Our Expert in Bulgaria
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Last updated: 24 May 2026
Understanding how to collect a claim in Bulgaria is essential for any business creditor seeking to recover an outstanding debt, whether the debtor is a local company or a party in another EU Member State. Bulgaria’s Code of Civil Procedure (CPC) provides a fast-track payment order mechanism that, when uncontested, leads directly to enforcement through a private bailiff (частен съдебен изпълнител, or ЧСИ). For cross-border receivables, creditors may instead rely on the European Order for Payment under Regulation (EC) No 1896/2006. This guide walks through every stage, from pre-action checks and filing, through opposition, to instructing a private enforcement agent and recovering the funds, with the practical timelines, costs and document checklists a creditor needs in 2026.
Key point: Before filing any court application, confirm your evidence is complete, the claim is within the limitation period, and send a formal written demand, most debtors respond within 14 days.
Bulgaria’s Obligations and Contracts Act sets a general limitation period of five years for contractual claims and three years for certain periodic payments such as rent, interest and insurance premiums. Commercial claims between traders follow the same five-year rule unless a shorter period is specified by special legislation. If the limitation period has expired, the debtor may raise it as a defence and the court will dismiss the claim. Always verify the applicable period before incurring court costs.
Assemble the following before taking any legal step:
| Day | Action |
|---|---|
| Day 1 | Send formal written demand by registered post and email |
| Day 14 | Deadline for voluntary payment expires |
| Day 15–21 | If no payment: finalise documents and instruct counsel to file a payment order application |
If the debtor pays within the demand period, no court proceedings are necessary. If not, the creditor moves to Step 2.
Key point: The Bulgarian payment order (заповед за изпълнение) under the CPC is the fastest route to a writ of execution for uncontested monetary claims. It is filed ex parte, meaning the debtor is not heard before the order is issued, and, if unopposed, becomes enforceable within weeks.
The order-for-payment procedure is governed by Chapter Thirty-Seven of the Bulgarian Code of Civil Procedure. Article 410 CPC allows a creditor to apply for a payment order in respect of monetary claims or claims for delivery of fungible goods, regardless of value. Article 417 CPC provides a reinforced variant: where the claim is supported by specified documentary evidence (such as a notarial deed, extract from the debtor’s accounting records, or a document with a notarised signature), the court issues both a payment order and a writ of immediate execution simultaneously.
The court fee for a payment order application is 2 % of the claimed amount, with a minimum of BGN 25. This fee is paid upon filing and is non-refundable if the application is rejected on formal grounds. By comparison, the fee for ordinary litigation is 4 % of the claim value, making the payment order route significantly cheaper at the outset.
Industry observers report that Bulgarian district courts typically process a correctly completed payment order application within one to four weeks. If the court identifies formal deficiencies, it issues instructions for correction, which extends the timeline.
Bulgaria has been progressively adopting electronic filing across its court system. Creditors and their lawyers can now submit payment order applications through the Unified Portal for Electronic Justice (ЕПЕП) where the relevant district court has activated the e-filing module. The application, supporting documents and fee payment confirmation are uploaded digitally, and the court communicates its decision electronically. Early indications suggest that e-filed applications are processed faster due to automated checks, though availability still varies by district.
Key point: Once the court issues a payment order, the debtor receives a copy and has a short statutory window to file an opposition. If no opposition is filed, the order becomes final and enforceable. If the debtor objects, the case moves to ordinary civil proceedings.
Under the CPC, the debtor may file a written objection (възражение) against the payment order within two weeks of receiving it. The objection does not need to state specific grounds, a simple statement that the debtor disputes the claim is sufficient. This is a crucial feature: opposition is a low threshold for the debtor, which means creditors must be prepared for the possibility of contested proceedings.
The creditor’s options after opposition depend on the type of payment order originally sought:
The flowchart below summarises the opposition path:
Key point: For cross-border monetary claims within the EU, where the creditor and debtor are domiciled in different Member States, the European Order for Payment under Regulation (EC) No 1896/2006 offers a uniform, form-based procedure that avoids the need to navigate Bulgarian domestic procedural law from scratch.
The European payment order Bulgaria procedure is particularly useful for creditors in other EU countries who hold straightforward, uncontested receivables against Bulgarian debtors. The application is made using standard Form A (Annex I to the Regulation) and can be filed with the competent Bulgarian court, typically the district court at the debtor’s domicile. The Regulation is directly applicable in Bulgaria as an EU Member State.
| Element | Detail |
|---|---|
| Legal basis | Regulation (EC) No 1896/2006 of the European Parliament and of the Council |
| Application form | Standard Form A, available on the European e-Justice Portal |
| Language | Application filed in Bulgarian (or accompanied by a certified Bulgarian translation) |
| Court fee | Same as the domestic payment order fee (2 % of the claim, minimum BGN 25) |
| Opposition deadline | 30 days from service on the defendant (per Regulation 1896/2006, Article 16) |
| Effect of opposition | Proceedings converted to ordinary civil proceedings unless the claimant requests termination |
Source: EUR-Lex, Regulation (EC) No 1896/2006; European e-Justice Portal.
If the debtor does not oppose within 30 days, the EOP is declared enforceable and can be executed in Bulgaria (or any other EU Member State) without the need for a separate exequatur procedure. This makes the European payment order Bulgaria route an efficient tool for cross-border debt recovery.
Key point: Once the creditor holds an enforceable payment order or court judgment, the next step is to instruct a private enforcement agent (private bailiff Bulgaria) to execute the writ. Bulgaria’s private enforcement agent system, operational since 2006, handles the vast majority of civil enforcement proceedings.
Private enforcement agents (PEAs) in Bulgaria are regulated professionals licensed and overseen by the Bulgarian Chamber of Private Enforcement Agents (BCPEA). Each PEA operates within the territorial jurisdiction of a specific district court. The creditor may freely choose any PEA whose jurisdiction covers the debtor’s assets or registered address.
PEAs cannot, however, conduct criminal investigations, arrest debtors, or seize assets that are exempt under Bulgarian law (such as essential household items or tools necessary for the debtor’s livelihood).
After receiving the creditor’s instructions and the original writ, the private bailiff sends the debtor a formal invitation to pay voluntarily (покана за доброволно изпълнение). According to the EU Enforcement Atlas, Bulgaria report, the standard period given for voluntary compliance is two weeks. If the debtor does not pay within this period, the PEA proceeds to compulsory enforcement measures.
| Stage | Typical duration |
|---|---|
| Creditor files enforcement request with PEA | Day 1 |
| PEA sends invitation to pay voluntarily | Within days of receiving the writ |
| Voluntary compliance period | Two weeks |
| Bank account garnishment (if no payment) | Within days after voluntary period expires |
| Property seizure / auction preparation | Several weeks to months, depending on asset type |
| Public auction (immovable property) | Conducted within a set timeframe after announcement; re-auction if no buyer |
Source: EU Enforcement Atlas, Bulgaria national enforcement report; BCPEA.
When bank account garnishment and seizure of movables are insufficient to satisfy the debt, the PEA proceeds to auction the debtor’s immovable property. The auction is publicly announced and conducted under CPC rules. The starting price is set at 80 % of the property’s assessed value for the first auction, reduced further if a second auction is required. The creditor may participate in the auction and offset the purchase price against the outstanding debt.
Key point: The total cost and duration of debt recovery in Bulgaria depends on which procedural route is used and whether the debtor contests the claim. The comparison table below summarises the three main paths.
| Procedure | When to use | Key deadlines and notes |
|---|---|---|
| Bulgarian payment order (CPC Articles 410–425) | Local uncontested monetary claims where the debtor is likely not to contest | Court fee: 2 % (min. BGN 25). Court issues order within weeks if requirements are met. Debtor has two weeks to oppose after service. |
| European Order for Payment (Reg. 1896/2006) | Cross-border EU claims where at least one party is domiciled in another Member State | Court fee: 2 % (min. BGN 25). Standard forms required; 30-day opposition period. If unopposed, enforceable across the EU without exequatur. |
| Ordinary litigation → judgment → enforcement | Contested claims, complex disputes or set-off defences | Court fee: 4 % (min. BGN 50). First instance may take months to over a year; appeals extend timeline further. Enforcement via PEA after final judgment. |
Source: Bulgarian CPC; EUR-Lex, Regulation (EC) No 1896/2006; EU Enforcement Atlas, Bulgaria.
Deciding which route to use when collecting a claim in Bulgaria requires a quick assessment of three factors: (1) whether the claim is purely domestic or cross-border, (2) whether the debtor is likely to contest, and (3) the strength of the creditor’s documentary evidence.
Industry observers recommend that creditors always apply for precautionary measures (interim attachment of bank accounts or property) at the earliest opportunity, particularly when there is a risk that the debtor may dissipate assets during the proceedings.
Engaging experienced local counsel is the single most important step for a foreign creditor seeking to recover a debt in Bulgaria. To ensure a swift start, prepare the following before your first consultation:
A qualified Bulgarian debt collection lawyer will assess the optimal procedural route, estimate realistic costs and timelines, and handle the application, court hearings and enforcement on your behalf.
Knowing how to collect a claim in Bulgaria in 2026 means understanding a clear procedural sequence: confirm your evidence and limitation period, send a formal demand, file for a payment order (domestic or European), navigate any debtor opposition, and enforce through a licensed private bailiff. Each stage has defined deadlines and cost implications, the payment order route is faster and cheaper than ordinary litigation, but creditors must be prepared to transition to full proceedings if the debtor objects.
The most effective strategy combines thorough pre-action preparation with early precautionary measures and the selection of the right procedural tool for the specific claim. Whether your debtor is a Sofia-based company or a business elsewhere in the EU, the Bulgarian legal framework offers efficient mechanisms for debt recovery when used correctly.
For creditors ready to take the next step, assembling the document checklist outlined in this guide and engaging a qualified Bulgarian debt collection lawyer will significantly accelerate the process and improve the prospects of full recovery.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Vladislav Bozhikov at Bozhikov & Vatev Law Firm, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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