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Understanding how to start judicial reorganisation in Belgium is critical for any enterprise whose continuity is threatened by financial distress. Governed by Book XX of the Belgian Code of Economic Law, substantially reformed by the Law of 7 June 2023 transposing EU Directive 2019/1023 on preventive restructuring frameworks, the procedure grants a debtor court-supervised breathing space to restructure its debts while continuing to trade. This guide sets out the eligibility criteria, the step-by-step filing procedure, every document you will need, realistic timelines and costs, and the practical changes brought by the 2026 EU insolvency harmonisation measures. It is aimed at company directors, CFOs, in-house counsel and insolvency practitioners preparing to file, or respond to, a reorganisation petition in Belgium.
Judicial reorganisation (réorganisation judiciaire / gerechtelijke reorganisatie) is a court-supervised procedure that allows a financially distressed enterprise to negotiate with its creditors under the protection of a temporary suspension of enforcement measures. The objective is to preserve business continuity, either by reaching an agreement with creditors or, failing that, by facilitating an orderly transfer of all or part of the business.
Belgian law distinguishes between two broad categories of reorganisation proceedings:
Any enterprise registered in the Crossroads Bank for Enterprises may file, including sole traders, partnerships and companies. The petition is filed by the debtor. Creditors cannot themselves initiate judicial reorganisation proceedings, although they may petition for bankruptcy. The immediate practical outcome is a court-ordered suspension period during which creditor claims are temporarily put on hold, giving the debtor time to restructure. To find an insolvency lawyer in Belgium who can assist with the filing, specialist restructuring counsel should be engaged at the earliest sign of distress.
Before filing, directors and their advisers must confirm that the enterprise meets the judicial reorganisation Belgium requirements and that preliminary internal steps have been completed. The eligibility threshold, directors’ duties and the timing of professional engagement are outlined below.
An enterprise can request the opening of judicial reorganisation if it can demonstrate that its continuity is at risk, whether immediately or in the near future. This is a lower threshold than actual insolvency (a state of persistent cessation of payments combined with a loss of creditworthiness). The debtor does not need to be insolvent at the time of filing, the key question is whether there is a credible threat to the enterprise’s ability to continue operating. The court will assess the application based on the financial evidence submitted with the petition.
Belgian company law imposes specific obligations on directors once financial distress becomes apparent. Failure to act can expose directors to personal liability for wrongful trading. The following checklist summarises the immediate duties:
Directors should engage specialist restructuring counsel as soon as the continuity of the enterprise comes into question, and in any event before the company fails to meet payment obligations. Early engagement of an insolvency practitioner serves two purposes: it reduces the risk of personal liability for delayed action, and it ensures that the filing dossier is professionally prepared, increasing the likelihood that the court will grant the suspension.
The following numbered steps describe the complete filing and approval sequence. Each step identifies who is responsible, what the outputs are, and the typical duration involved.
| Step | Who Does It | Typical Duration |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Board decision & appoint advisers | Board / CFO / external counsel | 1–7 days |
| 2. Prepare filing dossier | Management + accountant + counsel | 7–21 days |
| 3. File petition at Enterprise Court | Counsel (on behalf of debtor) | Day 0 (filing day) |
| 4. Opening hearing & suspension order | Enterprise Court | 1–21 days after filing |
| 5. Claim verification | Court-appointed verifier / curator | 4–8 weeks |
| 6. Negotiate & submit reorganisation plan | Debtor + counsel + advisers | 4–12 weeks |
| 7. Voting, homologation & implementation | Court / creditors / debtor | 2–8 weeks |
The process begins with a formal board resolution acknowledging the threat to continuity and authorising the company to explore judicial reorganisation. At this stage the board should retain restructuring counsel, an accountant or auditor to prepare the financial dossier, and, where appropriate, a financial adviser to assist with cash-flow modelling. This step typically takes 1–7 days. The board minutes will form part of the petition dossier and should record the factual basis for the filing decision.
Before the petition can be filed, management and its advisers must compile a comprehensive dossier including financial statements for the preceding three financial years, a forward-looking cash-flow forecast covering at least six to twelve months, a complete schedule of creditors (with names, amounts owed, security details and contact information), and a management declaration explaining the causes of distress and the proposed path to recovery. This preparation phase typically takes 7–21 days. The quality of the dossier materially affects the court’s decision at the opening hearing, incomplete filings risk rejection or delay.
The petition is filed at the Enterprise Court (tribunal de l’entreprise / ondernemingsrechtbank) with jurisdiction over the debtor’s registered office. The petition itself, prepared by counsel, must set out the grounds for the application, the nature and scope of the proposed reorganisation (private amicable, public collective, or both), and the request for a suspension period. It is accompanied by the full documentary dossier described in Step 2 and a signed power of attorney for counsel. Filing day is designated as Day 0 for timeline purposes.
The Enterprise Court schedules an opening hearing, which typically takes place within 1–21 days of filing, depending on the court’s calendar and the urgency of the case. At this hearing the court examines the petition and the supporting dossier. If satisfied that the continuity of the enterprise is genuinely at risk and the filing requirements are met, the court issues a judgment opening the judicial reorganisation proceedings and grants a suspension period during which enforcement actions by creditors are frozen. The court also appoints a supervisory judge (juge délégué) and may, where appropriate, appoint a provisional administrator or insolvency practitioner to oversee the debtor’s management during the suspension.
Once proceedings are opened, the claim verification process begins. All known creditors receive formal notification of the proceedings and are invited to file or confirm their claims. The debtor prepares a schedule of claims, which is then verified, typically by a court-appointed verifier or the supervisory judge. Creditors may object to the amounts or rankings listed. Disputed claims are resolved by the court before the reorganisation plan is put to a vote. This phase generally takes 4–8 weeks. Accurate creditor data at the filing stage significantly reduces the risk of objections and delays during verification.
With verified claims in hand, the debtor and its advisers draft the reorganisation plan. The plan sets out the proposed treatment of each class of creditors, including repayment schedules, any proposed debt write-downs, and the conditions for the plan’s implementation. Under the reformed Belgian rules transposing EU Directive 2019/1023, creditors must be separated into distinct classes according to the nature and ranking of their claims (secured, unsecured, subordinated, and, for large enterprises, equity holders). The plan is then submitted for a vote. Approval requires a majority of creditors in each class representing a specified proportion of the total claims in that class. This negotiation and voting phase typically takes 4–12 weeks, though complex multi-class cases can run longer.
Following a successful vote, the reorganisation plan is submitted to the Enterprise Court for homologation (formal approval). The court verifies that the plan complies with legal requirements, that the voting process was properly conducted, and that the plan does not unfairly prejudice any class of creditors. Once homologated, the plan becomes binding on all creditors covered by it, including dissenting creditors within approving classes. An appeal window applies after homologation. The debtor then implements the plan under the continued supervision of the court-appointed judge. Failure to comply with the plan’s terms can result in the court revoking the reorganisation and declaring the enterprise bankrupt.
The following table sets out the documents required for the petition and the reorganisation plan. Court registries expect originals or certified copies in one of Belgium’s official languages (French, Dutch or German, depending on the jurisdiction of the Enterprise Court).
| Document | Notes |
|---|---|
| Petition for opening judicial reorganisation | Prepared by counsel. States the grounds, lists creditors, summarises the financial position and requests a suspension period. |
| Board resolution authorising the filing | Signed corporate minutes evidencing that the board formally resolved to petition. Required to prove authorised action. |
| Financial statements (last 3 financial years) | Audited annual accounts where available. If audited accounts are unavailable, interim management accounts accompanied by an accountant’s letter. |
| Cash-flow forecast (6–12 months minimum) | Prepared by the CFO or financial adviser. Should include base-case and stress-case scenarios. |
| Complete creditor schedule | Names, amounts, security details (pledges, mortgages), priority rankings and contact information. Used for verification notices. |
| Reorganisation plan draft with exhibits | Proposed treatment by creditor class; repayment schedule; sustainability analysis; evidence of operational viability post-restructuring. |
| Evidence of negotiation efforts | Emails, meeting minutes and correspondence demonstrating good-faith attempts to reach out-of-court solutions. |
| Tax and social security statements | Recent filings and statements of outstanding liabilities from tax authorities and the National Social Security Office (ONSS/RSZ). |
| Director compliance evidence | Internal memos, legal opinions and board minutes showing that directors took reasonable steps to mitigate creditor losses. |
| Power of attorney for counsel | Signed POA authorising counsel to file the petition and represent the debtor in proceedings. |
Practitioners preparing these documents should ensure that all financial statements are current and that the creditor schedule is as accurate and complete as possible at the time of filing. Incomplete dossiers are the single most common cause of delays at the opening hearing stage. Petition samples and creditor schedule templates are available as downloadable resources.
The total duration of judicial reorganisation proceedings varies significantly depending on the complexity of the case, the number of creditors, and whether disputes arise during claim verification. The table below summarises the key milestones and their typical timeframes.
| Milestone | Typical Deadline / Window |
|---|---|
| Filing of petition | Day 0 |
| Opening hearing and suspension order | 1–21 days after filing |
| Suspension period (breathing space) | Court sets the period, typically an initial 4–8 weeks, with extensions possible on application |
| Creditor verification period | 4–8 weeks after formal notification to creditors |
| Negotiation and creditor vote on plan | 4–12 weeks (longer in complex multi-class cases) |
| Court homologation and appeal window | Homologation day + 15–30 days for appeals (verify per applicable court rules) |
The suspension period is central to the reorganisation procedure timeline. During this window, individual enforcement actions (seizures, garnishments and demands for payment) are frozen, giving the debtor operational breathing space. The Enterprise Court sets the duration of the suspension, and the debtor may apply for extensions if negotiations with creditors require additional time. Industry observers expect that post-2026 reforms will push courts toward shorter initial suspension periods with more structured extension requests, reflecting the EU emphasis on efficient resolution.
Directors and CFOs should build internal project plans around these milestones. Missing a deadline, particularly for creditor notifications or the filing of the reorganisation plan, can result in the court closing proceedings or, in the worst case, converting the matter to a bankruptcy declaration.
Judicial reorganisation involves several categories of cost. The following table provides indicative ranges. All figures should be verified against current court fee schedules and individual adviser quotations before budgeting.
| Item | Indicative Amount | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Court filing fees | Varies by court | Registry fees are set by royal decree; confirm the current schedule with the Enterprise Court registry. |
| Counsel fees (debtor-side) | €10,000 – €60,000+ | Depends on case complexity, duration and billable-hour rates. Obtain a fee estimate before filing. |
| Insolvency practitioner / curator | Hourly or monthly retainer | Costs are significant where a full curator is appointed. Budget early and negotiate retainer terms. |
| Accountant / valuation adviser | €3,000 – €30,000 | Covers cash-flow forecasts, asset valuations and financial due diligence supporting the plan. |
| Notification and publication | €200 – €2,000 | Formal creditor notices and publication in the Belgian Official Gazette. |
From a tax perspective, debt write-downs achieved through a homologated reorganisation plan may have corporate tax implications for both the debtor and its creditors. Directors should obtain specialist tax advice on the treatment of forgiven debt, potential exit taxes and the deductibility of restructuring costs before finalising the plan.
Belgium’s restructuring framework has been evolving rapidly. The Law of 7 June 2023 transposed EU Directive 2019/1023 into Belgian law, taking effect on 1 September 2023. This reform introduced mandatory creditor classing, cross-class cram-down mechanics for large enterprises, and the distinction between private and public reorganisation proceedings. Since then, a further wave of EU-level harmonisation has advanced. The EU Insolvency Harmonisation Directive, approved in April 2026, introduces harmonised minimum standards on avoidance actions, pre-pack frameworks and cross-border recognition that will require additional Belgian implementing legislation.
The likely practical effects for enterprises filing judicial reorganisation in Belgium in 2026 and beyond include the following:
Practitioners should ensure that all filing dossiers prepared in 2026 reflect these developments, in particular, that plan exhibits include updated creditor class structures and evidence of pre-filing negotiation efforts, as Belgian courts are increasingly treating these as baseline requirements.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Nils Verschaeren at Reyns Advocaten, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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