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Emergency Arbitrator & Urgent Interim Relief in Greece (2026): When to Use Emergency Arbitration, Greek Courts or Both

By Global Law Experts
– posted 1 hour ago

When a commercial dispute touching Greece demands immediate asset preservation or injunctive protection, the first tactical question for any general counsel or disputes partner is whether to seek an emergency arbitrator in Greece, file for interim relief before the Greek courts, or pursue both routes simultaneously. Since the enactment of Law 5016/2023, Greece’s dedicated international commercial arbitration statute, and the Greek civil procedure reform 2026 amendments that have reshaped injunctive practice, the decision matrix has changed materially. This guide provides the step-by-step tactical playbook that in-house teams, claims managers and external counsel need to navigate interim measures in Greece as the framework stands in mid-2026, including timelines, evidence requirements, enforcement pathways and model checklists.

TL;DR, When to Use Which Route for Emergency Arbitrator Relief in Greece

Quick decision rule: Use an emergency arbitrator when you need cross-border interim protection, the arbitration agreement and applicable institutional rules permit it, and the counterparty is likely to comply voluntarily or you can seek parallel enforcement. Use the Greek courts when you need an immediately enforceable domestic order, particularly a freezing order against Greek-sited assets, or when no EA mechanism is available. Use both in parallel when the stakes justify dual-track protection and the assets span multiple jurisdictions.

The core decision breaks down as follows:

  • Emergency arbitrator (EA) only. Best suited to disputes under institutional rules (ICC, LCIA, SIAC, HKIAC) where the respondent has a track record of voluntary compliance with arbitral orders, or where the order’s primary purpose is to create cross-border evidential or tactical momentum before the tribunal is constituted.
  • Greek court only. The right choice when assets are located in Greece and you need immediate enforcement power, attachment, seizure or a directly executable injunction, or when the arbitration clause does not provide for emergency arbitration.
  • Parallel EA + Greek court. Recommended for high-value disputes where Greek-sited assets must be frozen immediately and you need to demonstrate urgency to the tribunal that will eventually hear the merits. This dual approach maximises both domestic enforceability and international arbitral momentum.

Under Law 5016/2023 (FEK A 21/04.02.2023), recourse to Greek courts for interim measures is expressly preserved even where an arbitration agreement exists, which means parties are never locked out of the court route for interim relief in international arbitration. The practical effect is that the decision is genuinely tactical, not jurisdictional.

Background: Law 5016/2023 and the 2026 Reforms That Reshaped Interim Measures in Greece

Understanding the current interim-relief landscape requires familiarity with two legislative layers: Greece’s modern international arbitration statute and the recent civil-procedure amendments that affect court-side injunctive practice.

Law 5016/2023, Key Provisions Affecting Interim Measures

Law 5016/2023, published in the Government Gazette (FEK A 21) on 4 February 2023, replaced the former Law 2735/1999 as Greece’s lex arbitri for international commercial arbitration. Modelled closely on the 2006 revision of the UNCITRAL Model Law, it introduced several provisions that directly affect how interim relief operates:

  • Article 17 (Interim measures by the arbitral tribunal). Empowers an arbitral tribunal to order any interim measure it considers necessary, including preservation of assets, maintenance of the status quo and orders to prevent harm. The standard requires the applicant to show a reasonable possibility of success on the merits and that irreparable harm would result absent the order.
  • Article 17 J (Court-ordered interim measures). Expressly provides that a court with jurisdiction may grant interim measures in support of arbitration proceedings, regardless of whether the seat is in Greece or abroad. This is the statutory gateway that enables parallel applications.
  • Recognition and enforcement of arbitral interim measures. Law 5016/2023 includes provisions (tracking Model Law Articles 17 H and 17 I) for recognition and enforcement of tribunal-ordered interim measures through the Greek courts, subject to limited grounds of refusal.

Critically, Law 5016/2023 does not contain express provisions on emergency arbitrator orders specifically, the statute addresses tribunal-ordered interim measures. The enforceability of EA orders in Greek courts therefore depends on whether a Greek court treats the EA order as an “arbitral interim measure” within the scope of the law, a question that remains unsettled and institution-dependent.

2026 Civil Procedure Reforms, What Changed for Courts

The Greek civil procedure reform 2026 amendments, adopted as part of Greece’s broader judicial modernisation programme, introduced several changes relevant to interim relief applications:

  • Expedited hearing tracks for interim and injunctive applications, reducing typical listing times for ex parte preservation orders.
  • Digital filing expansion to interim-measure applications in the Athens and Thessaloniki multi-member first-instance courts, streamlining the administrative steps.
  • Clarified security/bond requirements for ex parte freezing orders, codifying practice that had previously varied by chamber.
Date Reform Practical Effect on Interim Relief
4 February 2023 Law 5016/2023 published (FEK A 21) Modern lex arbitri for international arbitration; express court competence for interim measures in support of arbitration; recognition/enforcement provisions for arbitral interim orders
2023–2025 Institutional rule updates (ICC 2021, LCIA 2020, SIAC 2024) Refined emergency arbitrator procedures; reduced appointment timelines; expanded scope of EA-ordered relief
2026 Greek civil procedure reform amendments Expedited hearing tracks for injunctions; digital filing for interim-measure applications; codified security/bond practice for freezing orders

Emergency Arbitration in Greece: What It Is, Which Rules Allow It and How It Works in Practice

An emergency arbitrator is an individual appointed under institutional arbitration rules to grant urgent interim relief before the full arbitral tribunal is constituted. The mechanism exists precisely because tribunal constitution can take weeks or months, while asset dissipation, evidence destruction or irreparable harm can occur within hours.

When an Emergency Arbitrator Can Be Appointed

The availability of an EA depends entirely on the arbitration agreement and the applicable institutional rules. The major institutions that provide EA mechanisms include:

  • ICC (International Chamber of Commerce). Article 29 and Appendix V of the ICC Rules allow for EA appointment. The mechanism applies automatically unless the parties have opted out or the arbitration agreement predates 1 January 2012.
  • LCIA (London Court of International Arbitration). Article 9B of the LCIA Rules provides for emergency arbitrator appointment, available for all LCIA arbitrations unless excluded by the parties.
  • SIAC (Singapore International Arbitration Centre). Schedule 1 of the SIAC Rules governs the EA procedure, with automatic application to arbitrations commenced under the current rules.
  • UNCITRAL Rules. The standard UNCITRAL Rules do not include an emergency arbitrator mechanism, though parties may incorporate one by agreement or by reference to an institution’s EA provisions.

If an arbitration is seated in Greece under Law 5016/2023 but governed by UNCITRAL Rules without an EA opt-in, the EA route is unavailable, and the Greek court route under Article 17 J becomes the primary option for urgent pre-tribunal relief.

Practical Timeline for Emergency Arbitration

Step ICC Typical Timing LCIA Typical Timing
Filing of EA application Day 0 Day 0
Appointment of emergency arbitrator Within 2 days of filing Within 3 days of receipt
Procedural timetable set Within 2 days of appointment As soon as practicable
EA order issued Within 15 days of file transfer to EA Within 14 days of appointment (extendable)
Effective duration Until confirmed, modified or revoked by tribunal Until confirmed, modified or revoked by tribunal

In practice, where genuine urgency is demonstrated, ICC emergency arbitrators have issued orders within 5–7 days of the initial application. LCIA timings are comparable. Industry observers expect these timelines to compress further as digital hearing infrastructure matures.

Evidence and Drafting Checklist for an EA Application

  • Arbitration agreement, certified copy demonstrating the applicable institutional rules and EA opt-in.
  • Statement of urgency, detailed explanation of why relief cannot wait for tribunal constitution (asset dissipation risk, evidence destruction, irreparable harm).
  • Prima facie case, summary of the merits demonstrating a reasonable possibility of success.
  • Evidence of harm, documentary evidence of the risk (e.g., bank statements showing drawdowns, correspondence indicating asset transfers, valuation reports).
  • Draft order, a precisely worded proposed order, specifying the relief sought, duration and any conditions (including security undertakings).
  • Security proposal, willingness to provide a cross-undertaking in damages or bank guarantee as security for the respondent’s potential losses.

Greek Courts and Interim Relief: Injunctive Remedies, Freezing Orders and Anti-Suit Injunctions

Even where an arbitration agreement exists, Greek courts retain full jurisdiction to order interim measures in Greece under both the Code of Civil Procedure (CCP) and Article 17 J of Law 5016/2023. The court route delivers what an emergency arbitrator cannot: directly enforceable orders executable by Greek enforcement officers.

Freezing Orders and Mareva-Type Relief in Greece

Greek law provides for conservatory attachment (syntiritiki katashesi) and provisional injunctions (asfalistika metra) that function similarly to freezing orders in common-law jurisdictions. The key characteristics are:

  • Ex parte availability. Applications can be heard ex parte where the applicant demonstrates that giving notice would defeat the purpose of the order, typically where there is evidence of imminent asset dissipation.
  • Burden of proof. The applicant must demonstrate a probable claim (pithanologisi), a lower threshold than proof on the merits, and urgency or imminent danger (epigon kindynos).
  • Security/bond. Courts may require the applicant to post a bond or provide a guarantee as a condition of the order, particularly for ex parte relief. The 2026 civil procedure reforms have codified this practice, providing clearer guidance on bond quantum.
  • Typical timeline. An ex parte order can often be obtained within days. Contested inter partes applications in the Athens courts typically proceed to hearing within one to two weeks of filing.

Anti-Suit Injunctions vs Anti-Arbitration Injunctions, Greek Practice

Anti-suit injunctions, court orders restraining a party from commencing or continuing proceedings in another forum, are not a well-established remedy in Greek civil-procedure tradition. Greek courts have generally been reluctant to issue injunctions directed at restraining foreign court or arbitral proceedings, a position that reflects the civil-law preference for jurisdictional rules over forum-control injunctions.

However, parties seeking to prevent parallel litigation that undermines an arbitration agreement may instead rely on a jurisdictional objection (enstasi anarmodioditas) in the Greek court proceedings, or seek an anti-suit injunction from the emergency arbitrator or tribunal itself. In disputes involving EU counterparties, the Brussels I Recast Regulation further constrains Greek courts from issuing injunctions against proceedings in other EU Member State courts.

Interaction with the Arbitration Agreement

Law 5016/2023, Article 17 J makes clear that the existence of an arbitration agreement does not prevent a party from applying to Greek courts for interim measures. This dual competence is a deliberate design choice: the statute recognises that arbitral relief, including emergency arbitrator relief, may be insufficient to protect a party’s interests where immediate enforcement power is needed. Foreign parties involved in cross-border commercial disputes who also need to start a business in Greece or hold Greek assets should note that the same courts handling interim measures also oversee commercial registration and enforcement.

Emergency Arbitrator vs Greek Court vs Both, Tactical Decision Checklist

The choice between emergency arbitration, Greek court relief, or a parallel strategy depends on the specific facts: where assets are located, whether the institutional rules permit EA appointment, the likely enforceability of an EA order, and whether the dispute involves cross-border elements requiring international recognition.

Route Typical Speed to Order Practical Enforceability in Greece
Emergency arbitrator (institutional rules) 5–15 days (rule-dependent; expedited in genuine emergencies) Not self-executing in Greece, enforcement requires Greek court recognition or conversion; practical route: seek parallel Greek preservation order or convert once tribunal constituted
Greek court interim order Days (ex parte) to 2 weeks (inter partes) Directly enforceable and executable in Greece; immediate freezing/attachment powers available through enforcement officers
Parallel EA + Greek court EA provides international momentum within days; court provides immediate domestic enforceability Best chance of preserving assets domestically and creating cross-border tactical leverage, but requires careful management of potential inconsistent-order risk

Scenario A: EA Only

Choose this route when the respondent’s assets are predominantly outside Greece, the institutional rules permit EA appointment, and the respondent has a history of voluntary compliance with arbitral orders. An EA order provides a strong foundation for subsequent tribunal proceedings and may be enforceable in respondent-friendly jurisdictions without court conversion.

Scenario B: Greek Court Only

This is the correct approach when assets are concentrated in Greece, the arbitration clause uses UNCITRAL Rules without an EA opt-in, or you need an order that Greek enforcement officers can execute immediately, for example, attachment of bank accounts held at Greek branches. It is also the only viable route for urgent interim measures in Greece when dealing with domestic arbitrations governed by the CCP rather than Law 5016/2023.

Scenario C: Parallel Filing

A dual-track strategy is appropriate for high-value disputes where Greek assets must be frozen immediately while the EA order establishes the international arbitral record. The key risk is inconsistent orders: if the EA denies relief but the Greek court grants it (or vice versa), this creates a persuasive argument for the opposing party at the merits stage. Mitigation strategies include:

  • Carve-out clauses in the arbitration agreement, expressly preserving each party’s right to seek court-ordered interim measures without waiving the arbitration clause. A model carve-out might read: “Nothing in this arbitration clause shall prevent either party from applying to any court of competent jurisdiction for interim or conservatory measures. Any such application shall not be deemed a waiver of the agreement to arbitrate.”
  • Sequential filing, filing the EA application first, then the Greek court application within 24–48 hours, ensuring each application cross-references the other to maintain consistency.
  • Unified counsel team, using a single legal team to coordinate both filings, ensuring consistent evidence, argument and relief formulations.

Parties with broader Greek commercial interests, such as those navigating the Greece property law changes in 2026, should be aware that interim measures affecting real property follow additional registration requirements at the relevant land registry.

Enforcement and Conversion: How to Make an EA Order Effective in Greece

Obtaining an emergency arbitrator order is only the first step. The critical question is how to enforce an emergency arbitrator order in Greece, and the answer depends on what type of order was issued and under which legal framework recognition is sought.

Path A: Emergency Arbitrator Order, Seeking Greek Court Recognition

Law 5016/2023 provides for recognition and enforcement of arbitral interim measures (tracking UNCITRAL Model Law Articles 17 H and 17 I). Whether an EA order qualifies as an “arbitral interim measure” under the statute is a question that Greek courts have not yet definitively resolved. The likely practical effect, based on the statutory text and international commentary, is that:

  • If the EA order is treated as an arbitral interim measure under Law 5016/2023, it may be submitted for recognition through the single-member first-instance court, subject to the limited refusal grounds (public policy, inability to present the case, measure outside the scope of the arbitration agreement).
  • If the court declines to treat the EA order as a recognisable arbitral measure, the applicant may instead seek a fresh interim order from the Greek court, using the EA order as persuasive evidence of urgency and merits.

In either case, the practical approach is to prepare a parallel Greek court application as a fallback. A sample pleading skeleton for seeking recognition might include the following headings:

  1. Identification of the parties, the arbitration agreement and the applicable institutional rules
  2. Summary of the EA application and the EA order issued (attaching a certified copy and Greek translation)
  3. Legal basis for recognition (Law 5016/2023, Articles tracking Model Law 17 H–17 I)
  4. Statement that no ground for refusal applies
  5. Request for recognition and declaration of enforceability
  6. Alternative request: if recognition is declined, application for equivalent Greek court interim measure under CCP provisions

Note: This skeleton is provided as a non-binding template for discussion purposes. It should be reviewed and adapted by qualified Greek counsel before filing.

Path B: Tribunal-Ordered Interim Measure, Conversion to Enforceable Domestic Order

Once the full tribunal is constituted and issues an interim measure (confirming, modifying or replacing the EA order), the enforcement route is clearer. Law 5016/2023 expressly provides for recognition and enforcement of tribunal-ordered interim measures, following the Model Law framework. The applicant files before the competent single-member first-instance court, and the court examines only the limited refusal grounds, it does not review the merits of the measure.

Path C: Enforcement Abroad When the Seat Is Greece

When the seat of arbitration is Greece and an EA or tribunal order must be enforced in another jurisdiction, the strategy depends on the enforcement country’s legal framework:

  • New York Convention countries: The 1958 New York Convention applies to arbitral awards. Whether interim measures constitute “awards” for Convention purposes is debated; industry observers expect most enforcement courts to require that the measure be cast as a final and binding order on the issue of interim relief.
  • EU Member States: The Brussels I Recast Regulation does not apply to arbitration. Enforcement of Greek-seated arbitral measures in other EU states therefore proceeds under national law or bilateral treaties rather than the Regulation’s automatic enforcement regime.
  • Model Law jurisdictions: Countries that have adopted the 2006 Model Law revisions (including provisions on interim-measure enforcement) offer the most straightforward recognition path for measures ordered under Law 5016/2023.

Cross-border enforcement planning should begin before the EA application is filed. Identifying where assets are located and mapping each jurisdiction’s enforcement framework is essential to ensuring that any order obtained, whether from an EA, a Greek court or both, can be made effective where it matters.

Practical Timelines, Templates and Procedural Checklist

Below are consolidated checklists for both the emergency arbitrator route and the Greek court interim-relief route.

EA Application Checklist

  1. Confirm the arbitration agreement permits EA appointment under the applicable institutional rules
  2. Instruct local counsel in Greece (and in any jurisdiction where enforcement may be sought)
  3. Prepare the statement of urgency with supporting documentary evidence
  4. Draft the proposed EA order with precision, specify assets, duration, conditions
  5. Prepare a security proposal (cross-undertaking in damages or bank guarantee)
  6. File the EA application with the institution and pay the required deposit
  7. Prepare a parallel Greek court application as a fallback or complementary filing
  8. Coordinate with counsel in enforcement jurisdictions to prepare recognition applications

Greek Ex Parte Injunction Checklist

  1. Identify the competent court (single-member first-instance court at the location of the assets or the respondent’s domicile)
  2. Prepare the application with evidence of probable claim (pithanologisi) and urgency (epigon kindynos)
  3. Include evidence that notice would defeat the order’s purpose (for ex parte relief)
  4. Prepare a bond or guarantee proposal as required under the 2026 codified practice
  5. File the application (digital filing available in Athens and Thessaloniki from 2026)
  6. Attend the hearing (or arrange representation), ex parte hearings may proceed on papers
  7. If granted, serve the order on the respondent and relevant third parties (banks, registries) for immediate execution
  8. File any necessary follow-up application to the arbitral tribunal or EA to align the arbitral record with the court order

For parties also managing immigration or administrative matters alongside a commercial dispute in Greece, processes such as obtaining a single permit in Greece or a 5-year residence permit in Greece may involve the same courts and administrative offices.

Risks, Pitfalls and Mitigation

Pursuing interim relief in Greece, whether through an emergency arbitrator, the courts, or both, carries risks that counsel must actively manage:

  • Inconsistent orders. Parallel applications to an EA and a Greek court can produce conflicting results. The risk is reputational as well as tactical: the tribunal at the merits stage may view inconsistent positions unfavourably. Mitigation: use a single counsel team, ensure consistent evidence and arguments, and cross-reference each application.
  • Anti-arbitration applications by the respondent. A respondent may argue before the Greek court that the EA’s jurisdiction is doubtful or that the court should decline to recognise the EA order. Mitigation: ensure the arbitration clause and EA provisions are clearly documented and translated.
  • Security/bond exposure. If interim relief is granted and later found to have been unjustified, the applicant may be liable for the respondent’s losses under the security undertaking. Mitigation: calibrate the scope of relief sought and the security offered.
  • Cross-border enforcement gaps. Not all jurisdictions will recognise or enforce EA orders, particularly where the order does not qualify as an “award” under the New York Convention. Mitigation: map enforcement jurisdictions before filing and prepare concurrent applications where necessary.
  • Delayed tribunal confirmation. If the full tribunal takes weeks to constitute and the EA order expires or lapses, there may be a gap in protection. Mitigation: seek a Greek court order as a bridge measure to cover the gap period.

Practical Next Steps

The decision whether to pursue an emergency arbitrator in Greece, Greek court interim relief or both is among the most consequential tactical choices in any cross-border commercial dispute. Getting it right requires a clear understanding of the current legal framework under Law 5016/2023, familiarity with institutional EA procedures and deep local knowledge of Greek court practice, all of which have evolved significantly since the 2026 reforms. Parties with assets, operations or counterparties in Greece, including those navigating the police clearance process or other administrative requirements, should seek specialist Greek commercial litigation and arbitration counsel early, ideally before the dispute crystallises, so that arbitration clauses, enforcement strategies and interim-relief options can be structured proactively.

Need Legal Advice?

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.

Sources

  1. Official Government Gazette (FEK), Law 5016/2023 (epimetol.gr)
  2. Aceris Law, Law 5016/2023 Unofficial English Translation (PDF)
  3. DLA Piper, New Greek Law on International Commercial Arbitration
  4. Aceris Law, Greece’s 2023 Arbitration Law Commentary
  5. Politis & Partners, Law 5016/2023 on International Commercial Arbitration

FAQs

What is an emergency arbitrator and when can I apply for one in Greece?
An emergency arbitrator is an individual appointed under institutional arbitration rules (such as ICC Article 29 or LCIA Article 9B) to grant urgent interim relief before the full tribunal is constituted. You can apply for one in Greece whenever your arbitration agreement incorporates institutional rules that include an EA mechanism. The seat of arbitration does not need to be Greece, what matters is the applicable institutional rules and the parties’ agreement.
Not automatically. Law 5016/2023 provides for recognition and enforcement of arbitral interim measures, but whether an EA order qualifies as such under the statute is not definitively settled in Greek case law. In practice, applicants should prepare a parallel Greek court application as a fallback, using the EA order as persuasive evidence of urgency and merits. See the enforcement section above for the detailed recognition pathway.
It depends on where the assets are, whether the institutional rules permit EA appointment, and how urgently you need a directly enforceable order. If assets are in Greece and immediate freezing is required, the Greek court route is essential. If you also need to establish an international arbitral record or protect assets abroad, adding an EA application creates valuable tactical leverage. For high-value disputes with Greek and foreign assets, the parallel approach is generally recommended.
Under ICC Rules, an EA order can typically be obtained within 5–15 days of application. Under LCIA Rules, the timeline is comparable. Greek court ex parte orders can be obtained within days of filing. Inter partes hearings typically proceed within one to two weeks. Key documents include a certified copy of the arbitration agreement, a statement of urgency with supporting evidence, a draft proposed order and a security proposal. See the procedural checklists above for a full list.
Yes, freezing orders (conservatory attachment, syntiritiki katashesi) are well established in Greek law and available in support of arbitration proceedings under Law 5016/2023, Article 17 J. Anti-suit injunctions, however, are not a standard remedy in Greek civil procedure. Parties seeking to prevent parallel litigation typically rely on jurisdictional objections in the Greek courts or seek anti-suit relief from the arbitral tribunal itself.
Include an express carve-out confirming each party’s right to seek court-ordered interim or conservatory measures without waiving the agreement to arbitrate. A model carve-out is provided in the tactical decision section above. Additionally, ensure the chosen institutional rules include an EA mechanism (or expressly incorporate one by reference) and do not inadvertently opt out of emergency arbitrator provisions.
Enforcement abroad depends on the target jurisdiction’s legal framework. In New York Convention countries, the EA order may need to be structured as a binding order to qualify for Convention recognition. In Model Law jurisdictions that adopted the 2006 revisions, the recognition path is more direct. In EU Member States, enforcement proceeds under national law rather than the Brussels I Recast Regulation (which does not cover arbitration). Pre-filing enforcement mapping across all relevant jurisdictions is strongly recommended.

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Emergency Arbitrator & Urgent Interim Relief in Greece (2026): When to Use Emergency Arbitration, Greek Courts or Both

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