supreme Court practice.

D. Arbitral Awards: New York Convention and Danish Arbitration Act

Denmark’s obligations under the New York Convention, implemented through the Voldgiftsloven, make the enforcement of foreign arbitral awards relatively straightforward compared to foreign court judgments. The creditor files an application for recognition with the competent district court, attaching the original award, the arbitration agreement and any required translations. Once recognised, the award is treated as equivalent to a domestic judgment and can be enforced through the fogedret. Those seeking deeper procedural guidance on arbitral hearings may wish to consult our overview of arbitration hearing preparation and conduct.

Step-by-Step: Starting Recognition or Enforcement in Danish Courts

Whether a creditor pursues a treaty-based or discretionary route, the practical steps share common procedural elements. This section provides a filing checklist that applies across all routes, with notes on route-specific variations.

4.1 Pre-Filing Checks

  • Finality. Confirm that the foreign judgment is final and enforceable in the country of origin. Danish courts will not enforce a judgment that remains subject to ordinary appeal. Obtain a certificate of enforceability (or equivalent) from the rendering court.
  • Jurisdiction. Assess whether the rendering court’s jurisdiction would be recognised under Danish principles. Grounds of jurisdiction that are considered exorbitant, such as jurisdiction based solely on the plaintiff’s nationality, may lead to refusal.
  • Translation. All documents must be translated into Danish by a certified translator unless the documents are in Swedish or Norwegian (accepted under Nordic Convention proceedings). English-language documents require Danish translation.
  • Authentication. The judgment must be authenticated, typically through an apostille (for Hague Apostille Convention states) or consular legalisation. The arbitration agreement and award, if applicable, must likewise be authenticated.

4.2 Filing the Claim

  1. Identify the competent district court: generally the court in the judicial district where the debtor is domiciled or where the debtor’s assets are located.
  2. Prepare the application for recognition, attaching: the certified judgment copy, certificate of enforceability, proof of service on the defendant in the original proceedings, authenticated translations, and a power of attorney for Danish counsel.
  3. Pay the court filing fee. Filing fees in Danish district courts are calculated on a sliding scale based on the claim value, starting from DKK 750 for claims up to DKK 100,000 and increasing for higher amounts.
  4. File the application and serve the defendant in accordance with Danish service rules.

4.3 Opposing Defences and Timeline

Once served, the defendant typically has a period of four weeks to file a response (though this may vary where the defendant is domiciled abroad and service takes longer). If the defendant contests recognition, the court will schedule a hearing. Uncontested applications may be resolved on the papers. Where a defendant raises substantive objections, such as a public policy defence, expect the recognition phase to take three to six months in a contested proceeding.

4.4 Costs and Security

Beyond filing fees, creditors should budget for Danish legal counsel, certified translation costs and potential security deposits. In some cases, the court may order the creditor to provide security for the defendant’s costs if recognition is contested and the creditor is domiciled outside the EU/EEA. Legal fees for recognition proceedings in Denmark are not regulated, they are agreed between client and counsel, and will vary depending on complexity. For a contested recognition of a mid-size commercial judgment, industry observers estimate total legal costs (excluding court fees) in the range of DKK 50,000 to DKK 200,000.

4.5 Sample Checklist for Counsel

  • Certified copy of the foreign judgment
  • Certificate of enforceability from the rendering court
  • Proof of service on the defendant in the original proceedings
  • Authenticated (apostille or consular legalisation) translations into Danish
  • Power of attorney for Danish counsel
  • Court filing fee payment
  • Arbitration agreement and original award (if enforcing an arbitral award)
  • Evidence of jurisdiction of the rendering court (for discretionary-route cases)

Fogedret (Bailiff’s Court) Process for Seizure and Levy in Denmark

The fogedret is the enforcement arm of the Danish district courts and is the venue where recognised judgments translate into tangible asset recovery. Understanding how the bailiff’s court in Denmark operates is essential for any creditor pursuing cross-border judgment enforcement in Denmark.

5.1 What the Fogedret Does

The fogedret in Denmark conducts compulsory execution, principally the seizure (udlæg) of the debtor’s assets. This includes bank accounts, real property, vehicles, business equipment and financial instruments. The fogedret does not re-examine the merits of the underlying judgment; its role is to identify and seize assets in satisfaction of the recognised debt.

5.2 Pre-Conditions to Levy

A creditor may apply to the fogedret for levy only after obtaining a valid enforcement title. This means either: (a) a Danish court order recognising the foreign judgment or award; or (b) a preservation order (arrest) where urgent interim measures are needed before full recognition. Preservation orders are available where there is a risk that the debtor will dissipate assets, and they can be obtained on an ex parte basis in urgent situations.

5.3 Filing for Levy: Forms, Notices and Timelines

  1. Submit a written request to the fogedret attached to the district court that has jurisdiction over the debtor or the location of the assets.
  2. Attach the enforcement title (recognition order or equivalent), the original foreign judgment, and any supporting documentation regarding the debtor’s assets.
  3. The fogedret schedules a hearing, typically within two to four weeks of filing. The debtor is summoned and required to disclose assets under oath.
  4. At the hearing, the fogedret officer identifies seizable assets and issues the levy order. Seized funds in bank accounts are typically transferred to the creditor’s Danish counsel within days of the order.

5.4 Types of Assets and Practical Limitations

The fogedret can seize most categories of assets, but Danish law protects certain items from execution. Essential household goods, tools of trade up to a modest value, and social-welfare benefits are generally exempt. Real property can be seized but requires a subsequent forced sale (tvangsauktion) supervised by the fogedret, which adds several months to the recovery timeline. For business debtors, receivables and stock-in-trade may also be seized.

5.5 Costs and Creditor Obligations

Fogedret filing fees are modest, starting at DKK 750. However, the creditor bears the obligation to provide accurate debtor information, the court will not conduct asset searches on the creditor’s behalf. Pre-filing asset tracing is therefore a practical necessity. Where the debtor fails to appear or refuses to disclose assets under oath, the fogedret may impose coercive fines or, in extreme cases, order detention.

Grounds for Refusal of Enforcement of Foreign Judgments in Denmark

Danish courts will refuse recognition and enforcement where specific threshold conditions are not met. For creditors, understanding these refusal grounds is the single most important element of pre-enforcement risk assessment. The public policy defence in Denmark, in particular, has received renewed judicial attention.

6.1 Statutory Grounds for Refusal

  • Ordre public (public policy). Enforcement will be refused if the result would be manifestly incompatible with Danish public policy. This is an exceptional ground, Danish courts apply a high threshold and will not refuse enforcement merely because Danish law would have reached a different substantive outcome.
  • Lack of jurisdiction. If the rendering court lacked jurisdiction under principles accepted by Danish private international law, recognition will be denied. Exorbitant bases of jurisdiction (for instance, jurisdiction founded solely on the seizure of unrelated assets) are typically rejected.
  • Failure of proper service. If the defendant was not properly served with the originating process and did not have adequate opportunity to defend, enforcement will be refused. This ground overlaps with due-process protections.
  • Conflicting judgments. Where a Danish judgment, or a previously recognised foreign judgment, conflicts with the judgment sought to be enforced, the Danish court will refuse recognition.
  • Fraud. A judgment obtained by fraud in the rendering jurisdiction may be refused recognition, although this ground is rarely invoked in practice.

6.2 Public Policy Defence in Practice

The Danish ordre public test is narrow but not toothless. It protects fundamental principles of Danish law and constitutional values, including the right to a fair hearing, protection against punitive or grossly disproportionate awards, and basic procedural fairness. Danish courts have historically been reluctant to invoke public policy, reserving it for cases of clear and serious violation. However, recent case law suggests a more rigorous scrutiny of procedural fairness, particularly in the context of arbitral awards.

6.3 Due Process and the Danish Supreme Court (2024–2025)

The Danish Supreme Court’s decision in case BS-34884/2024-HJR, reported in early April 2025, marked a significant development. The Court refused to enforce a foreign arbitral award, finding that the arbitral proceedings had not afforded the respondent adequate opportunity to present its case, a fundamental breach of due process. Practitioner commentary from Gorrissen Federspiel and the European Association of Private International Law (EAPIL) noted that the decision sent a clear signal: Danish courts will apply robust due-process scrutiny even where the New York Convention’s pro-enforcement bias ordinarily prevails. The likely practical effect will be increased judicial attention to whether parties in cross-border proceedings had genuine and meaningful access to present evidence, cross-examine witnesses and challenge adverse submissions.

Practical tip: Creditors seeking enforcement in Denmark should ensure that the original proceedings, whether court or arbitral, demonstrate a clear paper trail of proper notice, adequate time for the respondent to prepare, and full opportunity to be heard. Any irregularity in the original procedure creates a potential refusal ground that a well-advised debtor will exploit.

6.4 Strategic Mitigation

  • Contract drafting. Include exclusive jurisdiction or arbitration clauses that designate a recognised forum and specify service mechanics. This reduces ambiguity at the enforcement stage.
  • Service and evidence. Retain comprehensive records of service, hearing transcripts and procedural orders from the original proceedings. These records are critical if the debtor challenges enforcement on due-process grounds.
  • Pre-enforcement audit. Before filing in Denmark, conduct a refusal-risk audit: review the foreign judgment for any procedural irregularities, assess whether the rendering court’s jurisdiction will be accepted, and confirm that the judgment is final.

Special Cases: State Immunities, Insolvency, Family and Consumer Judgments

Certain categories of foreign judgment face additional enforcement obstacles in Denmark. Creditors should be aware of the following limitations:

  • State immunity. Denmark adheres to the principles of sovereign immunity under customary international law and the European Convention on State Immunity. Enforcement against the assets of a foreign state or its emanations requires the creditor to demonstrate that the state has waived immunity or that the assets are used for commercial purposes rather than sovereign functions.
  • Insolvency and restructuring. Foreign insolvency judgments raise complex questions. Denmark does not have a general framework for automatic recognition of foreign insolvency proceedings from non-EU states. The Nordic Bankruptcy Convention provides mutual recognition among the Nordic states, but judgments from other jurisdictions require case-by-case assessment.
  • Family law. Foreign family-law judgments, including divorce decrees, custody orders and maintenance obligations, follow separate recognition rules under specific Danish legislation and applicable international instruments (such as the Hague Conventions on child abduction and maintenance). These are outside the scope of the general civil and commercial enforcement framework discussed in this guide.
  • Consumer and employment matters. Danish courts may apply heightened scrutiny where enforcement is sought against a Danish consumer or employee, particularly if the original jurisdiction clause was included in a standard-form contract. This aligns with broader Danish and European policy to protect weaker parties in cross-border disputes.

Practical Decision Matrix and Sample Timelines for Cross-Border Judgment Enforcement in Denmark

The following decision matrix and timeline table help creditors and counsel select the appropriate route and set realistic expectations. For a detailed understanding of how arbitration compares with litigation, readers may also find our comparative guide useful.

Scenario Recommended Route Estimated Timeline
Judgment from a Nordic state, uncontested Nordic Convention → Fogedret levy 4–12 weeks (recognition) + 2–4 weeks (levy)
Arbitral award (New York Convention), uncontested Voldgiftsloven recognition → Fogedret levy 4–16 weeks (recognition) + 2–4 weeks (levy)
Judgment from a non-treaty state, contested Ordinary recognition (Retsplejeloven) → Fogedret levy 3–9 months (recognition) + 2–6 weeks (levy)
Urgent asset preservation before recognition Preservation order (arrest) → Full recognition → Fogedret levy Days to 2 weeks (preservation) + recognition timeline above
Enforcement against real property Fogedret levy → Forced sale (tvangsauktion) Add 3–6 months to levy timeline for forced sale

Risk level assessment. Nordic Convention and arbitral-award routes carry low refusal risk for well-documented claims. Ordinary recognition of third-state judgments carries medium to high refusal risk, particularly where jurisdiction or due-process arguments are available to the debtor. Any proceeding involving state immunity or insolvency carries high complexity and cost risk.

Conclusion: Recommended Next Steps for Creditors and Counsel

Successfully navigating the enforcement of foreign judgments in Denmark requires early route selection, meticulous documentation and awareness of the refusal grounds that Danish courts apply with increasing rigour. The following five-point action plan provides a practical starting framework:

  1. Identify your route immediately. Determine whether a treaty (Nordic Convention, Hague Choice of Court, New York Convention) applies. Treaty-based routes are faster, cheaper and more predictable.
  2. Assemble your enforcement dossier early. Collect certified copies, certificates of enforceability, service records and authenticated translations well before filing. Gaps in documentation are the most common cause of delay.
  3. Conduct a refusal-risk audit. Review the original proceedings for any procedural irregularity, especially service failures and due-process shortcomings, that could give the debtor grounds to oppose recognition.
  4. Engage Danish counsel with enforcement experience. The fogedret process, asset-tracing requirements and local court practice require hands-on familiarity with the Danish system. Consult a qualified Danish dispute-resolution lawyer as early as possible.
  5. Consider interim measures. If there is any risk of asset dissipation, apply for a preservation order (arrest) before or simultaneously with the recognition application. Speed is critical, once assets are moved, recovery becomes far more difficult.

For broader context on how Denmark fits within the global enforcement landscape, our international commercial law guide offers additional comparative analysis.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Morten Boe Jakobsen at Jon Palle Buhl, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Danish Administration of Justice Act (Retsplejeloven), Retsinformation.dk
  2. Nordic Convention on Recognition and Enforcement of Judgments, Kluwer Law Online
  3. HCCH 2019 Judgments Convention, EUR-Lex Summary
  4. Gorrissen Federspiel, Danish Supreme Court Blocks Enforcement of Award (BS-34884/2024-HJR)
  5. EAPIL, Due Process Prevails: Danish Supreme Court Blocks Chinese Arbitral Award
  6. Danish Courts (Domstol.dk), Official Court Administration
  7. Hague Conference on Private International Law (HCCH)

FAQs

What is enforcement of foreign judgments in Denmark?
Enforcement of foreign judgments in Denmark is the legal process by which a creditor obtains a Danish court order compelling compliance with a judgment rendered by a court or tribunal outside Denmark. It requires the foreign judgment to be first recognised by a Danish court, after which compulsory execution (typically through the fogedret) can proceed against the debtor’s Danish assets. See the quick summary above for a route-selection checklist.
To enforce a foreign arbitral award in Denmark, the creditor files an application for recognition with the competent district court under the Danish Arbitration Act (Voldgiftsloven), which implements the New York Convention. The application must be accompanied by the original award or a certified copy, the arbitration agreement, and authenticated Danish translations. Once the court grants recognition, the creditor applies to the fogedret for seizure of the debtor’s assets. The process typically takes 4 to 16 weeks for uncontested applications.
Danish courts may refuse enforcement on several grounds: the foreign judgment is contrary to Danish public policy (ordre public); the rendering court lacked jurisdiction under principles accepted in Danish law; the defendant was not properly served or denied due process; the judgment conflicts with a Danish judgment or a previously recognised foreign judgment; or the judgment was obtained by fraud. The 2025 Danish Supreme Court decision in BS-34884/2024-HJR highlighted due-process failures as an active ground of refusal. See the detailed grounds analysis above.
The fogedret is the enforcement division of the Danish district court, often translated as the “bailiff’s court.” It handles all compulsory execution, including the seizure of bank accounts, real property, vehicles and other assets. To use the fogedret, the creditor must hold a valid enforcement title (such as a Danish recognition order), file a written request, and attend a hearing where the debtor is summoned to disclose assets under oath. The fogedret typically schedules hearings within two to four weeks of the creditor’s application.
Yes. The Nordic Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Judgments provides a near-automatic recognition mechanism for judgments from Sweden, Norway, Finland and Iceland in civil and commercial matters. No exequatur is required. Provided the judgment is final, the rendering court had Convention-based jurisdiction, and the defendant received proper notice, the creditor can file the judgment directly with the fogedret for execution. Processing times are typically four to twelve weeks.
The standard document set includes: a certified copy of the foreign judgment, a certificate of enforceability from the rendering court, proof of service on the defendant in the original proceedings, authenticated translations into Danish (apostille or consular legalisation), and a power of attorney for Danish counsel. For arbitral awards, the original award and the arbitration agreement are additionally required. See the full checklist in Section 4.5 above.
Timelines vary by route. Nordic Convention enforcement typically takes 4 to 12 weeks for recognition, plus 2 to 4 weeks for fogedret levy. Arbitral-award enforcement takes approximately 4 to 16 weeks for recognition. Ordinary recognition of non-treaty judgments may take 3 to 9 months where the debtor contests. Where real property is seized, an additional 3 to 6 months should be allowed for the forced-sale process. The decision matrix and timeline table above provide detailed scenario-by-scenario estimates.
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Enforcement of Foreign Judgments in Denmark: Grounds, Fogedret Steps & Nordic Convention Routes

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