[codicts-css-switcher id=”346″]

Global Law Experts Logo
freezing order in the netherlands

Freezing Order in the Netherlands: Pre‑judgment Attachment, Bank Garnishment and Ex Parte Leave

By Global Law Experts
– posted 2 hours ago

A freezing order in the Netherlands, known in Dutch practice as conservatoir beslag, is one of the fastest and most powerful creditor remedies available anywhere in Europe. Governed by the Wetboek van Burgerlijke Rechtsvordering (Dutch Code of Civil Procedure, “Rv”), the procedure allows a claimant to freeze a debtor’s bank accounts, receivables, shares and other assets before any judgment has been rendered on the merits. Cross‑border creditors are increasingly turning to Dutch courts, and in particular the Netherlands Commercial Court (NCC), which conducts proceedings entirely in English, to secure assets at speed. This guide sets out the complete procedure, from the legal test and ex parte application through to bank garnishment mechanics, typical timelines, costs and the path to enforcement.

Executive Summary: When to Use a Freezing Order (Conservatoir Beslag)

The purpose of a conservatoir beslag is straightforward: to preserve assets so that a future judgment can actually be enforced. Without it, a debtor who anticipates litigation can move funds offshore, transfer property to related entities or dissipate assets before a creditor ever reaches the enforcement stage. Dutch law deliberately makes pre‑judgment attachment accessible, courts grant leave on an ex parte basis, meaning the debtor is not warned in advance.

A freezing order in the Netherlands is most commonly used when a creditor holds a monetary claim and has reasonable grounds to fear that assets will disappear. It is equally available to domestic and foreign claimants, and the procedure is not limited to Dutch‑law claims. The measure is conservatory only: it preserves the status quo without transferring ownership or granting the creditor a right of priority over other creditors.

For any creditor considering this route, the first 72 hours are critical. The practical action plan looks like this:

  • Hours 0–12: Identify and verify debtor assets (bank accounts, receivables, property). Instruct a Dutch lawyer to draft the petition for leave to attach.
  • Hours 12–24: File the ex parte petition with the preliminary relief judge (voorzieningenrechter). In urgent cases, leave can be granted the same day.
  • Hours 24–72: Once leave is granted, instruct a bailiff (deurwaarder) to serve the attachment on the bank or third party. The freeze takes effect upon service.

Key Definitions and Legal Basis, Conservatoir Beslag Explained

Understanding the Dutch terminology is essential for any party engaging with the procedure. The statutory framework is found in Articles 700–770 Rv, which govern conservatory attachment in its various forms.

  • Conservatoir beslag. A pre‑judgment attachment that freezes specific assets belonging to the debtor. It does not require a prior judgment or arbitral award. The term literally translates as “conservatory seizure.”
  • Pre‑judgment attachment (prejudgmenteel beslag). The English-language equivalent used in international practice. It mirrors the function of a Mareva injunction or freezing injunction under English law, though the Dutch procedural mechanism is distinct.
  • Bank garnishment (derdenbeslag onder de bank). A form of conservatoir beslag specifically targeting funds held by a bank as third party. Upon service, the bank is obliged to freeze the debtor’s account balances.
  • Ex parte. An application made without notice to the opposing party. Under Article 700 Rv, leave to attach is granted by the preliminary relief judge on an ex parte basis as a matter of standard procedure, this is not an exceptional remedy.

Is a Freezing Order the Same as a Freezing Injunction?

Not exactly. A freezing injunction (as known in English and Commonwealth jurisdictions) is a court order prohibiting a party from dealing with assets and is enforced through contempt of court. A Dutch conservatoir beslag, by contrast, operates in rem, it attaches to specific, identified assets and is served directly on the party holding them (e.g., a bank). The practical result is similar, but the enforcement mechanism and procedural framework differ significantly. Industry observers note that the Dutch system is often considered faster and more cost‑effective for monetary claims because it does not require an inter partes hearing before the freeze takes effect.

Who Can Apply and What Threshold Must Be Met?, The Legal Test for Pre‑Judgment Attachment in the Netherlands

The legal threshold for obtaining conservatoir beslag is deliberately low by international standards. Under Article 700 Rv, a claimant must apply to the preliminary relief judge of the competent district court for leave to attach. The judge assesses the petition summarily, typically without hearing the debtor.

The key conditions are:

  • A claim (vordering). The applicant must have a claim, or an anticipated claim, against the debtor. The claim does not need to be immediately due and payable (opeisbaar) at the time of application, a future or conditional claim may suffice, provided it is sufficiently substantiated.
  • Sufficient substantiation (summierlijk). The applicant must demonstrate on a summary basis that the claim is likely to succeed. This is not a full merits assessment; rather, the court requires a prima facie showing that the claim is not manifestly unfounded.
  • Fear of dissipation (vrees voor verduistering). For attachment of moveable goods, the applicant must show a well‑founded fear that the debtor will remove or conceal assets. Importantly, for bank attachment and attachment of receivables, a fear of dissipation is not an explicit statutory requirement, the court will grant leave if the claim itself is sufficiently substantiated.
  • Proportionality. The amount to be attached must be specified in the petition, including a surcharge (typically 30%) for interest and costs. The court may limit the scope of the attachment if it considers the requested amount disproportionate.

A practical document checklist for the petition includes:

  • A concise description of the factual and legal basis for the claim
  • Supporting evidence (contracts, invoices, correspondence, expert reports)
  • Identification of the assets to be attached (bank name and branch, account details if known, property addresses)
  • A calculation of the claim amount plus the surcharge for interest and costs
  • A draft order (beslagrekest) prepared by a Dutch-qualified lawyer

Emergency (Ex Parte) vs Inter Partes Procedure, Strategic Choice for Asset Freezing in the Netherlands

One of the distinctive features of the Dutch system is that ex parte attachment is the default, not the exception. Under Article 700 Rv, the preliminary relief judge in the Netherlands considers the petition in chambers and grants or refuses leave without notifying the debtor. This ensures the element of surprise, which is critical for asset preservation.

How to Draft an Ex Parte Petition

The petition (beslagrekest) must be signed by a Dutch-qualified lawyer (advocaat) and filed at the district court. It should set out the claim in summary form, identify the assets targeted and state the amount (including the surcharge). In practice, experienced practitioners include a brief legal analysis and attach key evidence as exhibits. The judge may ask supplementary questions or impose conditions, including a requirement to commence substantive proceedings within a set deadline (typically 14 days after the attachment is levied, but the judge may set a different period).

Where the debtor applies to have the attachment lifted (opheffing), the matter becomes inter partes. The debtor must bring summary proceedings (kort geding) before the preliminary relief judge, arguing that the attachment was unjustified or disproportionate.

Factor Ex parte attachment Inter partes (kort geding)
Notice to debtor None, attachment is served without prior warning Debtor is summoned and heard before the court decides
Speed Leave can be granted within hours; attachment effected within 24–72 hours Typically 2–4 weeks from summons to hearing
Element of surprise Preserved, debtor cannot move assets before the freeze Lost, debtor may take evasive action
Risk of wrongful attachment Attaching party bears strict liability for damages if the claim fails on the merits Risk is lower because the court has heard both sides
Security for damages Court may require a bank guarantee or deposit as a condition of leave Generally not required (order is on the merits)
Typical use case Urgent asset preservation where dissipation risk is real Injunctive relief, performance orders, or where the claimant seeks a broader remedy

Courts, Judges and Where to File, The Preliminary Relief Judge in the Netherlands and the NCC

Applications for conservatoir beslag are filed with the preliminary relief judge (voorzieningenrechter) of the district court in the district where the assets are located or where the debtor is domiciled. For bank attachments, this is typically the district where the bank branch holding the account is situated.

Cross‑border claimants should note that the Netherlands Commercial Court (NCC), a specialised chamber of the Amsterdam District Court, conducts all proceedings, including interim relief, in English. Foreign applicants can therefore obtain a freezing order in the Netherlands without the need for Dutch-language pleadings. The NCC’s interim relief facility is particularly attractive for international trade disputes, joint venture disagreements and cross‑border debt recovery matters. Procedural information is published on the Dutch judiciary website (Rechtspraak.nl). The NCC charges an elevated court fee, but the ability to proceed entirely in English often justifies the additional cost for international parties.

Step‑by‑Step: How to Obtain Conservatoir Beslag, Practical Timeline

The following numbered procedure sets out the typical sequence for obtaining and enforcing a freezing order in the Netherlands. Timelines are indicative and may vary depending on court availability and complexity.

  1. Pre‑filing asset identification. Instruct a Dutch lawyer. Identify the debtor’s assets: bank accounts, trade receivables, real property, shares. Engage asset‑tracing specialists if necessary.
  2. Draft the petition (beslagrekest). Prepare and sign the petition. Attach supporting evidence, a claim calculation (including the 30% surcharge) and a draft order specifying each asset.
  3. File ex parte at the district court. Submit the petition to the preliminary relief judge. In Amsterdam, urgent petitions can be filed electronically and processed the same day.
  4. Court grants (or refuses) leave. The judge reviews the petition in chambers. Leave is typically granted within hours to one business day. Conditions may be imposed (deadline to start proceedings, security for damages).
  5. Instruct a bailiff (deurwaarder). Once leave is granted, the enforcement bailiff serves the attachment order on the bank, debtor, third party or registry as applicable.
  6. Freeze takes effect. The attachment is effective from the moment of service. A bank receiving a conservatoir beslag order must freeze the debtor’s balances immediately.
  7. Commence substantive proceedings. The attaching party must initiate the main action (or arbitration) within the deadline set by the court, commonly 14 days after the attachment is levied.
Step Typical timeframe Key action
Asset identification & petition drafting 1–3 days Gather evidence, instruct lawyer, draft beslagrekest
Filing ex parte petition Same day File with preliminary relief judge
Court grants leave Hours to 1 business day Judge reviews in chambers; issues order
Service on bank / third party Same day to 1 business day after leave Bailiff serves order; freeze takes immediate effect
Commence main proceedings Within 14 days (or as court directs) File writ of summons or request for arbitration

Bank Attachment in the Netherlands, Garnishment Mechanics and Practical Tips

Bank attachment (derdenbeslag) is the most common form of conservatoir beslag in commercial disputes. The procedure targets funds held by a bank (as third party) on behalf of the debtor. Understanding how Dutch banks respond to attachment orders is critical for effective asset preservation.

Upon service of the attachment order by the bailiff, the bank is legally obliged to freeze the debtor’s account balances up to the amount specified in the order. The bank must then file a declaration (verklaring derdenbeslag) within four weeks, setting out the amounts held and any prior claims or set‑off rights. In practice, major Dutch banks, including ING, ABN AMRO and Rabobank, process attachment orders through dedicated legal or compliance departments and typically freeze accounts within the same business day of service, though administrative confirmation may take 24–72 hours.

Cross‑Border Banking Issues

Where a debtor holds accounts at international banks with Dutch branches, the attachment is served on the branch in the Netherlands. Funds held at branches outside the Netherlands are generally not captured by a Dutch conservatoir beslag unless the bank’s internal systems pool balances centrally. Practitioners advising on garnishment in the Netherlands should always verify the precise branch and IBAN details before service. For EU cross‑border matters, the European Account Preservation Order (EAPO) under Regulation (EU) No 655/2014 provides an alternative route that may reach accounts in other Member States.

Asset type Procedure to freeze Typical time to effect
Bank account (domestic) Court order (conservatoir beslag) served on bank via enforcement bailiff 24–72 hours after order granted
Receivables (debtor claims against third parties) Attachment of receivables served on the third‑party debtor 2–7 days (depends on tracing and service)
Shares / securities Preservation order served on company registry or custodian 3–14 days (custody and administration complexities)

Other Attachable Assets and Third‑Party Garnishment, Asset Freezing in the Netherlands Beyond Bank Accounts

Dutch conservatoir beslag is not limited to bank accounts. The procedure can target virtually any identifiable asset belonging to the debtor, including:

  • Moveable property (roerende zaken). Goods, vehicles, inventory and equipment can be attached by a bailiff who records and, where necessary, takes physical custody.
  • Immoveable property (onroerende zaken). Real estate is attached by registering the court order in the Land Registry (Kadaster). The registration prevents the debtor from selling or encumbering the property.
  • Receivables and contractual claims. Amounts owed to the debtor by third parties can be attached through garnishment served on those third parties.
  • Shares and participations. Registered shares in a Dutch BV (private limited company) can be attached by serving the order on the company. Listed securities require service on the custodian or clearing institution.

Effective asset tracing is often the decisive factor. Practitioners experienced in Dutch commercial litigation routinely engage specialised investigators to locate assets before filing, ensuring the attachment captures meaningful value.

Security for Damages, Costs and Termination of Freezing Orders

A party that obtains a conservatoir beslag assumes a significant risk: if the underlying claim ultimately fails on the merits, the attaching party is strictly liable for all damages caused by the attachment. This is an objective liability, the claimant cannot escape it by showing good faith or reasonable grounds for attachment at the time it was levied.

In some cases, the preliminary relief judge will impose a condition requiring the attaching party to provide security for potential damages, typically a bank guarantee. The quantum depends on the amount attached and the court’s assessment of the potential harm to the debtor. Industry observers note that security requirements are more common where the claim is substantial, the debtor is a trading company whose operations depend on the frozen funds, or where the claim’s merits are uncertain.

A debtor who wishes to challenge the attachment must bring summary proceedings (kort geding) before the preliminary relief judge to seek its lifting (opheffing). Grounds for lifting include that the claim is manifestly unfounded, the attachment is disproportionate, or the debtor has provided adequate alternative security (such as a bank guarantee replacing the frozen assets).

From Freezing Order to Enforcement, Converting to Judgment

A conservatoir beslag is a temporary measure. To convert it into enforcement (executoriaal beslag), the creditor must obtain a judgment, arbitral award or other enforceable title on the underlying claim. The attaching party is required to commence the main proceedings within the deadline set by the court in its leave order, typically 14 days after the attachment is effected.

Once a final and enforceable judgment is obtained, the conservatory attachment automatically converts into an executory attachment. The creditor can then proceed to forced sale of the attached assets (for moveable or immoveable property) or direct payment from frozen bank balances. Where the debtor remains unable to pay, the creditor may also petition for the debtor’s bankruptcy (faillissement), at which point the attachment lapses and the creditor participates in the insolvency distribution.

Practical Checklist: First 72 Hours and Documentation Pack

The following checklist is designed for in‑house counsel and instructing lawyers who need to act quickly. Completing these steps within the first 72 hours maximises the chances of a successful freezing order in the Netherlands:

  • Asset intelligence. Compile a list of all known debtor assets: bank names, account numbers (IBANs), property addresses, known receivables, corporate participations.
  • Evidence bundle. Assemble contracts, invoices, payment records, correspondence and any expert reports supporting the claim.
  • Claim calculation. Quantify the claim precisely and add the surcharge (typically 30%) for interest and costs.
  • Instruct a Dutch lawyer. The petition must be signed by a Dutch‑qualified advocaat. Foreign counsel should engage local co‑counsel immediately.
  • Draft the beslagrekest. Include the claim summary, legal basis, asset identification and draft order.
  • File with the court. Submit the petition to the preliminary relief judge of the competent district court.
  • Brief the bailiff. Have a bailiff on standby to serve the order the moment leave is granted.
  • Plan substantive proceedings. Prepare the writ of summons or arbitration request to comply with the deadline for commencing the main action.
  • Preserve all correspondence. Maintain a complete record, this will be needed for any subsequent lifting application.

Case Study (Anonymised): Cross‑Border Creditor Secures Dutch Bank Account

A German manufacturing company was owed approximately €1.2 million by a Dutch trading entity under a supply agreement. When the Dutch debtor began transferring inventory to a newly incorporated affiliate and stopped responding to payment demands, the German creditor’s in‑house team instructed Dutch counsel. Within 12 hours, the lawyers drafted and filed a beslagrekest at the Amsterdam District Court. The preliminary relief judge granted leave the same afternoon. A bailiff served the attachment order on the debtor’s bank the following morning, freezing €950,000 in the debtor’s primary operating account.

The debtor applied to lift the attachment in summary proceedings two weeks later, arguing business disruption. The court declined to lift the attachment but permitted the debtor to replace it with a bank guarantee of equivalent value. The creditor subsequently obtained a judgment on the merits and enforced it against the guarantee. The entire process, from initial instruction to judgment, took approximately five months. The early indication from this and similar matters is that prompt action in the first 24 hours is the single most important factor in successful asset preservation.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Marcel Fruytier at Fruytier Lawyers in Business, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Wetboek van Burgerlijke Rechtsvordering (Dutch Code of Civil Procedure)
  2. Rechtspraak.nl, Dutch Judiciary (including Netherlands Commercial Court)
  3. Thomson Reuters Practical Law, Attachment (Freezing) Orders: Overview (Netherlands)
  4. Eversheds Sutherland, Global Freezing Order Guide (Netherlands)
  5. MAAK Advocaten, Freezing Order in the Netherlands
  6. Law & More, Asset Freezing and Pre-Judgment Attachment in the Netherlands
  7. HVG Law, Attachment (Freezing) Order: Overview (Netherlands)
  8. Banning, Freezing Assets in the Netherlands: Basic Principles

FAQs

Q1: What are the conditions for a freezing order in the Netherlands?
The applicant must demonstrate a sufficiently substantiated claim against the debtor and identify the assets to be attached. For moveable property, a well‑founded fear of dissipation is required. For bank accounts and receivables, the claim itself is generally sufficient. The petition must be signed by a Dutch lawyer and filed with the preliminary relief judge under Article 700 Rv.
A conservatoir beslag freezes specific assets of the debtor, preventing their sale, transfer or dissipation. It does not transfer ownership to the creditor and does not give the creditor priority over other creditors. The freeze remains in place until the attachment is lifted by the court, replaced by alternative security, or converted into executory attachment following a judgment.
Yes, but the term “restraining order” in Dutch law typically refers to a civil injunction obtained through summary proceedings (kort geding), which is a different remedy from conservatoir beslag. A conservatoir beslag freezes specific assets; a civil injunction can order a party to perform or refrain from a specific action. Criminal-law protection orders exist separately under Dutch criminal procedure.
The freezing order preserves assets while the creditor pursues the main claim through litigation or arbitration. Once a final and enforceable judgment or award is obtained, the conservatory attachment converts automatically into an executory attachment, allowing the creditor to proceed to forced sale of the attached assets or direct payment from frozen balances.
Yes. Under Article 700 Rv, ex parte leave is the standard procedure for conservatoir beslag. The debtor is not notified in advance. The primary risk is strict liability: if the underlying claim is ultimately dismissed, the attaching party must compensate the debtor for all damages resulting from the attachment, regardless of good faith. The court may also require the claimant to post security for damages as a condition of granting leave.
The attachment remains in force until the court lifts it, the debtor provides alternative security, or the creditor obtains a judgment and converts it into executory attachment. However, the attaching party must commence substantive proceedings within the deadline specified in the court’s leave order, typically 14 days after the attachment is levied. Failure to do so will cause the attachment to lapse.
Costs include lawyer fees for drafting and filing the petition, court fees, and bailiff charges for service. The court may require the claimant to provide a bank guarantee or deposit as security against potential wrongful‑attachment damages. The quantum of security depends on the amount attached and the potential commercial impact on the debtor. Early indications from practice suggest that costs for a straightforward bank attachment (excluding the security deposit) typically range from several thousand euros for simple cases to significantly more for complex multi‑asset or cross‑border matters.

Find the right Legal Expert for your business

The premier guide to leading legal professionals throughout the world

Specialism
Country
Practice Area
LAWYERS RECOGNIZED
0
EVALUATIONS OF LAWYERS BY THEIR PEERS
0 m+
PRACTICE AREAS
0
COUNTRIES AROUND THE WORLD
0
Join
who are already getting the benefits
0

Sign up for the latest legal briefings and news within Global Law Experts’ community, as well as a whole host of features, editorial and conference updates direct to your email inbox.

Naturally you can unsubscribe at any time.

Newsletter Sign Up
About Us

Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.

Global Law Experts App

Now Available on the App & Google Play Stores.

Social Posts
[wp_social_ninja id="50714" platform="instagram"]
[codicts-social-feeds platform="instagram" url="https://www.instagram.com/globallawexperts/" template="carousel" results_limit="10" header="false" column_count="1"]

See More:

Contact Us

Stay Informed

Join Mailing List
About Us

Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.

Social Posts
[wp_social_ninja id="50714" platform="instagram"]
[codicts-social-feeds platform="instagram" url="https://www.instagram.com/globallawexperts/" template="carousel" results_limit="10" header="false" column_count="1"]

See More:

Global Law Experts App

Now Available on the App & Google Play Stores.

Contact Us

Stay Informed

Join Mailing List

GLE

Lawyer Profile Page - Lead Capture
GLE-Logo-White
Lawyer Profile Page - Lead Capture

Freezing Order in the Netherlands: Pre‑judgment Attachment, Bank Garnishment and Ex Parte Leave

Send welcome message

Custom Message