Our Expert in Bulgaria
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Last reviewed: 15 June 2026
Bulgaria’s accession to the eurozone on 1 January 2026, at the irrevocably fixed conversion rate of €1 = 1. 95583 BGN, has created immediate practical challenges for every ongoing FIDIC-governed construction project in the country. The question of FIDIC contract conversion Bulgaria, how existing currency clauses, interim payment certificates, retention accounts and variation valuations should be handled, is now a live issue for contractors, employers, in-house counsel and procurement officers alike. This guide sets out the concrete steps parties must take: auditing contract currency provisions, issuing timely notices under the applicable FIDIC claims machinery, recalculating valuations at the fixed rate, and selecting the most effective dispute-resolution route where agreement cannot be reached.
Whether your project uses the FIDIC Red Book, Yellow Book or Silver Book, the principles below will help you protect your position and avoid unnecessary disputes in the post-conversion landscape.
FIDIC standard forms, published by the International Federation of Consulting Engineers, are the dominant contract framework for publicly funded infrastructure projects in Bulgaria, particularly those co-financed by the European Union’s structural and cohesion funds. The Bulgarian Construction Sector Liaison (BSCL) has long promoted FIDIC adoption, and accredited FIDIC training has been delivered in Sofia since at least 2017, underlining the depth of local practitioner familiarity with these contracts. FIDIC forms are also used globally on projects in over 100 jurisdictions, making the principles discussed here relevant well beyond Bulgaria’s borders.
The critical legal starting point following euro adoption is the principle of legal continuity of contracts. Under the established EU framework for eurozone accession (mirroring rules that applied when earlier member states joined), every reference to the Bulgarian lev (BGN) in an existing contract is automatically read as a reference to the euro at the fixed conversion rate of €1 = 1.95583. This means that FIDIC contracts denominated in BGN do not need to be formally re-executed; however, the mechanical process of converting payment flows, retention accounts, performance security amounts and price adjustment formulae still requires deliberate action by both parties.
Where a FIDIC contract already denominates the contract price in euros, common on internationally tendered projects, the conversion issue may appear less acute, but secondary effects still arise: subcontractor payments previously made in BGN, bank guarantee denominations, insurance policy limits and local tax calculations all require attention. Industry observers expect that the majority of disputes will stem not from the conversion rate itself, which is fixed, but from the timing of conversion application, rounding differences on large sums, and disagreements over whether conversion-related administrative costs constitute claimable expenses under the contract. For broader context on the legal continuity rules and registry changes, see our earlier analysis of Bulgaria’s euro adoption and construction contracts.
Parties to ongoing FIDIC projects should treat the euro changeover as a contract administration event requiring immediate, documented action. The checklist below sets out priority tasks, responsible parties and recommended deadlines.
| Action | Who should do it | Recommended deadline |
|---|---|---|
| Audit all contract documents for currency-specific clauses (contract price, interim payment provisions, retention, performance security, insurance limits, price adjustment formulae) | In-house counsel / contract administrator (both parties) | Within 14 days of euro adoption effective date |
| Record and preserve all exchange-rate exposures, bank statements and BGN-denominated payment records as at 31 December 2025 | Finance / accounting teams (both parties) | Immediately (evidence preservation) |
| Issue or prepare formal notices under the applicable FIDIC claims clause if any cost, delay or disruption has arisen from conversion | Contractor (primarily) / Employer if counter-claiming | Within 28 days of becoming aware of the event (Clause 20.1 deadline) |
| Update accounting, invoicing and procurement records to reflect euro denomination | Finance teams / procurement officers | Ongoing from 1 January 2026 |
| Confirm with banks that performance guarantees and retention account balances have been correctly converted | Employer’s and contractor’s banks; contract administrator to verify | Within 30 days of conversion |
| Notify the Engineer (under Red and Yellow Books) or Employer’s Representative of any discrepancies identified | Contractor or Employer as relevant | Promptly upon discovery |
This structured approach ensures that both parties have a clear evidence trail. Failing to act within contractual notice periods is one of the most common reasons construction contract disputes become unrecoverable. Early action is essential even where parties believe the conversion will be straightforward, because seemingly minor rounding differences can compound across multi-million-euro project values.
The FIDIC claims machinery is the contractual gateway through which any party asserting a right to additional payment, time or other relief must pass. For currency conversion claims arising from Bulgaria’s euro adoption, the relevant provisions are principally Clause 20.1 (Contractor’s Claims), Clause 3.5 (Determinations by the Engineer) and, where applicable, the price adjustment provisions found in certain FIDIC forms. Understanding these mechanisms is essential for anyone navigating FIDIC contract conversion Bulgaria scenarios in 2026.
Under the FIDIC Red Book (1999 edition) and equivalent provisions in the Yellow and Silver Books, a contractor who considers itself entitled to additional payment or an extension of time must give notice to the Engineer not later than 28 days after becoming aware (or after the date on which the contractor should have become aware) of the event or circumstance giving rise to the claim. This 28-day window is strictly enforced. Late notice can result in a complete loss of entitlement.
For euro conversion claims, the “event” is the changeover itself, effective 1 January 2026, or, more precisely, the date on which the contractor becomes aware of a specific financial impact (such as a bank applying rounding that reduces the converted retention balance, or a subcontractor invoicing in euros at a different effective date). Where the impact was foreseeable before 1 January 2026, prudent contractors should have issued protective notices in late 2025.
A conversion notice template for FIDIC-governed projects should include the following elements:
FIDIC contracts require claimants to submit a fully detailed claim, with supporting documentation, within the time specified in the relevant sub-clause (typically 42 days of the notice, or such other period as agreed). For conversion claims, the evidence package should include:
Interim Payment Certificates (IPCs) issued after 1 January 2026 must be denominated in euros. For IPCs straddling the conversion date, where work was measured in BGN but payment falls due in January 2026 or later, the Engineer should apply the fixed conversion rate to convert the certified BGN amount into euros. Contractors should review each IPC carefully and issue a notice of disagreement if the conversion has been applied incorrectly or if the rounding method produces a material discrepancy.
The recommended insertion point for explicit conversion language is as an addendum to the Particular Conditions, specifying: “All sums certified, invoiced or payable under this Contract in BGN on or after 1 January 2026 shall be converted to euros at the irrevocably fixed rate of €1 = BGN 1. 95583, rounded to the nearest euro cent.
Valuation of conversion-related claims is where the practical complexity of the FIDIC contract conversion Bulgaria question becomes most apparent. The fixed conversion rate eliminates exchange-rate risk in the traditional sense, but several categories of financial impact remain.
There are two principal valuation approaches. The first is the contractual price approach: every BGN sum in the contract is mechanically divided by 1.95583 to yield its euro equivalent. This is straightforward where all contract rates, bills of quantities and provisional sums are clearly denominated in BGN. The second is the actual increased cost approach: where the conversion has caused the contractor to incur genuine additional costs, such as bank charges for converting performance guarantees, fees for re-issuing insurance policies in euros, accounting system upgrades, or subcontractor renegotiation costs, these may be claimable as additional costs under the contract, provided proper notice has been given.
A worked example illustrates the mechanics. Suppose a contractor’s IPC for December 2025 certifies BGN 1,955,830 for works completed. Applying the fixed conversion rate:
Who bears the construction payment conversion risk depends on contract drafting. Where the contract is silent on currency conversion, as most pre-2026 FIDIC contracts in Bulgaria will be, the default position under the legal continuity principle is that all BGN sums convert at the fixed rate, and neither party should gain or lose from the conversion itself. However, secondary costs (administrative, banking, re-documentation) fall on the party that incurs them unless the contract provides otherwise or a successful claim is made.
| Item | Typical FIDIC approach | Practical recommendation (Bulgaria, post-euro) |
|---|---|---|
| Interim payments | Paid in contract currency as invoiced; clause on currency may be silent | Apply fixed conversion at the official rate of €1 = BGN 1.95583; preserve evidence and issue conversion notices promptly for any discrepancies |
| Variations | Valued per contract rates or agreed rates | Document basis for valuation and whether variation price is in BGN or EUR; propose a clause specifying conversion mechanics for all variation orders issued after 1 January 2026 |
| Retention funds | Usually payable in contract currency at practical completion | Decide whether conversion occurs at payment date or at a fixed conversion trigger; include an explicit retention conversion clause to avoid disputes on rounding and timing |
Where a main contractor on a Bulgarian project has subcontractors invoicing in currencies other than BGN or EUR (for example, Turkish lira, Romanian leu or US dollars for imported materials), the euro adoption adds a layer of complexity. Previously, the contractor held BGN and converted to the subcontractor’s currency. Now, the contractor holds euros and converts from EUR. The exchange-rate risk on these non-euro payments is unchanged by Bulgaria’s accession, but the base currency has shifted. Contractors should review all subcontract currency clauses and update payment instructions accordingly. Early indications suggest that disputes in this area will centre on which party bears the cost of revised hedging arrangements where forward contracts referenced the BGN rather than the EUR.
A significant proportion of FIDIC-governed construction projects in Bulgaria are public procurement contracts, funded either from the national budget or from EU structural funds. Public procurement euro conversion raises distinct issues because contract modifications in the public sector are subject to the strict rules of Bulgaria’s Public Procurement Act (Zakon za obshtestvenite porachki), which transposes the EU Procurement Directives.
The general rule is that a contracting authority may modify an existing contract without a new procurement procedure only within narrowly defined limits, typically where the modification does not alter the overall nature of the contract, does not exceed certain value thresholds, and meets one of the permitted grounds for modification. A purely mechanical currency conversion at the legally mandated fixed rate is widely expected to fall within the category of modifications that do not change the economic balance or overall nature of the contract.
However, if the conversion is accompanied by other changes, such as revised payment schedules, renegotiated prices or adjusted scope, then the modification may cross into territory requiring a new procurement procedure or, at minimum, formal approval from the contracting authority’s management.
Procurement officers should take three specific steps. First, prepare a formal internal memorandum documenting that the conversion is mechanical, applying only the fixed rate, and that no substantive contract terms are being changed. Second, seek written confirmation from the contracting authority that the conversion addendum is approved under the applicable modification ground. Third, monitor the Bulgarian Public Procurement Agency’s guidance for any specific instructions on contract amendments arising from euro adoption, as academic research on standard procurement forms in Bulgaria has noted the evolving interplay between FIDIC conditions and national procurement rules.
Failure to follow the correct modification procedure exposes both the contracting authority and the contractor to procurement remedy proceedings, including potential annulment of the modified contract by the Commission for Protection of Competition (KZK).
Where parties cannot agree on the handling of conversion-related issues, whether that involves the valuation of a claim, the allocation of rounding costs, or the proper interpretation of a currency clause, the FIDIC dispute-resolution machinery provides a structured pathway. Selecting the right route requires careful analysis of the claim’s characteristics.
Most FIDIC contracts incorporate a multi-tier dispute-resolution clause. Under the 1999 Red Book, disputes are first referred to the Dispute Adjudication Board (DAB), with dissatisfied parties then able to proceed to arbitration (typically under ICC Rules). The 2017 editions introduced the Dispute Avoidance/Adjudication Board (DAAB) with standing appointment. Commentary on the enforceability of FIDIC multi-tier clauses under Bulgarian law confirms that Bulgarian courts generally uphold such clauses as valid, provided the pre-arbitration steps are clearly drafted and not waived by conduct.
For currency conversion claims, the recommended decision-tree is as follows:
Industry observers expect that arbitration euro conversion disputes will be relatively rare for the fixed-rate conversion itself, but more common for the secondary effects, subcontractor claims, hedging losses and administrative cost recovery. Parties should ensure that any arbitration agreement specifies the governing law (Bulgarian law will apply to construction contracts performed in Bulgaria unless otherwise agreed) and the language of proceedings. For a deeper overview of hearing preparation, see our guide to arbitration preparation and conduct.
Parties who wish to formalise the conversion arrangements should execute a contract addendum. Below are sample clause provisions, offered in two versions: a “quick-adopt” clause suitable for immediate use where both parties are in agreement, and a “recommended negotiation” clause for situations requiring more detailed treatment.
Quick-adopt euro conversion clause:
“With effect from 1 January 2026, all references in this Contract to amounts in Bulgarian lev (BGN) shall be read as references to the euro (EUR) at the irrevocably fixed conversion rate of €1 = BGN 1.95583. All amounts shall be rounded to the nearest euro cent. No other terms of this Contract are amended by this Addendum.”
Recommended negotiation clause (expanded):
“1. Conversion. With effect from 1 January 2026, all sums expressed in BGN under this Contract, including the Contract Price, Provisional Sums, Daywork rates, retention percentages, performance security amounts and insurance limits, shall be converted to EUR at the fixed rate of €1 = BGN 1. 95583 and rounded to two decimal places. 2. Conversion Costs. Each Party shall bear its own internal costs of conversion (including bank charges and accounting adjustments). If a Party incurs material additional costs directly and demonstrably caused by the conversion that exceed [€X,000], such costs may be claimed under Sub-Clause [20. 1] subject to the notice and substantiation requirements therein. 3. Subcontracts.
The Contractor shall ensure that all subcontracts are similarly amended and shall provide evidence of such amendments to the Engineer within [30] days. 4. Dispute Resolution. Any dispute arising from the interpretation or application of this Addendum shall be resolved in accordance with [Clause 20] of the Contract.
Parties active across the broader international commercial landscape will recognise these provisions as adaptations of standard currency-conversion addenda used in other eurozone accession events.
Where a conversion-related dispute proceeds to a final arbitral award or court judgment, enforcement in Bulgaria follows well-established procedures. Domestic arbitral awards (from the Arbitration Court at the Bulgarian Chamber of Commerce and Industry, or ad hoc tribunals seated in Bulgaria) are enforceable through the Sofia City Court. Foreign arbitral awards are enforceable under the New York Convention, to which Bulgaria is a party.
Practical enforcement considerations for euro-denominated awards include confirming that the enforcement court’s order specifies the amount in euros (not BGN, which no longer exists as a circulating currency), ensuring that the debtor’s bank accounts are denominated in the correct currency, and verifying that enforcement agents apply the correct post-judgment interest rate (which, following euro adoption, tracks ECB reference rates rather than the former BNB base rate). Where a party holds a BGN-denominated judgment obtained before 1 January 2026, that judgment converts to euros at the fixed rate, but the enforcing party should present the conversion calculation to the court to avoid procedural delays. Practitioners seeking foundational terminology for enforcement proceedings can consult our construction law glossary.
The transition from the Bulgarian lev to the euro is a mechanical event with real commercial consequences for FIDIC-governed projects. To protect your position on any ongoing or forthcoming construction project, follow these five steps immediately:
For project-specific advice on FIDIC contract conversion Bulgaria obligations, dispute notices and arbitration strategy, consult a qualified construction law practitioner through the Global Law Experts lawyer directory.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Yavor Tankov at Penkova & Partners, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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