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When a Dutch buyer files for bankruptcy, unpaid suppliers face an immediate question: how can retention of title protect your business and help you recover goods that were delivered but never paid for? Retention of title, known in the Netherlands as eigendomsvoorbehoud, is one of the most powerful contractual mechanisms available to suppliers, allowing them to reclaim ownership of goods sitting in the buyer’s warehouse rather than joining the queue of unsecured creditors. With EU insolvency harmonisation work continuing through 2026, and Dutch courts refining the evidentiary standards curators apply when assessing claims, getting the drafting, documentation and timing right has never been more critical.
This guide sets out the complete workflow: the types of retention of title available under Dutch law, the statutory right of reclamation (recht van reclame), exact steps to notify the curator, model contract clauses, an evidence checklist and the practical timeline you must follow to reclaim goods from a bankrupt customer in the Netherlands.
Retention of title is a contractual clause that keeps ownership of delivered goods with the seller until the buyer has paid in full. In everyday business language, it means the goods on the buyer’s premises are legally still yours until the invoice is settled. Under Dutch law, retention of title (eigendomsvoorbehoud) is recognised by Article 3:92 of the Dutch Civil Code (Burgerlijk Wetboek, or BW). It is a real property right, not merely a contractual promise, which gives it teeth in bankruptcy proceedings.
The most common form. The seller retains ownership of the specific goods delivered until the purchase price for those goods has been paid. Example: a steel supplier delivers 500 tonnes of plate steel and includes a retention of title clause in its general terms and conditions. Until the buyer pays the corresponding invoices, ownership remains with the supplier, who can reclaim the steel if the buyer becomes insolvent.
An extended (verlengd) retention of title clause seeks to retain ownership not only until the price of the specific goods is paid, but until all outstanding debts between the parties have been settled. Dutch law permits this under Article 3:92(2) BW, provided the clause relates to claims that arise from the same legal relationship or to claims arising from failure to perform obligations under such a relationship. In practice, the scope of an extended clause must be drafted carefully: courts scrutinise whether the “connection” requirement is met.
When delivered goods are processed, mixed or incorporated into a new product, the original supplier’s retention of title is generally lost. Article 5:14 BW provides that when goods are combined or transformed, ownership passes to the owner of the principal item or to the new product’s creator. A supplier of raw ingredients mixed into a food product, for instance, can no longer point to “its” ingredients once they have been blended. This limitation is one of the most significant practical risks to retention of title in the Netherlands and underscores why early action and proper identification of goods matter.
Understanding how retention of title operates within Dutch statutory and case law is essential for any supplier that wants to reclaim goods from a bankrupt customer in the Netherlands. The enforceability of an eigendomsvoorbehoud depends on meeting several legal requirements, and falling short on even one can destroy the claim entirely.
The legal basis for retention of title in the Netherlands sits primarily in Article 3:92 BW. This article provides that ownership of a delivered movable good can be retained by the seller until a suspensive condition, typically full payment, has been fulfilled. Unlike some jurisdictions, Dutch law does not require registration of the retention of title in a public register. However, it does require that the clause is validly agreed between the parties. In practice, this means the clause must be included in general terms and conditions that have been properly provided to (and accepted by) the buyer before or at the time the contract is concluded, in accordance with Articles 6:232–6:234 BW.
In bankruptcy, Articles 20 and 57 of the Faillissementswet (Dutch Bankruptcy Act) govern how security rights, including retention of title, interact with the insolvency estate. Article 57 allows holders of certain in rem rights to exercise those rights as though no bankruptcy had been declared. The practical effect is that a supplier with a valid retention of title can, in principle, reclaim goods outside of the collective insolvency proceedings, provided the claim is supported by evidence.
Dutch courts and curators will assess several points when evaluating a retention of title claim:
| RoT type | Dutch legal basis | Enforceability risk |
|---|---|---|
| Simple RoT (specific goods, specific invoice) | Art. 3:92(1) BW | Low, provided clause is validly agreed and goods are identifiable |
| Extended RoT (all claims between the parties) | Art. 3:92(2) BW | Medium, must satisfy “same legal relationship” connection requirement; courts may narrow scope |
| RoT for processed or mixed goods | Art. 5:14 BW (accession / mixing) | High, ownership typically lost upon transformation; claim likely fails |
Industry observers note that the most common reason retention of title claims fail in Dutch practice is not the absence of a clause but the failure to properly incorporate general terms and conditions. Sending terms with or after the invoice, rather than before or with the original offer or order confirmation, creates a risk that the clause was never validly agreed. Additionally, clauses that attempt to retain title over goods that have been resold or transformed into end products are almost always unenforceable under Dutch law. Suppliers should ensure their clauses are realistic in scope and backed by a robust documentation workflow.
When a buyer enters bankruptcy (faillissement), the court appoints a curator (trustee) to manage the estate. To reclaim goods from a bankrupt customer in the Netherlands, a supplier must act quickly and follow a structured process. Delay can be fatal, particularly if the curator sells the goods as part of a bulk asset disposal.
As soon as you learn of the bankruptcy, typically through the Centraal Insolventieregister published on Rechtspraak.nl, check the following:
Before contacting the curator, compile the following evidence package:
To notify the curator in the Netherlands, send a written claim (letter or email) as soon as possible after the bankruptcy declaration. Your notification should include:
Curators will generally verify the claim by checking whether the terms and conditions were validly agreed, whether the goods can be identified, and whether any payment has been received. In many cases, a cooperative curator will grant access to the premises for a joint inventory. If the curator disputes the claim, you may need to escalate to summary proceedings (kort geding) before the provisional relief judge.
Once the curator acknowledges your claim, arrange collection promptly. You bear the logistics costs, transport, handling and any storage charges the curator may levy for keeping goods on the premises. If a dispute arises during collection (for example, the curator argues that certain items have been mixed or transformed), document everything thoroughly and seek legal advice before accepting a reduced claim or cash settlement. Where goods have been partly paid for, the curator may offer to return only the unpaid portion or negotiate a cash equivalent, though the supplier is under no obligation to accept a monetary settlement in place of goods.
For suppliers who cannot reclaim goods, because the items have been processed, resold or are unidentifiable, the alternative is to file an unsecured claim (vordering in faillissement) with the curator. Historically, unsecured creditors in Dutch bankruptcies recover only a small fraction of their claims, which underscores the importance of pursuing retention of title wherever possible. For broader context on choosing between restructuring and liquidation in an insolvency, suppliers should evaluate the debtor’s overall position early.
Alongside retention of title, Dutch law provides a separate statutory remedy for unpaid sellers: the right of reclamation, or recht van reclame, codified in Articles 7:39–7:44 BW. This right allows a seller to reclaim delivered goods even without a contractual retention of title clause, but only within strict time limits. It is a powerful fallback for suppliers who lack a properly drafted eigendomsvoorbehoud, but it demands fast action.
Under Article 7:44 BW, the right of reclamation must be exercised within six weeks after the claim for the purchase price has become due and payable, and within 60 days after the goods were delivered to the buyer. Whichever deadline expires first cuts off the right. In a bankruptcy context, these deadlines interact with the cooling-off period (afkoelingsperiode) that the court may impose under Article 63a of the Faillissementswet. During a cooling-off period, which the court can set for up to two months and extend once, the curator may prevent creditors (including retention of title holders) from exercising recovery rights without court permission.
| Event | Calendar day (example) | Deadline / action required |
|---|---|---|
| Goods delivered to buyer | 1 March 2026 | 60-day clock starts (recht van reclame) |
| Invoice due date (30-day terms) | 31 March 2026 | 6-week clock starts (recht van reclame) |
| Buyer declared bankrupt | 15 April 2026 | Notify curator immediately; check if cooling-off period imposed |
| 60 days from delivery expire | 30 April 2026 | Recht van reclame expires, claim must have been exercised before this date |
| 6 weeks from invoice due date | 12 May 2026 | Second deadline (here later than the 60-day limit, so the earlier deadline governs) |
| Cooling-off period (if set by court: max 2 months from bankruptcy) | 15 June 2026 | Retention of title holders may need court permission to recover goods during this period |
Smart suppliers do not wait for a buyer to go bankrupt. If a buyer is showing signs of financial distress, late payments, requests for extended terms, rumours in the market, consider exercising the right of reclamation before formal insolvency proceedings commence. Send a written reclamation notice to the buyer demanding return of goods. This pre-filing action can preserve rights that would otherwise be lost once statutory deadlines expire. Industry observers recommend that credit management teams build “early warning” triggers into their accounts receivable monitoring, flagging any buyer whose payment is overdue beyond a threshold (e.g. 14 days past due) for immediate review of reclamation options.
Prevention is far more effective than cure. How can retention of title protect your business if the clause is poorly drafted or the supporting documentation is incomplete? Below are practical tools: a model clause, an evidence checklist and a template curator notification letter.
Dutch:
“Alle door verkoper geleverde zaken blijven eigendom van verkoper totdat de koper alle verplichtingen uit alle met verkoper gesloten overeenkomsten volledig is nagekomen, met inbegrip van vorderingen ter zake van tekortkomingen in de nakoming.”
English translation:
“All goods delivered by the seller shall remain the property of the seller until the buyer has fully discharged all obligations under all agreements concluded with the seller, including claims for failure to perform.”
This clause covers extended retention of title (all mutual obligations). For a simple clause limited to the specific delivery, replace “alle overeenkomsten” with “de betreffende overeenkomst” (the relevant agreement). Always have the clause reviewed by Dutch counsel before implementation, as enforceability depends on precise wording and valid incorporation.
| Document / record | Purpose | When to create / collect |
|---|---|---|
| General terms and conditions (with RoT clause) | Prove valid agreement of the clause | At contract formation; file proof of delivery to buyer |
| Signed order confirmation or purchase order | Link the clause to the specific transaction | Per order |
| Delivery note / CMR waybill / packing slip | Identify goods and tie to invoice | Per shipment |
| Invoice (unpaid) | Prove outstanding payment obligation | Per delivery; track payment status continuously |
| Serial numbers, batch codes, photographs | Identify and distinguish goods from other stock | Per shipment; photograph distinctive markings |
| Payment ledger / accounts receivable extract | Demonstrate non-payment or partial payment | Ongoing; extract upon learning of insolvency |
| Correspondence with buyer acknowledging terms | Reinforce valid incorporation | Archive emails / signed acknowledgements |
[Your company letterhead]
To: [Name of curator], curator in the bankruptcy of [buyer’s company name]
Court file reference: [case number]
Date: [date]
Dear [curator],
We refer to the bankruptcy of [buyer]. We hereby notify you that we retain ownership of the goods described in the attached schedule, pursuant to the retention of title clause in our general terms and conditions (enclosed). These goods were delivered under the invoices listed in the schedule, which remain unpaid.
We request access to the premises at [address] to inspect and recover the goods at our earliest convenience. We attach copies of our general terms and conditions, the relevant invoices, delivery notes and proof of incorporation of our terms.
We look forward to your response within [7/14] days.
Yours sincerely,
[Name, title, contact details]
For Dutch suppliers selling goods to buyers in other EU member states, or for foreign suppliers delivering into the Netherlands, cross-border retention of title adds a layer of complexity. The applicable law governing the property right (in rem aspect) of retention of title is generally the law of the country where the goods are located at the time ownership is claimed. This means a Dutch supplier shipping goods to a German buyer must typically comply with German requirements for the retention of title to be enforceable in a German insolvency.
The European Commission has been progressing its insolvency harmonisation agenda, building on the EU Insolvency Regulation (Regulation (EU) 2015/848) and subsequent proposals aimed at converging member state approaches to preventive restructuring and cross-border creditor rights. Early indications suggest that the 2026 legislative package will seek greater mutual recognition of security interests, including retention of title, across borders, though industry observers expect implementation timelines to extend beyond 2027 for most member states.
The following workflow summarises the creditor action plan from first notice to final recovery when seeking to reclaim goods from a bankrupt customer in the Netherlands:
Costs to budget for include: legal fees for drafting the claim and any court proceedings, transport and handling charges, potential storage fees charged by the curator, and (if a kort geding is necessary) court fees and counsel costs. For complex or high-value claims, early engagement with an experienced insolvency lawyer is strongly recommended.
| Remedy | What it secures | Practical pros and cons (NL) |
|---|---|---|
| Retention of title (eigendomsvoorbehoud) | Ownership of specific goods until paid | + Strong if properly drafted and evidenced; operates outside insolvency estate. − Lost if goods are transformed or mixed; requires valid incorporation of terms; subject to cooling-off period restrictions. |
| Right of reclamation (recht van reclame) | Statutory right to reclaim unpaid goods within deadline | + Available even without a contractual RoT clause; quick remedy if exercised in time. − Very tight deadlines (6 weeks / 60 days); must notify curator; lost once goods processed or resold. |
| Insolvency claim (vordering in faillissement) | Monetary claim for pro rata distribution from the estate | + Available to all creditors; formal process. − Unsecured creditors typically recover a very small fraction; slow proceedings; no priority. |
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Martijn Dellebeke at De Vos & Partners Advocaten N.V., a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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