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The Wet afwikkeling massaschade in collectieve actie (WAMCA) has reshaped the landscape of class actions in the Netherlands, and watersport businesses are now squarely in the firing line. An Amsterdam District Court judgment handed down on 28 April 2026 confirmed that enforcement measures, including conservatory seizure of commercial vessels, can follow swiftly once a WAMCA claim gains traction. For marina operators, yacht brokers, small manufacturers and vessel owners, the practical question is no longer whether WAMCA class actions in the Netherlands could affect day-to-day operations, but how quickly an attachment order can ground a boat and freeze a balance sheet.
This guide delivers a step-by-step enforcement playbook: what the law says, how conservatoir beslag works against vessels, how to lift an attachment, and what contract clauses and insurance measures to put in place before a claim ever lands.
If you have received a WAMCA notice, or believe your business may be named in mass claims in the Netherlands, take these five steps immediately:
WAMCA is the Dutch class-action statute that entered into force on 1 January 2020. It replaced the earlier collective settlement regime (WCAM) with a broader framework allowing qualified entities, foundations or associations that meet governance, funding and representativeness requirements, to bring collective damages claims before the Amsterdam District Court on behalf of large groups of affected parties.
Once a qualified entity files a collective claim, the court appoints an Exclusive Representative for the class. Proceedings can result in a declaratory judgment, a damages award, or, most commonly, a court-approved settlement. Settlements approved under WAMCA carry binding effect for all class members who have not actively opted out. This opt-out mechanism is significant: it means that persons who are unaware of the proceedings, or who simply fail to act, are bound by the outcome.
WAMCA claims are not limited to Dutch victims. Qualified entities may represent claimants across the European Union and beyond, provided there is a sufficient connection to the Netherlands. The WODC’s five-year evaluation of the WAMCA framework confirmed a steady increase in cross-border filings, making it increasingly likely that international watersport supply chains will be drawn into Dutch proceedings.
| Feature | Pre-2020 (WCAM / Art. 3:305a BW) | WAMCA (post-1 January 2020) | Practical Effect for Defendants |
|---|---|---|---|
| Remedy type | Declaratory relief only; no direct damages award | Declaratory relief and collective damages / settlement | Defendants now face direct financial exposure in one proceeding |
| Binding effect | Only parties to WCAM settlement | Opt-out: all class members bound unless they actively opt out | Much larger pool of claimants; higher aggregate claim value |
| Who may claim | Foundations / associations (loose requirements) | Qualified entities meeting governance & funding thresholds | Better-funded, more professional claimant organisations |
| Cross-border scope | Limited | Broad, sufficient Dutch connection required | International supply-chain defendants increasingly caught |
The first half of 2026 has brought a sharp escalation in WAMCA-related activity relevant to the watersport sector. The Amsterdam District Court’s judgment of 28 April 2026 addressed enforcement consequences arising from a WAMCA collective claim and confirmed that the existence of a pending mass claim, combined with evidence of asset dissipation risk, can support the grant of conservatory attachment orders against business assets, including vessels.
Industry observers expect this judgment to embolden claimant-side litigation funders. The WODC evaluation documented a growing trend of third-party-funded WAMCA proceedings, and the April 2026 ruling is the likely practical catalyst for a wave of attachment applications targeting tangible, high-value assets such as yachts, motorboats and commercial watersport equipment.
For watersport businesses, the risk profile breaks down into three categories:
Yes. Where a claimant, including a qualified entity in a WAMCA proceeding, can demonstrate a serious underlying claim and a justified fear that the defendant will dissipate assets, Dutch courts may grant conservatory attachment (conservatoir beslag) on vessels and other assets. The WAMCA itself does not contain a separate attachment mechanism; instead, claimants rely on the existing provisions of the Dutch Code of Civil Procedure (Wetboek van Burgerlijke Rechtsvordering, “Rv”), which apply alongside the collective-action framework.
Under Articles 700–770 Rv, a party seeking conservatoir beslag must file an ex parte petition with the preliminary relief judge (voorzieningenrechter). The applicant must demonstrate:
The preliminary relief judge typically decides within days and often within 24 hours. The order is granted without the defendant being heard. This means a watersport business can discover that its vessel has been attached only after the harbour master or registry has been notified.
Vessel seizure in the Netherlands follows specific rules that watersport operators must understand:
For a comprehensive explanation of how vessel seizure works in Dutch procedural law, including bank-guarantee substitution and maritime enforcement coordination, see our detailed guide on vessel seizure in the Netherlands (conservatoir beslag).
Consider this anonymised example drawn from recent practice patterns: a qualified entity files a WAMCA collective claim on behalf of several hundred boat owners, alleging that a specific engine component sold across the Netherlands is defective and has caused pollution damage. The claim names both the manufacturer and a chain of marine dealers. While the WAMCA proceeding is still at the initial pleading stage, the qualified entity’s litigation funder applies separately for conservatoir beslag on three vessels owned by a marina operator who is also a named dealer-defendant. The preliminary relief judge grants the attachment within 48 hours on the basis that the dealer was actively marketing one vessel for export sale, evidence of potential dissipation.
| Enforcement Measure | Legal Basis | Typical Timeline |
|---|---|---|
| Conservatoir beslag on a vessel | Articles 700–770 Rv (ex parte petition) | 24–72 hours from application to grant |
| Conservatoir beslag on bank accounts | Articles 718–720 Rv | 24–48 hours |
| Conservatoir beslag on movable assets (equipment, inventory) | Articles 711–712 Rv | 24–72 hours |
| Provisional measures (kort geding) to freeze operations | Article 254 Rv | 1–2 weeks (hearing required) |
A conservatory attachment is not the end of the road. Dutch law provides clear routes for lifting an attachment, and in watersport business litigation, speed is everything. The following procedural roadmap applies whether the underlying claim is a WAMCA mass proceeding or a conventional dispute.
An application to lift the attachment (opheffing van het beslag) is filed with the preliminary relief judge under Article 705 Rv. Successful grounds include:
The fastest way to regain control of a seized vessel is to offer substitute security. Dutch practice allows two main options:
Early indications suggest that courts favour the bank-guarantee route as less disruptive, and defendants who proactively offer a guarantee before the lifting hearing often secure faster results.
Challenging a conservatoir beslag in the Netherlands involves legal fees for urgent motion practice, court fees, and potentially the cost of the bank guarantee itself (typically 1–2% per annum of the guaranteed sum). A lifting hearing before the preliminary relief judge can usually be obtained within one to three weeks of filing. In urgent cases, for example, where a vessel is needed for an imminent charter commitment, expedited hearings within days are possible.
Budget guidance for watersport SMEs: legal fees for the lifting procedure typically range from €5,000 to €20,000 depending on complexity, plus bank-guarantee costs and court fees. The cost of inaction, a vessel immobilised through peak season, is invariably higher.
The most effective defence against WAMCA-related attachment is one that is built long before a claim is filed. Watersport businesses should integrate the following contract clauses, insurance measures and operational policies into their standard procedures.
The sample clauses below are illustrative starting points. Each should be tailored to the specific business and reviewed by Dutch counsel:
Watersport businesses should review the following insurance lines for WAMCA-readiness:
Beyond contracts and insurance, sound operational hygiene reduces vulnerability. Maintain up-to-date asset registers. Ensure vessel registrations are accurate and ship mortgages are properly filed with the Dutch cadastre (Kadaster). Conduct regular due diligence on suppliers, particularly for components that could give rise to product-liability mass claims in the Netherlands.
| Entity Type | Priority Actions on Receiving a WAMCA Notice | Enforcement Consequences (Attachment Risk) |
|---|---|---|
| Marina operator | Freeze transfers; verify owner/operator of each vessel; alert insurer and specialist counsel immediately | High, vessels used commercially may be attached to preserve claim value |
| Yacht broker | Preserve all contract documents; notify financier and vessel owner; quarantine commission accounts | Medium, broker commission claims may be targeted; inventory less likely to be attached but trustee claims are possible |
| Small watersport manufacturer | Review warranty and recall exposure; conduct inventory risk assessment; notify product-liability insurer | Medium–High, product claims included in mass claims can lead to asset seizures |
| Yacht owner (SME) | Verify registration, mortgage and third-party liens; assemble complete title chain; engage counsel for pre-emptive bank guarantee | High, direct target for attachment if judgment is likely and asset is physically available |
Responding to a vessel attachment under time pressure requires having the right documents assembled before the crisis arrives. The following checklist summarises the materials every watersport business should maintain in a “seizure response file.”
If your vessel has been attached, first 72 hours:
For a sample bank-guarantee application and urgent court-submission checklist tailored to maritime enforcement in the Netherlands, consult a specialist Dutch litigation lawyer through the Global Law Experts lawyer directory.
The combination of WAMCA class actions in the Netherlands and the Dutch conservatory attachment regime creates a uniquely potent enforcement risk for watersport businesses. The April 2026 Amsterdam District Court judgment has removed any remaining ambiguity: mass-claim claimants will pursue vessel seizures where the facts support them, and they can do so with remarkable speed. The businesses that will weather this environment are those that act before an attachment order arrives, engaging specialist counsel, structuring contracts defensively, securing appropriate insurance, and maintaining the documentation needed to challenge or lift an attachment within hours rather than weeks.
Watersport operators who need tailored guidance on WAMCA exposure, conservatoir beslag defence strategy, or contract and insurance review can connect with experienced Netherlands civil litigation counsel through the Global Law Experts lawyer directory.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Edwin H.J. Slager at Van Emstede & Slager Advocaten, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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