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Winning a court judgment against a German company is only half the battle, the other half is turning that piece of paper into actual money in your account. At Prelia PartG mbB Rechtsanwälte Avocats, where I focus on cross-border debt collection and enforcement, I regularly advise creditors who hold perfectly valid judgments yet struggle to recover a single euro because they underestimate the procedural steps required to enforce a judgment in Germany against a company debtor. Germany’s compulsory enforcement framework, known as Zwangsvollstreckung, is powerful, but it demands precision: the right enforcement title, the right asset targets, and the right timing.
This guide walks you through every practical step, from confirming your enforcement documents to instructing a bailiff and navigating the insolvency trap, so you can move from paper judgment to recovery.
Before committing resources, every creditor should answer three threshold questions. First, is the judgment enforceable in Germany, meaning, is it a German domestic judgment, an EU judgment with automatic recognition, or a non-EU judgment that requires domestication? Second, does the debtor company have identifiable, attachable assets located in Germany? Third, has the debtor filed for insolvency, which would impose an automatic stay on individual enforcement?
If you hold a final, enforceable German court judgment (or an EU judgment accompanied by the correct certificate), you can generally proceed directly to enforcement. If you hold a non-EU judgment, you will first need a German court to recognise and declare it enforceable. In either case, the essential starting checklist looks like this:
If any of these elements is missing, enforcement applications will be rejected. In my experience, international creditors lose weeks by submitting incomplete documentation. The most efficient approach is to assemble these documents in parallel while your enforcement strategy is being designed.
German enforcement law requires a valid enforcement title (Vollstreckungstitel) before any compulsory measure can be taken. The rules governing which documents qualify as enforcement titles are set out in §§ 704–707 of the Zivilprozessordnung (ZPO), Germany’s Code of Civil Procedure. For domestic German judgments, the court that issued the judgment will, upon application, attach an enforceability clause (Vollstreckungsklausel) under § 724 ZPO, certifying that compulsory enforcement may proceed.
Other common enforcement titles include court settlements (Prozessvergleiche), notarised deeds with a submission-to-enforcement clause (§ 794(1) No. 5 ZPO), and payment orders that have become final (Vollstreckungsbescheid). Each of these must carry the enforceability clause before a bailiff or court will act on them.
If you need to enforce a foreign judgment in Germany, the procedure depends on the judgment’s origin:
A common pitfall I see is creditors assuming their UK judgment still benefits from Brussels I. Since Brexit, UK judgments no longer benefit from the Brussels I Recast Regulation. Recognition and enforcement may depend on the Hague Choice of Court Convention, the Hague Judgments Convention (where applicable), or the general German rules contained in §§ 328 and 722 ZPO.
Zwangsvollstreckung is the umbrella term for all compulsory enforcement measures available to a creditor under German law. When you enforce a judgment in Germany against a company debtor, you are not limited to a single tool, you can (and often should) pursue multiple enforcement routes simultaneously. The principal options are:
| Enforcement Route | Best Suited For | Typical Timeline |
|---|---|---|
| Sachpfändung (movable seizure) | Inventory, vehicles, equipment on-site | 2–6 weeks (depends on bailiff availability) |
| Kontopfändung (bank garnishment) | Cash in bank accounts | 1–4 weeks from court order to freeze |
| Forderungspfändung (attachment of receivables) | Trade receivables, insurance payouts | 2–8 weeks (third-party debtor must acknowledge) |
| Share/financial-asset attachment | Equity stakes, investment accounts | Variable, often 1–3 months |
| Real property enforcement | Land, buildings, commercial premises | 6–18 months (forced auction process is lengthy) |
In my practice, the fastest recovery path for company debtors is almost always bank account garnishment combined with attachment of receivables. Physical seizure of movables tends to yield lower returns because modern service-oriented businesses may not hold significant tangible assets on their premises.
The Gerichtsvollzieher (bailiff) is the enforcement officer responsible for executing certain categories of enforcement measures on the ground. The bailiff is an independent officer of the court, assigned to a specific district. You do not choose your bailiff, the assignment is determined by the debtor’s location. Understanding how to instruct and work with the Gerichtsvollzieher effectively can make or break an enforcement action.
To initiate enforcement through a bailiff, you submit a formal enforcement request (Vollstreckungsauftrag) to the competent local court (Amtsgericht), which forwards it to the assigned Gerichtsvollzieher. Alternatively, your lawyer can submit the request directly to the bailiff if the identity and district are known. The request must include:
Upon receiving the instruction, the bailiff will typically schedule a visit to the debtor’s registered or operational address. During this visit, the bailiff can seize movable assets, affix seizure labels (Pfandsiegel, colloquially known as the “Kuckuck”), and serve formal notices. If the debtor has no seizable assets on-site, or if the seizure would not cover the claim, the bailiff can order the debtor to provide a sworn disclosure of assets (Vermögensauskunft pursuant to § 802c ZPO). This disclosure requires the debtor to disclose its assets, bank accounts, receivables, real property, vehicles and other relevant financial information under oath.
The sworn asset disclosure is one of the most powerful tools available. If the debtor fails to appear or refuses to provide the disclosure, the bailiff can apply for an arrest warrant (Haftbefehl) under § 802g ZPO. In my experience, the mere threat of an arrest warrant often prompts debtors to engage in settlement discussions.
Bailiff fees are regulated by the Gerichtsvollzieherkostengesetz (GvKostG) and are relatively modest, typically in the range of €30–€50 per individual enforcement act, plus travel expenses. The creditor advances these fees, but they are added to the debtor’s liability.
Effective enforcement starts before the first application is filed. Identifying the debtor’s attachable assets in advance allows you to target the most productive enforcement routes and avoid wasting time and fees on fruitless actions. Here are the practical investigative steps I recommend to creditors looking to enforce a judgment in Germany against a company debtor:
When investigating a corporate debtor, watch for signs that assets may have been moved beyond reach: recent transfers of real property to related entities, newly formed holding companies, or abrupt changes in managing directors. Where assets have been fraudulently transferred to frustrate creditors, German law provides remedies through Anfechtung (avoidance of transactions detrimental to creditors), though these claims require separate proceedings and careful evidential preparation.
The Vollstreckungsbescheid is a specific type of enforcement title that arises from Germany’s streamlined court payment-order procedure (Mahnverfahren). If you have not yet obtained a judgment but hold an undisputed monetary claim, the Mahnverfahren offers a fast track. Here is the typical sequence:
Timelines vary, but in straightforward cases the entire Mahnverfahren, from application to Vollstreckungsbescheid, can be completed in four to eight weeks if the debtor does not object. This speed advantage makes it an attractive first step for undisputed commercial debts.
For all enforcement titles, creditors should note the general limitation period: the right to enforce a judgment expires after 30 years under § 197 of the Bürgerliches Gesetzbuch (BGB). However, individual enforcement measures may face shorter procedural windows, and delay can allow the debtor to dissipate assets. In my view, speed is the creditor’s greatest ally.
Not every enforcement action follows the standard domestic pattern. Below are the scenarios I encounter most frequently in my work at Prelia.
As outlined in Step 1, EU judgments benefit from near-automatic recognition under Brussels I Recast, while non-EU judgments require a separate domestication proceeding. One important nuance: even under Brussels I, the debtor retains the right to apply for refusal of recognition on limited grounds (Articles 45–46 of Regulation 1215/2012), such as a violation of public policy or defective service. In practice, such challenges rarely succeed, but they can delay enforcement by several months.
The opening of formal insolvency proceedings (Insolvenzverfahren) by the competent court triggers an automatic enforcement stay under § 89 InsO. From that moment, individual creditors can no longer pursue independent enforcement actions. Instead, you must register your claim with the insolvency administrator (Insolvenzverwalter) and participate in the collective distribution of assets.
Critically, if you have already commenced enforcement measures and assets were seized or garnished before the insolvency filing, those measures may be subject to clawback (Insolvenzanfechtung) under §§ 129–147 InsO if they occurred within defined look-back periods. The practical implication: act quickly once you obtain your enforcement title. Delay increases the risk that the debtor files for insolvency before your enforcement completes.
German law recognises only limited exceptions to the principle of separate legal personality. In exceptional circumstances, such as abuse of the corporate form (Existenzvernichtungshaftung), or independent tortious liability, creditors may pursue claims against individuals behind the company. Such claims require separate legal proceedings and do not form part of ordinary enforcement measures.
Creditors should budget for the following cost categories when they enforce a judgment in Germany against a company debtor:
Recovery rates vary enormously. For solvent company debtors with identifiable bank accounts, bank garnishment can achieve full recovery within weeks. For debtors with limited or concealed assets, recovery may depend on the success of the sworn asset disclosure and subsequent targeted enforcement. In my experience, a well-prepared enforcement strategy that combines multiple routes, garnishment, receivables attachment, and the threat of asset disclosure, yields the highest recovery rates.
To accelerate the enforcement process, I recommend preparing the following package for your German enforcement counsel:
When instructing the Gerichtsvollzieher, your lawyer’s application should cover:
Providing these instructions comprehensively from the outset avoids multiple bailiff visits and keeps enforcement costs under control.
For specialist advice on this topic, contact Thierry Schwenk at Prelia PartG mbB Rechtsanwälte Avocats.
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