Our Expert in Liechtenstein
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Last reviewed: 25 May 2026
Can foreign judgments be enforced in Liechtenstein? The short answer is conditionally yes, but only where an applicable treaty exists or where the creditor can demonstrate that the judgment state grants reciprocal treatment to Liechtenstein judgments under the Liechtenstein Enforcement Act (Exekutionsordnung, “EO”). Because Liechtenstein is neither an EU member state nor a party to the Lugano Convention, the recognition and enforcement of foreign judgments in Liechtenstein follows a narrower, domestically governed path that differs materially from the regimes available across the wider European Economic Area.
For banks, institutional creditors and recovery teams evaluating cross-border enforcement prospects in 2026, the feasibility assessment hinges on two immediate questions: does a bilateral or multilateral treaty cover the judgment; and, if not, can reciprocity be proved to the satisfaction of a Liechtenstein court?
The statutory gateway for enforcing foreign judgments in Liechtenstein is the Exekutionsordnung (EO), formally the Law on Enforcement and Legal Assurance Procedures. Recorded in the Liechtenstein consolidated law database (LILEX) and catalogued by the WIPO Lex legislative archive, the EO sets out the conditions under which foreign judicial titles may be declared enforceable.
In its core provisions, the Act requires that a foreign judgment meets several cumulative conditions before a Liechtenstein court will grant recognition: the judgment must be final and enforceable in the state of origin; the issuing court must have had jurisdiction under Liechtenstein conflict-of-laws principles; the debtor must have been properly served and afforded due process; the judgment must not conflict with Liechtenstein public policy; and, critically, the state of origin must grant reciprocal enforcement to Liechtenstein judgments.
Liechtenstein’s position outside the EU legal order means that the Brussels I Regulation (recast) and the Lugano Convention do not apply. While Liechtenstein is an EEA member, the EEA Agreement does not incorporate EU rules on mutual recognition of civil judgments. The practical result is that enforcement of foreign judgments in Liechtenstein depends almost entirely on bilateral treaties or the domestic reciprocity requirement under the Enforcement Act.
Liechtenstein has concluded a limited number of bilateral arrangements for mutual recognition of judgments, most notably with Austria and Switzerland. The Austrian–Liechtenstein enforcement treaty remains the most frequently invoked instrument. Where a treaty applies, it generally simplifies the procedural pathway and may relax certain conditions, for example, by establishing reciprocity as a matter of treaty obligation rather than requiring the creditor to prove it case by case. For judgments originating in jurisdictions without treaty coverage, which encompasses the vast majority of the world, the creditor must rely on the domestic reciprocity route under the EO or, as a last resort, pursue re-litigation in Liechtenstein.
When a creditor holds a foreign judgment and seeks to collect against assets in Liechtenstein, there are three principal routes available. Each carries different procedural requirements, timelines and risk profiles. Understanding which route applies is the first strategic decision in any enforcement campaign.
Where a bilateral or multilateral treaty exists between Liechtenstein and the judgment state, the creditor applies for recognition and enforcement under the terms of that treaty. The treaty typically designates the competent court, prescribes the required documents and may waive the need for independent proof of reciprocity. This route offers the most predictable outcome and the fastest timeline, but it is available only for a narrow group of jurisdictions, primarily Austria and Switzerland.
For judgments from states without treaty coverage, the Liechtenstein Enforcement Act permits recognition provided the creditor satisfies all statutory conditions, including proof that reciprocity exists. This is the most common route for commercial creditors pursuing enforcement of foreign judgments in Liechtenstein from major financial centres such as London, New York, Frankfurt or Singapore. The creditor must file a formal application with the Liechtenstein court, attaching certified copies of the judgment, proof of enforceability, evidence of reciprocity, and German-language translations of all documents. The court examines these submissions and, if satisfied, grants a declaration of enforceability (Vollstreckbarerklärung), a process that functions in practice as the Liechtenstein equivalent of an exequatur.
Where reciprocity cannot be established, or where the creditor assesses the risk of a reciprocity challenge as too high, the alternative is to commence fresh proceedings in Liechtenstein based on the underlying cause of action. The foreign judgment itself cannot be enforced in this scenario, but the creditor uses it as compelling evidence of the merits of the claim. Re-litigation is more expensive and time-consuming, but it entirely sidesteps the reciprocity hurdle. Industry observers expect this route to remain relevant in 2026 for creditors pursuing claims originating in jurisdictions with no established enforcement track record in Liechtenstein.
Provisionally enforceable foreign judgments, those that carry an enforceability declaration at origin notwithstanding an outstanding appeal, present a more complex picture. Liechtenstein courts have generally required that a judgment be final to qualify for recognition under the EO. Early indications suggest that courts may permit enforcement of provisionally enforceable titles in limited circumstances where the applicable treaty expressly provides for it, but this remains an area of caution for practitioners. Creditors holding interim or provisional titles should seek local counsel advice before filing an enforcement application.
The reciprocity requirement under the Liechtenstein Enforcement Act is the single most consequential condition for most cross-border creditors. It requires the applicant to demonstrate that the state in which the judgment was rendered would, in comparable circumstances, recognise and enforce a Liechtenstein judgment. This is not a theoretical or diplomatic test: Liechtenstein courts assess reciprocity based on the actual legal practice and statutory provisions of the foreign state.
In practical terms, the reciprocity requirement in Liechtenstein operates as follows. The applicant must provide credible evidence, documentary, statutory or expert-based, showing that the originating jurisdiction does or would enforce Liechtenstein judgments. The courts do not require absolute certainty; they apply a standard of reasonable probability based on the legal framework and enforcement practice of the originating state.
Creditors and their counsel typically assemble one or more of the following types of evidence to satisfy the reciprocity test:
For certain jurisdictions, particularly Austria and Switzerland, reciprocity is well-established through treaty and longstanding practice. For others, including common-law jurisdictions like the United Kingdom or the United States, the analysis requires more granular work. Common-law systems generally enforce foreign judgments on the basis of private international law principles (such as the doctrine of obligation), but the creditor must demonstrate that these principles would extend to Liechtenstein judgments in practice.
Once the applicable route is identified and the evidence assembled, the enforcement application proceeds through a structured series of procedural steps. The following table provides a practical overview of the typical timeline for the domestic reciprocity route (Route 2), which is the most common path for commercial creditors.
| Step | Typical Duration | Who Files / Responsible |
|---|---|---|
| Prepare recognition application, assemble documents, obtain translations and reciprocity evidence | 2–6 weeks | Foreign counsel + local Liechtenstein counsel |
| File application with the competent Liechtenstein court | 1 week | Local counsel |
| Court processing, review of application and scheduling of hearing (if required) | 4–12 weeks | Liechtenstein court registry (Landgericht) |
| Court issues declaration of enforceability (Vollstreckbarerklärung) | Included above | Presiding judge |
| Appeal window (debtor may challenge recognition) | 4 weeks from service of decision | Debtor / respondent |
| Enforcement measures (seizure, bank attachment, garnishee) | 2–8 weeks (asset-dependent) | Bailiff / enforcement office |
Total estimated timeline: From initial instruction to actual attachment of assets, creditors should plan for a window of approximately 3–6 months in a standard, uncontested matter. Contested applications, where the debtor challenges reciprocity, jurisdiction or public policy, can extend the process significantly, potentially to 9–12 months or longer if appellate proceedings are involved.
Court fees in Liechtenstein are calculated as a percentage of the value in dispute and are generally moderate by international standards. Legal fees for local counsel are typically agreed on an hourly or fixed-fee basis. Creditors should budget for: translation costs (all documents must be filed in German); the cost of obtaining a foreign-law expert opinion on reciprocity; court fees; and local counsel fees. For a mid-range commercial enforcement (claim value CHF 500,000–5,000,000), total costs for the recognition phase alone are likely to fall in the range of CHF 15,000–50,000, depending on complexity and whether the matter is contested.
A debtor facing enforcement of a foreign judgment in Liechtenstein has several grounds on which to resist recognition. Understanding these defences is critical for creditors conducting a pre-suit feasibility assessment.
The likely practical effect of these defences is that well-prepared creditors should address each potential ground proactively in their application, by including proof of finality, a jurisdictional analysis, service evidence and a robust reciprocity opinion, rather than waiting for the debtor to raise objections.
Once the Liechtenstein court issues a declaration of enforceability, the creditor gains access to the full suite of domestic enforcement measures under the Enforcement Act (EO). These measures are broadly comparable to those available in other continental European jurisdictions, but certain features are particularly relevant for institutional creditors targeting financial assets in Liechtenstein.
Attachment of bank accounts is the primary enforcement tool for creditors pursuing debtors with assets held at Liechtenstein banks and financial institutions. The creditor applies to the court for a Forderungsexekution (attachment of receivables), which directs the bank to freeze and, ultimately, transfer funds up to the judgment amount. This requires identification of the debtor’s bank, though not necessarily the specific account number, and a valid enforcement title.
Third-party debt orders (garnishee proceedings) operate in a similar fashion. The creditor identifies a third party who owes a debt to the judgment debtor and obtains a court order directing payment to the creditor instead. This mechanism is particularly useful where the debtor holds claims against insurance companies, business partners or investment managers domiciled in Liechtenstein.
Seizure of movable property and registration of enforcement charges over real property are also available, though they are less commonly used in cross-border enforcement scenarios involving financial assets.
Creditors who face an urgent risk of asset dissipation should consider applying for einstweilige Verfügungen (provisional or interim measures) at the outset of the enforcement process, or even before the recognition application is filed. Liechtenstein courts can grant freezing orders over bank accounts and other assets where the creditor demonstrates a credible claim and a genuine risk that the debtor will remove, conceal or dissipate assets. These orders can be obtained ex parte in urgent situations, though the creditor will typically be required to provide security (a cross-undertaking in damages or a bank guarantee) to compensate the debtor if the order is later found to have been unjustified.
For institutional creditors, the following checklist provides a structured approach to evaluating and executing an enforcement campaign in Liechtenstein in 2026:
Indicative timeline matrix: For a well-prepared, uncontested case: approximately 3–4 months from instruction to attachment. For a contested case with a reciprocity challenge: approximately 6–12 months. For re-litigation on the underlying claim: approximately 12–24 months.
The following anonymised examples, drawn from practitioner experience reported in leading Liechtenstein legal commentaries, illustrate how the enforcement framework operates in practice:
Case A, Successful recognition (Austrian judgment, treaty route). A Liechtenstein-domiciled bank faced enforcement of an Austrian commercial court judgment for approximately EUR 2.5 million. The creditor applied under the bilateral treaty between Austria and Liechtenstein. Because the treaty establishes reciprocity as a matter of obligation, the court granted recognition within approximately eight weeks of filing. Enforcement measures against the debtor’s Liechtenstein bank accounts were executed shortly thereafter. The entire process, from initial filing to attachment, was completed in under four months.
Case B, Reciprocity challenge (English High Court judgment, domestic route). A creditor sought to enforce an English High Court money judgment against a Liechtenstein-domiciled entity holding assets in local financial institutions. The debtor contested reciprocity, arguing that English courts would not enforce a Liechtenstein judgment under common-law principles. The creditor submitted a detailed expert opinion from an English solicitor demonstrating that Liechtenstein judgments could be enforced in England under the common-law doctrine of obligation. After a contested hearing, the Liechtenstein court accepted the reciprocity evidence and granted enforcement. The process took approximately nine months from filing to the final enforcement order, reflecting the additional time required for the contested reciprocity hearing and appeal window.
The answer to whether foreign judgments can be enforced in Liechtenstein remains conditional in 2026: enforcement is achievable where a treaty applies, where reciprocity can be demonstrated under the Liechtenstein Enforcement Act, or, as a fallback, where the creditor is prepared to re-litigate the underlying claim. The process requires careful preparation, local expertise and a realistic assessment of the reciprocity position before significant costs are incurred.
For banks and institutional creditors holding foreign judgments and targeting Liechtenstein-based assets, the recommended immediate steps are: first, verify enforceability at origin; second, obtain a reciprocity opinion for the originating jurisdiction; and third, instruct qualified Liechtenstein dispute resolution counsel to advise on the optimal route and any need for urgent protective measures. Early engagement of local counsel is essential, particularly where asset dissipation is a concern and freezing orders may be needed on short notice.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Sabine Fröhlich at Fröhlich Attorneys at Law AG, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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