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tier 1 unpaid commercial invoices supplychain

Unpaid Commercial Invoices and Supply‑chain Payment Disputes in Germany

By Götz Gaiser
– posted 1 week ago

Last updated: 22 June 2026

Unpaid commercial invoices in the supply chain remain one of the most persistent threats to B2B cash flow in Germany, and in my experience the problem has intensified as payment cycles lengthen and margin pressure grows across manufacturing, logistics and wholesale sectors. This guide provides the practical recovery roadmap I use with clients at Prelia PartG mbB Rechtsanwälte Avocats, from the first overdue reminder through to enforcement and insolvency monitoring. It is written for finance managers, credit controllers, in-house counsel and external advisers who need to know exactly which levers German law provides, how fast each one works, and what each one costs.

Whether you are chasing a single six-figure receivable or managing a portfolio of smaller supply-chain claims, the step-by-step framework below will help you preserve cash and recover what you are owed.

What This Guide Covers and When to Use It

This article maps the entire lifecycle of a B2B payment dispute under German law, from the moment an invoice passes its due date to the point at which you hold an enforceable title or file a claim in the debtor’s insolvency proceedings. I have structured it as a decision tree: each section tells you what to do, which statute applies, and when to move to the next stage.

You should reach for this guide whenever a commercial counterparty in Germany, whether a buyer, distributor, sub-contractor or service recipient, fails to pay an undisputed or partially disputed invoice on time. The principles apply equally to domestic German transactions and to cross-border supply arrangements governed by German law.

My overarching advice to clients can be distilled into two points. First, speed matters: statutory default interest under BGB §288 only begins accruing once the debtor is in Verzug (default), so triggering that default promptly is the single most valuable early step. Second, documentation wins cases: German courts and the Mahnverfahren procedure reward creditors who can present a clean paper trail, purchase order, delivery confirmation, invoice and formal demand. The better your records, the faster and cheaper your recovery.

Quick Triage: Immediate Commercial and Credit‑Control Steps

Seven‑Point Checklist for Immediate Action

Before any legal process begins, disciplined credit management can resolve a surprising number of unpaid invoices in Germany. The moment a B2B payment is overdue, I recommend working through the following checklist:

  • Confirm the debt. Verify that the invoice was correctly addressed, delivered and not subject to a pending credit note, discount or set-off.
  • Check the contract. Review payment terms, any agreed late-payment penalties, retention-of-title (Eigentumsvorbehalt) clauses and dispute-resolution provisions.
  • Make direct contact. Call or email the debtor’s accounts-payable team. A brief, firm telephone call often uncovers simple processing errors.
  • Send a written payment reminder. Even before a formal Mahnung, a polite reminder letter resets the conversation and creates a documentary record.
  • Freeze further supply if contractually permitted. Where your terms allow suspension of deliveries upon non-payment, exercise that right promptly to limit exposure.
  • Assess debtor solvency. Run a commercial credit check (Creditreform, SCHUFA commercial or equivalent) to gauge whether the non-payment is a one-off or a sign of deeper financial distress.
  • Set an internal escalation deadline. Decide, and document, the date on which you will move from commercial follow-up to formal legal demand.

Documentation and Evidence to Gather

German courts are document-driven. To succeed in any recovery action, whether a Mahnverfahren or ordinary litigation, you will need the following core evidence assembled and easily accessible:

  • The underlying contract or purchase order (including general terms and conditions, AGB, if incorporated).
  • Delivery or performance confirmation, signed delivery notes, shipping documents, service-acceptance protocols.
  • The invoice itself with date, amount, payment terms and VAT details.
  • Proof of delivery of the invoice to the debtor (email read receipt, postal tracking).
  • All correspondence, payment reminders, debtor responses, settlement discussions, internal notes of telephone calls.
  • Bank statements showing non-receipt of payment.

Assembling this file before instructing counsel saves time and legal fees. In my experience, a well-prepared dossier shortens the pre-litigation phase by weeks.

Legal Framework: Key German Law Principles for B2B Non‑Payment

German commercial litigation on unpaid invoices rests on three statutory pillars: the rules on default (Verzug) under the German Civil Code (BGB), the procedural tools in the Code of Civil Procedure (ZPO), and the cost-recovery entitlements created by Germany’s implementation of the EU Late Payment Directive. Understanding each pillar is essential before choosing a remedy.

Mahnung (Formal Demand) and When Default Occurs, BGB §286

Under BGB §286, a debtor generally falls into default (Verzug) when the creditor issues a Mahnung, a clear, unambiguous written demand for payment of a specific sum that is already due and payable. The Mahnung does not need to use any magic words, but it must identify the claim and demand payment without conditions.

There are important exceptions where no Mahnung is required. Default occurs automatically if a calendar date for payment has been determined or is determinable (for example, “payment within 30 days of invoice date”), if the debtor has seriously and finally refused to pay, or, critically for B2B transactions, if, in the absence of a Mahnung, the debtor does not pay within 30 days of receiving the invoice, provided the creditor has drawn attention to this consequence on the invoice (BGB §286(3)). In practice, I advise clients to send a formal Mahnung regardless, because it eliminates any argument about whether automatic default applied.

Default Interest and Statutory Rates, BGB §288

Once the debtor is in Verzug, the creditor is entitled to default interest under BGB §288. For transactions between businesses (Unternehmer), the rate is nine percentage points above the base interest rate published by the Deutsche Bundesbank. For consumer transactions, the rate is five percentage points above base. The base rate is adjusted every six months (1 January and 1 July) and is published in the Federal Gazette (Bundesanzeiger).

Worked example, €50,000 invoice, 90 days overdue (B2B):

Element Calculation Amount
Outstanding principal , €50,000.00
Applicable default interest rate (assumed base rate 3.37% + 9 pp) 12.37% per annum ,
Default interest for 90 days €50,000 × 12.37% × 90/365 €1,525.48
Flat-rate recovery cost (Act to Combat Late Payment) Statutory minimum €40.00
Total claim (before legal fees) , €51,565.48

This calculation uses BGB §288(2) for the B2B interest rate. The actual base rate should be verified against the Bundesbank publication for the relevant half-year period. Higher actual damages (e.g. costs of alternative financing) can also be claimed if proven.

Recovery of Collection and Enforcement Costs, Late Payment Law Germany

Germany’s Act to Combat Late Payment in Business Transactions (Gesetz zur Bekämpfung von Zahlungsverzögerungen im Geschäftsverkehr), implementing EU Directive 2011/7/EU, entitles the creditor to a flat-rate compensation of €40 for recovery costs in every B2B transaction where the debtor is in default, without the need to prove actual expenses. This amount is credited against any higher actual recovery costs the creditor can demonstrate, meaning that if you incur, say, €1,200 in lawyer and collection-agency fees, you can claim the full €1,200 minus the €40 already received. The flat-rate payment is automatic and does not require a court order. In practice, it is a useful tool that signals to debtors that delay carries tangible financial consequences from day one.

How to Recover Unpaid Commercial Invoices in Germany: Mahnverfahren vs Ordinary Proceedings

When pre-litigation efforts fail, the creditor must choose between two main procedural routes, the Mahnverfahren (summary payment order proceedings) and ordinary civil litigation. The table below summarises the key differences.

Remedy When to use Key pro / con
Out‑of‑court demand (Mahnung) Before formal proceedings; when parties are negotiating or debtor likely to pay Low cost; may be required to trigger default (pro), no legal compulsion (con)
Mahnverfahren (payment order) Uncontested debt or clear contractual claim; sped-up summary route Fast and low‑cost; can convert to enforceable title quickly (pro), defendant can oppose (con)
Ordinary litigation (Gerichtsverfahren) Disputed factual or complex legal claims; strategic enforcement Full adjudication and stronger enforcement powers (pro), slower and costlier (con)

How the German Mahnverfahren Works, Stepwise Timeline

The Mahnverfahren under ZPO §§688–703d is the workhorse remedy for unpaid invoices in Germany. It is an automated, largely paper-based (or electronic) procedure that does not require evidence to be filed at the outset, only a clear statement of the claim. Here is the typical sequence:

  1. File the application (Mahnantrag) with the competent Mahngericht. Most applications are filed online via the official portal. Court fees are modest, roughly half the fees for ordinary proceedings.
  2. Court issues the payment order (Mahnbescheid), typically within days to two weeks of filing.
  3. Service on the debtor. The debtor has two weeks from service to file an objection (Widerspruch).
  4. If no objection: the creditor applies for an enforcement order (Vollstreckungsbescheid). The court issues this, again typically within days.
  5. Vollstreckungsbescheid becomes enforceable, it has the same force as a court judgment and opens the door to Zwangsvollstreckung.

If the procedure runs uncontested, creditors can obtain an enforceable title within approximately three to six weeks. If the debtor files an objection, the case is automatically transferred to ordinary litigation, and the creditor must then pursue the claim through a full trial. The Mahnverfahren is therefore most effective where the debt is clear and the debtor’s objection is unlikely.

When to Use Ordinary Litigation Instead

Ordinary civil proceedings (Klageverfahren) are the better route where the debtor has already signalled a substantive defence, for example, disputing the quality of goods delivered, the scope of services rendered, or the validity of the contract itself. Litigation also makes sense where the creditor wants to combine the payment claim with other relief, such as a declaratory judgment on contract interpretation or an injunction. Court fees are higher and timelines longer, first-instance proceedings at a Landgericht typically take six to twelve months, but the judgment carries full evidentiary weight and is harder to challenge on appeal.

Decision Matrix for Creditors

In my practice, I advise clients to weigh three factors when choosing their route:

  • Amount at stake. For claims below €5,000, the Mahnverfahren is almost always the right starting point because costs are low and the process is fast. For larger claims, the analysis shifts to likelihood of contest.
  • Likelihood of debtor opposition. If the debtor has never disputed the invoice and simply has not paid, the Mahnverfahren will typically deliver an enforceable title without a hearing. If disputes are likely, filing suit directly saves the wasted step of a contested Mahnverfahren converting to ordinary proceedings.
  • Debtor solvency. If solvency is in doubt, speed is paramount, the Mahnverfahren gets you to enforcement faster, and enforcement before insolvency opens is critical to recovery.

Enforcement (Zwangsvollstreckung): Practical Steps to Seize Assets

An enforceable title, whether a Vollstreckungsbescheid from the Mahnverfahren, a court judgment or a notarial deed with enforcement clause, is only the beginning. The creditor must actively pursue enforcement in Germany through the Zwangsvollstreckung framework set out in ZPO §§704 ff.

Preconditions for Enforcement and Debtor Asset Discovery

Before initiating enforcement, the creditor must have the enforceable title served on the debtor by a bailiff (Gerichtsvollzieher) together with an enforcement clause (Vollstreckungsklausel). In practice, this is handled as part of the first enforcement step.

One of the most valuable tools available is the debtor’s asset disclosure (Vermögensauskunft, ZPO §802c). The court bailiff can summon the debtor to provide a sworn statement listing all assets, bank accounts, employment income and real property. Failure to appear or provide truthful information can lead to an arrest warrant. I routinely request this disclosure early in the enforcement process because it reveals where to direct garnishment and seizure.

Common Enforcement Routes

German law offers several enforcement mechanisms, and creditors should pursue multiple routes in parallel where the claim justifies it:

  • Bank account seizure (Kontopfändung). The creditor applies to the enforcement court for a garnishment and transfer order (Pfändungs- und Überweisungsbeschluss) directed at the debtor’s bank. This is the fastest and most commonly used route, the court typically issues the order within days, and the bank must freeze and remit funds up to the claim amount. Costs are modest (court fee plus bailiff fees).
  • Wage garnishment (Lohn- und Gehaltspfändung). Where the debtor is an individual or sole proprietor with employment income, the creditor can garnish wages above the statutory exemption thresholds. This is a reliable stream for recurring recovery but yields smaller periodic amounts.
  • Seizure of movable assets. The bailiff can seize and auction physical goods, vehicles and inventory at the debtor’s premises. In practice, this is less productive for commercial debtors with leased equipment, but it remains a useful pressure tool.
  • Land charges and forced sale (Zwangsversteigerung). For larger claims, registering a compulsory mortgage (Zwangshypothek) on the debtor’s real estate secures the claim and can lead to forced auction proceedings. This is a longer-term enforcement route, but it provides strong security.

Enforcement costs, bailiff fees, court fees and any lawyer’s fees, are generally recoverable from the debtor as part of the enforcement process itself.

Insolvency Checkpoints: When to Monitor and What Protective Steps to Take

Early Warning Signs and Filing Claims

Not every debtor who misses a payment is insolvent, but creditors in the supply chain should monitor for warning signs: repeated broken payment promises, sudden requests for extended terms, rumours of cash-flow problems among other suppliers, and entries in the German debtor register (Schuldnerverzeichnis). If the debtor files for insolvency (Insolvenzantrag) or a court opens insolvency proceedings, all individual enforcement measures are automatically stayed.

At that point, the creditor must file its claim with the insolvency administrator (Insolvenzverwalter) within the deadline set by the court. Missing this deadline does not extinguish the claim but significantly complicates recovery. In practice, unsecured creditors in German insolvency proceedings recover an average of only a few cents on the euro, making pre-insolvency enforcement all the more critical.

Set‑Off, Retention of Title and Reclamation Rights

Creditors holding a valid retention-of-title clause (Eigentumsvorbehalt) are in a far stronger position in insolvency. If title to delivered goods has been validly reserved and the goods are still identifiable and in the debtor’s possession, the creditor can reclaim them outside the insolvency estate. Extended and expanded retention-of-title clauses are common in German supply contracts and, when properly drafted, can be a decisive advantage. Equally, where mutual obligations exist, set-off (Aufrechnung) remains permissible even after insolvency proceedings open, subject to specific restrictions in the Insolvency Code (InsO).

Cross‑Border and Contractual Considerations for Supply Chains

Many supply-chain payment disputes involve parties in different jurisdictions. Where the contract is governed by German law but the debtor is domiciled in another EU member state, the Brussels I Regulation (recast) determines jurisdiction and enables recognition and enforcement of German judgments across the EU without a separate exequatur procedure. For non-EU debtors, bilateral treaties or the Hague Convention framework may apply, and enforcement can be more complex.

Arbitration clauses are increasingly common in international supply contracts. While arbitration can offer confidentiality and specialist expertise, it is generally slower and more expensive than the Mahnverfahren for straightforward payment claims. In my view, the optimal approach is to include an arbitration clause for complex contractual disputes but to carve out summary payment proceedings so that uncontested receivables can still be pursued through the Mahnverfahren or ordinary courts. Choice-of-law and jurisdiction clauses should be reviewed carefully, a poorly drafted clause can delay recovery by months while preliminary jurisdictional questions are resolved. For a comparative perspective on summary recovery procedures in other jurisdictions, see Global Law Experts’ guide on summary suits for recovery of money.

Practical Tools: Sample Mahnung Template and Calculation Example

Below is a streamlined Mahnung template that I provide to clients. It is designed to satisfy the requirements of BGB §286 and to put the debtor clearly on notice:

, Sample Mahnung,

[Company letterhead]
[Date]
[Debtor name and address]

Formal Demand for Payment (Mahnung)

Dear [Name],

We refer to our invoice no. [●] dated [●] in the amount of €[●], which was due for payment on [●]. Despite the expiry of the payment deadline, we have not received payment.

We hereby formally demand payment of the outstanding amount of €[●], plus default interest at the statutory rate pursuant to BGB §288(2) from [date of default] until the date of payment, plus the flat-rate recovery fee of €40 pursuant to BGB §288(5).

Please arrange payment to reach our account no later than [date, typically 7–10 days from Mahnung]. Should we not receive payment by that date, we will be compelled to pursue legal proceedings without further notice, including Mahnverfahren and enforcement, at your expense.

[Signature, contact details, bank account details]

, End of template,

The Mahnung should always be sent in a verifiable way, registered letter or documented email, so that proof of receipt is available for any subsequent proceedings.

Next Steps and When to Instruct Counsel

Recovering unpaid commercial invoices in the supply chain requires timely action and the right procedural choice. In my experience, the following thresholds should prompt you to instruct a commercial litigation lawyer:

  • The debtor has not responded to two written reminders and a formal Mahnung.
  • The outstanding amount exceeds €5,000 or involves multiple invoices from an ongoing supply relationship.
  • The debtor has raised a substantive defence or counterclaim.
  • There are signs of debtor insolvency or the debtor is domiciled outside Germany.
  • You need urgent interim relief (e.g. a freezing order or arrest of assets).

Early legal advice is almost always more cost-effective than delayed action. If you are dealing with unpaid invoices in Germany and need to assess your options, I recommend consulting a specialist. You can find a Germany-based commercial litigation lawyer through the Global Law Experts directory.

Need Legal Advice?

For specialist advice on this topic, contact Götz Gaiser at Prelia PartG mbB Rechtsanwälte Avocats.

Sources

  1. German Civil Code (BGB), Bürgerliches Gesetzbuch
  2. Code of Civil Procedure (ZPO), Zivilprozessordnung
  3. KPMG Law, Act to Combat Late Payment in Business Transactions
  4. CMS Expert Guide, Payment Term Legislation Germany
  5. SE Legal, Debt Collection and Enforcement in Germany
  6. Bundesministerium der Justiz (Federal Ministry of Justice)
  7. Paschen (FECMA), Successful Legal Claim Management in Germany
  8. European Commission, Late Payment Directive Resources

FAQs

Do I have to send a Mahnung before suing for payment in Germany?
In most cases, yes. Under BGB §286, the debtor enters default (Verzug) upon receipt of a Mahnung, a written demand for an overdue payment. However, a Mahnung is not required where a specific calendar payment date was agreed, where the debtor has definitively refused to pay, or where, in a B2B transaction, 30 days have elapsed since the invoice was received and the invoice warned of this consequence. Regardless, I always advise sending a formal Mahnung to create a clear evidentiary record.
Under BGB §288(2), default interest for B2B transactions runs at nine percentage points above the Bundesbank base rate. You calculate daily interest as: (principal × annual rate) ÷ 365 × number of days in default. For example, on a €50,000 invoice 90 days overdue with an assumed total rate of 12.37%, the interest amounts to approximately €1,525. The base rate is published semi-annually and must be checked for the relevant period.
The Mahnverfahren (ZPO §§688–703d) is a summary payment-order procedure. The creditor files an application stating the claim amount; the court issues a Mahnbescheid without examining evidence. If the debtor does not object within two weeks, the creditor obtains an enforceable Vollstreckungsbescheid. The entire uncontested process typically takes three to six weeks. If the debtor objects, the case converts automatically to ordinary litigation.
Yes. Germany’s Act to Combat Late Payment entitles the creditor to a flat-rate compensation of €40 per transaction once the debtor is in default, without proof of actual costs. Where actual recovery costs (lawyer fees, collection-agency charges) exceed €40, the creditor can claim the higher amount, with the €40 credited against it. Additionally, enforcement costs (bailiff fees, court fees) are generally recoverable from the debtor through the enforcement process itself.
Once insolvency proceedings are opened, all individual enforcement is stayed. The creditor must file its claim with the insolvency administrator within the court-set deadline. Recovery rates for unsecured creditors in German insolvency are typically very low. Creditors with valid retention-of-title clauses can reclaim goods outside the insolvency estate, and set-off rights may also be preserved, making contractual protections essential.
The standard limitation period for contractual payment claims is three years, running from the end of the calendar year in which the claim arose and the creditor became aware (or should have become aware) of it (BGB §195, §199). For example, an invoice due on 15 March 2026 will generally become time-barred on 31 December 2029. Initiating Mahnverfahren or litigation suspends the limitation period, but mere reminders do not.
I recommend seeking legal advice when the debtor ignores a formal Mahnung, when the claim exceeds €5,000, when there is any substantive dispute over the underlying contract or delivery, when there are signs of debtor insolvency, or when the debtor is located outside Germany. Early instruction reduces overall costs and improves recovery prospects. You can search for a qualified specialist through the Global Law Experts lawyer directory.
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Unpaid Commercial Invoices and Supply‑chain Payment Disputes in Germany

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