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Netherlands' 2026 Court Fee Increases, What In‑house Teams Must Know About Litigation Costs, Recoverability and Cross‑border Enforcement

By Global Law Experts
– posted 1 hour ago

The Netherlands adjusted its court fees (griffierechten) on 1 January 2026, continuing a pattern of annual index-linked increases that has pushed upfront filing costs materially higher across every level of the Dutch judiciary. For general counsel, CFOs and claims teams managing commercial litigation in the Netherlands, the 2026 fee regime demands a fresh look at claim economics, settlement strategy and enforcement budgets. Court fees in the Netherlands now range from a few hundred euros for modest cantonal claims to tens of thousands of euros for high-value proceedings at district-court level or at the Netherlands Commercial Court (NCC), meaning that the decision whether to litigate, settle or explore alternative dispute resolution has become a live financial question.

This guide maps the current fee structure, explains who pays and when, walks through recoverability rules and cost-shifting mechanics, and sets out a practical enforcement checklist for foreign claimants, giving in-house teams the information they need to make an informed litigation strategy in the Netherlands.

How the 2026 Court Fee Increases Work, Scope and Timeline

Dutch court fees are set by ministerial decree under the Wet griffierechten burgerlijke zaken (WGBZ) and are adjusted annually, typically effective 1 January. The 2026 court fee increase follows the established indexation mechanism, applying updated rates across cantonal courts (kantonrechter), district courts (rechtbanken), courts of appeal (gerechtshoven) and the Supreme Court (Hoge Raad). The NCC, which sits within the Amsterdam District Court, publishes its own fixed fee schedule aligned with these updates.

Courts Affected

  • Cantonal court. Handles claims up to €25,000 and specific matters such as employment and tenancy disputes. Fees are the lowest in the system, though even here the 2026 rates represent a noticeable increase over prior years.
  • District court. First-instance court for civil and commercial claims above €25,000. Fees are tiered by claim value and by whether the claimant is a natural person or a legal entity.
  • Court of appeal. Higher fees apply at the appellate stage, reflecting the increased procedural complexity.
  • Supreme Court. Cassation proceedings carry the highest standard fees in the ordinary court system.
  • Netherlands Commercial Court (NCC). A specialist English-language chamber with fixed, substantially higher filing fees designed to fund its specialised services.

Effective Date and Legislative Reference

The 2026 rates took effect on 1 January 2026, published via a ministerial regulation amending the fee schedule under the WGBZ. The Rechtspraak (Dutch judiciary) publishes the full fee tables on its website, and the Dutch Government’s English-language portal provides a summary of payment obligations. In-house teams should consult these primary sources for the most current figures, as interim corrections are occasionally issued.

Court Level Pre‑2026 Practice 2026 Change / Implication
Cantonal court (claims ≤ €25,000) Fees ranged from roughly €90 to €520 depending on claim value and claimant type Indexed upward; still the most affordable tier but higher absolute cost for repeat-claimant portfolios
District court (claims > €25,000) Fees for legal entities reached approximately €2,000–€4,200 for high-value claims 2026 rates push top-tier fees for legal entities above €4,200; sharpens the break-even calculus on mid-value claims
Court of appeal Appellate fees for legal entities around €2,000–€6,000+ Higher indexed fees increase the cost of pursuing or defending appeals; reinforces the need for early settlement analysis
Supreme Court Cassation fees up to approximately €7,000+ for legal entities Further increase; reinforces the financial barrier to cassation for marginal cases
NCC (first instance) Fixed fee of €15,000 per party Fee confirmed at €15,000 per party in 2026; NCC appeal (NCCA) carries a separate €20,000 fee, cost justified only for complex, high-value international disputes

Note: exact euro amounts are drawn from Rechtspraak.nl and Government.nl fee schedules. Readers should verify current rates directly, as fees may be further adjusted by interim decree.

Court Fee Mechanics: Who Pays, When and How

In Dutch civil proceedings, both the claimant and the respondent are required to pay court fees, but the timing and amount differ. Understanding these mechanics is essential for accurate litigation budgeting.

Plaintiff vs Defendant Obligations

The plaintiff pays the applicable court fee when initiating proceedings. In summons procedures (dagvaardingsprocedure), the fee is due after the case is enrolled with the court registry. In petition procedures (verzoekschriftprocedure), the fee is payable upon filing the petition. The defendant also pays a court fee when appearing in the proceedings, in a summons case, this is triggered when the defendant files a statement of defence. The fee for the defendant is generally the same category-based amount as the plaintiff’s fee. If the defendant does not appear, the defendant owes no fee, but the plaintiff’s fee still applies.

When Fees Are Due and the Effect on Case Filing

Court fees must be paid within a specified period after the court issues a payment notice. Failure to pay leads to the case being struck from the court’s roll, effectively stalling proceedings. For legal entities, the category most relevant to commercial litigation in the Netherlands, the fees are higher than those for natural persons, a distinction that runs through every tier of the Dutch system. Special provisions apply for indigent litigants (through subsidised legal aid), but these rarely apply to corporate claimants. In practice, the immediate cash outflow required at filing means that court fees must be budgeted as a first-order cost, not an afterthought.

Litigating vs Settling, Recalculating Claim Economics Under the 2026 Court Fee Increase

Higher court fees in the Netherlands directly affect the financial viability of litigation, especially for mid-range claims where the gap between potential recovery and total litigation spend is narrowest. In-house teams should recalculate break-even thresholds using a simple framework that accounts for upfront court fees, expected external counsel fees and likely recoverable amounts.

Worked Examples: Three Claim Scenarios

Scenario A, Low-value claim (under €25,000). A cantonal-court claim by a legal entity for €20,000. The 2026 court fee for this bracket is several hundred euros. External counsel costs (assuming a straightforward debt recovery) typically range from €3,000 to €8,000. Even if the full court fee is recoverable upon a successful outcome, the combined litigation costs may consume 20–40 per cent of the claim value. Early settlement or use of a European Payment Order procedure may be more efficient.

Scenario B, Mid-value claim (€25,000–€100,000). A district-court claim by a legal entity for €75,000. The 2026 court fee for legal entities in this bracket may sit around €2,000. External counsel costs for a contested first-instance case commonly range from €15,000 to €40,000. Total litigation costs (including the defendant’s court fee, if cost-shifted) therefore range from roughly €17,000 to €42,000, meaning the claimant needs to recover at least 25–55 per cent of the claim just to break even on costs. The higher the court fee, the more important it becomes to conduct a realistic merits assessment before filing.

Scenario C, High-value claim (above €100,000). A district-court or NCC claim for €1 million. Court fees for legal entities at the highest district-court tier exceed €4,200 in 2026; at the NCC, the fixed fee is €15,000. External counsel costs for complex commercial litigation commonly range from €50,000 to €200,000 or more through first instance. While the proportional impact of court fees is lower at this level, the aggregate cost, especially if appeal and enforcement fees are included, warrants formal litigation budgeting and board-level approval.

Break-Even Decision Framework

A simple formula for assessing claim viability is:

Net litigation upside = (Claim value × probability of success) − (Court fees + External counsel fees + Enforcement costs) − Irrecoverable cost portion

If the net litigation upside is negative or marginal, settlement, mediation or alternative dispute resolution should be prioritised. In-house teams should prepare this calculation before any filing decision and revisit it at each procedural milestone.

Recoverability and Cost-Shifting in Dutch Civil Litigation

Dutch law follows a partial cost-shifting model: the losing party is ordered to pay a contribution toward the winning party’s litigation costs, but this contribution rarely covers the full amount actually spent. Understanding the gap between theoretical recoverability and practical recovery is critical for accurate budgeting.

Statutory Rules on Recoverable Court Fees in the Netherlands

Under Articles 237–245 of the Dutch Code of Civil Procedure (Wetboek van Burgerlijke Rechtsvordering), the court orders the losing party to pay the winning party’s court fees (griffierechten) and a contribution toward attorney fees. The court fees component is generally recoverable in full, the losing party reimburses the winner’s actual court fee. This has become more significant under the 2026 court fee increase because the absolute amounts being shifted are now larger.

What Judges Typically Award, Market Practice

Attorney fee recovery is where the system diverges sharply from actual costs. Dutch courts apply a standardised fee schedule known as the liquidatietarief (liquidation tariff), which assigns fixed point values to procedural steps (filing a statement of defence, attending a hearing, etc. ) and multiplies them by a tariff rate linked to the claim value. The result is a formulaic, capped contribution that almost always falls well below the actual fees incurred. For example, in a contested district-court case worth €100,000, the liquidatietarief may yield an attorney-fee award of roughly €2,000–€6,000, a fraction of the €30,000–€80,000 typically spent on external counsel.

Industry observers note that this gap has widened as hourly rates have risen, while the tariff rates have been adjusted only modestly.

This means that even a fully successful claimant will bear a substantial portion of their own attorney fees, regardless of the outcome. The practical effect is that cost shifting in the Netherlands covers court fees effectively but only partially compensates for legal representation costs.

Insurance, Indemnity Interactions and Drafting Tips

For corporate claimants, legal expenses insurance (rechtsbijstandsverzekering) may cover court fees and a portion of counsel costs, but policy terms vary significantly. In-house teams should:

  • Review policy limits and exclusions, many policies cap coverage or exclude proceedings above a certain value threshold.
  • Check contractual indemnity clauses, commercial contracts can include full indemnity for litigation costs, overriding the statutory liquidatietarief limitation. These clauses should be drafted clearly and specifically to be enforceable.
  • Consider after-the-event (ATE) insurance, available in the Netherlands to hedge the risk of an adverse cost order, though still less common than in common-law jurisdictions.

Funding, Budgeting and Commercial Options for In-House Teams

The 2026 fee increases reinforce the importance of formal pre-litigation budgeting. Several funding models are available in the Netherlands, and selecting the right one depends on claim size, risk appetite and the organisation’s balance-sheet constraints.

  • Self-funding. The default for most corporate claimants. Requires internal budget approval and a realistic cost estimate covering court fees, counsel fees, expert costs and potential enforcement expenses.
  • Legal expenses insurance. Standard commercial policies may cover first-instance proceedings but often exclude appeals or NCC claims. Confirm coverage scope before filing.
  • Third-party litigation funding (TPLF). An established and growing market in the Netherlands. Funders typically finance claims with a minimum value of €500,000 and take a percentage of the recovery. TPLF can shift the cash-flow burden away from the claimant’s balance sheet.
  • Conditional or hybrid fee arrangements. Dutch bar rules permit conditional fee arrangements within limits. A reduced hourly rate combined with a success uplift is the most common structure. Pure “no-win, no-fee” arrangements are permitted provided the success fee does not exceed 150 per cent of the agreed hourly rate.

Eight Questions for GC and CFO Before Filing

  1. What is the total estimated cost through first instance, including court fees at 2026 rates?
  2. What is the realistic probability of success on the merits?
  3. What amount is likely to be recovered via cost-shifting under the liquidatietarief?
  4. Does existing insurance cover the court fees and counsel fees for this type of claim?
  5. Is the counterparty solvent enough to satisfy a judgment, or will enforcement add further cost?
  6. Would mediation or arbitration deliver a faster, cheaper resolution?
  7. If the claim is cross-border, what additional enforcement costs should be budgeted?
  8. Has the board or litigation committee approved the budget, including a contingency for appeal?

Cross-Border Enforcement in the Netherlands, Steps, Costs and Traps for Foreign Claimants

For foreign companies seeking to litigate or enforce judgments in the Netherlands, the 2026 court fee structure adds a layer of cost that must be planned from the outset. Cross-border enforcement in the Netherlands involves two main routes, each with distinct fee and procedural implications.

Route A, Foreign Claimant Sues Directly in the Netherlands

A foreign party initiating proceedings before a Dutch court pays the same court fees as a domestic claimant. There is no surcharge for foreign litigants, but the court may order a foreign claimant to provide security for costs (cautio judicatum solvi) under Article 224 of the Dutch Code of Civil Procedure if the claimant is domiciled outside the EU/EEA and no applicable treaty exempts them. This security requirement can add significant upfront costs, the court sets the amount based on anticipated litigation costs, and should be factored into the filing budget.

Route B, Enforcing a Foreign Judgment in the Netherlands

Recognition and enforcement of foreign judgments depends on the applicable legal framework. Within the EU, the Brussels I Recast Regulation (Regulation 1215/2012) provides for direct enforcement without exequatur proceedings, reducing fees to the cost of serving the judgment and any ancillary applications. For judgments from non-EU jurisdictions without an applicable treaty, the foreign claimant must bring fresh proceedings on the merits before a Dutch court (the so-called nieuwe rechtsvordering), which triggers the full court fee schedule. Arbitral awards benefit from the streamlined recognition procedure under the New York Convention, typically handled through a petition procedure with correspondingly lower fees.

Enforcement Step Estimated Cost Driver Practical Mitigation
Filing/service of EU judgment (Brussels I Recast) Bailiff fees and court registry costs, relatively low Engage a Dutch bailiff early; confirm no grounds for refusal before incurring costs
Fresh proceedings for non-EU judgment Full court fees at 2026 rates plus counsel fees Consider arbitration clauses in the underlying contract to access New York Convention recognition instead
Security for costs (foreign claimant outside EU) Court-set amount; can be substantial Check whether a bilateral treaty exempts the claimant’s home jurisdiction; budget conservatively
Recognition of arbitral award (New York Convention) Petition procedure fees, lower than summons procedure Ensure the award is properly authenticated; anticipate possible set-aside arguments

Netherlands Commercial Court (NCC), Fees, When to Use It and Strategic Tradeoffs

The NCC offers English-language proceedings before specialised commercial judges, a significant advantage for international disputes involving parties unfamiliar with Dutch. However, this convenience comes at a premium. The NCC charges a fixed court fee of €15,000 per party at first instance and €20,000 per party on appeal before the Netherlands Commercial Court of Appeal (NCCA), as published by Rechtspraak.nl.

When the NCC Justifies Its Cost

Industry observers expect the NCC to remain attractive primarily for disputes exceeding €1 million in value, where:

  • Language efficiency matters. All submissions, hearings and judgments are in English, eliminating translation costs that can otherwise run into tens of thousands of euros.
  • Specialised expertise adds value. The NCC bench handles complex commercial, corporate and financial disputes, often delivering judgments faster than the standard district-court track.
  • Both parties agree. NCC jurisdiction requires an agreement between the parties (typically via a forum-selection clause). Unilateral access is not available.

For disputes below €500,000, the NCC filing fee alone may represent 3 per cent or more of the claim value, making the standard district court a more proportionate forum. The decision should be made early, ideally at the contract-drafting stage when dispute-resolution clauses are negotiated.

Action Checklist and Recommended Next Steps

In-house teams navigating litigation strategy in the Netherlands under the 2026 fee regime should work through the following steps before committing to proceedings:

  1. Update litigation budgets. Recalculate cost estimates using the 2026 court fee tables from Rechtspraak.nl and apply them to all pending and anticipated claims.
  2. Audit insurance coverage. Confirm whether legal expenses policies cover the higher court fees and whether any claim-value caps have been exceeded.
  3. Reassess ADR options. For mid-value claims, model the cost of mediation or arbitration against the revised litigation cost and compare expected timelines.
  4. Plan enforcement early. If the counterparty’s assets are outside the Netherlands, map the enforcement route and associated costs before filing.
  5. Secure internal approvals. Present the board or litigation committee with a clear cost–benefit analysis, including a worst-case cost scenario and appeal contingency.
  6. Engage Dutch counsel promptly. Early involvement of experienced litigation counsel ensures accurate fee estimates and avoids procedural missteps that waste filing fees.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Evelyn Tjon-En-Fa at Bird & Bird, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Government.nl, Costs of Judicial Proceedings
  2. Rechtspraak.nl, Court Fees
  3. Rechtspraak.nl, Netherlands Commercial Court (NCC) Costs
  4. European e‑Justice Portal, Court Fees (European Payment Order Procedure)
  5. Credifin, Court Fees 2026: Current Rates and Legal Fees Explained
  6. Dutch‑law.com, Costs of Litigation in the Netherlands
  7. Maak Law, Legal Costs and Fees in the Netherlands

FAQs

Will court fees in the Netherlands increase in 2026 and by how much?
Yes. Court fees were adjusted upward effective 1 January 2026 under the annual indexation mechanism of the WGBZ. The increases apply across all court levels. Exact amounts depend on the claim value and the claimant’s legal status (natural person vs legal entity) and are published on Rechtspraak.nl.
Higher fees raise the break-even threshold for all claims, most acutely for mid-value disputes (€25,000–€100,000). In-house teams should recalculate net litigation upside using updated fee tables before filing.
Court fees (griffierechten) are generally recoverable in full from the losing party under Articles 237–245 of the Dutch Code of Civil Procedure. However, attorney fees are only partially recoverable under the liquidatietarief, which typically falls well below actual costs.
The claimant pays the applicable fee upon initiating proceedings. The defendant pays a separate fee when entering an appearance. If the defendant does not appear, only the claimant’s fee is due.
The NCC charges a fixed fee of €15,000 per party at first instance and €20,000 on appeal, significantly higher than standard district-court fees, which are tiered by claim value. The NCC premium is justified primarily for complex, high-value international disputes conducted in English.
Options include legal expenses insurance, third-party litigation funding (typically for claims above €500,000), and conditional fee arrangements permitted under Dutch bar rules. Each option should be evaluated against the specific claim profile and risk appetite.
Start by identifying the applicable enforcement framework (Brussels I Recast for EU judgments; New York Convention for arbitral awards; fresh proceedings for non-treaty judgments). Budget for bailiff fees, potential security-for-costs orders, and any translation or authentication costs. Engage Dutch counsel early to map the likely steps and associated court fees in the Netherlands.

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Netherlands' 2026 Court Fee Increases, What In‑house Teams Must Know About Litigation Costs, Recoverability and Cross‑border Enforcement

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