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The enforcement of foreign judgments in Germany is a practical concern that crosses the desks of in-house counsel, collections teams and cross-border litigators with increasing frequency. Germany permits recognition and enforcement through a structured judicial procedure, the exequatur, governed primarily by §§ 722–723 of the Code of Civil Procedure (Zivilprozessordnung, ZPO). Parallel regimes exist for EU-origin judgments under the Recast Brussels I Regulation and for arbitral awards under the New York Convention, each with distinct procedural pathways. This guide maps every step of the process as it stands in 2026, from eligibility checks and document preparation through to asset-preservation tactics and realistic timelines, giving practitioners a single reference point for turning a foreign title into enforceable relief on German soil.
Can a foreign judgment be enforced in Germany? Yes. A final, binding civil or commercial judgment from a non-EU court can be declared enforceable by a German court through the exequatur procedure set out in ZPO §§ 722–723. The German court does not re-examine the merits of the foreign case; it reviews the judgment against a closed list of procedural and public-policy safeguards.
For EU-origin judgments, the Recast Brussels I Regulation (Regulation (EU) No 1215/2012) largely eliminates the need for a separate exequatur, allowing direct enforcement on the basis of a certificate of enforceability issued in the state of origin. The route a creditor must take therefore depends entirely on where the original judgment was rendered and whether an applicable treaty or regulation governs the relationship between that state and Germany.
The following six-step checklist provides the core workflow for recognition of foreign judgments in Germany under the domestic exequatur regime:
Germany’s approach to the recognition of foreign judgments operates through a layered hierarchy of legal instruments. The applicable regime depends on the origin of the judgment and any treaty relationship between Germany and the rendering state.
Germany is a signatory to the 2019 Hague Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Judgments in Civil or Commercial Matters. The European Union signed the Convention on behalf of its member states in 2022. As of June 2026, the Convention had entered into force for the EU (and consequently for Germany) on 1 September 2023, though its practical significance depends on the number of other contracting states. Industry observers expect the Convention’s impact to grow as additional states ratify it, but for now its day-to-day application remains limited because relatively few non-EU states have joined. Practitioners should check the HCCH status table for the most current list of contracting parties before relying on this instrument.
For judgments rendered in other EU member states, Regulation (EU) No 1215/2012 (the Recast Brussels I Regulation), which has applied since 10 January 2015, provides for direct enforceability without an exequatur. The judgment creditor obtains a certificate from the court of origin and can proceed to enforcement measures in Germany by presenting that certificate to the competent enforcement authority. This is the fastest route available and avoids the multi-month recognition procedure required for non-EU judgments.
Where no EU regulation or international treaty governs the relationship, the default mechanism for enforcement of foreign judgments in Germany is the exequatur procedure under ZPO §§ 722–723. This applies to judgments from the United States, many Asian and Latin American jurisdictions, and any other state not covered by a specific regime. The German court conducts a limited review, it does not re-hear the merits, but it does verify compliance with the conditions set out in ZPO § 328, which governs recognition.
Foreign arbitral awards follow a separate track under ZPO § 1061, which implements the 1958 New York Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards. Germany is a party to the New York Convention, and its courts routinely declare foreign arbitral awards enforceable, subject to the grounds for refusal mirrored in Article V of the Convention.
The exequatur is the central mechanism for recognising and enforcing non-EU foreign judgments in Germany. Understanding its requirements and workflow is essential for any creditor seeking to convert a foreign title into German enforcement measures. Under ZPO § 722, a foreign judgment is declared enforceable by a German court through an Vollstreckungsurteil (enforcement judgment). ZPO § 723 specifies the procedural conditions: the court assesses whether the judgment satisfies the recognition criteria of ZPO § 328 without re-examining the substance of the underlying dispute.
Exequatur (from the Latin, “let it be executed”) is a formal court declaration that a foreign judgment meets Germany’s legal requirements for recognition and may be enforced as though it were a domestic judgment. It is not an appeal or a re-trial. The German court’s review is limited to verifying procedural fairness, jurisdictional propriety and compatibility with German public policy (ordre public). Once the exequatur is granted, the creditor receives an enforceable title and can proceed with standard execution measures under German law.
To qualify for exequatur in Germany, the foreign judgment must satisfy several threshold requirements derived from ZPO § 328:
A German court will refuse exequatur if any of the recognition conditions in ZPO § 328 are not met. The most commonly invoked grounds are:
The petitioner must file a complete set of documents with the German court. The standard document package includes:
| Regime | Scope / Typical Source Judgments | Key Practical Effect in Germany |
|---|---|---|
| ZPO §§ 722–723 (domestic exequatur) | Final civil/commercial judgments from non-EU states where no specific treaty applies (e.g., US, many Asian and Latin American jurisdictions) | Full judicial review for public policy, jurisdiction, service and reciprocity; requires certified documents and translations; enforcement follows once the court grants the exequatur |
| EU Regime (Recast Brussels I Regulation) | Judgments from EU member states rendered after 10 January 2015 | Direct enforceability without exequatur, creditor presents a certificate of enforceability from the court of origin; significantly faster and less expensive |
| Hague Judgments Convention (where in force) | Judgments from contracting states covered by the 2019 Convention | Streamlined recognition rules with a closed list of grounds for refusal; practical impact depends on number of contracting states, check HCCH status table for current parties |
The enforcement of US judgments in Germany is possible but presents distinctive challenges. There is no bilateral treaty between Germany and the United States governing the mutual recognition of court judgments. US state and federal court judgments must therefore be submitted to the full exequatur procedure under ZPO §§ 722–723.
The reciprocity requirement of ZPO § 328(1) No. 5 has been the most debated obstacle for US judgments. German courts have generally accepted reciprocity in relation to US jurisdictions, largely because US courts, particularly in states such as New York, California and Florida, do recognise and enforce foreign-country money judgments under the Uniform Foreign-Country Money Judgments Recognition Act or equivalent state legislation. However, the analysis is state-specific, and practitioners should verify reciprocity for the particular US state in question.
Other common pitfalls when enforcing US judgments include:
Early indications suggest that the establishment of Germany’s English-language Commercial Courts may simplify the strategic picture for US-based creditors. Where an underlying contract contains a German jurisdiction clause, the Commercial Courts allow proceedings to be conducted in English, reducing translation costs and procedural friction.
Proper service of process in Germany is both a precondition for the original foreign proceedings (as assessed by the German court at the exequatur stage) and a procedural requirement for the German recognition proceedings themselves. The applicable rules depend on the international instruments in force between Germany and the state where service is to be effected or was originally effected.
Germany is a party to the Hague Convention on the Service Abroad of Judicial and Extrajudicial Documents (the Hague Service Convention). For service originating from or directed to Germany, the primary channel is through the designated Central Authority, the relevant state (Land) justice administration. Key points for practitioners:
To satisfy the German court at the exequatur stage, the petitioner must demonstrate that the defendant received proper notice of the foreign proceedings. Acceptable proof includes:
All documents not in German must be accompanied by certified translations prepared by sworn translators (beeidigte Übersetzer). Failure to provide proper translations is a common ground for procedural delay.
Creditors pursuing enforcement of foreign judgments in Germany should not overlook the provisional relief tools available under German procedural law. These measures can be sought before, during or after the exequatur proceedings to prevent the debtor from dissipating assets.
ZPO §§ 916–934 govern the provisional attachment of assets (dinglicher Arrest). A creditor can apply for an attachment order to freeze the debtor’s bank accounts, real property or movable assets. The requirements are:
In cross-border enforcement scenarios, early indications suggest that German courts are increasingly willing to grant provisional attachment in support of foreign proceedings, provided the creditor can show a sufficient connection to German assets.
For non-monetary claims or where the creditor seeks to preserve a specific status quo, ZPO §§ 935–945 permit applications for preliminary injunctions. These are less common in the enforcement context but can be relevant where the debtor is about to dispose of specific assets (e.g., intellectual property, shares or real estate) that form the subject matter of the foreign judgment.
Security for costs in Germany is governed by ZPO § 110. Under this provision, a defendant can request that a foreign claimant (or, in the enforcement context, a foreign petitioner) provide security for the defendant’s anticipated litigation costs if the petitioner is habitually resident outside the EU or the EEA. The court sets the amount based on the estimated costs of the proceedings. Key considerations for practitioners:
One of the most common questions from creditors and in-house teams concerns how long enforcement of a foreign judgment takes in Germany. The honest answer is that timelines vary significantly depending on whether the debtor contests the exequatur, whether service issues arise, and whether provisional measures are needed.
| Stage | Typical Duration | Typical Fees (EUR) |
|---|---|---|
| Document preparation (translations, apostille, legalisation) | 2–6 weeks | €500–€3,000 (depending on volume and language pair) |
| Exequatur proceedings, uncontested | 3–6 months | Court fees: €300–€5,000+ (based on claim value under GKG); attorney fees: statutory scale (RVG) plus any agreed premium |
| Exequatur proceedings, contested | 6–18 months (first instance); additional 6–12 months if appealed | Same fee structure; costs increase with duration and procedural complexity |
| Provisional attachment / freezing order | Days to weeks (ex parte possible) | Separate court fees (typically €100–€2,000); attorney fees for urgent application |
| Enforcement measures (garnishment, bailiff, land charge) | Weeks to months after enforceable title is obtained | Bailiff fees from approximately €30; garnishment court fees from approximately €20; bank inquiry costs approximately €15–€30 |
The overall cost of pursuing exequatur in Germany is significantly lower than re-litigating the claim from scratch in German courts. For claims exceeding €500,000, industry observers expect total legal costs (including translations, court fees and attorney fees) to range from €10,000 to €50,000 or more, depending on complexity and whether the debtor mounts a robust defence.
Debtors in exequatur proceedings have a limited but effective arsenal of defences. Understanding these in advance allows the creditor to pre-empt challenges and strengthen the petition.
What to tell the client: “Build the enforcement file from day one. Ensure the contract has a clear jurisdiction clause, serve meticulously under the applicable service convention, and preserve every document. The exequatur court in Germany will not reopen the merits, but it will scrutinise procedural fairness. If the process was clean, enforcement is achievable.”
Practitioners pursuing recognition and enforcement of foreign judgments in Germany will benefit from standardised templates. The following resources are designed to streamline the preparation of exequatur filings and provisional relief applications:
These templates are available for download in .docx and .pdf formats. They are designed as starting points and should be adapted to the specific facts and jurisdiction of each case. To request access, use the Global Law Experts lawyer directory to connect with a qualified German commercial litigator.
The enforcement of foreign judgments in Germany follows a well-defined procedural path. For non-EU judgments, the exequatur under ZPO §§ 722–723 remains the primary mechanism, requiring the creditor to demonstrate finality, proper service, jurisdictional propriety, reciprocity and compatibility with German public policy. EU-origin judgments benefit from the streamlined Recast Brussels I regime, while the Hague Judgments Convention offers a developing framework whose practical scope will expand as more states ratify. Regardless of the applicable regime, success depends on meticulous document preparation, strict compliance with service requirements and early consideration of asset-preservation measures. Practitioners who invest in the enforcement file from the outset, clean service, complete translations, reciprocity evidence, will find that the German exequatur process delivers predictable, efficient results.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Götz Gaiser at Prelia, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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