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how to file a creditor claim in the Netherlands

How to File a Creditor Claim in a Dutch Bankruptcy: Step‑by‑step Guide

By Global Law Experts
– posted 3 hours ago

When a Dutch company or individual is declared bankrupt (failliet verklaard), every creditor with an outstanding claim must act quickly to preserve its right to share in the proceeds of the insolvent estate. Understanding how to file a creditor claim in the Netherlands is essential for trade creditors, suppliers, finance officers and in‑house counsel who need to submit a proof of claim to the court‑appointed trustee, known as the curator. This guide sets out the complete creditor claim process in the Netherlands, from identifying the bankruptcy declaration through to verification, creditors’ meetings and distribution, and covers the documents needed, key deadlines, estimated costs and the 2026 legislative changes that affect creditor ranking and security documentation.

Overview of Dutch Bankruptcy Proceedings and Who They Apply To

Dutch insolvency law is governed by the Faillissementswet (Bankruptcy Act). A faillissement (bankruptcy) is a court‑supervised liquidation procedure in which a curator is appointed to take control of the debtor’s assets, sell them, and distribute the proceeds to creditors in accordance with a statutory ranking system. The procedure applies to natural persons, partnerships and legal entities (BVs, NVs and other corporate forms) that have ceased paying their debts as they fall due.

Three categories of creditor may file claims in a Dutch bankruptcy:

  • Secured creditors, holders of a registered mortgage (hypotheek) or pledge (pandrecht) who can, in principle, enforce their security as if no bankruptcy had been declared.
  • Preferential creditors, parties with a statutory priority, most notably the Dutch Tax Authority (Belastingdienst) and employees claiming unpaid wages.
  • Unsecured (concurrent) creditors, all other creditors, including trade suppliers and service providers, who share proportionally in the remainder of the estate after secured and preferential claims have been satisfied.

The curator manages the estate, verifies submitted claims, draws up a provisional creditors’ list and convenes a creditors’ meeting at which claims are examined and, if sufficient assets exist, a distribution proposal is put forward. Outcomes range from full payment of verified claims (rare) to closure of the estate due to insufficient assets (opheffing bij gebrek aan baten). For creditors of all types, timely and properly documented submission of claims to the curator is the critical first step in any recovery effort. A directory of insolvency specialists can help creditors identify experienced counsel in the Netherlands.

Eligibility and Prerequisites for Filing a Creditor Claim

Any party, whether domestic or foreign, that holds a monetary claim against the bankrupt debtor may file a proof of claim. There is no minimum threshold amount. Claims may be contractual, tortious, or based on unjust enrichment, and they may include interest and extrajudicial collection costs where recoverable under Dutch civil law. Secured creditors who wish to participate in the verification process should also submit their claims, even though they hold separate enforcement rights over their collateral.

Key requirements for eligibility include:

  • The claim must have arisen before the date of the bankruptcy declaration. Post‑bankruptcy debts are, as a rule, estate debts (boedelschulden) and follow a different regime.
  • The claim must not have been previously extinguished by payment, set‑off or statute of limitations.
  • Claims subject to a condition (contingent claims) may be submitted and are noted on the creditors’ list at their estimated value.

Creditors do not need a Dutch lawyer simply to submit a proof of claim to the curator. However, if a creditor wishes to file a bankruptcy petition to initiate proceedings, this must be done through a Dutch‑qualified attorney (advocaat), as confirmed by Business.gov.nl and De Rechtspraak.

Foreign Creditors, Jurisdiction, Service and Translation

Foreign creditors have the same right to file claims as Dutch creditors. Within the European Union, the EU Insolvency Regulation (Recast) provides that creditors in other Member States must be notified by the curator of the opening of proceedings and their right to lodge claims. Foreign creditors should note that the curator or court may request sworn translations of key supporting documents. All correspondence should be addressed to the curator, not to the debtor or to the court, and should include full company registration details from the creditor’s home jurisdiction.

How to File a Creditor Claim in the Netherlands: Step‑by‑Step Procedure

The creditor claim process in the Netherlands follows a clear sequence. The table below summarises each step, the responsible actor and the typical duration, followed by detailed guidance.

Step Who Does It Typical Duration
1. Identify the bankruptcy notice and curator Creditor (or counsel) / court registry / Rechtspraak listing Same day to 3 days
2. Prepare the proof of claim and supporting documents Creditor / accounting department 1–7 days (depending on records)
3. Submit the claim to the curator Creditor / lawyer / bailiff Submission same day; curator typically acknowledges within 7–14 days
4. Curator verifies claims and prepares creditors’ list Curator (trustee) 2–8 weeks (depends on estate size)
5. Publication of provisional list / objections window Curator / court Objection period commonly 2–6 weeks (case‑dependent)
6. Creditors’ meeting and voting Curator / creditors / court Meeting typically 4–12 weeks after verification
7. Distribution (if any) Curator Months to years (depends on assets and recovery actions)

Step 1: Check the Bankruptcy Declaration and Identify the Curator

When a Dutch court declares a debtor bankrupt, it simultaneously appoints a curator and a supervisory judge (rechter‑commissaris). The bankruptcy declaration is published in the Central Insolvency Register (Centraal Insolventieregister), accessible through Rechtspraak.nl. Creditors should check this register immediately upon learning of the bankruptcy to confirm the date of the declaration and obtain the curator’s name, firm and contact details. The curator’s first public report typically states the deadline or preferred method for submitting claims.

Step 2: Prepare the Proof of Claim

Under the Faillissementswet, claims must be submitted to the curator in the form of an invoice or other written statement listing the nature and amount of the claim, accompanied by supporting documents. Each proof of claim should contain:

  1. The creditor’s full legal name, registered address and company registration number (KvK number for Dutch entities, or equivalent foreign registration).
  2. A clear description of the legal basis of the claim (contract reference, purchase order, invoice number).
  3. The principal amount owed, broken down by individual invoice where applicable.
  4. Any claim for statutory or contractual interest, calculated up to the date of the bankruptcy declaration.
  5. Extrajudicial collection costs, where recoverable under Dutch law.
  6. If the creditor holds security, a description of the pledge, mortgage or retention of title, with references to registration details.

Sample claim text (for immediate use):

“To the Curator in the bankruptcy of [Debtor Name], case number [XX/XXX]: [Creditor Name], registered at [address], KvK number [number], hereby submits its proof of claim for a total amount of € [amount], comprising € [principal] in unpaid invoices (see attached), € [interest] in statutory interest calculated to [date of bankruptcy declaration], and € [costs] in extrajudicial collection costs. Supporting documentation is enclosed. [If secured:] This claim is secured by a [pledge/mortgage] registered on [date] at [register]. We request that this claim be included on the list of verified creditors.”

Step 3: Submit the Claim to the Curator

The proof of claim and all supporting documents must be submitted directly to the curator, not to the court and not to the debtor. Most curators accept submissions by email (with PDF attachments) or by post. Check the curator’s first report or website for preferred submission methods. There is no prescribed form or court template; a clear letter accompanied by the documents listed above is sufficient.

Key practical points:

  • Retain proof of submission (email delivery receipt or registered post tracking).
  • If filing through a Dutch lawyer or bailiff (deurwaarder), include a signed power of attorney.
  • Claims can be submitted at any time before the verification meeting, but earlier submission increases the likelihood of timely inclusion on the provisional list.

Step 4: Follow Up, Verification, Creditors’ List and Objections

After collecting all submitted claims, the curator verifies each one against the debtor’s records and prepares a provisional list of admitted and disputed claims. This list is filed at the court registry. Creditors should:

  • Request written confirmation from the curator that their claim has been received and provisionally admitted.
  • Review the provisional list when it becomes available, it shows whether your claim has been fully admitted, partially admitted, or disputed.
  • If a claim is disputed, prepare to present evidence at the verification meeting. The court will decide on contested claims after hearing both the creditor and the curator.

The supervisory judge sets the date for the verification meeting (verificatievergadering). Creditors are notified in writing and may attend in person or through counsel. At the meeting, undisputed claims are verified and placed on the definitive creditors’ list. Disputed claims may be referred to a separate court procedure (renvooiprocedure) for resolution.

Step 5: Voting, Distributions and Appeals

Once claims are verified, the curator may propose a composition (akkoord) or, more commonly, proceed to liquidate the estate and prepare a distribution list. Verified unsecured creditors receive a proportional share (pondspondsgewijze uitdeling) of whatever remains after secured and preferential claims and estate costs have been paid. If a creditor disagrees with the distribution list, it may lodge an objection with the court within the prescribed period. Final distributions may take months or, in complex cases, years to complete.

Required Documents and Information for Filing a Creditor Claim

Complete documentation significantly increases the likelihood that a claim is admitted without dispute. The table below lists the documents needed for a proof of claim in a Dutch bankruptcy.

Document Notes
Signed invoice or contract Show original invoice, contract reference, invoice date, VAT and amounts. PDF or certified copy.
Statement of account / ledger extract Bank statement or accounting entry showing the unpaid amount, including date range.
Proof of delivery or acceptance Waybill, delivery note or email confirmation demonstrating that goods or services were provided.
Security documents (if secured creditor) Registered pledge or mortgage deed, assignment agreements. Indicate where registered (Kadaster or other public register).
Court judgments or enforcement decisions Certified copy of any judgment confirming the debt (if applicable).
Documents proving interest and collection costs Contractual interest clause, statutory interest calculation, extrajudicial collection invoices.
Power of attorney / lawyer mandate Required if filing via counsel. Include the lawyer’s bar registration details.
Identity / company registration details KvK extract for Dutch companies; equivalent certificate plus translation for foreign entities.
Sworn translation (where required) The curator or court may request sworn translations of key documents not in Dutch.

Foreign‑Language Documents

There is no statutory requirement that all documents be in Dutch, but curators regularly request sworn translations (beëdigde vertaling) of essential documents, particularly contracts, judgments and security agreements, that are in a language other than Dutch, English, German or French. Creditors should budget for translation costs and submit translations proactively to avoid delays.

Sample Proof‑of‑Claim Checklist

Before submitting, creditors should confirm that their proof of claim package includes: (1) a covering letter setting out the claim, (2) copies of all underlying invoices or the contract, (3) proof of delivery or performance, (4) an interest and costs calculation, (5) security documentation (if applicable), (6) company registration details, and (7) a power of attorney if using counsel. A downloadable proof‑of‑claim template in editable .docx and printable PDF format is available to assist creditors in structuring their submission.

Timeline and Key Deadlines for Filing a Creditor Claim in the Netherlands

The Faillissementswet does not impose a single fixed deadline by which all claims must be submitted. Instead, the practical deadline is the date of the verification meeting set by the supervisory judge. Claims submitted after this date risk being excluded from the provisional list. In practice, the curator’s first report or initial correspondence with known creditors will state a preferred submission date, typically several weeks before the scheduled verification meeting.

Key timeline markers include:

  • Bankruptcy declaration: published in the Central Insolvency Register on the day the court pronounces the judgment.
  • Curator’s first report: usually published within 2–4 weeks, outlining the estate, known creditors and the intended schedule.
  • Claim submission window: open from the date of the bankruptcy declaration until the verification meeting. Early submission is strongly advised.
  • Verification meeting: set by the supervisory judge, typically 4–12 weeks after claims have been collected and the provisional list prepared.
  • Objection period for distribution list: commonly 10 days after the list is filed at the court registry.

Creditor Ranking, Who Gets Paid First

The statutory ranking of claims in a Dutch bankruptcy follows a strict hierarchy. Estate debts (boedelschulden), including the curator’s fees and post‑bankruptcy obligations, are paid first, outside the ranking. Thereafter:

  1. Secured creditors (mortgage holders and pledgees) enforce their rights against the specific collateral.
  2. Preferential creditors, principally the Tax Authority and employees with wage claims, are paid from the unencumbered estate before unsecured creditors.
  3. Unsecured (concurrent) creditors share proportionally in whatever remains.

In practice, industry observers note that distributions to unsecured creditors in Dutch bankruptcies are frequently low, often in the range of a few cents on the euro, and in many cases nothing at all where the estate has insufficient assets.

What Happens If You Miss the Deadline

A creditor that fails to submit its claim before the verification meeting may still attempt to file a late claim, but the curator is under no obligation to include it on the provisional list. Late creditors may need to apply to the court for permission to have their claim verified. This process involves additional cost, delay and uncertainty. The likely practical effect is that late filers are placed at a significant disadvantage, particularly in estates where distribution has already begun.

Costs, Fees and Tax Considerations

Filing a proof of claim with the curator does not itself attract a court fee. However, creditors should budget for the following costs associated with the creditor claim process in the Netherlands:

Item Estimated Amount Notes
Court filing fee (if filing a bankruptcy petition) Variable, see Rechtspraak court fee schedule Applies only if the creditor initiates the bankruptcy proceedings. Amount depends on the court and procedure type.
Curator administration costs Estate‑dependent; hourly or percentage basis Paid from the estate before any distribution to creditors. Amounts vary widely by estate size.
Legal fees (creditor representation) €500–€2,500 (small claims); €3,000–€30,000+ (complex) Depends on claim complexity and whether the claim is disputed. Obtain quotes from counsel.
Bailiff / service costs (deurwaarder) €50–€300 For formal service of documents, if required.
Sworn translation €50–€200 per A4 page May be required for foreign‑language documents.
KvK extract / document retrieval €2–€20 Chamber of Commerce registration extracts.

Any amount recovered through a bankruptcy distribution is taxable income or a reduction in the creditor’s write‑off, depending on the creditor’s own jurisdiction and accounting treatment. Creditors should consult their tax adviser regarding the timing and treatment of write‑offs and recoveries.

What Changes in 2026: Legislative Reforms Affecting Creditor Claims

Several legislative developments between 2024 and 2026 have direct implications for creditors filing claims in Dutch bankruptcies:

  • Abolition of pledge prohibitions (Wet Opheffing Verpandingsverboden). This law, which entered into force in 2025, removes contractual restrictions on the pledging and assignment of trade receivables. As a result, receivables that were previously non‑pledgeable can now serve as collateral, and creditors holding pledges over receivables should ensure their security documentation reflects the new regime. This reform strengthens the position of secured creditors but may also increase competition for assets in the estate.
  • WHOA restructuring framework. The Wet Homologatie Onderhands Akkoord (WHOA), in force since 2021, continues to affect creditor recoveries. Debtors may propose a court‑confirmed composition plan that binds dissenting creditors, including secured creditors, to a restructuring. Creditors filing claims in a traditional bankruptcy should be aware that a WHOA procedure may have preceded or may follow the faillissement, potentially altering their recovery expectations.
  • Practical implications for 2026. Creditors should (1) double‑check security registrations and pledge paperwork against the new receivables rules, (2) include receivable transfer documentation when filing claims, and (3) verify whether a WHOA procedure has affected the debtor’s obligations before quantifying the claim.

Common Pitfalls When Filing a Creditor Claim and How to Avoid Them

  • Sending the claim to the debtor instead of the curator. Once bankruptcy is declared, the debtor loses the authority to manage its affairs. Always submit claims directly to the curator whose details are published in the Central Insolvency Register.
  • Late submission. While there is no single statutory cut‑off, claims filed after the verification meeting may be excluded. Submit as early as possible after identifying the bankruptcy.
  • Incomplete documentation. Claims without supporting invoices, contracts or delivery evidence are more likely to be disputed. Use the documents checklist above to ensure completeness.
  • Failing to evidence security. Secured creditors who do not attach registration details, pledge deeds or mortgage instruments risk having their claim treated as unsecured, a materially worse position in the distribution hierarchy.
  • Ignoring translation requirements. Curators may set aside foreign‑language documents they cannot assess. Proactively provide sworn translations of key materials.
  • Not verifying the curator’s appointment. Before submitting a claim, confirm the curator’s identity and authority through the Central Insolvency Register or court records to avoid sending sensitive financial information to the wrong party.
  • Misunderstanding creditor ranking. Many unsecured creditors overestimate their likely recovery. Understanding where your claim sits in the statutory hierarchy helps set realistic expectations and informs whether contesting a disputed claim is commercially worthwhile.

Need Legal Advice?

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.

Sources

  1. De Rechtspraak, Filing for the Bankruptcy of Another Person or Organisation
  2. Business.gov.nl, Filing for Your Customer’s Bankruptcy
  3. Dutch Civil Law, English Translation of the Dutch Bankruptcy Act
  4. ICLG, Netherlands: Restructuring & Insolvency Laws and Regulations 2026
  5. Stibbe, Abolition of Pledge Prohibitions: New Law in Force
  6. Pinsent Masons, New Law Will Make It Easier for Dutch Businesses to Use Money Owed as Collateral
  7. Russell Advocaten, Debt Recovery in the Netherlands
  8. Stek Lawyers, Pre‑Judgment Attachments: How to Calculate the Creditor’s Claim
  9. De Rechtspraak, Costs Netherlands Commercial Court (NCC)

FAQs

What are the proceedings for insolvency in the Netherlands?
Dutch insolvency law provides three main proceedings under the Faillissementswet: bankruptcy (faillissement), which is a court‑supervised liquidation; suspension of payments (surseance van betaling), a temporary moratorium; and the debt restructuring scheme for natural persons (WSNP). Additionally, the WHOA enables court‑confirmed restructuring plans outside full bankruptcy.
Estate debts (including the curator’s costs) are paid first. Secured creditors enforce against their collateral. Preferential creditors, primarily the Tax Authority and employees, are paid next from the unencumbered estate. Unsecured creditors share proportionally in whatever remains, which in many cases is minimal.
The general limitation period for contractual claims under Dutch law is five years, though specific claims may be subject to shorter or longer periods. Within a bankruptcy, the practical timeline for distributions typically ranges from several months to several years. Estates with insufficient assets may be closed without any distribution, at which point the debt is effectively irrecoverable.
The 10‑10‑10 shorthand refers to a practical scheduling convention used in some Dutch courts, where the verification meeting is set approximately 10 weeks after the bankruptcy declaration, with the curator filing reports at 10‑day intervals. The precise application varies by court. Creditors should always check the actual dates set by the supervisory judge rather than relying on this rule of thumb.
Yes. Foreign creditors have the same right to file claims as Dutch creditors. Within the EU, the curator must notify known creditors in other Member States. Foreign creditors should submit their claim directly to the curator by email or post, include company registration details from their home jurisdiction, and provide sworn translations of essential documents if requested.
A creditor that misses the verification meeting deadline may apply to the court for late verification, but success is not guaranteed. Late claims are unlikely to be included in any distribution already under way. The costs and uncertainty of late applications make timely submission essential. Engaging a Netherlands‑based insolvency lawyer early in the process reduces this risk significantly.
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How to File a Creditor Claim in a Dutch Bankruptcy: Step‑by‑step Guide

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