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how to recover a debt in Morocco

How to Recover a Debt in Morocco, Step-by-step Procedure, Provisional Seizure & Enforcement

By Global Law Experts
– posted 3 hours ago

Updated: June 18, 2026

Understanding how to recover a debt in Morocco requires familiarity with a procedural sequence that moves from amicable collection, through provisional asset preservation, to court judgment and enforcement. The process applies to domestic creditors, foreign investors holding Moroccan receivables, and any party that needs to enforce a foreign judgment on Moroccan soil. Morocco’s Code de Procédure Civile (CPC) governs each stage, from the simplified injonction de payer for acknowledged debts to the full-blown ordinary claim before the competent tribunal. Importantly, amendments published in the Official Journal (No. 7485, 23 February 2026) have overhauled the rules on international jurisdiction and exequatur, giving foreign creditors a clearer statutory pathway and making provisional seizure in cross-border cases more accessible than before.

Overview of the Debt Recovery Procedure in Morocco and Who It Applies To

The debt recovery procedure in Morocco follows a broadly predictable path. At each stage the creditor decides whether to escalate or settle, depending on the debtor’s response and the value of identifiable assets.

The standard sequence is:

  1. Extrajudicial (amicable) collection, formal demand letters, negotiation, mediation.
  2. Provisional measures (saisie conservatoire), freezing the debtor’s assets before or alongside litigation to prevent dissipation.
  3. Summary recovery (injonction de payer), a fast-track order available when the debt is evidenced by a written instrument and is not contested.
  4. Ordinary litigation (action au fond), a full court proceeding when the debt is disputed or the injonction route is unavailable.
  5. Judgment and enforcement, execution through garnishment, forced sale, or distraint.
  6. Recognition and enforcement of a foreign judgment (exequatur), the additional step required when the creditor already holds a final judgment or arbitral award from abroad.

Who should use which path? A domestic creditor with invoices or a promissory note will typically start at step 1 and move to the injonction de payer. A foreign creditor whose debtor holds assets in Morocco should consider applying for a saisie conservatoire immediately, even before commencing exequatur proceedings, to lock down those assets. A creditor that already has a final foreign judgment skips the merits stage and proceeds directly to exequatur, though parallel provisional measures remain available where there is a risk of asset flight. The 2026 Code reform expressly addresses this sequencing for cross-border cases.

Eligibility and Prerequisites, Requirements for a Debt Claim in Morocco

Before filing any claim, the creditor must satisfy several foundational requirements under the CPC and the Code de Commerce.

  • Standing. Any natural or legal person, Moroccan or foreign, may bring a debt claim, provided the debt is certain (certaine), liquid (liquide), and due (exigible).
  • Type of debt. Commercial debts between merchants are heard by the Tribunal de Commerce. Civil debts fall under the ordinary Tribunal de Première Instance. Mixed debts (creditor is a non-merchant suing a merchant) may be brought in either court at the creditor’s election.
  • Territorial jurisdiction. The competent court is generally the tribunal of the debtor’s domicile or registered office. Where the claim relates to immovable property, the tribunal of the property’s location may also have jurisdiction.
  • No minimum threshold. There is no statutory minimum debt amount to file a claim, though the injonction de payer route is practical mainly for sums backed by written evidence.

Statute of Limitations

The general civil limitation period under Moroccan law is 15 years for most contractual claims. Commercial obligations between merchants are subject to a shorter 5-year limitation period. Limitation is interrupted by a formal judicial demand, an acknowledgement of debt by the debtor, or the filing of a saisie conservatoire. Creditors should verify the applicable period for their specific type of obligation before taking action.

When Foreign Creditors Can Sue Directly

A foreign creditor may bring proceedings directly in a Moroccan court provided the debtor is domiciled in Morocco or has assets within Moroccan territory. Service on a foreign defendant is governed by the CPC’s provisions on international notification, which may require service through diplomatic channels or, where an applicable bilateral treaty exists, through a central authority. The 2026 amendments have codified clearer rules on when Moroccan courts accept international jurisdiction, reducing earlier uncertainty for foreign claimants.

How to Recover a Debt in Morocco, Step-by-Step Procedure

The following numbered steps walk through each stage of the debt recovery procedure in Morocco, from the first demand letter to final enforcement. The timeline table below provides a consolidated view of who acts at each stage and how long each step typically takes.

Step Who Does It Typical Duration
Extrajudicial demand & settlement negotiations Creditor / counsel 1–4 weeks
Provisional measure (saisie conservatoire) application & execution Creditor + judge (référé) + agent d’exécution 1–4 weeks to obtain order; execution immediate once issued
Injonction de payer (summary order) Creditor files requête with tribunal 2–8 weeks if uncontested
Ordinary claim (action au fond) Creditor files statement of claim 6–18 months (straightforward cases); complex cases longer
Judgment to enforcement (domestic) Court + enforcement officer (agent d’exécution) Weeks to months, depending on asset location
Exequatur / recognition of foreign judgment Creditor petitions local court 3–9 months (2026 framework clarifies process)

Step 1, Send a Formal Extrajudicial Demand

Begin with a written demand letter (mise en demeure) sent by registered post with acknowledgement of receipt. The letter must state the precise amount owed, the contractual or legal basis for the claim, the due date, and a deadline for payment, typically 15 days. Attach copies of the underlying invoices, delivery notes, and any prior correspondence. A well-drafted mise en demeure serves two purposes: it often prompts voluntary payment, and it constitutes mandatory evidence of the creditor’s extrajudicial efforts should the matter proceed to court. Where the debtor responds with a partial payment or a settlement offer, document every communication in writing.

Step 2, Apply for Provisional Seizure (Saisie Conservatoire)

If the debtor fails to pay and there is a risk that assets will be moved, hidden, or dissipated, the creditor should apply for a saisie conservatoire, a provisional freezing order under Articles 452–456 of the CPC. This is the single most important tactical step for protecting enforcement prospects, particularly for foreign creditors whose principal litigation may take months.

Grounds and evidence. The creditor must demonstrate: (a) the existence of a claim that appears well-founded (créance paraissant fondée dans son principe), and (b) circumstances threatening the recovery of the debt, for example, evidence that the debtor is transferring property, has ceased trading, or is insolvent. Moroccan case law confirms that courts will not order mainlevée (lifting of the seizure) where the existence of the debt is established.

Procedure. The application is made either sur requête (ex parte, without notice to the debtor) to the president of the competent tribunal, or by référé (urgent summary proceedings) before the juge des référés. The ex parte route is preferred when advance notice would defeat the purpose of the freezing order. Once the order is granted, an agent d’exécution (enforcement officer) serves it on the debtor and on any third party holding the debtor’s assets, typically the debtor’s bank.

Registration and publicity. For seizures over immovable property, the order must be registered (inscription) at the local Conservation Foncière (land registry). For movable assets, the agent d’exécution draws up a procès-verbal de saisie inventorying the seized goods. The court may require the creditor to post a security bond (caution) to cover potential damages if the seizure later proves unjustified.

Effect. A saisie conservatoire does not transfer ownership; it prevents the debtor from disposing of the seized assets. The creditor must subsequently commence substantive proceedings (either an injonction de payer or an ordinary claim) to convert the provisional seizure into a definitive enforcement measure.

Step 3, File for an Injonction de Payer (Summary Payment Order)

Where the debt arises from a written instrument, a contract, promissory note, bill of exchange, acknowledged invoice, or written acknowledgement of debt, the creditor may apply for an injonction de payer under Articles 155–165 of the CPC. This is a simplified, single-judge procedure.

How it works. The creditor files a requête (petition) with the president of the competent Tribunal de Première Instance or Tribunal de Commerce, attaching the original written instrument and supporting documents. The judge examines the file without a hearing. If satisfied, the judge issues a payment order (ordonnance d’injonction de payer) for the full amount claimed plus costs.

Debtor’s opposition. The debtor may file an opposition within a statutory period from service of the order. If the debtor opposes, the case is automatically converted into ordinary proceedings before the same tribunal. If no opposition is filed, the order becomes enforceable and the creditor proceeds directly to execution.

When to choose this route. The injonction de payer is the fastest judicial path and avoids the costs of full litigation. It is ideal for trade debts supported by clear documentation. It is not available where the debt amount is disputed or where the claim depends on oral evidence alone.

Step 4, Commence Ordinary Litigation

When the debt is contested, the injonction route is unavailable, or the debtor files opposition, the creditor must bring an ordinary action (action au fond). The claim is filed by way of a requête introductive d’instance before the competent tribunal. The court summons the debtor, and the case proceeds through written submissions, possible witness evidence, and oral hearings. Straightforward commercial debt cases typically resolve within 6–18 months at first instance, though complex or multi-party disputes can take longer.

The creditor should ensure that all documentary evidence, contracts, delivery confirmations, payment records, expert reports, is filed in Arabic or French, or accompanied by certified translations. Moroccan courts place significant weight on documentary proof.

Step 5, Obtain Judgment and Enforcement Remedies

Once the tribunal delivers a judgment in the creditor’s favour, several enforcement remedies become available:

  • Saisie-attribution, garnishment of the debtor’s bank accounts or receivables held by third parties.
  • Saisie-vente, seizure and forced sale of the debtor’s movable property.
  • Saisie immobilière, forced sale of the debtor’s real estate, conducted through a public auction supervised by the court.

The creditor instructs an agent d’exécution to carry out the enforcement. Where the debtor owns registered property, the judgment must be noted at the Conservation Foncière before a forced sale can proceed.

Step 6, Enforce the Judgment and Navigate Appeals

A first-instance judgment becomes enforceable once it is final, meaning either the appeal period has expired without the debtor filing an appeal, or the court has granted provisional enforcement (exécution provisoire). The standard appeal window is 30 days from notification of the judgment. An appeal suspends enforcement unless provisional enforcement was ordered. Creditors should request exécution provisoire at the time of filing the original claim, particularly where the debt is well-documented and the debtor has a history of delay.

Documents Needed to Sue for a Debt in Morocco

Assembling a complete file at the outset avoids procedural delays and strengthens the creditor’s position. The table below lists the core documents required at various stages of the debt recovery procedure in Morocco.

Document Notes
Original contract or agreement (or certified copy) Establishes the legal basis of the claim. Must be in Arabic or French, or accompanied by a certified translation.
Invoices, statements of account, delivery notes Supporting evidence of the amounts due and dates of performance.
Proof of demand (mise en demeure, emails, registered letters) Evidence of extrajudicial recovery attempts, required before most judicial filings.
Written acknowledgement of debt or promissory note Essential for the injonction de payer route. Include the original instrument.
Power of attorney / firm mandate Signed appointment of Moroccan counsel. If issued abroad, must be legalised or apostilled.
Identity documents / company registration (both parties) Needed for service, jurisdiction verification, and enforcement officer records.
Bank account details and asset intelligence Property registry extracts, vehicle registration, known bank details, critical for executing a saisie conservatoire or saisie-attribution.
Certified translations of non-French / non-Arabic documents Must be prepared by a sworn translator (traducteur assermenté) approved by a Moroccan Court of Appeal.
Copies of foreign judgment or arbitral award (if applicable) Certified copies, proof of finality, and translations, required for enforcement of foreign judgments in Morocco.

How to Translate and Legalise Foreign Documents

Documents originating outside Morocco must be translated into Arabic or French by a sworn translator registered with a Moroccan Court of Appeal. Public documents (court judgments, company extracts, powers of attorney) must also be legalised, either through the apostille procedure (if the issuing country is a party to the Hague Apostille Convention) or through consular legalisation. Allow at least one to two weeks for translation and legalisation, and factor this lead time into the overall debt enforcement Morocco timeline.

Debt Enforcement Morocco Timeline, Key Deadlines and Milestones

Timing is critical in debt recovery. Missing a statutory deadline can forfeit a creditor’s rights or allow a debtor to dissipate assets. The table below consolidates the key milestones and the deadlines that govern them.

Action Trigger Typical Deadline
Send mise en demeure Debt becomes due and unpaid Immediate, allow debtor 15 days to respond
Apply for saisie conservatoire Failed demand or imminent risk of asset flight Urgent, judge typically hears ex parte applications within days
File injonction de payer Debt evidenced by written instrument 2–8 weeks to obtain order if uncontested
Debtor files opposition to injonction Service of the payment order on debtor Statutory period from date of service (verify applicable period under CPC)
Commence ordinary proceedings Debtor contests or injonction unavailable Case lifecycle: 6–18 months at first instance (straightforward); complex cases longer
Appeal a first-instance judgment Notification of judgment 30 days from notification
File for exequatur (foreign judgment) Creditor holds final foreign judgment or award 3–9 months for court examination (2026 framework applies)
Convert provisional seizure to definitive enforcement Judgment in creditor’s favour becomes final Creditor must commence substantive proceedings promptly after obtaining seizure order

Creditors should build a project timeline that accounts for document preparation (1–3 weeks), translation and legalisation (1–2 weeks), and court processing. The entire cycle from first demand to enforcement of a domestic judgment in a straightforward case can be completed within 4–8 months if the injonction de payer route succeeds without opposition. Contested cases that proceed through ordinary litigation and appeal can extend to 24 months or more.

Cost of Litigation in Morocco, Fees, Expenses, and Tax Considerations

The cost of litigation in Morocco varies significantly depending on the complexity of the claim, the value of assets involved, and whether provisional measures are sought. The table below outlines the principal cost categories.

Item Estimated Amount Notes
Court filing fee (first instance) Small fixed fee to several hundred MAD Varies by tribunal and claim value; confirm with local court registry.
Saisie conservatoire execution costs Fixed fee + percentage of seized value Set by the enforcement officer (agent d’exécution) tariff; varies by asset type.
Lawyer fees (Moroccan counsel) Case dependent, hourly, flat fee, or success-based Simple injonction de payer claims cost significantly less than contested litigation with enforcement.
Translation and notarisation Per-page fee (sworn translator rates) Budget for all non-French / non-Arabic documents.
Legalisation / apostille Varies by country of origin Consular legalisation fees or apostille charges; allow processing time.
Security bond (caution) for provisional measures Case dependent, set by judge May be required to maintain a saisie conservatoire; refundable if claim succeeds.
Appeal costs Additional filing fee + counsel fees Budget separately if the debtor is likely to appeal.

Moroccan courts may award costs (dépens) to the successful party, though the amounts recovered rarely cover the full expense of litigation. Foreign creditors should also note that legal fees paid to Moroccan counsel may be subject to local withholding tax obligations, consult a tax adviser to confirm the applicable regime.

What Changes in 2026, Provisional Seizure in Morocco and Cross-Border Enforcement

The amendments to the Code de Procédure Civile published in the Official Journal (No. 7485, 23 February 2026) represent the most significant reform of Morocco’s international private law rules in decades. For creditors pursuing how to recover a debt in Morocco, the practical effects include:

  • Codified international jurisdiction rules. The 2026 provisions set out express criteria for when Moroccan courts accept jurisdiction over cross-border disputes, reducing the earlier reliance on case-by-case judicial discretion.
  • Modernised exequatur procedure. The recognition and enforcement of foreign judgments now follows a statutory framework that specifies the conditions for recognition (including finality, jurisdiction of the foreign court, absence of conflict with Moroccan public policy) and the procedural steps for obtaining an exequatur order.
  • Express statutory basis for provisional measures in cross-border cases. The reforms confirm that a creditor may apply for a saisie conservatoire in Morocco even while substantive proceedings, or exequatur proceedings, are pending. This removes earlier ambiguity about whether Moroccan courts could grant provisional relief in support of foreign proceedings.

Tactical sequencing for foreign creditors. Industry observers expect the practical effect of the 2026 reform to be a shift in creditor strategy: where the debtor’s assets are in Morocco, the optimal approach is now to apply for a saisie conservatoire first (to preserve those assets), and then commence exequatur proceedings to have the foreign judgment recognised and enforced. Where there is a genuine risk of asset dissipation, both applications should be pursued in parallel. Detailed guidance on the exequatur route is available in the enforcement of foreign judgments in Morocco, 2026 update.

Common Pitfalls in the Debt Recovery Procedure in Morocco, and How to Avoid Them

  • Filing a saisie conservatoire without sufficient evidence. Courts will reject the application, and may award damages to the debtor, if the creditor cannot demonstrate both a well-founded claim and a genuine threat to recovery. Prepare a detailed evidence file (contracts, unpaid invoices, correspondence, asset intelligence) before approaching the judge. Moroccan case law confirms that a seizure will be maintained where the existence of the debt is established, but an under-supported application risks mainlevée and cost orders.
  • Relying on a foreign judgment without verifying finality and public policy compliance. The exequatur court will refuse recognition if the foreign judgment is not final, was issued without proper service on the debtor, or conflicts with Moroccan public policy. Creditors must obtain certified confirmation of finality from the foreign court and review the judgment against Moroccan public policy standards before filing.
  • Missing translation and legalisation requirements. Documents filed in a language other than Arabic or French without a certified translation will be rejected. Powers of attorney issued abroad without proper legalisation or apostille are similarly invalid. Build document preparation time into the project plan.
  • Failing to gather asset intelligence before filing. A judgment is worthless if the creditor cannot identify enforceable assets. Before commencing proceedings, investigate the debtor’s bank accounts, property holdings (via the Conservation Foncière), vehicle registrations, and trade receivables. This intelligence also supports the saisie conservatoire application.
  • Filing in the wrong court. Where the debtor is a merchant (commerçant), the claim must be brought before the Tribunal de Commerce. Filing in the ordinary civil tribunal causes procedural delay and potential dismissal on jurisdictional grounds. Verify the debtor’s commercial registration before selecting the court.

Conclusion

Knowing how to recover a debt in Morocco means understanding the full procedural chain, from the initial mise en demeure, through provisional seizure and court proceedings, to enforcement of a final judgment. The 2026 reforms to the Code de Procédure Civile have strengthened the position of both domestic and foreign creditors by codifying international jurisdiction rules, modernising the exequatur process, and providing an express statutory basis for provisional measures in cross-border cases. Creditors who act early, securing assets through a saisie conservatoire before commencing substantive proceedings, will consistently achieve better enforcement outcomes than those who wait. Prepare the documentary file in advance, verify the competent court, and instruct experienced Moroccan litigation counsel at the earliest opportunity.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Rachid Benzakour at Benzakour Law Firm, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Adala, Code de Procédure Civile (Justice Portal)
  2. WIPO Lex, Code de procédure civile
  3. Conflict of Laws, The New Moroccan Framework on International Jurisdiction and Foreign Judgment Enforcement (2026)
  4. Global Law Experts, Enforce Foreign Judgment in Morocco 2026
  5. Jurisprudence.ma, Moroccan Case Law Database
  6. Medias24, Saisie Conservatoire: Practical Guide
  7. Allianz Trade, Morocco Collection Complexity

FAQs

How do I start a debt recovery claim in Morocco?
Begin by sending a formal demand letter (mise en demeure) by registered post, specifying the amount owed, the contractual basis, and a payment deadline. If the debtor does not pay, the next step depends on your evidence: if you hold a written instrument (contract, promissory note, acknowledged invoice), file for an injonction de payer; if the debt is contested or you need to freeze assets urgently, apply for a saisie conservatoire and commence ordinary proceedings. See the step-by-step procedure section above for the full sequence.
At a minimum, you need the original contract or agreement, supporting invoices and delivery notes, proof of your extrajudicial demand, identity or company registration documents for both parties, and a power of attorney appointing Moroccan counsel. For the injonction de payer, you also need the original written instrument evidencing the debt. All documents must be in Arabic or French, or accompanied by certified translations from a sworn translator. See the full documents checklist above.
Timelines vary by route. Extrajudicial collection typically takes 1–4 weeks. An uncontested injonction de payer can be obtained within 2–8 weeks. Ordinary litigation at first instance takes 6–18 months for straightforward cases, with complex disputes taking longer. Exequatur proceedings for foreign judgments generally take 3–9 months under the 2026 framework. Appeals add further time. See the timeline and milestones table above for a detailed breakdown.
Yes. A creditor can apply for a saisie conservatoire under Articles 452–456 of the Code de Procédure Civile. The application is made to the president of the competent tribunal (ex parte or by référé). The creditor must show a well-founded claim and a risk that assets will be dissipated. Once granted, an enforcement officer serves the order on the debtor and relevant third parties (e.g., banks). The creditor must then commence substantive proceedings to convert the provisional seizure into definitive enforcement.
A foreign creditor holding a final judgment or arbitral award must apply for exequatur before a Moroccan court. The 2026 Code reform (Official Journal No. 7485, 23 February 2026) now provides a codified framework: the court examines the jurisdiction of the foreign court, whether the debtor was properly served, whether the judgment is final, and whether recognition would conflict with Moroccan public policy. If exequatur is granted, the foreign judgment becomes enforceable in Morocco as if it were a domestic judgment. Creditors should apply for provisional measures in parallel where assets are at risk.
Missing a statutory deadline, such as the appeal window (30 days from notification), generally forfeits the right to challenge or enforce within that procedural stage. If a creditor fails to apply for a saisie conservatoire before the debtor moves assets, the enforcement prospects are significantly diminished. In some cases, urgent relief may still be available through référé proceedings, but the evidentiary burden increases. The best mitigation is to instruct Moroccan counsel early and apply for provisional measures at the first sign of non-payment or asset flight.
Engage Moroccan counsel before sending the formal demand letter. A lawyer can draft the mise en demeure to comply with procedural requirements, advise on the correct court and recovery route, and, critically, apply for provisional measures on an urgent basis if assets are at risk. For foreign creditors, early engagement is essential to manage translation, legalisation, and jurisdiction issues. Experienced litigation practitioners in Morocco can be identified through the Morocco lawyer directory.

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How to Recover a Debt in Morocco, Step-by-step Procedure, Provisional Seizure & Enforcement

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