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enforcement foreign judgments slovenia

How to Enforce a Foreign Judgment in Slovenia in 2026, Hague Judgments, Exequatur & Step‑by‑step Guide for Creditors

By Global Law Experts
– posted 1 hour ago

The enforcement of foreign judgments in Slovenia has entered a new phase in 2026, shaped by the evolving reach of the Hague Judgments Convention, ongoing EU regulatory refinements under Brussels I Recast, and domestic procedural updates to Slovenia’s Code of Civil Procedure (ZPP). For international creditors, in‑house counsel and insolvency practitioners holding a judgment from abroad, choosing the right enforcement route, and executing it efficiently, can mean the difference between recovering assets promptly and watching a debtor dissipate them. This guide delivers a jurisdictional decision tree, a step‑by‑step exequatur filing roadmap, a document checklist, realistic timelines, and practical strategy tips tailored specifically to cross-border judgment enforcement in Slovenia.

Quick Definitions, Recognition vs Enforcement vs Exequatur

Before diving into procedure, it is essential to distinguish three concepts that are often conflated but carry different legal consequences in Slovenian courts.

  • Recognition. A foreign judgment is acknowledged as having legal effect in Slovenia. Recognition alone does not authorise forced execution; it simply means the Slovenian legal order accepts the judgment’s findings, for example, to establish res judicata or to update a public register.
  • Declaration of enforceability (exequatur). The Slovenian court issues a formal order confirming that the foreign judgment may be enforced domestically, just as if it were a Slovenian judgment. This is the procedural gateway creditors must pass through before attaching assets.
  • Enforcement (execution). Once the exequatur is granted, the creditor may initiate actual enforcement measures, wage garnishment, bank‑account attachment, seizure of movable or immovable property, or forced sale, through the competent enforcement court.

In practice, the recognition of foreign judgments and the declaration of enforceability are often requested together in a single application. However, recognition may sometimes be sought independently, for instance, when a creditor needs the judgment to serve as a defence in pending Slovenian litigation rather than as a basis for execution.

Which Legal Regimes Apply to Enforcement of Foreign Judgments in Slovenia?

Slovenia sits at the intersection of multiple enforcement regimes. Identifying the correct regime at the outset is the single most important strategic decision a creditor will make, it determines the documents required, the speed of the process, and the defences available to the judgment debtor.

Brussels I Recast, Regulation (EU) No 1215/2012

Where the foreign judgment originates from another EU Member State and concerns a civil or commercial matter, the Brussels I Recast Regulation applies. Under this regime, judgments circulate freely across the EU: a judgment given in one Member State is recognised in Slovenia without any special procedure being required. For enforcement, the creditor obtains a certificate from the court of origin (using the standard Annex I form) and presents it, together with the judgment, to the competent Slovenian enforcement court. No exequatur is needed. The practical effect is that enforcement typically takes between one and three months from submission of the certificate, making this by far the fastest route available.

Hague Judgments Convention (2019), Status and Practical Effect for Slovenia

The Convention of 2 July 2019 on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Judgments in Civil or Commercial Matters entered into force globally on 1 September 2023, initially binding the European Union (on behalf of its Member States, except Denmark) and Ukraine. Because the EU ratified the Convention as a regional economic integration organisation, Slovenia is bound as an EU Member State. However, the Convention applies between Contracting States, meaning it is relevant for enforcement in Slovenia only where the judgment originates from a non‑EU Contracting State (or vice versa). Creditors should consult the HCCH status table to confirm the current list of Contracting States and any declarations or reservations that may affect the scope of enforceable judgments.

Industry observers expect additional ratifications in the coming years, which would steadily expand the Convention’s practical utility for creditors seeking enforcement in Slovenia.

National Exequatur Route, Slovenian Code of Civil Procedure (ZPP)

When neither the Brussels I Recast Regulation nor the Hague Judgments Convention (nor an applicable bilateral treaty) covers the judgment in question, creditors must fall back on Slovenia’s domestic foreign judgment recognition procedure. The relevant provisions are found in the Slovenian Code of Civil Procedure (Zakon o pravdnem postopku, ZPP), which governs the exequatur process, the grounds for refusal, and the procedural requirements for applications. This is the most document‑intensive and time‑consuming route, but it remains the only path for judgments from jurisdictions that have no treaty relationship with Slovenia.

Comparison Table, Enforcement Regimes at a Glance

Regime When It Applies Key Features & Typical Timeline
Brussels I Recast (EU) Judgment from an EU Member State in a civil or commercial matter No exequatur required; enforcement via Annex I certificate from origin court; recognition is automatic; typical timeline: 1–3 months
Hague Judgments Convention (2019) Judgment from a non‑EU Contracting State covered by the Convention Streamlined recognition and enforcement; limited grounds for refusal; may require documentary proof of Convention applicability; timeline: early indications suggest faster than national exequatur, comparable to Brussels I where courts are familiar with the instrument
National exequatur (ZPP) Judgments from non‑EU, non‑Convention states, or where no bilateral treaty applies Full exequatur proceeding before Slovenian court; court reviews public policy, jurisdiction, reciprocity, res judicata, fraud; timeline: commonly 3–9 months, longer if contested

Where a bilateral treaty exists between Slovenia and the judgment‑origin state (Slovenia maintains bilateral judicial‑cooperation agreements with certain successor states of the former Yugoslavia and a small number of other countries), the bilateral treaty may provide a separate, and sometimes more favourable, enforcement pathway. Creditors should verify bilateral treaty coverage before defaulting to the national exequatur route.

Step‑by‑Step Exequatur Procedure in Slovenia for Creditors

The national exequatur process remains the enforcement route most commonly encountered by creditors holding judgments from non‑EU jurisdictions. The following step‑by‑step guide walks through the foreign judgment recognition procedure from pre‑filing assessment to actual execution.

Step 0, Practical Pre‑Filing Assessment

Before investing in the formal application, prudent creditors carry out a preliminary assessment. This includes confirming that the debtor holds attachable assets in Slovenia (real property, bank accounts, business interests), verifying that the limitation period for enforcement has not expired, and ensuring the judgment is final and enforceable in the state of origin. If the debtor’s assets are at risk of dissipation, the creditor should consider applying for provisional measures concurrently with, or even before, the exequatur application.

Step 1, Identify the Competent Slovenian Court

Applications for the declaration of enforceability of a foreign judgment are filed before the district court (okrožno sodišče) in whose jurisdiction the debtor has its registered seat or domicile. If the debtor has no known domicile in Slovenia, the competent court is generally determined by the location of the debtor’s assets. Ljubljana District Court handles a significant volume of cross‑border matters and is the most frequently used venue for exequatur applications.

Step 2, Key Documents to File

The quality and completeness of the filing package is the single greatest factor in avoiding delays. Slovenian courts require the following core documents:

Document Acceptable Form Notes
Foreign judgment (certified copy) Certified copy from the issuing court Must be apostilled (if origin state is party to the Hague Apostille Convention) or consularly legalised; attach certified Slovenian translation
Certificate of finality Court certificate or registry printout confirming the judgment is final and enforceable Some jurisdictions issue this as a separate document; others include it on the judgment itself
Proof of proper service on the defendant Court record or affidavit Critical where default judgment was entered, the court will verify the defendant was duly summoned
Power of attorney Notarised and apostilled if executed outside Slovenia Authorises Slovenian counsel to act on creditor’s behalf
Certified Slovenian translations All foreign‑language documents must have a sworn Slovenian translation Translations by a court‑certified translator (sodni tolmač) are required
Statement of claim / application Written submission in Slovenian Sets out the legal basis for recognition and enforcement; identifies the applicable regime and addresses potential grounds for refusal

Incomplete filings are the most common cause of procedural delay. Courts will issue a request to supplement the application, adding weeks or even months to the timeline. Creditors are strongly advised to have their local Slovenian counsel review every document for completeness and formal compliance before filing.

Step 3, Service and Notifications

Once the application is filed and deemed formally complete, the court serves it on the judgment debtor. Service follows the standard rules of the Slovenian Code of Civil Procedure. The debtor is given an opportunity to respond and to raise any defences against recognition. If the debtor is located abroad, service may need to proceed via the Hague Service Convention or through diplomatic channels, which can add several weeks to the process.

Step 4, Grounds the Court Examines

The Slovenian court does not re‑examine the merits of the foreign judgment. Instead, it examines a limited set of procedural and public‑policy grounds for refusal. The principal grounds on which recognition or enforcement may be refused include:

  • Public policy. The judgment’s effects would be manifestly contrary to Slovenian public order.
  • Lack of jurisdiction. The foreign court lacked jurisdiction under Slovenian private international law rules.
  • Due process / right to be heard. The defendant was not properly served or was otherwise denied the opportunity to participate in the proceedings.
  • Conflicting judgments. A Slovenian court (or a previously recognised foreign court) has already issued an incompatible judgment between the same parties on the same subject matter.
  • Reciprocity. Under the national exequatur route, Slovenian courts may examine whether the state of origin grants reciprocal recognition to Slovenian judgments, a ground not present under the Brussels I or Hague regimes.

Step 5, Court Order / Declaration of Enforceability

If the court is satisfied that no ground for refusal exists, it issues a declaration of enforceability (exequatur). This order effectively equates the foreign judgment with a domestic Slovenian judgment and serves as the execution title that the creditor needs to initiate enforcement measures. Either party may appeal the court’s decision. The appeal does not automatically stay enforcement, although the debtor may apply for a stay pending appeal.

Step 6, Execution Stage

With the exequatur in hand, the creditor proceeds to enforcement under Slovenia’s Enforcement and Security of Claims Act (Zakon o izvršbi in zavarovanju, ZIZ). Available enforcement measures include attachment of the debtor’s bank accounts, garnishment of wages or receivables, seizure of movable property, registration of an enforcement lien on immovable property, and, ultimately, forced sale at public auction. The creditor may pursue multiple enforcement measures simultaneously. Execution proceedings are handled by the local court (okrajno sodišče) of the place where the debtor’s assets are located.

Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards vs Court Judgments in Slovenia

Creditors holding a foreign arbitral award rather than a court judgment follow a parallel but distinct procedure. Slovenia is a party to the 1958 New York Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards, and the Convention provides the primary legal basis for enforcing foreign arbitral awards in the country.

To enforce an arbitral award in Slovenia, the creditor files an application with the competent district court, accompanied by the original award (or a certified copy), the arbitration agreement, and certified Slovenian translations of both documents. The grounds on which a Slovenian court may refuse enforcement of an arbitral award mirror those set out in Article V of the New York Convention: invalidity of the arbitration agreement, lack of due process, award exceeding the scope of the submission, irregular constitution of the tribunal, and public‑policy violation.

In practice, the likely practical effect of the New York Convention framework is a somewhat faster and more predictable process compared to the national exequatur for court judgments, because the grounds for refusal are narrower and internationally well established. Enforcement of arbitral awards in Slovenia typically takes between two and six months, depending on whether the debtor contests the application.

Practical Checklist: Documents, Translations, Costs, Timelines & Limitation Periods

Complete Document Checklist for Exequatur in Slovenia

Document Form Required Notes
Certified copy of the foreign judgment Issued by the court of origin; apostilled or legalised Include both the original‑language version and a certified Slovenian translation
Certificate of finality / enforceability Court certificate or printout from the court registry of the origin state Must confirm the judgment is final and no longer subject to ordinary appeal
Proof of service on the defendant Court record, affidavit or certificate of service Particularly important for default judgments; apostilled or legalised
Power of attorney for Slovenian counsel Notarised; apostilled if executed abroad Must specifically authorise the attorney to file the exequatur application
All certified Slovenian translations Prepared by a court‑certified translator (sodni tolmač) Each translation must bear the translator’s stamp and signature
Application / statement of claim Written in Slovenian; filed with the competent district court Should identify the applicable legal basis, address potential refusal grounds, and specify the enforcement measures sought
Evidence of debtor’s assets in Slovenia (optional but recommended) Land‑registry extracts, company‑registry records, bank information Strengthens the creditor’s position and assists the court in directing execution measures

Limitation Period for Enforcement in Slovenia

The limitation period for enforcement of foreign judgments in Slovenia is governed by the general rules on prescription. Under Slovenian law, a final judgment, whether domestic or foreign, is enforceable for ten years from the date it became final and enforceable. Creditors should note that the ten‑year period runs from finality in the state of origin, not from the date of the Slovenian exequatur order. If the creditor delays too long in seeking exequatur, the limitation period may expire, making enforcement impossible. Early engagement with Slovenian counsel is therefore critical.

Estimated Costs and Timeline Milestones

  • Court fees. Slovenian court fees for exequatur applications are modest by international standards and are determined by the value of the claim according to the Court Fees Act (Zakon o sodnih taksah, ZST‑1). As a general indicator, fees range from several hundred euros for moderate claims to low thousands for high‑value matters.
  • Translation costs. Certified translation typically costs between EUR 20 and EUR 35 per page. A complex judgment with supporting documents can easily run to 50–100 pages, so translation costs of EUR 1,000–3,500 are common.
  • Legal fees. Attorney fees depend on the complexity of the matter and whether the debtor contests the application. A straightforward uncontested exequatur may cost EUR 2,000–5,000 in legal fees; contested proceedings with an appeal can reach EUR 8,000–15,000 or more.
  • Overall timeline. From filing to first‑instance exequatur order, uncontested cases typically take three to six months. Contested cases with debtor opposition and a potential appeal may extend to nine to twelve months or beyond.

Practical Tips for Creditors and Litigation Strategy

Successful cross-border judgment enforcement in Slovenia often depends less on the strength of the legal claim and more on pre‑enforcement preparation and tactical choices. The following practice points can make a significant difference in outcome:

  • Asset‑trace before you file. Conducting a preliminary asset search in Slovenia, land registry, company register, known bank relationships, ensures the effort and expense of exequatur will translate into actual recovery.
  • Seek provisional measures early. Slovenian courts can grant provisional measures (interim injunctions, freezing orders) before or alongside the exequatur application. If there is a genuine risk of asset dissipation, applying for provisional measures is strongly recommended.
  • Coordinate with local counsel from the start. Document requirements and procedural nuances, particularly around sworn translations and apostilles, are best navigated by Slovenian lawyers experienced in enforcement of foreign judgments in Slovenia.
  • Consider settlement leverage. The mere filing of an exequatur application, combined with evidence of the debtor’s Slovenian assets, often creates settlement leverage. Debtors who face attachment of bank accounts or forced sale of property may prefer a negotiated resolution.
  • Avoid common delays. The two most frequent causes of delay are incomplete document packages and service difficulties when the debtor is abroad. Prepare every document in final, compliant form before filing, and budget extra time if international service will be required.

Sample Timeline, Comparative Timelines by Enforcement Route

Stage Brussels I Recast Hague Judgments Convention National Exequatur (ZPP)
Pre‑filing preparation 1–2 weeks 2–4 weeks 3–6 weeks
Filing and court review 2–4 weeks 4–8 weeks 6–12 weeks
Service on debtor / response period N/A (automatic recognition) 4–6 weeks 4–8 weeks (longer if abroad)
Court decision (first instance) 1–4 weeks 4–8 weeks 4–12 weeks
Appeal (if filed by debtor) Rare; 2–4 months 2–4 months 3–6 months
Execution measures Immediate upon certificate filing Upon court order Upon exequatur + enforcement application
Total (uncontested) 1–3 months 3–5 months 3–9 months

Conclusion, Enforcement of Foreign Judgments in Slovenia: Next Steps for Creditors

Enforcement of foreign judgments in Slovenia in 2026 is more accessible than ever, but success depends on choosing the right legal regime, assembling a complete and compliant filing package, and acting within the applicable limitation period. For EU judgments, the Brussels I Recast offers near‑automatic enforcement. For judgments from Hague Convention states, the 2019 Convention provides a streamlined alternative. For all other judgments, the national exequatur under the Slovenian Code of Civil Procedure remains the established, if more demanding, pathway. Regardless of the route, early engagement with experienced Slovenian counsel, thorough asset investigation, and strategic use of provisional measures are the hallmarks of a well‑executed cross-border judgment enforcement strategy.

This article is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Enforcement of foreign judgments involves jurisdiction‑specific procedural requirements that may change. Readers are strongly encouraged to consult qualified Slovenian legal counsel before initiating any enforcement proceedings.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Marko Butinar at Marko Butinar – odvetnik, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Hague Conference on Private International Law (HCCH), Judgments Convention Full Text
  2. HCCH, Status Table for the 2019 Judgments Convention
  3. ICLG / Maćešić i partneri, Enforcement of Foreign Judgments (Slovenia Chapter)
  4. CPLJ, Recognition and Enforcement of Judgments
  5. Slovenian Ministry of Justice
  6. Slovenian Legislation Portal, Official Consolidated Texts (ZPP)
  7. New York Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards
  8. Legalmondo, Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Titles in Slovenia

FAQs

What is recognition and enforcement of foreign judgments?
Recognition means a foreign judgment is accepted as legally valid in Slovenia. Enforcement goes further, it authorises the creditor to use Slovenian enforcement mechanisms (asset attachment, garnishment, forced sale) to satisfy the judgment. Recognition may be sought independently, but enforcement always presupposes recognition.
Yes. The European Union ratified the 2019 Hague Judgments Convention on behalf of its Member States (except Denmark), and it entered into force on 1 September 2023. For Slovenia, this means that judgments from other Contracting States may be enforced under the Convention’s streamlined framework, with narrower grounds for refusal than the national exequatur route.
File an application with the competent Slovenian district court (okrožno sodišče), typically in the district where the debtor is domiciled or where the debtor’s assets are located. The application must be accompanied by the certified foreign judgment, proof of finality, certified Slovenian translations, and a power of attorney for local counsel.
At minimum: a certified and apostilled copy of the foreign judgment, a certificate of finality from the court of origin, proof that the defendant was properly served, a notarised power of attorney, and sworn Slovenian translations of all foreign‑language documents. Additional evidence of debtor assets is highly recommended.
Under Slovenian law, a final judgment may generally be enforced within ten years from the date it became final and enforceable in the state of origin. Creditors should not delay in seeking exequatur, as the limitation clock runs regardless of whether the Slovenian recognition procedure has been initiated.
Yes. Slovenian courts may grant provisional measures, such as freezing orders over bank accounts or injunctions restraining asset transfers, before or alongside the exequatur application. The creditor must demonstrate a probable claim and a risk that enforcement would otherwise be frustrated.
An uncontested exequatur typically takes three to six months. Contested proceedings can extend to nine to twelve months or longer. Overall costs, including court fees, sworn translations and legal fees, commonly range from EUR 3,000 to EUR 10,000 for straightforward cases, and can be significantly higher in complex or contested matters.
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How to Enforce a Foreign Judgment in Slovenia in 2026, Hague Judgments, Exequatur & Step‑by‑step Guide for Creditors

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