Our Expert in Liechtenstein
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Understanding how to collect a debt in Liechtenstein requires creditors to navigate a structured sequence that begins with an extrajudicial demand letter and, if the debtor does not pay voluntarily, escalates through court proceedings to enforcement and, where necessary, insolvency. The Principality’s civil procedure framework, anchored in the Zivilprozessordnung (ZPO) and supplemented by the Ausserstreitgesetz for non‑contentious matters, governs every stage from claim filing at the Landgericht (Court of Justice) through appeal at the Obergericht (Court of Appeal). This guide sets out the full debt collection procedure, documents needed, realistic timelines, costs, and the practical changes that affect asset‑recovery strategy in 2026.
It is written for B2B creditors, in‑house counsel and law firms preparing to recover unpaid invoices against debtors who reside in, or hold assets within, Liechtenstein.
Debt collection in Liechtenstein follows a two‑track model. The first track is amicable (extrajudicial): the creditor sends a formal demand letter, follows up with reminders, and may engage a collection agent or counsel to negotiate payment or an instalment plan. If the debtor refuses to pay or disputes the claim, the creditor moves to the second track, judicial enforcement.
The judicial track involves filing a claim under the ZPO, obtaining a judgment (or default judgment if the debtor fails to defend), and then applying for execution measures such as bank‑account garnishment, seizure of movable property, or forced sale of real estate. Where the debtor is insolvent, the creditor may instead file for insolvency proceedings and register its claim with the insolvency administrator.
For creditors holding foreign judgments or arbitral awards, a separate recognition step is required before enforcement can begin. Liechtenstein is not a party to the Lugano Convention, so recognition of foreign court judgments depends on bilateral treaties or the domestic rules on reciprocity. Arbitral awards benefit from the New York Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards, to which Liechtenstein is a contracting state.
Any natural person, company or foreign creditor may pursue debt collection in Liechtenstein, provided the claim has a sufficient connection to the jurisdiction. The key jurisdictional prerequisites are:
Foreign creditors enjoy the same standing as domestic ones, though they may be required to provide security for costs (cautio iudicatum solvi) if reciprocal treaties do not exempt them.
Representation. Parties may represent themselves in lower‑value disputes, but engaging a Liechtenstein‑admitted attorney (Rechtsanwalt) is mandatory for proceedings before the Obergericht and strongly recommended at every stage. Notarial involvement may be required where foreign documents need authentication or where enforcement titles must be notarised.
Collection agencies. Liechtenstein does not impose a specific licence or permit requirement on debt‑collection agencies. However, agencies must comply with general consumer‑protection rules and data‑protection legislation when contacting debtors.
The debt collection procedure begins with a formal written demand (Mahnung). The letter should be sent by registered post to create proof of delivery and should contain the following elements:
If the debtor does not respond to the first demand, send a second reminder and, where commercially appropriate, offer an instalment arrangement. Retain copies of all correspondence and delivery receipts, these form part of the evidence file if court proceedings become necessary. The full list of documents needed is set out in the Required Documents section below.
When the debtor does not pay or actively disputes the claim, the creditor files a civil action at the Landgericht in Vaduz, Liechtenstein’s sole first‑instance court of general jurisdiction. The claim (Klage) must set out the factual and legal basis of the debt, the amount demanded (principal, interest, costs), and a list of evidence.
Key procedural points under the ZPO:
Creditors should request provisional measures, such as a freezing order over the debtor’s bank accounts, at the time of filing if there is a risk of asset dissipation.
Once the creditor holds a final, enforceable title (a court judgment that is no longer subject to ordinary appeal, or an enforceable arbitral award), it applies to the competent enforcement authority for execution. The execution procedure in Liechtenstein provides for several measures:
The debtor may file objections or apply for a stay of execution on limited grounds (e.g., payment already made, pending appeal with suspensive effect). Enforcement of a bank‑account garnishment typically begins within 2–8 weeks of application; real‑estate proceedings take considerably longer.
If execution reveals that the debtor has insufficient attachable assets, the creditor should assess whether insolvency proceedings offer a better recovery route. Key options include:
For debtors with cross‑border operations, particularly those connected to Switzerland or Austria, coordination with local counsel in each jurisdiction is essential. Liechtenstein’s insolvency framework does not automatically recognise foreign insolvency proceedings, so parallel measures may be necessary.
Creditors holding a foreign court judgment must apply for recognition before enforcement can proceed. Because Liechtenstein is not a party to the Lugano Convention, recognition depends on:
Arbitral awards enjoy a more streamlined route: Liechtenstein is a contracting state to the New York Convention, so foreign arbitral awards are enforceable subject to the limited grounds for refusal set out in the Convention.
The recognition application is filed at the Landgericht. The creditor must submit a certified copy of the judgment or award, together with a certified German translation where the original is in another language.
| Step | Who does it | Typical duration |
|---|---|---|
| Extrajudicial demand / reminder | Creditor or counsel / collection agent | 7–21 days (allow debtor 7–14 days to respond) |
| File claim at the Landgericht | Creditor (via counsel) | 1–3 days to file; court intake 1–4 weeks |
| Court proceedings to judgment (uncontested / default) | Landgericht | 1–3 months |
| Court proceedings to judgment (contested) | Landgericht | 3–9 months (longer for complex cases) |
| Appeal | Obergericht | 3–9 months |
| Apply for enforcement / execution | Creditor (via bailiff / execution office) | 2–8 weeks to commence; asset‑seizure timing varies |
| Asset tracing / cross‑border tracing | Counsel + forensic specialist | 2–12+ weeks (complex cases) |
| Insolvency proceedings (opening to claims phase) | Insolvency court / administrator | 2–6 months to opening; full process varies |
A well‑organised evidence file accelerates every stage of the debt collection procedure. The table below lists the documents needed, together with notes on format, authentication and translation requirements. As a general rule, any document not originally in German must be accompanied by a certified translation, and foreign public documents may require an apostille (under the Hague Apostille Convention, to which Liechtenstein is a party) or consular legalisation.
| Document | Notes |
|---|---|
| Original or copy of the underlying contract | Signed contract or confirmed electronic equivalent. If executed abroad, a notarised copy and certified German translation may be required. |
| Invoices and statement of account | Creditor‑issued invoices, chronological payment history, and calculation of accrued interest or penalties. |
| Proof of delivery / acceptance | Delivery notes, signed proof‑of‑delivery slips, email confirmations, or acceptance certificates. |
| Correspondence and demand letters | Copies of all extrajudicial demands, registered‑post receipts, and relevant email threads. |
| Payment acknowledgement or admission of debt | Any signed acknowledgement of liability, partial‑payment receipts, or written admissions. |
| Power of attorney for counsel | Dated and signed POA. If executed abroad, apostille or consular certification may be needed. |
| Judgment or enforceable title | Court‑certified copy of the judgment or authenticated arbitral award. Translation into German required if in another language. |
| Asset information / bank details | Known bank‑account numbers, property register extracts, or results of asset‑tracing inquiries. |
| Commercial register extract (corporate debtor) | Shows the debtor’s registered office, authorised signatories and current status. |
| Identification documents | Passport or ID of the creditor’s representative; corporate constitutional documents for company creditors. |
Several statutory deadlines shape the debt collection procedure in Liechtenstein. Missing any of them can delay recovery or, in the worst case, extinguish the claim entirely.
Limitation periods. Liechtenstein’s substantive private law, rooted in provisions modelled on the Austrian Allgemeines Bürgerliches Gesetzbuch (ABGB), prescribes general limitation periods for contractual claims. Creditors should verify the specific limitation period applicable to their claim type well before it expires, because once a claim is time‑barred the court will dismiss it if the debtor raises the defence. Limitation is interrupted by filing suit or by a written acknowledgement of debt.
Appeal windows. Under the ZPO, a party wishing to appeal a Landgericht judgment to the Obergericht must file the appeal within the statutory deadline prescribed for the relevant type of decision. Failure to appeal in time renders the judgment final and enforceable.
Enforcement objection periods. A debtor served with an enforcement order may lodge an objection within the timeframe set by the enforcement rules. If no objection is filed, enforcement proceeds.
Insolvency claim registration. Once insolvency proceedings are opened, the insolvency administrator publishes a call for creditors to register their claims. Missing the registration deadline does not extinguish the claim, but it may result in reduced or deferred distributions.
Practical guidance. Creditors should diarise every procedural deadline immediately upon receipt of a court communication. Local counsel will track court‑imposed deadlines, but the creditor must ensure that instructions and supporting documents reach counsel well in advance.
Costs vary by claim size, the stage reached, and whether the matter is contested. The table below provides indicative ranges.
| Item | Typical amount / range | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Extrajudicial demand (registered mail / counsel letter) | CHF 20–200 | Registered post plus counsel’s flat fee for drafting a demand letter. |
| Court filing fee | CHF 50–500+ | Calculated on a statutory scale linked to the claim value. Higher‑value claims attract proportionally higher fees. |
| Lawyer fees | CHF 200–600 per hour; fixed or contingency also used | Rates depend on firm and complexity. Contingency arrangements are commercially permissible. |
| Bailiff / enforcement fees | CHF 100–1,000+ | Bank‑account garnishment is less costly; forced sale of real estate incurs higher charges. |
| Translation / notarisation | CHF 50–500 per document | Certified translation into German; apostille or notarisation where required for foreign documents. |
| Insolvency filing and administration | Varies widely | Administrator fees and statutory distribution costs apply if insolvency proceedings are opened. |
| Default interest and cost recovery | Statutory rate + court‑ordered costs | The court may award the successful party recovery of court fees and a portion of legal costs. |
Tax note. Interest received on judgment debts is generally taxable income for the creditor. Counsel fees and enforcement costs incurred in the course of business may be deductible expenses. Creditors should consult their tax adviser on the treatment of recovered amounts and associated costs.
Creditors planning how to collect a debt in Liechtenstein in 2026 should be aware of evolving practices in asset‑recovery and cross‑border cooperation. Industry observers expect that enhanced due‑diligence and beneficial‑ownership transparency requirements, driven by updates to Liechtenstein’s anti‑money‑laundering and counter‑terrorism financing (AML/CTF) framework, will make it easier for creditors (and their counsel) to identify and trace debtor assets held through corporate structures or trusts.
The likely practical effects include faster responses from Liechtenstein banks to court‑ordered information requests, improved access to beneficial‑ownership register data, and more efficient mutual legal assistance with treaty partners (notably Switzerland and Austria). Early indications suggest that counsel are increasingly requesting information preservation orders at the outset of proceedings to prevent asset dissipation before a judgment is obtained.
For cross‑border claims, creditors should coordinate with local counsel as early as possible to take advantage of these measures. Requesting targeted asset‑tracing before filing suit, rather than after a judgment proves difficult to enforce, is now regarded as best practice by experienced enforcement practitioners.
Knowing how to collect a debt in Liechtenstein means understanding a clear sequence: demand, litigate, enforce, and, if assets are insufficient, consider insolvency. Each stage has its own documentary requirements, statutory deadlines and cost implications. With 2026 developments improving asset‑tracing and cross‑border cooperation, creditors who act early and methodically stand the best chance of full recovery. Because procedural missteps can be costly and difficult to reverse, engaging experienced Liechtenstein counsel at the earliest opportunity remains the single most effective step a creditor can take.
This article is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Laws, fees and procedural deadlines may change. Creditors should consult a qualified Liechtenstein lawyer for advice tailored to their specific circumstances. Information was last reviewed on July 15, 2026.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Sabine Dorn at Müller & Partner Rechntsanwältea, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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