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Commercial litigation Greece entered a new era on 1 January 2026, when the civil-procedure reforms introduced by Law 5221/2025 (ΦΕΚ A 133/28. 07. 2025) took full effect, overhauling payment-order mechanics and accelerating commercial hearing tracks. These changes layer on top of Law 5016/2023, which modernised the recognition and enforcement of arbitral awards and brought Greek arbitration law closer to UNCITRAL Model Law standards. Together, the two statutes rewrite the enforcement playbook for creditors, in-house counsel and restructuring advisers who need to collect on commercial claims against Greek-domiciled debtors or enforce cross-border awards in Greece.
This article provides a practical, decision-matrix-driven guide to the three principal enforcement routes now available, arbitral-award recognition, payment orders and ordinary civil proceedings, covering deadlines, documentary requirements, stay risks and tactical recommendations for each.
Before diving into procedural detail, creditors and general counsel need an at-a-glance comparison. The table below maps each enforcement route to the claimant profile it best serves and the realistic timeline under the 2026 rules.
| Enforcement Route | Best For / Typical Claimant Profile | Typical Timeline & Key Risk (Greece, 2026) |
|---|---|---|
| Recognition & enforcement of arbitral award (Law 5016/2023 / New York Convention) | Cross-border awards against Greek debtors; party seeking global enforcement or immediate conservatory measures; award already final and binding. | Weeks to a few months for a recognition order; enforcement actions follow quickly. Annulment proceedings do not automatically stay enforcement (Art. 44(3), Law 5016/2023). Risk: debtor may challenge recognition on NY Convention grounds. |
| Payment order (Law 5221/2025) | Documentary, largely undisputed monetary claims, unpaid invoices, signed contracts, promissory notes; creditor wants fast attachment and settlement leverage. | Days to weeks for issuance; short statutory objection window for the debtor. Accelerated hearing windows under new civil-procedure rules (effective 1 January 2026). Risk: debtor files opposition and claim shifts to ordinary track. |
| Regular civil enforcement (ordinary proceedings) | Complex disputes requiring full evidentiary process, expert evidence or injunctive relief beyond mere monetary collection. | Months to years depending on court backlog and complexity. New procedural accelerations under Law 5221/2025 help certain commercial tracks, but this route remains the slowest. |
Law 5016/2023 overhauled Greek arbitration law, replacing the previous patchwork with a unified statute aligned with the UNCITRAL Model Law. For creditors holding arbitral awards, whether domestic or foreign, the statute provides a streamlined pathway for enforcing arbitral awards Greece-wide through the competent single-member first-instance court.
An arbitral award becomes eligible for recognition and enforcement in Greece once it is final and binding on the parties under the law governing the arbitration. For foreign awards, Greece’s ratification of the 1958 New York Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards provides the primary treaty framework. This means a Convention-country award benefits from a presumption of enforceability, and the Greek court’s review is limited to the narrow refusal grounds set out in Article V of the Convention.
Domestic awards rendered under Greek law are enforceable upon deposit with the secretariat of the competent court, as provided by Law 5016/2023. The distinction matters for timing: a domestic award can move to enforcement almost immediately after deposit, while a foreign award requires a formal recognition application.
The following documentary checklist applies to applications for recognition of foreign awards Greece courts will examine:
Industry observers expect the recognition process to be completed in a matter of weeks where the documentary file is complete and unopposed, though contested applications can extend to several months.
Greek courts may refuse recognition of foreign awards Greece-bound enforcement of which is sought on the following grounds, mirroring Article V of the New York Convention:
Greek courts have historically interpreted the public-policy exception narrowly, limiting it to fundamental principles of the Greek legal order rather than mere disagreement with the merits of the award.
A critical innovation of Law 5016/2023 for commercial litigation Greece practitioners is Article 44(3): the filing of an application to annul an arbitral award does not automatically stay its enforceability. This represents a significant shift. Under the previous regime, annulment challenges could effectively freeze enforcement for years. Now, the award creditor may proceed with enforcement while the annulment application is pending, unless the court specifically orders a stay upon the debtor’s application and subject to stringent conditions.
Early indications suggest that Greek courts are granting stays sparingly, requiring the applicant to demonstrate both a prima-facie meritorious annulment ground and the risk of irreparable harm. For creditors, this means that the filing of a tactical annulment by the debtor is no longer the enforcement roadblock it once was.
Effective 1 January 2026, Law 5221/2025 reformed key provisions of the Greek Code of Civil Procedure, including the payment-order regime and accelerated commercial procedure Greece courts now apply to documentary monetary claims.
A payment order (διαταγή πληρωμής) is an ex parte judicial order directing a debtor to pay a specified sum. It does not require a full hearing; instead, the creditor files an application supported by documentary evidence, and the judge issues the order based on the papers alone. Under the reforms introduced by Law 5221/2025, the procedural framework for obtaining and challenging payment orders has been tightened, with compressed timelines that benefit creditors pursuing undisputed monetary claims.
To obtain a payment order Greece 2026 courts will require the claimant to demonstrate:
Claims that depend on oral testimony, expert valuation or disputed factual findings are not suitable for the payment-order track and must proceed through ordinary or accelerated civil proceedings.
The payment-order application is filed with the competent single-member first-instance court (for claims within its jurisdiction) or the multi-member first-instance court (for higher-value claims). The filing must include:
If the judge is satisfied, the payment order is issued ex parte, typically within days of filing under the new accelerated timelines. The order is then served on the debtor together with a copy of the application and supporting documents.
Once served, the debtor may file an opposition (ανακοπή) challenging the payment order. Under the Law 5221/2025 reforms, the opposition window and subsequent hearing timelines have been recalibrated to prevent the procedural delays that historically undermined the payment-order remedy’s effectiveness. The debtor must present its grounds, such as payment, set-off, invalidity of the underlying obligation, or procedural defects, within the statutory deadline. If opposition is filed, the matter transitions to a contested hearing, but the payment order remains provisionally enforceable unless the court grants a suspension.
A payment order can serve as the basis for immediate enforcement measures, including seizure of movable and immovable assets, garnishment of bank accounts, and registration of judicial liens. This makes the payment order Greece 2026 practitioners’ tool of first resort when a creditor needs fast attachment of debtor assets to prevent dissipation, particularly in commercial relationships where the debtor’s financial stability is uncertain.
Understanding how enforcement deadlines Greece-wide compare across routes is essential for tactical planning. The following timeline table summarises the key procedural milestones for each enforcement path under the 2026 framework.
| Procedural Step | Arbitral Award Recognition (Law 5016/2023) | Payment Order (Law 5221/2025) | Regular Civil Proceedings |
|---|---|---|---|
| Filing of application / claim | Application for recognition filed with competent first-instance court | Ex parte application filed with supporting documents | Lawsuit filed; service on defendant required |
| Court review / first hearing | Weeks (documentary review; no adversarial hearing unless debtor opposes) | Days to weeks (ex parte issuance based on documents alone) | Months (first hearing scheduled per court calendar; accelerated tracks under Law 5221/2025 compress this for certain commercial matters) |
| Debtor response / opposition deadline | Debtor may seek annulment or oppose recognition on NY Convention grounds; no automatic stay of enforcement (Art. 44(3)) | Statutory opposition window after service of the order; compressed under 2026 reforms | Standard pleading deadlines apply; written submissions and counter-evidence per procedural schedule |
| Enforcement measures available | Immediately upon recognition order, asset seizure, garnishment, judicial lien | Immediately upon issuance of the order, asset seizure, bank garnishment, judicial lien (provisionally enforceable even if opposed) | Only after final judgment or provisional enforcement order |
| Typical total timeline to enforcement | Weeks to months (faster where unopposed; annulment does not stay enforcement) | Days to weeks (fastest route for documentary claims) | Months to years (even with accelerated commercial procedure Greece reforms) |
The critical takeaway for commercial litigation Greece decision-makers: where a creditor already holds a final arbitral award, the Law 5016/2023 recognition route and a payment order under Law 5221/2025 operate on comparable fast timelines. The choice turns on the nature of the underlying claim and available evidence, not on raw speed alone. For claimants without an existing award, a payment order is almost always the fastest path to provisional enforcement, provided the claim is documentary in nature.
Both routes involve court filing fees, legal representation costs and enforcement agent (δικαστικός επιμελητής) fees for service and execution. However, the cost profiles diverge in several respects:
Practitioners should be alert to the following practical traps when pursuing commercial litigation Greece enforcement:
For in-house counsel seeking to maximise leverage before formal enforcement, the 2026 reforms create a powerful combination:
The following checklists provide a starting point for practitioners preparing enforcement applications. Detailed procedural checklists and sample pleadings for each route will be published as companion articles.
The 2026 enforcement landscape in Greece offers creditors and litigators more options, and more speed, than at any point in recent memory. Law 5016/2023 ensures that arbitral awards are enforceable without being held hostage to tactical annulment challenges, while Law 5221/2025’s payment-order reforms provide a rapid, document-driven collection route that industry observers expect will significantly reduce average enforcement times for straightforward commercial debts. The likely practical effect is a shift in debtor behaviour: with provisional enforceability available almost immediately, debtors face stronger incentives to negotiate early.
For practitioners navigating commercial litigation Greece, the decision between enforcement routes should be driven by the nature of the claim, the quality of the documentary evidence and the location of the debtor’s assets, and the checklists and timelines in this guide provide the framework for that decision.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Konstantinos Bairaktaris at Papachatzis I Bairaktaris (PB legal), a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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