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When a Belgian construction project goes wrong, defective works, missed deadlines, unpaid invoices, or an insolvent subcontractor, the parties face a critical procedural choice before they can resolve the substance of the dispute. The question of arbitration vs litigation for Belgium construction disputes is not academic: it directly determines how much you will spend, how long you will wait, what remedies are available, and whether the final decision can be enforced across borders.
Since Belgium modernised its arbitration framework through the Law of 24 June 2013 (amending Part Six of the Belgian Judicial Code) and the Belgian Centre for Arbitration and Mediation (CEPANI) has continued to refine its institutional rules, the arbitration route has become genuinely competitive with court litigation for many construction cases. This guide gives contractors, developers, project owners and their commercial counsel a clear, dimension-by-dimension comparison and a concrete decision framework to act on now.
Arbitration is a private, consensual process in which the parties submit their dispute to one or more independent arbitrators whose award is final and binding. In Belgium, the legal foundation sits in Part Six of the Judicial Code (Articles 1676–1723), as rewritten by the Law of 24 June 2013. Any commercial construction dispute may be submitted to arbitration provided the parties have a valid arbitration agreement, typically an arbitration clause in the building contract or a separate submission agreement concluded after the dispute arises.
Belgian construction parties overwhelmingly choose between two arbitration formats:
An arbitral tribunal seated in Belgium may order the full range of contractual and tortious remedies available under Belgian law: damages, specific performance, price reductions, and phased payment schedules tailored to the construction project. Tribunals may also appoint technical experts, a critical advantage in disputes over structural defects, waterproofing failures or design liability. Under CEPANI Rules, parties can request an emergency arbitrator to obtain interim measures before the full tribunal is constituted, addressing urgent issues such as preserving evidence on-site or preventing demolition of disputed works.
If you are negotiating a Belgian building contract and considering an arbitration clause, address these points at the drafting stage:
Practical example: A Belgian main contractor on a cross-border infrastructure project with Dutch and German subcontractors should prefer arbitration when confidentiality is important, when the dispute involves technical issues best assessed by an engineer-arbitrator, and when the resulting award needs to be enforceable in multiple jurisdictions under the New York Convention.
Court litigation remains the default construction dispute resolution path in Belgium when no valid arbitration clause exists or when the parties choose not to arbitrate. Belgian courts offer a structured, multi-level system with full appellate review, a feature that arbitration deliberately sacrifices for finality.
Belgian construction litigation typically unfolds through the following levels:
Belgian court proceedings involve mandatory written submissions (conclusions), a structured calendar set by the court or agreed by the parties, and in construction cases, frequent court-appointed expert investigations (expertise judiciaire). These expert proceedings, while thorough, are often cited as the single greatest driver of delay and cost in Belgian construction litigation.
Belgian courts can grant interim injunctive relief through summary proceedings (référé / kort geding), which are available immediately and without needing an arbitration agreement. This is a material advantage when urgent preservation of evidence or a stop-work order is needed before the main proceedings begin. Courts may award damages, order specific performance and appoint judicial experts, but Belgian law does not recognise punitive damages.
Within the European Union, Belgian court judgments circulate freely under the Brussels I Recast Regulation (Regulation 1215/2012), which provides for automatic recognition without an exequatur in other EU Member States. Outside the EU, enforcement depends on bilateral treaties and local enforcement rules, a context in which arbitration awards enforceable under the New York Convention often have a practical advantage.
Practical example: A Belgian property developer facing an urgent structural-safety issue during construction should prefer court litigation when immediate interim relief from a state judge is essential, when a full right of appeal is a commercial priority, or when the dispute value is relatively low and the administrative costs of arbitration would be disproportionate.
The following table is the centrepiece of the arbitration vs litigation Belgium construction decision. Use it to identify which forum aligns with your project’s priorities, then read the dimension-by-dimension analysis below for the detail behind each row.
| Dimension | Arbitration | Court Litigation |
|---|---|---|
| Eligibility & arbitrability | Requires valid arbitration agreement; almost all commercial construction disputes are arbitrable under Belgian law | Available by default; no agreement needed, any party can sue |
| Typical speed | CEPANI targets final award within 6–12 months (expedited: 6 months); ad hoc can be longer | First instance: typically 2–4 years including judicial expertise; appeal adds 1–2 years |
| Cost profile | Higher upfront (admin fees + arbitrator fees); potentially lower total cost due to shorter duration | Lower filing fees; total cost often higher due to extended procedural phases and judicial expert fees |
| Interim relief / emergency measures | Emergency arbitrator under CEPANI Rules; state courts remain available for urgent interim measures even during arbitration | Full range of interim relief via summary proceedings (référé / kort geding), fast and effective |
| Remedies & technical orders | Damages, specific performance, phased payment orders, party-appointed and tribunal-appointed experts | Damages, specific performance, court-appointed judicial expertise (often lengthy) |
| Enforceability (domestic & foreign) | Domestic: enforcement via exequatur from Belgian court; international: enforceable in 170+ New York Convention states | EU: automatic recognition under Brussels I Recast; outside EU: treaty-dependent, often more complex |
| Appeal / review options | No appeal on the merits; limited annulment grounds (Article 1717 Judicial Code: procedural defects, public policy) | Full appeal on facts and law; cassation appeal on law only |
| Confidentiality | Private proceedings; award not published unless parties consent | Public hearings and public judgments (with limited exceptions) |
| Multi-party joinder | Possible if arbitration clause covers all parties; CEPANI Rules provide for consolidation and joinder | Broad joinder and third-party proceedings available as of right |
| Cross-border suitability | Strong, neutral forum, enforceable worldwide, language flexibility | Limited to EU automatic enforcement; language typically Dutch or French |
How to read this table:
Cost is typically the first question contractors and developers ask. The answer depends on dispute complexity, value and duration rather than forum alone.
| Cost item | Arbitration (CEPANI institutional) | Court litigation |
|---|---|---|
| Filing / registration fee | CEPANI administrative fee calculated on amount in dispute per published fee schedule | Court registration fee (rolrecht), modest fixed amount |
| Decision-maker fees | Arbitrator fees per CEPANI schedule (sole arbitrator significantly less than three-member tribunal) | No judge fees, funded by the state |
| Expert costs | Party-appointed or tribunal-appointed; costs controlled by tribunal | Court-appointed judicial expert, often the largest single cost item; fees set by the expert and approved by court |
| Legal counsel fees | Typically concentrated over 6–12 months | Spread over 2–5+ years; total often higher due to extended proceedings |
| Recovery of costs | Tribunal may allocate costs between parties in the award | Winning party recovers capped procedural indemnity (indemnité de procédure / rechtsplegingsvergoeding); actual lawyer fees rarely fully recovered |
The upfront cost of arbitration is higher because the parties pay the arbitrators directly. However, the shorter duration of arbitration proceedings often results in lower total legal spend when counsel fees and the cost of capital tied up in the dispute are factored in. Litigation funding is gradually becoming available in Belgium for large-value construction cases, which can offset the upfront arbitration cost for claimants who qualify. Parties should negotiate cost-allocation mechanisms and fee caps in the arbitration clause at the contract stage.
Time to resolve a construction dispute has direct cashflow consequences. CEPANI’s institutional rules target a final award within six months for expedited proceedings and aim for completion within twelve months for standard cases. By contrast, Belgian court litigation for construction disputes, particularly where a judicial expertise is ordered, routinely takes two to four years at first instance. An appeal adds one to two further years. The time to resolve a construction dispute through Belgian courts is driven primarily by the judicial expert investigation phase, which in complex defect cases can itself last twelve to twenty-four months. For parties whose projects or businesses cannot absorb multi-year uncertainty, arbitration’s compressed timetable is a decisive factor.
Belgium is a party to the New York Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards, making arbitral awards rendered in Belgium enforceable in over 170 contracting states. Domestically, an arbitral award is enforced through an exequatur procedure before the Court of First Instance, a largely formal process. The grounds for setting aside an award are limited to those listed in Article 1717 of the Judicial Code: procedural irregularity, lack of a valid arbitration agreement, excess of jurisdiction, or violation of public policy. There is no appeal on the merits.
Court judgments, by contrast, enjoy full appellate review. Within the EU, Belgian judgments benefit from automatic recognition under the Brussels I Recast Regulation. Outside the EU, enforcement depends on bilateral treaties and can be significantly more cumbersome than enforcing an arbitral award under the New York Convention. For construction projects involving non-EU parties or assets, arbitration offers a materially stronger enforceability pathway.
Both forums can apply Belgium’s construction liability regime, including the ten-year liability (responsabilité décennale / tienjarige aansprakelijkheid) applicable to architects and contractors for serious structural defects. An arbitral tribunal seated in Belgium applies the same substantive law as a court. The key difference lies in procedural flexibility: arbitration allows the tribunal to order phased technical remediation, appoint its own experts with targeted mandates, and tailor the award timetable to the project’s construction schedule, remedies that are harder to achieve in the more rigid court process.
Multi-party construction disputes, involving owners, architects, main contractors and multiple subcontractors, create practical challenges in both forums. In court, joinder and third-party proceedings are available as of right. In arbitration, joinder requires that all parties have consented to the same arbitration agreement or clause, making well-drafted multi-party arbitration clauses essential at the contract stage. CEPANI Rules expressly provide for consolidation of related arbitrations and joinder of additional parties, but the absence of a shared clause remains a barrier. Arbitration proceedings are conducted in the language chosen by the parties, offering flexibility for international projects; Belgian court proceedings are conducted in Dutch, French or German depending on the judicial district.
Three developments have shifted the commercial calculus for construction dispute resolution in Belgium:
Choose arbitration when:
Choose litigation when:
| If your priority is… | Choose… |
|---|---|
| Speed and finality | Arbitration (CEPANI) |
| Cross-border enforcement | Arbitration (New York Convention) |
| Full appellate review | Court litigation |
| Lowest upfront cost | Court litigation |
| Technical expertise in the decision-maker | Arbitration |
| Confidential process | Arbitration |
| Immediate emergency relief | Court litigation (summary proceedings) |
| Multi-party joinder without shared clause | Court litigation |
Immediate steps for operations teams:
The arbitration-or-litigation decision is best made with specialist advice. Engage a Belgian construction disputes lawyer in three specific situations:
What to ask your Belgian construction lawyer:
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Wim Nackaerts at Strada Legale, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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