[codicts-css-switcher id=”346″]

Global Law Experts Logo
Danish Complaints Board vs negotiation: when to complain (Denmark)

Our Expert in Denmark

Danish Complaints Board vs Negotiation: When to Complain (denmark)

By Global Law Experts
– posted 3 hours ago

When a Danish public procurement award goes wrong, a supplier is excluded without justification, a contracting authority applies evaluation criteria incorrectly, or a procedure breach distorts the outcome, the aggrieved party faces a concrete choice: file a formal complaint with the Complaints Board for Public Procurement (Klagenævnet for Udbud), negotiate a settlement directly with the other side, or escalate to the ordinary courts. The Danish Complaints Board vs negotiation decision is time-sensitive, cost-sensitive, and strategically irreversible if handled carelessly.

Since the 2026 EU procurement threshold and remedies changes took effect on 1 January 2026, the pool of tenders subject to EU-level remedies has shifted, altering when interim measures are reliably available and recalibrating the complaint-versus-settle calculus for both domestic and cross-border bidders. This guide delivers the decision framework that procurement professionals need right now.

Option A: The Complaints Board for Public Procurement, What It Is and Who It Suits

The Complaints Board Denmark (Klagenævnet for Udbud) is an independent quasi-judicial body housed within Nævnenes Hus (the Danish Appeals Boards Authority). It is the primary institutional mechanism for procurement dispute resolution in Denmark, and its decisions carry legal weight that negotiated settlements cannot replicate.

What the Board Can Do

The Complaints Board can issue legally binding decisions, including annulment of unlawful procurement decisions, declaration that procurement rules have been infringed, and award of damages for losses suffered by the complainant. Critically, the Board can also grant interim measures, temporary suspension of the award or contract execution, which can freeze a procurement before an unlawful contract is signed and performed. According to the Danish Competition and Consumer Authority (Kfst), the Board can pass legally binding decisions and award damages for losses incurred by the economic operator. This combination of remedial powers makes the Board the strongest formal avenue for a supplier seeking to overturn an award or compel re-evaluation.

Standing and Deadlines

Not everyone can file a complaint. The Board requires that the complainant be an economic operator with a direct legal interest in the procurement at issue, typically a bidder, a potential bidder who was unlawfully prevented from participating, or in certain cases a relevant industry body. The Complaints Board’s procedural rules require each complainant to satisfy formal admissibility criteria before a case proceeds to substance.

Deadlines are strict. The precise filing deadline varies depending on the type of procurement and the decision being challenged, but the statutory windows are short, often measured in calendar days from notification of the award decision. Missing the deadline extinguishes the right to complain, regardless of the merits. For interim measures, the timing pressure is even more acute: applications for suspension must be filed before the standstill period expires or, in some cases, within hours of becoming aware of the breach.

Typical Outcomes and Remedies

Where the Board finds a breach, it may annul the contracting authority’s decision, order re-evaluation, or declare the contract ineffective in the most serious cases. Damages are available where the complainant demonstrates a quantifiable loss caused by the breach. The Board has awarded damages in cases involving lost-profit claims where a supplier proved it would have won the contract absent the infringement. Interim relief, suspending the contract award, is fact-specific and time-sensitive, but it remains one of the most powerful tools available to suppliers who act quickly.

Option B: Negotiation and Settlement, What It Is and Who It Suits

Negotiation is the informal route. There is no filing, no standing requirement, and no statutory deadline, any party can propose a conversation at any time. For many procurement disputes, particularly those where the commercial relationship matters more than legal precedent, a well-structured negotiated settlement delivers a faster, cheaper, and more predictable result than formal proceedings.

Types of Negotiated Settlements in Procurement

Settlement in the procurement context takes several forms. A contracting authority may agree to a corrective action, withdrawing the flawed decision and re-running the evaluation. The parties may negotiate a commercial settlement involving financial compensation for bid costs or lost opportunity. In some cases, settlement involves awarding the contract to the aggrieved supplier following a voluntary re-evaluation. The key feature of all these outcomes is that they rest on mutual agreement, documented in a binding settlement contract, rather than an imposed Board ruling.

Advantages of the Negotiation Route

  • Speed. A negotiated resolution can be concluded in days or weeks, compared with months for a Board complaint.
  • Confidentiality. Settlements are private. Board proceedings may become part of the public record.
  • Lower cost. Counsel time for negotiation is typically a fraction of what a full Board complaint requires.
  • Relationship preservation. Suppliers who plan to bid on future tenders from the same contracting authority may prefer to avoid the adversarial dynamic of formal proceedings.

Risks and Limitations

  • No binding precedent. A settlement creates no legal ruling, the same procurement error can recur.
  • Enforceability depends on drafting. A poorly drafted settlement agreement is difficult to enforce and may leave the complainant worse off than a Board decision would.
  • Risk of inadequate compensation. Without the leverage of formal proceedings, a supplier may accept less than what the Board would have awarded.
  • No interim relief. Negotiation cannot compel the contracting authority to suspend the award, if the contract is signed and performed during talks, the supplier’s position weakens dramatically.

Complaints Board vs Negotiation: A Direct Comparison

The following side-by-side table captures the core dimensions that separate the formal complaint route from the negotiation route in Danish public procurement disputes. Use it as a quick-reference decision aid before committing to either path.

Dimension Complaints Board (Formal Complaint) Negotiation / Settlement
Eligibility / standing Economic operators with direct legal interest; strict formal admission criteria per Nævnenes Hus rules Any party can propose; no formal standing requirement
Timing to start File within statutory deadline (often days from award notification); Board timeline weeks to months; interim relief time-critical Immediate; as soon as dispute is identified; speed depends on counterpart cooperation
Interim measures / suspension Available, temporary suspension of award or contract execution; highly fact- and timing-sensitive Not available through Board; pause may be negotiated as part of settlement terms
Costs (practical) Administrative fees minimal; legal fees significant; risk of adverse cost order if claim fails Counsel time only; usually lower total cost; settlement may include cost allocation
Remedies / enforceability Legally binding decisions (annulment, damages); enforceable through Danish courts Binding only as a contract; enforceable as a contractual obligation
Public record / confidentiality Proceedings and certain documents may become public Private and confidential if parties agree
Likelihood of award set aside or damages Depends on breach evidence and timing; Board can award full damages for proven loss Outcome varies; may secure practical compensation but no legal precedent
Strategic value Creates formal precedent; high leverage; can obtain interim relief Preserves relationships; quicker commercial resolution
Where counsel adds most value Drafting complaint, evidence assembly, securing interim measures Drafting enforceable settlement terms, negotiating compensation, structuring releases

Key takeaways from the comparison:

  • If you need the contract award stopped immediately, only the Complaints Board (or the courts) can grant binding interim measures, negotiation cannot deliver this.
  • If speed and confidentiality outweigh the need for formal legal precedent, negotiation is the stronger route.
  • For high-value contracts where a breach is clear and provable, the Board’s ability to award annulment and damages provides leverage that no negotiated settlement can match.
  • The two routes are not always mutually exclusive: a supplier can begin negotiations while preserving its right to file a Board complaint within the statutory deadline, provided it documents all offers carefully.

Dimension-by-Dimension Analysis

Eligibility and Standing

The Complaints Board imposes hard admissibility filters that function as the first gate before any substantive review.

  • Complaints Board: Only economic operators with a legal interest may file. This typically means the complainant was a bidder, an excluded candidate, or a potential bidder whose participation was blocked by the alleged breach. Industry organisations may have standing in certain circumstances. The Board verifies admissibility before proceeding to substance.
  • Negotiation: No standing requirement. A contracting authority can engage informally with any supplier, including one who would not meet Board admissibility criteria. This makes negotiation the only practical path for parties who lack formal standing.

Interim Measures and Timing

Interim measures, the power to suspend a procurement award before the contract is signed, are often the single most important factor in choosing between routes. For suppliers, a contract that has already been executed is far harder to unwind than one that has been paused at the award stage.

  • Complaints Board: The Board can order suspension of the award decision or contract execution. Applications for interim measures must be filed promptly, industry observers expect that, following the 2026 threshold changes, the practical window for seeking interim relief on EU-regulated procurements has shifted, making early legal advice even more critical. The standstill period (the mandatory pause between award notification and contract signature) provides a limited window in which to file.
  • Negotiation: No mechanism to compel a pause. If the contracting authority refuses to voluntarily suspend the process during negotiations, the contract may be signed while talks continue, eliminating the supplier’s strongest remedy.

Cost: Direct and Indirect

Cost is usually the decisive factor for mid-tier suppliers weighing complaint vs settlement in Denmark procurement disputes.

Cost Item Complaints Board Negotiation / Settlement
Administrative filing fee Minimal (per Nævnenes Hus fee schedule) N/A
Legal fees (typical range) DKK 50,000 – DKK 300,000+ for complex cases DKK 10,000 – DKK 150,000 depending on complexity
Interim measure security May require bank guarantee or security depending on remedy sought Usually none unless part of settlement terms
Recoverable costs on success Board can order cost allocation; damages may include lost profit Settlement terms determine cost recoverability; usually a negotiated lump sum
VAT / tax treatment of compensation Compensation or damages may carry tax consequences, consult Danish Tax Agency (SKAT) guidance Settlement payments typically subject to standard income/corporate tax rules, verify with tax counsel

Beyond direct legal costs, consider indirect expenses: the opportunity cost of management time diverted to proceedings, the risk of losing a contract during protracted Board review, and the potential security deposit or bank guarantee required for interim measures.

Liability and Damages

The Complaints Board can award damages where the complainant proves a quantifiable loss caused by the procurement breach. This includes lost-profit damages in cases where the supplier demonstrates it would have won the contract. Limitation periods under Danish law apply, and damages claims may also be pursued through the ordinary courts as follow-on proceedings after a Board ruling establishing the infringement. Negotiated settlements, by contrast, deliver whatever compensation the parties agree, there is no floor and no ceiling, but also no independent assessment of loss.

Enforceability and Compliance Risk

Board decisions are legally binding. A contracting authority that fails to comply with a Board ruling faces enforcement through the Danish courts. In practice, compliance rates with Board decisions are high, as contracting authorities operate under public-law obligations and reputational pressure. Negotiated settlements are enforceable as contracts, if one party breaches the settlement, the other must pursue a contractual claim in court, which adds time and cost. The quality of the settlement drafting is therefore critical to enforceability.

Reputational and Commercial Impact

Filing a formal complaint signals adversarial intent. For suppliers who depend on repeat business with a limited number of contracting authorities, this can carry a real commercial cost, even if the complaint succeeds. Negotiation preserves the working relationship and keeps the dispute out of the public record. Industry observers note that larger suppliers and those active in competitive markets with many contracting authorities are typically more willing to use the formal complaint route, while smaller or niche suppliers with concentrated client bases tend to favour settlement.

What Changed in 2026: EU Thresholds and Public Procurement Remedies

The EU procurement threshold and remedies adjustments effective 1 January 2026 altered which tenders fall within the scope of the EU procurement directives and, consequently, which procurements trigger the full suite of EU remedies, including the right to seek interim measures and the mandatory standstill period before contract signature. Denmark transposed these changes into domestic law, affecting the practical availability of Complaints Board intervention.

The likely practical effect for suppliers and contracting authorities is twofold. First, procurements that previously fell below the EU thresholds may now be subject to EU-level scrutiny, expanding the pool of tenders where formal Board complaints and interim relief are available. Second, the updated thresholds may push certain smaller procurements out of scope, narrowing the remedies pathway for those contracts to national rules alone. For cross-border suppliers, the threshold shift changes the calculus of whether EU remedies can be invoked.

Early indications suggest that the 2026 changes have increased the urgency of early legal assessment. A supplier that assumes EU remedies apply when they do not, or misses the revised standstill window, may forfeit its most powerful remedy before the dispute even begins. Confirming the applicable threshold and the corresponding remedies framework is now the essential first step in any procurement dispute in Denmark.

Decision Framework: When to Choose the Board, Negotiate, or Sue

The table below translates the dimension analysis into an action-oriented decision framework. Match your priority to the recommended route.

If Your Priority Is… Choose… / Why
Fast, confidential resolution that preserves the commercial relationship Negotiation, lower cost, faster outcome; use counsel to draft an enforceable settlement and release
Stopping award execution quickly or obtaining interim suspension Complaints Board (seek interim measures) or emergency court injunction, choose the Board if standing and timing allow; otherwise apply for court relief
Legal precedent, full damages, or a binding remedial ruling Complaints Board (formal judgment), follow up with court enforcement if the contracting authority does not comply
Low evidence of breach but high commercial value of the contract Start with negotiation, preserve the right to complain later if talks fail; document all offers and counteroffers
Cross-border procurement where EU remedies may apply (post-2026 thresholds) Board / EU remedies pathway, confirm the applicable threshold immediately and assess standing before the deadline expires

Seven quick decision questions, answer yes or no to identify your route:

  • Is the contract not yet signed? If yes → consider interim measures via the Board or courts.
  • Do you have clear evidence of a procurement rule breach? If yes → the Board route offers the highest return (annulment + damages).
  • Is confidentiality a priority? If yes → favour negotiation.
  • Do you plan to bid on future tenders from this contracting authority? If yes → negotiation preserves the relationship.
  • Are you within the statutory filing deadline? If no → the Board option may be foreclosed; negotiate or consider court action.
  • Is the procurement above the EU threshold (post-2026)? If yes → full EU remedies are available through the Board.
  • Is the contract value high enough to justify legal fees? If no → negotiate directly; if yes → assess the Board route with counsel.

The answers to these seven questions will usually point clearly toward one route. Where the answers are mixed, strong evidence but time pressure, or high value but relationship sensitivity, the decision typically requires a structured legal assessment with procurement counsel before committing.

When to Hire a Public Procurement Lawyer for This Decision

Not every procurement dispute requires external legal counsel. But the following specific situations move the decision firmly into territory where professional advice is essential:

  • Meeting Board filing formalities. The Complaints Board’s admissibility criteria are strict. A deficient complaint, wrong deadline, inadequate legal interest, or failure to specify the breach, will be rejected without reaching the merits. Counsel ensures the complaint survives the procedural gate.
  • Applying for interim measures. Time-critical and procedurally complex. The difference between winning and losing a suspension application often comes down to hours and the quality of the legal submission.
  • Drafting a binding settlement agreement. A settlement that omits release clauses, fails to address future claims, or lacks enforceable compensation terms can be worse than no settlement at all.
  • Calculating and proving damages. Lost-profit claims require financial modelling, evidence of the causal link between breach and loss, and familiarity with Board precedent on quantum.
  • Assessing whether EU or national rules apply post-2026. The threshold determination dictates the available remedies and the filing deadlines. Getting this wrong can be fatal to the entire claim.

The recommended engagement model for most procurement disputes is an initial triage consultation, typically 60 to 90 minutes, in which counsel assesses the strength of the claim, estimates costs for each route, and recommends a path forward. This structured first step prevents the two most common errors: filing a weak complaint that wastes time and money, or accepting a low settlement when a Board complaint would have delivered significantly more. Denmark-based procurement counsel can provide this assessment quickly enough to preserve filing deadlines.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Anja Piening at NP advokater, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Nævnenes Hus, The Complaints Board for Public Procurement
  2. Danish Competition and Consumer Authority (Kfst), Danish Complaint System
  3. Bird & Bird, Danish Complaints Board Insight (2024)
  4. BusinessDenmark / Virk, Consumer Complaints System
  5. Danish Tax Agency (SKAT)
  6. European Commission, Public Procurement

FAQs

When should a supplier file a complaint with the Danish Complaints Board instead of negotiating?
File a formal complaint when you have clear evidence of a procurement breach, you need interim measures to stop the contract from being signed, or you require a binding legal ruling that sets a precedent. If the breach is well-documented and the contract value justifies the legal costs, the Board route offers the strongest remedies. Seek legal advice immediately to preserve filing deadlines.
Yes. The Board can grant temporary suspension of the award or contract execution. Interim measures are worth seeking when the contract has not yet been signed and you can demonstrate a prima facie case that the procurement rules were breached. The application must be filed promptly, often before the standstill period expires. The value diminishes sharply once the contract is executed.
Usually, yes. Negotiated settlements can be concluded in days to weeks, while Board proceedings typically take weeks to months. Legal costs for negotiation are generally a fraction of those for a formal complaint. However, negotiation lacks the enforcement power and the interim-relief mechanism that the Board provides, so speed and cost savings must be weighed against the risk of a weaker outcome.
Engage counsel when you need to file a Board complaint (strict procedural rules), apply for interim measures (time-critical), draft an enforceable settlement, or calculate damages. Also seek advice if you are unsure whether EU or national procurement rules apply following the 2026 threshold changes, as this affects the available remedies and deadlines.
Generally, no. A properly drafted settlement agreement is a binding contract, and attempting to reopen it will require establishing grounds such as duress, fraud, or a material misrepresentation. This is why the quality of settlement drafting is critical, once signed, the agreement typically forecloses future claims arising from the same procurement dispute.
Switching from negotiation to a Board complaint is possible, but only if the statutory filing deadline has not expired. Switching from a Board complaint to negotiation is always possible, as the complainant can withdraw and settle at any stage. The most common mistake is allowing the Board filing deadline to lapse during prolonged negotiations, which eliminates the formal route entirely. Always preserve your filing deadline while negotiating.
Foreign suppliers (EU and non-EU) have the same right to file complaints with the Complaints Board as Danish suppliers, provided they meet the standing requirements. For procurements above the EU thresholds, the full EU remedies framework applies regardless of the supplier’s nationality. Following the 2026 threshold changes, foreign suppliers should verify whether the specific procurement falls within EU scope before assuming that EU-level remedies are available.
Timelines vary depending on case complexity, but Board proceedings for straightforward complaints often conclude within a few months. Complex cases involving interim-measure applications, extensive evidence, or damages quantification may take longer. Negotiated settlements, by comparison, can be finalised in days or weeks when both parties are motivated to resolve the matter.

Find the right Legal Expert for your business

The premier guide to leading legal professionals throughout the world

Specialism
Country
Practice Area
LAWYERS RECOGNIZED
0
EVALUATIONS OF LAWYERS BY THEIR PEERS
0 m+
PRACTICE AREAS
0
COUNTRIES AROUND THE WORLD
0
Join
who are already getting the benefits
0

Sign up for the latest legal briefings and news within Global Law Experts’ community, as well as a whole host of features, editorial and conference updates direct to your email inbox.

Naturally you can unsubscribe at any time.

About Us

Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.

Global Law Experts App

Now Available on the App & Google Play Stores.

Social Posts
[wp_social_ninja id="50714" platform="instagram"]
[codicts-social-feeds platform="instagram" url="https://www.instagram.com/globallawexperts/" template="carousel" results_limit="10" header="false" column_count="1"]

See More:

Contact Us

Stay Informed

Join Mailing List
About Us

Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.

Social Posts
[wp_social_ninja id="50714" platform="instagram"]
[codicts-social-feeds platform="instagram" url="https://www.instagram.com/globallawexperts/" template="carousel" results_limit="10" header="false" column_count="1"]

See More:

Global Law Experts App

Now Available on the App & Google Play Stores.

Contact Us

Stay Informed

GLE

Lawyer Profile Page - Lead Capture
GLE-Logo-White
Lawyer Profile Page - Lead Capture

Danish Complaints Board vs Negotiation: When to Complain (denmark)

Send welcome message

Custom Message