Our Expert in Greece
The ship mortgage enforcement procedure in Greece is the principal mechanism through which secured lenders recover outstanding debt by compelling the judicial sale of a mortgaged vessel. Greece’s position as one of the world’s largest ship‑owning and ship‑financing jurisdictions means that lenders, syndicate counsel and owners regularly navigate this process, and the pace of enforcement activity has accelerated in 2025–2026 as loan restructurings increase and credit conditions tighten. This guide sets out the complete procedural sequence, from the initial demand letter through ship arrest, court sale and distribution of proceeds, together with the documents, timelines and costs that practitioners need at each stage.
Whether you are a domestic bank enforcing a preferred mortgage or a foreign lender seeking to realise security against a vessel in a Greek port, the steps below provide an actionable enforcement playbook grounded in Greek procedural law and current practice.
Before examining the individual steps to enforce a ship mortgage in Greece, it is important to distinguish between the two core procedural tracks that creditors may use, either separately or in combination.
Ship arrest is an interim, conservatory measure. A creditor with a maritime claim, including a claim secured by a ship mortgage, may apply to the competent Greek court for an order detaining the vessel in port. Arrest prevents the owner from moving the asset beyond the court’s reach while substantive proceedings or enforcement actions are pursued. It does not, by itself, result in a sale.
Mortgage foreclosure is the substantive enforcement process. Once a creditor holds an enforceable title (discussed below), that creditor may initiate compulsory execution against the vessel, leading to a court‑ordered public auction, transfer of ownership to the buyer, and distribution of the sale proceeds to creditors in order of priority.
The typical enforcement sequence follows this path:
Default → Demand → Arrest (optional) → Enforceable title → Court‑ordered sale → Distribution of proceeds
This procedure applies to any creditor holding a registered mortgage, whether a preferred (proïmïoménï) mortgage or a simple mortgage, over a Greek‑flagged vessel or a foreign‑flagged vessel physically located in Greek waters. It is equally available to domestic banks, international lending syndicates, bondholders and, in certain circumstances, receivers or insolvency officeholders acting on behalf of a creditor class.
Not every creditor can proceed directly to enforcement. Greek procedural law imposes prerequisites that must be satisfied before the court will order a sale.
Who can enforce. Any natural or legal person holding a registered ship mortgage may enforce it in Greece, provided the mortgage was validly constituted and registered under the law of the vessel’s flag state or, for Greek‑flagged ships, recorded in the Greek Ship Registry maintained by the Hellenic Ministry of Maritime Affairs. Foreign lenders enjoy the same right, but must satisfy additional procedural formalities (see the foreign lender checklist below).
Preconditions for enforcement. The creditor must demonstrate three things: (a) a valid, registered mortgage; (b) a default event, typically a missed payment, a breach of covenant, or an acceleration of the loan; and (c) an enforceable title against the debtor.
Greek law recognises several categories of enforceable title (ektelestós títlos) under the Code of Civil Procedure (CPC):
Foreign lender checklist. Where the mortgagee is a non‑Greek entity, the following formalities are typically required before enforcement can proceed:
The procedure to enforce a ship mortgage in Greece typically unfolds across six core stages, each involving specific actors, documents and deadlines. The table below summarises the sequence before the detailed sub‑steps that follow.
| Step | Who Does It | Typical Duration (Estimate) |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Demand / notice of default and maritime lien search | Creditor / counsel | 1–7 days |
| 2. Apply for ship arrest OR file enforcement claim | Creditor / Greek counsel | Arrest application: court can act within 1–7 days; enforcement claim: weeks |
| 3. Court order for arrest & security/caution requirement | Greek Court / Port Authority / Marshal | Arrest executed within days |
| 4. Interim relief / injunctions or security substitution | Court | Days–weeks |
| 5. Obtain enforceable title (if not already held) or recognition of foreign title | Creditor / Court | Months (if contested) |
| 6. Apply for court‑ordered sale (auction), complete sale and distribute proceeds | Creditor / Court auctioneer / Receiver | 2–6 months from enforceable title; distribution weeks–months after sale |
Enforcement begins with a formal demand. The creditor, or its counsel, must identify the precise default event, calculate the outstanding principal, accrued interest and any applicable default interest or breakage costs, and serve a written notice of default on the borrower and any guarantors. This demand should be sent by traceable means (courier with proof of delivery, or service through a Greek notary where required) and should expressly reserve the creditor’s right to pursue enforcement, including ship arrest.
At this stage, creditors should also conduct a maritime lien search and a search of the Greek Ship Registry or flag‑state registry to verify the current ownership chain, confirm the existence and priority of the mortgage, and identify any competing encumbrances. Preserving contemporaneous documentary evidence of the default, account statements, failed payment records, correspondence, is essential to supporting subsequent court applications.
The ship arrest procedure in Greece is one of the fastest creditor remedies available in Greek maritime law. A mortgagee may apply to the competent single‑member first‑instance court at the port where the vessel is located for a conservatory arrest order.
Grounds for arrest. A ship mortgage is a recognised maritime claim giving rise to a right of arrest. The applicant must demonstrate a prima facie claim (the existence of the mortgage and the default) and the risk that the debtor may remove or dissipate the asset. In practice, the threshold is not onerous: courts will typically grant arrest where the mortgage and default are evidenced by documentary proof.
Documents to submit. The arrest application is accompanied by an affidavit setting out the facts, the original or certified copy of the mortgage deed, the loan agreement and account statement, vessel particulars (including IMO number and current port location), and a proposed security or caution amount. Where the applicant is a foreign entity, the apostilled POA for Greek counsel and certified translations must be included.
Court action. The court may grant the arrest order ex parte, without notice to the shipowner, where urgency is demonstrated. Once the order is issued, it is served on the port authority and the vessel’s master; the port authority then detains the ship, preventing its departure. The likely practical effect is that the vessel is immobilised within days of the application being filed.
Security substitution. The shipowner or a third party (such as a P&I club) may apply to the court to release the vessel by posting substitute security, typically a bank guarantee or a letter of undertaking from the P&I club, in an amount sufficient to cover the creditor’s claim plus costs. If the court accepts the security, the arrest is lifted, but the creditor’s underlying enforcement claim remains intact and may proceed against the substitute security or the borrower’s other assets.
Between the arrest and the final court sale, the creditor may need to seek additional interim relief to protect the value of the collateral. Available creditor remedies include:
These interim steps are not always necessary, but they become critical where the arrest is expected to last several months or where the vessel’s condition is deteriorating.
If the creditor already holds an enforceable title, for example, a Greek notarial deed with an enforcement clause, this step is straightforward: the creditor serves the enforceable title on the debtor along with a payment command (epitagí̱ pros plïrōmí̱), giving the debtor a statutory period (typically three working days) to pay before compulsory execution may begin.
If no enforceable title exists, the creditor must obtain one. For a purely Greek dispute, this means filing suit and securing a court judgment. For a foreign lender relying on a foreign court judgment, recognition proceedings under Articles 903–906 CPC must be initiated before the competent Greek court. The court will verify that the foreign judgment is final, that the defendant was duly served, and that recognition does not contravene Greek public policy. Industry observers expect these recognition proceedings to take approximately two to six months if uncontested, though contested cases can take longer.
For lenders relying on a foreign arbitral award, enforcement follows the New York Convention regime, with the award and the arbitration agreement submitted to the competent Greek court for recognition.
Once the enforceable title is served and the statutory payment period has expired without satisfaction, the creditor applies for a compulsory auction of the vessel. The court sale process in Greece involves the following key elements:
After the court sale, the proceeds are distributed according to a statutory priority waterfall. Greek maritime law assigns priority broadly as follows:
The court oversees the distribution. Where the sale proceeds are insufficient to satisfy all claims, the mortgagee may pursue a deficiency claim against the borrower or guarantors through ordinary civil proceedings. Final accounting and distribution can take weeks to several months, depending on the number and complexity of competing claims.
Assembling a complete and properly authenticated document bundle before initiating enforcement is one of the most important practical steps a creditor can take. Incomplete documentation is among the most common causes of procedural delay, missing registry certificates or improperly legalised foreign documents can stall an arrest application or force adjournments at the enforcement stage. The documents needed for each phase of the process are set out in the table below.
| Document | Notes (Issuer / Format / Validity) |
|---|---|
| Original mortgage deed or certified copy | Issued by notary or ship register. If foreign, must be legalised (apostille or consular legalisation) and accompanied by a certified Greek translation. |
| Mortgage registration certificate from the Greek Ship Registry, or proof of flag registration and mortgage entry | Issued by the Hellenic Ministry of Maritime Affairs (for Greek‑flagged vessels) or the flag‑state registry. Confirms the registration date, which determines priority. |
| Loan agreement, account statement and demand letter | Prepared by the lender. Must show the sums due, the computation of interest and any default charges, and evidence of the demand served on the borrower. |
| Enforceable title, or draft claim / court judgment | Greek notarial deed with enforcement clause, final Greek court judgment, or foreign judgment/arbitral award with evidence of recognition proceedings. Foreign titles require certified translation and legalisation. |
| Power of attorney for Greek counsel | Notarised and apostilled (or legalised) if issued outside Greece. Must expressly authorise counsel to act in arrest, enforcement and court sale proceedings. |
| Vessel particulars, IMO number, port location and ownership chain | Obtained from the ship registry and commercial shipping databases (e.g., Lloyd’s List Intelligence, Equasis). Essential for identifying and locating the vessel. |
| Charterparty / bills of lading (if relevant to claim) | Required where the creditor is asserting a maritime lien or where the charterparty terms affect the enforcement (e.g., assignment of earnings). |
| Crew and management contact details | For compliance with crew welfare and flag‑state obligations during the arrest period. Include details of the ship manager and any manning agent. |
| Evidence of priority (registered mortgages, liens) | Registry search results showing competing encumbrances. Required to assess distribution and prepare priority arguments. |
| Insurance and P&I cover evidence | P&I club contact, letters of undertaking (LOUs) for crew repatriation, hull and machinery insurance certificates. Essential where arrest may affect vessel operations or where the P&I club may post substitute security. |
Creditors are strongly advised to prepare this bundle in advance of any enforcement trigger event. Pre‑assembled documentation allows counsel to file an arrest application within hours of a default, rather than days or weeks. Where a foreign lender is involved, the legalisation and translation process alone can take one to two weeks, so early preparation is essential.
The overall enforcement timeline from demand to distribution of proceeds varies depending on whether the creditor already holds an enforceable title, whether the debtor contests the proceedings, and the judicial calendar of the relevant court (Piraeus being the busiest maritime jurisdiction). The condensed timeline table below provides indicative ranges based on current practice.
| Stage | Trigger | Typical Calendar Timeframe (Estimate) |
|---|---|---|
| Demand to arrest application | Missed payment or covenant breach | 1–7 days (creditor action) |
| Arrest execution | Court order issued | 1–7 days after application |
| Hearing on merits / security substitution | Defendant challenges arrest or posts security | Days–weeks |
| Recognition of foreign judgment (if required) | Application to Greek court | 2–6 months (if uncontested) |
| Obtaining court order for sale | Post‑enforceable title and payment command | 2–6 months (subject to appeals) |
| Auction / sale completion | From order to sale | 1–4 months |
| Distribution and closing | After sale and creditor claims adjudicated | Weeks–3 months (longer if disputes) |
All timeframes above are indicative and should be verified against the specifics of each case, including the relevant court’s schedule and the debtor’s likelihood of contesting. Early indications suggest that well‑prepared cases in Piraeus, where the court has substantial maritime experience, tend to move through the enforcement sequence more efficiently than in other Greek port jurisdictions. Creditors should also factor in statutory appeal periods at each stage: the debtor’s right to challenge an arrest, appeal a recognition order or contest the auction can extend the overall timeline materially.
Enforcement of a ship mortgage in Greece involves multiple categories of cost. Some are fixed by tariff; others depend on the value of the claim, the duration of the arrest, and the complexity of the proceedings. The table below summarises the principal cost items.
| Item | Typical Amount / Basis | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Court filing fee | Percentage‑based or fixed, depending on claim value | Verify current tariff at the court of filing; varies by claim amount. |
| Arrest execution / bailiff fees | Fixed administrative fee plus port handling charges | Generally modest; variable by port authority. |
| Port / berth / daily detention costs | Market daily berth and agency rates | Charged by the port operator; accrues for every day the vessel is detained. Can become substantial over a multi‑month arrest. |
| Legal fees (creditor counsel) | Hourly rates or fixed retainer (market rates) | Include both Greek local counsel and, where applicable, foreign coordinating counsel. |
| Auctioneer / receiver fees | Percentage of sale price or fixed fee | Deducted from sale proceeds before distribution to creditors. |
| Translation and legalisation fees | Per document | Required for all foreign‑language documents; costs increase with volume and urgency. |
| Taxes on sale proceeds | Subject to final accounting; consult local tax counsel | Possible stamp duty or withholding obligations; verify current Greek tax practice for judicial vessel sales. |
Creditors should budget for the full cost of enforcement at the outset, including a contingency for extended detention periods and contested proceedings. Port and berth detention charges are frequently underestimated and can erode the net recovery from the sale. All enforcement costs, including court fees, custodian expenses and auctioneer fees, rank ahead of creditor claims in the distribution waterfall and are deducted from the sale proceeds first.
Greece’s New Code of Private Maritime Law, which consolidated and modernised the country’s maritime legislative framework from 2023 onwards, has introduced several changes that affect the ship mortgage enforcement procedure in Greece. Industry observers expect the practical implications of these reforms to become more prominent in 2025–2026 enforcement actions.
Key areas of change include the codification and clarification of mortgage priority rules, the streamlining of registry processes for both Greek‑flagged and bareboat‑registered vessels, and updated provisions governing the constitution and enforcement of preferred mortgages. Lenders with pre‑2023 mortgage documentation should review their security packages to confirm that the mortgage wording, registration specifics and enforceable title pathways remain consistent with the updated code provisions. Early indications suggest that Greek courts are applying the new provisions without significant procedural disruption, but any ambiguity in transitional arrangements, particularly for mortgages constituted under the former regime, warrants careful review by local counsel.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Sonia Horvathova at Papapetros, Papangelis, Tatagia & Partners Law Firm (PPT Legal), a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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