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enforcing arbitral awards in bulgaria

Enforcing Arbitral Awards in Bulgaria (2026): New York Convention Steps, Recognition at Sofia City Court, Timelines and Execution

By Global Law Experts
– posted 1 hour ago

Last reviewed: 22 June 2026

Enforcing arbitral awards in Bulgaria follows a well-defined procedural path, yet the practical details, court filings, document authentication, realistic timelines and asset-seizure mechanics, remain poorly documented in English-language sources. Bulgaria is a party to the 1958 New York Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards, and its domestic Law on International Commercial Arbitration (LICA) aligns closely with the UNCITRAL Model Law. Following the 2025 amendments to LICA, the landscape for international commercial arbitration enforcement has shifted in important ways, particularly around public-policy grounds for refusal and setting aside. This guide provides the step-by-step roadmap that in-house counsel, international creditors and enforcement lawyers need to convert an arbitral award into recovered assets in Bulgaria during 2026.

TL;DR, Quick-reference snapshot:

  • Competent court: Sofia City Court (Sofiyski gradski sad) for recognition and enforcement of foreign awards.
  • Typical uncontested timeline: 3–9 months from filing to enforceable order.
  • Contested / set-aside risk: 12+ months if the respondent raises Article V objections.
  • First steps: Appoint Bulgarian counsel, verify document authentication requirements, and consider urgent asset-preservation measures before or alongside the recognition filing.

Legal Framework for Enforcing Arbitral Awards in Bulgaria

Bulgaria’s enforcement regime for arbitral awards rests on three pillars: the New York Convention, the Law on International Commercial Arbitration (LICA), and the Civil Procedure Code (CPC). Foreign awards rendered in other Convention states follow the New York Convention route. Domestic awards, those rendered by tribunals seated in Bulgaria, including awards from the Arbitration Court at the Bulgarian Chamber of Commerce and Industry (BCCI), are enforced directly under LICA and Part II of the CPC.

The New York Convention and Bulgaria’s Implementation

Bulgaria acceded to the New York Convention without reservations, meaning it applies the Convention to awards made in any state, not only other contracting states. Article III of the Convention obliges Bulgarian courts to recognise and enforce foreign awards under the conditions laid down in the Convention itself and in Bulgarian procedural law. The Convention’s Article IV sets out the baseline documentary requirements, while Article V exhaustively lists the grounds on which enforcement may be refused.

Domestic Awards vs Foreign Awards, Key Distinctions

The distinction matters because the procedural route differs. A domestic arbitral award (seat in Bulgaria) constitutes a directly enforceable title once it becomes final and binding; the winning party obtains a writ of execution from the court and proceeds to enforcement through a bailiff. A foreign award, by contrast, must first be “recognised” through an exequatur procedure at Sofia City Court before it can be enforced. The recognition of foreign judgments in Bulgaria follows a separate regime under the CPC, but for arbitral awards the New York Convention takes precedence.

Sofia City Court, Exclusive Competence

Sofia City Court has exclusive first-instance jurisdiction over applications for recognition and enforcement of foreign arbitral awards in Bulgaria. This is confirmed by LICA and is consistently noted in practitioner commentary. Appeals against Sofia City Court decisions proceed to the Sofia Court of Appeal and, ultimately, the Supreme Court of Cassation.

Step-by-Step: Enforcing a Foreign Arbitral Award in Bulgaria (New York Convention Route)

The process for enforcing arbitral awards in Bulgaria under the New York Convention can be broken into four sequential stages. Each stage has specific documentary, procedural and timing requirements that creditors must plan for carefully.

Stage 1, Pre-Filing Checks

Before filing, the award creditor should confirm three things:

  1. Award finality: The award must be final and binding under the law of the seat. If the award is subject to a pending set-aside application at the seat, this creates a potential Article V(1)(e) defence.
  2. Territorial scope: Confirm that the debtor holds assets in Bulgaria or is domiciled there, otherwise enforcement may be academic.
  3. Reciprocity and reservations: Bulgaria made no reciprocity reservation, so awards from any country qualify. Confirm no bilateral treaty overrides.

Stage 2, Document Assembly and Authentication

Article IV of the New York Convention prescribes the core document set. Bulgarian courts require these documents, properly authenticated and translated:

Document Form required Authentication
Arbitral award Original or certified copy Apostille (Hague Convention states) or consular legalisation (non-Hague states)
Arbitration agreement Original or certified copy Same as above
Certified Bulgarian translation of both Sworn translation by a certified translator registered in Bulgaria Translation must be notarised or bear the translator’s certification stamp
Evidence of service / notification Copy of notice to respondent of arbitral proceedings Apostille or legalisation as applicable
Power of attorney for Bulgarian counsel Notarised, with apostille or legalisation Certified Bulgarian translation attached

Practical tip: Incomplete or improperly authenticated documents are the single most common reason for procedural delays. Industry observers expect courts to scrutinise translations carefully, so allocating time for professional sworn translation is essential.

Stage 3, Filing at Sofia City Court (Exequatur Application)

The creditor files a claim for recognition and permission to enforce (exequatur) with Sofia City Court. The application must identify the parties, describe the award, state the legal basis (New York Convention, LICA) and attach the document set above. A state fee, calculated as a percentage of the award value, is payable on filing. The court assigns the case to a panel, serves the respondent, and sets a hearing date. In uncontested cases, the court may decide on the papers without an oral hearing.

Stage 4, Interim Measures and Pre-Enforcement Preservation

Where there is a risk the debtor may dissipate assets, the creditor can request interim preservation measures concurrently with or even before the recognition application. Bulgarian courts may grant provisional attachment of bank accounts, freezing orders over movable assets, or prohibitions on disposal of real estate. Timing is critical, applications for interim measures can be decided within days, whereas the main recognition proceedings take months.

Drafting Tips to Minimise Article V Refusal Risk

  • Attach complete procedural records showing proper notice to the respondent, this pre-empts the Article V(1)(b) “due process” objection.
  • Include evidence of tribunal constitution (appointment letters, institutional rules applied) to counter Article V(1)(d) challenges.
  • If the award addresses multiple claims, ensure the application clearly maps each claim to the arbitration agreement’s scope, this prevents Article V(1)(c) objections that the award deals with matters beyond the agreement.
  • Anticipate the public-policy defence (see below) and include a brief legal memorandum explaining why the award does not conflict with Bulgarian public policy.

Enforcing Domestic Arbitral Awards in Bulgaria

Awards rendered in Bulgaria, whether by the BCCI Arbitration Court or by ad hoc tribunals seated in the country, do not require exequatur. Under BCCI arbitration law in Bulgaria, a domestic award becomes enforceable once it is final and binding. The winning party applies to the competent district court for a writ of execution (izpalnitelен лист). The court examines only whether the award meets formal requirements and has not been set aside. Once the writ is issued, enforcement proceeds through a private or state enforcement agent (bailiff).

Timing and Typical Costs for Domestic Awards

Obtaining a writ of execution from a district court typically takes 2–4 weeks in straightforward cases. Court fees are modest, generally a fixed fee rather than a percentage of the award value. The subsequent bailiff enforcement stage adds its own timeline and costs, depending on the asset type targeted (see the execution section below). Overall, how to enforce a judgement in Bulgaria through the domestic route is materially faster than the foreign-award recognition path.

Sofia City Court Recognition Mechanics, Practical Filing and Evidence

Sofia City Court recognition is the gateway for every foreign arbitral award seeking enforcement in Bulgaria. Understanding the court’s internal mechanics helps creditors set realistic expectations and avoid unnecessary delays.

Filing and Registry Procedures

Applications are filed with the court’s civil registry. Upon registration, the case is assigned to a three-judge panel within the court’s commercial division. The respondent is served with copies of the application and supporting documents. Service on respondents located outside Bulgaria follows the Hague Service Convention or bilateral service treaties, which can add 2–4 months to the timeline.

Hearing Cadence and Realistic Timeline

Filing stage Expected court action Estimated timeline
Application registered Case assigned to panel; respondent served 2–4 weeks (domestic service); 2–4 months (international service)
Respondent’s reply period Respondent files objections (if any) 30 days from service
First hearing Court examines documents; hears arguments on admissibility 1–3 months after reply deadline
Decision (uncontested) Court grants recognition and enforcement 1–2 months after hearing
Decision (contested) Court addresses Article V objections; may request further evidence 3–6 months after first hearing
Appeal (if filed) Sofia Court of Appeal reviews; further appeal to Supreme Court of Cassation 6–12+ additional months

Practical note: Where the respondent fails to appear or file objections, the court may grant enforcement on the papers alone, significantly shortening the total timeline to as little as 3–4 months from filing.

Service on Respondents and Third Parties

Proper service is a prerequisite for a valid enforcement decision. If the respondent is located in an EU member state, service follows the EU Service Regulation. For respondents outside the EU, the Hague Service Convention or consular channels apply. Creditors should factor international service timelines into their planning from the outset, as failed or delayed service is a frequent source of procedural setbacks in Sofia City Court recognition proceedings.

Grounds for Refusal and Setting Aside, Article V and Bulgarian Public Policy After the 2025 Reform

The enforcement grounds and public policy framework in Bulgaria underwent significant change with the 2025 amendments to LICA. Understanding these changes is critical for both creditors seeking enforcement and debtors considering challenges.

Article V Refusal Grounds, The Exhaustive List

Under Article V of the New York Convention, Bulgarian courts may refuse enforcement only on the following grounds:

  • Incapacity of a party or invalidity of the arbitration agreement under applicable law (Article V(1)(a)).
  • Lack of proper notice, the respondent was not given proper notice of the arbitrator’s appointment or the proceedings, or was unable to present its case (Article V(1)(b)).
  • Award exceeds the scope of the submission to arbitration (Article V(1)(c)).
  • Improper tribunal composition or procedure not in accordance with the parties’ agreement or the law of the seat (Article V(1)(d)).
  • Award not yet binding or has been set aside or suspended by a court at the seat (Article V(1)(e)).
  • Subject matter not arbitrable under Bulgarian law (Article V(2)(a)).
  • Public policy, enforcement would be contrary to Bulgarian public policy (Article V(2)(b)).

The burden of proof for grounds (1)(a) through (1)(e) lies with the party resisting enforcement. Grounds (2)(a) and (2)(b) may be raised by the court of its own motion.

The 2025 Reform, Public Policy Reinstated as a Setting-Aside Ground

The 2025 amendments to LICA reintroduced public policy as an express ground for setting aside domestic awards, a change that early indications suggest will also influence how courts approach the public-policy defence in enforcement proceedings for foreign awards. The reform aimed to increase transparency and judicial oversight, though industry observers note it came at some cost to party autonomy. Creditors should anticipate that respondents may invoke Bulgarian public policy more aggressively in enforcement proceedings during 2026, and should proactively address potential public-policy arguments in their applications.

Strategic Considerations for Overcoming Refusal

  • Waiver: If the respondent participated in the arbitration without objecting to jurisdiction or procedure, many Article V(1) defences may be deemed waived under Bulgarian practice.
  • Seat vs enforcement forum: A set-aside at the seat creates a strong (though not always absolute) ground for refusal under Article V(1)(e). Consider parallel enforcement in jurisdictions where the debtor also holds assets.
  • Evidence preparation: Submit a comprehensive evidentiary record with the initial filing, including proof of proper notice, tribunal composition documents and a legal memorandum addressing public-policy concerns, to reduce the court’s need for additional hearings.

Practical Enforcement: Attachment, Third-Party Debt Orders, Seizure of Assets and Cross-Border Tools

Once Sofia City Court grants recognition and issues an enforcement order, the creditor must convert that order into actual asset recovery. This is where enforcing arbitral awards in Bulgaria transitions from a judicial exercise to a practical, asset-tracing and execution exercise conducted through enforcement agents (bailiffs).

Enforcement Agents and the Writ of Execution

The creditor obtains a writ of execution from the court and commissions a private enforcement agent (частен съдебен изпълнител) or a state bailiff to execute. Private enforcement agents are generally preferred for their speed and flexibility. The agent serves the debtor with an invitation to comply voluntarily, and if the debtor fails to pay within the prescribed period, the agent proceeds to compulsory execution against specific assets.

Asset Types and Enforcement Routes

Asset type Typical enforcement route in Bulgaria Typical timeline & practical risk
Bank accounts / cash Attachment order via bailiff after court grants enforcement 2–6 weeks after enforcement order; medium risk if accounts moved
Receivables / contracts Third-party debt order or garnishment against debtor’s debtors 4–8 weeks; medium risk if debtor objects or debtors unknown
Real estate Provisional attachment + forced sale via enforcement proceedings 6–18 months; higher procedural/formality risk and potential insolvency complications

Cross-Border Tools and Insolvency Interactions

For debtors with assets in multiple jurisdictions, creditors may combine Bulgarian enforcement with tools available under EU regulations, particularly the European Account Preservation Order (EAPO) for bank accounts within the EU. Where the debtor enters insolvency proceedings in Bulgaria, enforcement is stayed and the creditor must register its claim in the insolvency estate. Timing the enforcement filing to precede any insolvency petition is therefore a key strategic consideration.

Costs, Timelines and Success Factors, Practical Estimates

Realistic budgeting is essential when planning enforcement in Bulgaria. The following estimates reflect typical 2026 practice:

  • Court filing fees: State fees for exequatur proceedings are calculated as a percentage of the award value (typically 2–4%), subject to a statutory cap.
  • Translation and legalisation: Sworn translation costs depend on document length; apostille and notarisation fees are modest but add up across multiple documents. Budget approximately EUR 500–2,000 for a standard document set.
  • Legal counsel fees: Bulgarian counsel fees vary by firm and complexity but typically range from EUR 3,000–15,000 for a straightforward recognition proceeding, increasing significantly for contested cases.
  • Bailiff fees: Private enforcement agents charge a combination of fixed fees and a percentage of the amount recovered (typically 1–2%), with additional costs for specific enforcement actions (property auctions, garnishment orders).

Timeline scenarios:

  • Uncontested recognition + bank-account attachment: 3–6 months total.
  • Contested recognition (Article V defence raised): 9–18 months through first instance; add 6–12 months per appeal level.
  • Full cycle including real-estate forced sale: 18–30 months in complex cases.

Success factors checklist:

  1. Award is final and not subject to set-aside proceedings at the seat.
  2. Complete, properly authenticated document set prepared before filing.
  3. Urgent asset-preservation measures filed concurrently with or before the recognition application.
  4. Accurate asset intelligence on the debtor’s Bulgarian holdings.
  5. Experienced Bulgarian counsel appointed early in the process.

Filing Checklist for Enforcing Arbitral Awards in Bulgaria

Use the following checklist to ensure your recognition application is complete before filing at Sofia City Court:

  • Original or certified copy of the arbitral award, with apostille or consular legalisation.
  • Original or certified copy of the arbitration agreement, with apostille or consular legalisation.
  • Certified Bulgarian translations of both the award and the arbitration agreement, prepared by a sworn translator.
  • Evidence of proper notice to the respondent of the arbitral proceedings and of the appointment of arbitrators.
  • Proof that the award is final and binding under the law of the seat (certificate from the arbitral institution or a legal opinion).
  • Notarised power of attorney for Bulgarian counsel, with apostille and Bulgarian translation.
  • Application form / claim identifying the parties, the award, the legal basis for recognition and the relief sought.
  • Payment of the state court fee (percentage of award value).
  • Legal memorandum addressing potential Article V defences (recommended but not mandatory).
  • Application for interim measures (if asset dissipation is a risk, file concurrently).

Conclusion

Enforcing arbitral awards in Bulgaria is a structured but detail-intensive process that rewards thorough preparation. The combination of the New York Convention framework, the LICA statutory regime and the 2025 reform, which expanded the public-policy ground, means creditors must approach every filing with a complete documentary record and a clear strategy for overcoming potential objections. For those who do, Bulgaria’s enforcement system offers a viable and reasonably efficient route to asset recovery: uncontested recognition at Sofia City Court can be achieved within a few months, and private enforcement agents provide effective tools for converting court orders into recovered funds. The key is to act quickly, preserve assets early, and work with experienced local counsel from the outset.

Explore the Global Law Experts lawyer directory to connect with qualified practitioners in Bulgarian commercial arbitration and enforcement.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Yavor Tankov at Penkova & Partners, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. New York Convention (official)
  2. UNCITRAL, Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards
  3. BCCI, Law on International Commercial Arbitration
  4. Global Arbitration Review, Bulgaria report
  5. Boyanov & Co, IA09_Bulgaria (practitioner guide)
  6. Wolters Kluwer, Bulgaria’s 2025 Arbitration Act Reform
  7. Jus Mundi, Bulgaria overview
  8. Lexology, Bulgaria enforcement/practice update

FAQs

Q: How do I enforce an arbitration award in Bulgaria?
File for recognition and permission to enforce (exequatur) at Sofia City Court with the award, arbitration agreement and certified Bulgarian translations. The typical uncontested timeline is 3–9 months.
Foreign parties can file directly, but practical considerations, service requirements, sworn translations, local procedural formalities, make appointing Bulgarian counsel strongly recommended.
The original award or certified copy, original arbitration agreement, certified Bulgarian translations of both, proof of finality, and authentication (apostille or consular legalisation) as applicable.
Article V grounds: party incapacity, invalid arbitration agreement, lack of proper notice, award exceeding arbitration scope, improper tribunal composition, award set aside at seat, or conflict with Bulgarian public policy, the latter now reinforced by the 2025 LICA reform.
After Sofia City Court grants the enforcement order, private bailiffs can attach bank accounts within 2–6 weeks. Speed depends on accurate asset intelligence and prompt instruction of the enforcement agent.
Yes. Bulgarian courts can grant interim preservation measures, including provisional bank-account attachments and freezing orders, concurrently with or even before the recognition filing, where there is a demonstrated risk of asset dissipation.
If the award has been set aside at the seat, Bulgarian courts will typically treat this as a ground to refuse enforcement under Article V(1)(e) of the New York Convention. In such circumstances, creditors should consider alternate enforcement strategies in other jurisdictions where the debtor holds assets.
By Birungyi Cephas Kagyenda

posted 1 hour ago

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Enforcing Arbitral Awards in Bulgaria (2026): New York Convention Steps, Recognition at Sofia City Court, Timelines and Execution

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