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enforcing foreign judgments in italy

Enforcing Foreign Judgments in Italy 2026: Exequatur, Punitive Damages & Hague Convention

By Global Law Experts
– posted 1 hour ago

Last updated: June 30, 2026

Enforcing foreign judgments in Italy has become a sharper focus for international companies and banks following two significant developments in early 2026: the Italian Supreme Court’s renewed commentary on the enforceability of punitive damages awarded abroad, and continued attention to whether the 2019 Hague Judgments Convention will reshape cross-border enforcement practice for creditors targeting Italian assets. For corporate counsel and recovery teams, the core enforcement mechanism, the exequatur procedure before an Italian Court of Appeal, remains the gateway, but the conditions for recognition, the treatment of non-compensatory awards, and the available execution tools have all evolved.

This guide provides a practical, step-by-step roadmap covering the legal framework, procedural requirements, realistic timelines, costs, and bank-specific enforcement tactics that companies and financial institutions need in 2026.

Executive Summary, Key Takeaways for Companies and Banks

Yes, foreign judgments can be recognised and enforced in Italy. The process centres on the exequatur procedure under Law No. 218/1995, which governs the recognition and enforcement of foreign judgments in Italy. Once the Italian Court of Appeal grants exequatur, the foreign judgment acquires the same force as an Italian titolo esecutivo (enforceable title), enabling the creditor to proceed with seizure, garnishment and other execution measures.

Two developments make 2026 a pivotal year for cross-border enforcement. First, the Italian Supreme Court has confirmed and expanded upon its landmark 2017 position that foreign punitive damages awards are not automatically contrary to Italian public policy, provided they meet tests of foreseeability and proportionality. Second, the 2019 Hague Judgments Convention entered into force internationally on 1 September 2023, and its potential adoption by Italy and the EU could fundamentally change how non-EU judgments are recognised.

Key takeaways for corporate counsel and bank recovery teams:

  • Exequatur is mandatory for enforcement. While recognition of a foreign judgment may occur automatically if uncontested, actual enforcement against assets requires a formal Court of Appeal order.
  • Punitive damages are now conditionally enforceable. Italian courts will recognise foreign non-compensatory awards where the legal basis in the originating jurisdiction ensures foreseeability, proportionality and a clear statutory or case-law foundation.
  • Hague Convention adoption by Italy remains pending. Industry observers expect EU-level accession to bring Italy within the Convention’s scope, but until ratification occurs, national rules under Law No. 218/1995 continue to govern enforcement of non-EU judgments.

Background: Legal Framework for Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Judgments in Italy

The recognition and enforcement of foreign judgments in Italy is governed primarily by Law No. 218 of 31 May 1995 (Riforma del sistema italiano di diritto internazionale privato), which reformed Italy’s private international law system. Articles 64 and 67 of this statute set out the conditions under which foreign judgments are recognised and the procedure for obtaining enforcement.

A critical distinction runs through Italian law: recognition and enforcement are separate concepts. Under Article 64 of Law No. 218/1995, a foreign judgment is recognised automatically in Italy, without any court proceedings, provided it satisfies several conditions, including that the foreign court had jurisdiction under Italian private international law principles, the defendant was properly served, the judgment is final, and the decision does not conflict with a prior Italian judgment or with Italian public policy (ordine pubblico).

However, when the creditor needs to enforce the judgment, that is, seize assets, garnish bank accounts, or compel payment, a formal procedure is required. This is the exequatur, governed by Article 67 of Law No. 218/1995 and the relevant provisions of the Italian Code of Civil Procedure (Codice di procedura civile).

Key Statutes and Case Law

The statutory framework is supplemented by important jurisprudence from the Corte di Cassazione (Italian Supreme Court). The landmark judgment No. 16601 of 5 July 2017, delivered by the Joint Divisions (Sezioni Unite), established that foreign judgments awarding non-compensatory damages, including punitive damages, may be recognised and enforced in Italy, subject to a compatibility test against Italian public policy. This decision reversed decades of blanket refusal and opened a pathway that the Court has continued to refine through subsequent commentary, most recently in early 2026.

For judgments originating within the European Union, enforcement is governed by EU Regulation No. 1215/2012 (the Brussels I Recast Regulation), which largely abolishes the exequatur requirement for intra-EU judgments. This guide focuses primarily on non-EU judgments, where the exequatur procedure under national law remains essential.

The Hague Judgments Convention 2019, Status and What It Means for Creditors (2026)

The Convention of 2 July 2019 on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Judgments in Civil or Commercial Matters (the Hague Judgments Convention) entered into force internationally on 1 September 2023. The Convention was designed to create a global framework, analogous to the New York Convention for arbitral awards, enabling judgments rendered in one contracting state to circulate and be enforced in other contracting states with minimal procedural barriers.

As of mid-2026, however, Italy has not individually ratified or acceded to the Convention. The HCCH status table confirms that the Convention’s contracting parties remain limited. The European Union signed the Convention in 2022, and EU-level ratification would bind all EU member states, including Italy. Early indications suggest that the EU’s accession process is advancing, but no formal deposit of the instrument of ratification had been recorded by the end of June 2026.

The likely practical effect for creditors is as follows: until Italy becomes bound by the Convention, whether through EU-level accession or individual ratification, the recognition and enforcement of non-EU judgments in Italy will continue to be governed by Law No. 218/1995. Once the Convention enters into force for Italy, creditors holding qualifying judgments from other contracting states would benefit from streamlined recognition with limited grounds for refusal, potentially faster proceedings, and greater predictability.

When the Convention Applies vs National Law, Checklist

  • Convention applies: When both the state of origin and Italy are contracting parties; the judgment falls within the Convention’s material scope (civil or commercial matters); and the judgment is not excluded (e.g., revenue, customs, administrative matters, defamation, privacy, intellectual property, and certain other categories are excluded or subject to declarations).
  • National law applies (current default): When the state of origin is not a contracting party, or the Convention has not yet entered into force for Italy. In this scenario, Law No. 218/1995 governs.
  • EU Regulation applies: When the judgment originates from another EU member state, Brussels I Recast (Regulation 1215/2012) provides the enforcement route, largely eliminating the need for exequatur.

Are Punitive Damages Enforceable in Italy? The 2026 Position

The enforceability of punitive damages in Italy has undergone a transformation over the past decade. Until 2017, Italian courts routinely refused to recognise foreign judgments containing punitive elements on the ground that such awards violated Italian public policy. The prevailing view was that damages in Italian law serve an exclusively compensatory function, and any award exceeding actual loss was incompatible with ordine pubblico.

That position changed decisively with the Corte di Cassazione Joint Divisions’ judgment No. 16601 of 5 July 2017. The Supreme Court held that foreign judgments awarding non-compensatory damages may be recognised and enforced in Italy, provided they satisfy specific conditions. The Court acknowledged that Italian law itself had evolved to include instances of non-compensatory damages (e.g., in labour law and intellectual property), meaning punitive awards were no longer inherently alien to the Italian legal system.

Leading Cases and How Courts Quantify the Enforceable Portion

The 2017 ruling established a three-pronged test for the recognition of foreign punitive damages awards. The award must be:

  1. Foreseeable: Based on a clear legal provision or established case-law principle in the originating jurisdiction, so the defendant could reasonably anticipate liability for non-compensatory damages.
  2. Proportionate: The amount must not be grossly disproportionate to the compensatory portion or to the gravity of the conduct.
  3. Not contrary to Italian public policy: The award must not offend fundamental principles of the Italian legal order, assessed not in the abstract but in the specific context of the case.

The February 2026 Supreme Court commentary, as reported by practitioner analyses, confirmed and elaborated on this framework. Italian courts will recognise foreign judgments with punitive or extra-compensatory elements, provided they meet the established criteria. The Court underscored that the public policy test is not a general comparison between Italian and foreign law but a targeted inquiry into whether the specific foreign rule producing the award clashes with fundamental Italian constitutional principles.

In practice, Italian courts have adopted an approach of examining whether the punitive element can be identified and separated from the compensatory portion. Where the foreign judgment does not clearly distinguish between compensatory and punitive components, the enforcing court may face difficulty in determining whether the total amount passes the proportionality test.

Practical Drafting Tips to Preserve Enforceability

  • Separate the award components. If you are the claimant in the originating proceedings, request that the foreign court clearly itemise compensatory and punitive portions in the judgment. This makes it substantially easier for the Italian Court of Appeal to apply the proportionality test.
  • Document the legal basis. Provide evidence that the punitive award rests on a specific statutory provision or established precedent in the originating jurisdiction, satisfying the foreseeability requirement.
  • Prepare a proportionality argument. Assemble materials showing the ratio of punitive to compensatory damages and explain why the total is proportionate to the conduct involved. Industry observers expect Italian courts to scrutinise ratios exceeding single-digit multiples more closely.
  • Anticipate the public policy defence. Prepare a brief addressing how the foreign law provision producing punitive damages aligns with, or at least does not offend, fundamental principles of the Italian constitutional order.

Exequatur Procedure in Italy, Step-by-Step for Companies and Banks

The exequatur is the formal judicial procedure through which a foreign judgment is declared enforceable in Italy. It is the essential gateway for any creditor, whether a multinational corporation or a bank, seeking to enforce a non-EU judgment against Italian assets. The application is filed before the Corte d’Appello (Court of Appeal) with territorial jurisdiction over the place where the judgment is to be enforced, or where the debtor is domiciled or has assets in Italy.

Procedural Steps

  1. Engage Italian counsel. A foreign creditor must retain an Italian lawyer (avvocato) admitted to practice before the Court of Appeal. A notarised and apostilled power of attorney must be executed in favour of the Italian lawyer.
  2. Prepare and authenticate documents. The certified copy of the foreign judgment must be obtained from the originating court. It must be legalised (apostille under the 1961 Hague Apostille Convention, or full consular legalisation for non-Apostille countries) and accompanied by a sworn Italian translation (traduzione giurata).
  3. File the application. The creditor’s lawyer files an application (ricorso) with the competent Court of Appeal, attaching the authenticated judgment, sworn translation, proof of service on the defendant in the original proceedings, and any evidence that the conditions under Article 64 of Law No. 218/1995 are met.
  4. Court examination. The Court of Appeal examines the application. In uncontested cases, the court may issue a decree (decreto) granting exequatur without an oral hearing. In contested matters, where the debtor challenges recognition, the court schedules a hearing and the proceeding becomes adversarial.
  5. Service of the exequatur decree. Once granted, the exequatur decree is served on the debtor together with the foreign judgment. The debtor may appeal the decree.
  6. Proceed to enforcement. With the exequatur granted and any appeal period elapsed or resolved, the creditor obtains a titolo esecutivo, the enforceable title, and may proceed with execution measures under the Italian Code of Civil Procedure.

Documents Checklist for Exequatur in Italy

Document Requirements
Certified copy of the foreign judgment Issued by the originating court; must be authenticated
Apostille or consular legalisation Apostille if the originating state is a party to the 1961 Hague Apostille Convention; otherwise full consular legalisation
Sworn Italian translation (traduzione giurata) Prepared by a certified translator and sworn before an Italian court or consulate
Proof of service on the defendant Evidence that the defendant was duly served in the original proceedings
Certificate of finality Confirmation that the judgment is final and not subject to ordinary appeal in the state of origin
Power of attorney (POA) Notarised and apostilled POA in favour of the Italian lawyer
Evidence of conditions under Art. 64, Law 218/1995 Memorandum or supporting documents demonstrating jurisdiction, due process, non-irreconcilability and public policy compliance

Timelines and Costs for Court of Appeal Exequatur in Italy

Timelines vary significantly depending on whether the debtor contests recognition. In straightforward, uncontested cases, industry observers report that Courts of Appeal may issue the exequatur decree within one to three months of filing. Contested proceedings, particularly those involving challenges on public policy grounds or punitive damages, can extend to six to eighteen months or longer, depending on the complexity of the issues and the court’s caseload.

Filing fees (contributo unificato) for exequatur applications are calculated based on the value of the claim, following the standard Italian court fee schedule. Legal costs depend on the complexity of the matter and the seniority of counsel engaged.

From Recognition to Execution: Enforcement Tools and Bank-Specific Actions

Once the Court of Appeal grants exequatur, the foreign judgment becomes a titolo esecutivo under Italian law. However, the creditor cannot immediately seize assets. Italian procedural law requires an additional formal step before enforcement can begin: the service of an atto di precetto.

Atto di Precetto and Titolo Esecutivo Explained

The atto di precetto is a formal demand for payment served on the debtor by a court officer (ufficiale giudiziario). It warns the debtor that if they fail to comply within a specified period, typically ten days, the creditor will commence compulsory execution. The atto di precetto must be served together with or following the notification of the titolo esecutivo (the exequatur decree plus the original foreign judgment). This requirement is established under Articles 479 and 480 of the Italian Code of Civil Procedure.

Once the atto di precetto period expires without payment, the creditor may initiate execution proceedings. The main enforcement tools available under Italian law include:

  • Pignoramento mobiliare: Seizure of the debtor’s movable assets (vehicles, equipment, inventory) at the debtor’s premises.
  • Pignoramento immobiliare: Seizure and forced sale of the debtor’s real property (land, buildings).
  • Pignoramento presso terzi: Garnishment of assets held by third parties, most commonly bank accounts and receivables owed to the debtor by customers or business partners. This is the primary tool used by banks and corporate creditors targeting liquid assets.
  • Sequestro conservativo: A precautionary seizure (freezing order) that can be sought even before the exequatur is finalised, if the creditor demonstrates a risk that the debtor may dissipate assets. The application is made to the competent court in civil and commercial litigation matters.

How to Identify Debtor Bank Accounts in Italy

Locating the debtor’s bank accounts is often the most critical practical challenge in enforcing foreign judgments in Italy. Italian law provides a mechanism for creditors to access information about the debtor’s financial assets. Following the 2012 reforms, creditors holding a titolo esecutivo can apply to the President of the competent court to access data held by the tax authorities (Agenzia delle Entrate) and the Anagrafe dei rapporti finanziari, the centralised database of financial relationships maintained by all Italian banks and financial institutions.

This disclosure procedure enables the creditor’s lawyer to identify the debtor’s bank accounts, securities accounts and other financial relationships, which can then be targeted through pignoramento presso terzi. For bank recovery teams, this step should be initiated as soon as the exequatur is granted, and preferably anticipated through preliminary asset intelligence before filing.

Grounds for Refusal, Defences and Enforcement Risk Management

Italian courts may refuse to recognise or enforce a foreign judgment on specific statutory grounds. Understanding these grounds is essential both for creditors (to anticipate and pre-empt challenges) and for debtors (to identify viable defences). The primary grounds for refusal, derived from Article 64 of Law No. 218/1995, include:

  • Lack of jurisdiction: The foreign court lacked jurisdiction under the principles of Italian private international law.
  • Violation of due process: The defendant was not properly served or was otherwise denied the right to appear and defend.
  • Irreconcilability: The foreign judgment is irreconcilable with a prior Italian judgment between the same parties, or with an earlier foreign judgment that has already been recognised in Italy.
  • Public policy (ordine pubblico): The judgment’s effects are contrary to Italian public policy. This remains the most litigated ground, particularly in cases involving punitive damages.
  • Pending Italian proceedings: Proceedings between the same parties on the same subject matter were already pending before an Italian court when the foreign proceedings were commenced.
  • Fraud: The judgment was obtained by fraud.

Common Procedural Defences Used by Debtors

In practice, debtors in exequatur proceedings most frequently raise jurisdictional objections and public policy arguments. Debtors may also challenge the authenticity or completeness of the documents submitted, argue that the judgment is not yet final in the state of origin, or contend that they were not properly served. Creditors can mitigate these risks by ensuring that all required documents are meticulously prepared, translated and authenticated before filing.

How Banks Typically Respond

When a pignoramento presso terzi is served on an Italian bank, the bank is legally obligated to declare the existence and extent of any assets held on behalf of the debtor. Banks typically cooperate promptly with garnishment orders, as failure to comply exposes them to liability. However, banks may raise procedural objections if the garnishment order is defective, if the debtor’s account is protected by specific legal provisions, or if the amounts claimed exceed the debtor’s available balance.

Practical Timeline and Cost Comparison for Enforcing Foreign Judgments in Italy

Case Complexity Typical Time to Enforce (Exequatur → Execution) Estimated Cost (EUR, Excluding Enforcement Steps)
Uncontested monetary judgment, clear assets 1–3 months 3,000–8,000
Contested recognition / judgment with punitive elements 6–18 months 10,000–40,000+
Complex cross-border asset tracing & freezing 6–24 months 15,000–80,000+

Note: These figures reflect practitioner estimates reported in leading legal directories. Actual costs and timelines will depend on the specific court, the debtor’s resistance, and the complexity of the asset landscape. Enforcement steps (pignoramento, forced sale) carry additional costs.

Enforcement Routes by Creditor Type

Creditor Type Best Enforcement Route Likely Timeline / Notes
Multinational company (non-EU judgment) Exequatur at Court of Appeal + atto di precetto + pignoramento 1–6 months (uncontested); consider sequestro conservativo if dissipation risk exists
Bank (loan recovery, cross-border) Exequatur + Anagrafe dei rapporti finanziari disclosure + pignoramento presso terzi (bank garnishment) 2–6 months (uncontested); pre-filing asset intelligence recommended
Individual creditor Exequatur + atto di precetto + movable/immovable seizure 3–12 months; higher proportional costs relative to claim value
EU-based company (EU judgment) Direct enforcement under Brussels I Recast (no exequatur); apply for certificate of enforceability in originating state 1–3 months; most streamlined route

Checklist for General Counsels and Bank Recovery Teams

Before instructing counsel in Italy, ensure the following items are prepared or under way:

  1. Obtain a certified copy of the foreign judgment from the originating court.
  2. Obtain a certificate of finality confirming the judgment is no longer subject to ordinary appeal.
  3. Arrange apostille or consular legalisation of the judgment and any supporting certificates.
  4. Commission a sworn Italian translation (traduzione giurata) of the judgment and all key documents.
  5. Execute a notarised and apostilled power of attorney in favour of the Italian lawyer.
  6. Prepare proof of service on the defendant in the original proceedings.
  7. If the judgment includes punitive or non-compensatory damages, prepare a memorandum explaining the legal basis, foreseeability and proportionality of the award, with the compensatory and punitive portions clearly separated.
  8. Conduct preliminary asset intelligence on the debtor’s Italian assets (real property, bank accounts, business interests, vehicles).
  9. Assess whether a sequestro conservativo (precautionary freezing order) is needed to prevent asset dissipation before or during the exequatur.
  10. Identify the competent Court of Appeal based on the debtor’s domicile or the location of assets in Italy.
  11. Budget for court fees and legal costs based on claim value and expected complexity (see cost table above).
  12. Prepare a strategy for execution post-exequatur: decide whether to pursue bank garnishment (pignoramento presso terzi), seizure of movable or immovable assets, or a combination.

Conclusion

Enforcing foreign judgments in Italy in 2026 requires careful preparation, an understanding of the exequatur procedure, and strategic awareness of the evolving legal landscape around punitive damages and international conventions. The Italian Supreme Court’s continued refinement of the enforceability tests for non-compensatory awards gives creditors a viable pathway, but only if the foreign judgment is properly structured, documented and presented. The potential adoption of the 2019 Hague Judgments Convention through EU-level accession could further streamline enforcement for non-EU judgments in the coming years, though creditors should not rely on this until formal ratification occurs.

For companies and banks with cross-border claims against Italian debtors, early engagement with experienced Italian litigation counsel is essential. From pre-filing asset intelligence to the strategic use of precautionary freezing measures, every step of the enforcement process benefits from specialist guidance tailored to the specific claim and the debtor’s asset profile.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Debora Monaci at SZA Studio Legale, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. HCCH, Status Table: Hague Judgments Convention (2019)
  2. EAPIL, The Italian Supreme Court on the Recognition of Foreign Judgments Awarding Punitive Damages (February 2026)
  3. RPLT, Recognition and Enforcement of Punitive Damages Awards in Italy (February 2026)
  4. Legal500, Italy: Enforcement of Judgments in Civil and Commercial Matters
  5. Chambers Global Practice Guides, Enforcement of Judgments 2025 (Italy)
  6. Giacomo Oberto, The Enforcement of Foreign Judgments in Italy and in Europe
  7. BacciardiPartners, The Italian Supreme Court Recognises the Enforceability in Italy of Foreign Judgments Granting Punitive Damages
  8. RDIPP (Università degli Studi di Milano), Punitive Damages and Private International Law

FAQs

How should enforcement proceedings be commenced in Italy?
Enforcement proceedings begin by filing an exequatur application at the competent Italian Court of Appeal. The application must include a certified and apostilled copy of the foreign judgment, a sworn Italian translation, proof of service on the defendant, and a notarised power of attorney. Once the Court of Appeal grants the exequatur decree, the creditor serves an atto di precetto on the debtor and, after the compliance period expires, initiates execution.
Under Article 64 of Law No. 218/1995, Italian courts may refuse recognition if the foreign court lacked jurisdiction, the defendant was not properly served, the judgment is irreconcilable with an Italian or previously recognised foreign judgment, the judgment offends Italian public policy, or the judgment was obtained by fraud. Public policy remains the most commonly invoked ground, particularly in cases involving punitive damages.
Yes, following the Corte di Cassazione’s landmark judgment No. 16601/2017 and the February 2026 Supreme Court commentary, foreign punitive damages awards may be recognised and enforced in Italy. However, the award must satisfy tests of foreseeability (based on a clear legal provision in the originating jurisdiction), proportionality (the punitive element must not be grossly excessive), and compatibility with Italian public policy.
The Hague Judgments Convention entered into force internationally on 1 September 2023. As of mid-2026, Italy has not individually ratified or acceded to the Convention. EU-level accession is under consideration and would bind Italy automatically. Until ratification occurs, enforcement of non-EU foreign judgments in Italy continues under national rules (Law No. 218/1995).
The core documents include: a certified copy of the foreign judgment, apostille or consular legalisation, a sworn Italian translation, proof that the defendant was served in the original proceedings, a certificate confirming the judgment is final, and a notarised and apostilled power of attorney in favour of the Italian lawyer.
An atto di precetto is a formal written demand for payment served on the debtor after the exequatur is granted. It warns the debtor that if they do not comply, typically within ten days, the creditor will commence compulsory execution. It is a mandatory prerequisite under Articles 479 and 480 of the Italian Code of Civil Procedure before any seizure or garnishment can take place.
Yes. Italian law permits a creditor to apply for a sequestro conservativo (precautionary seizure) even before the exequatur is finalised, provided the creditor demonstrates both the likely merit of the claim (fumus boni iuris) and a risk that the debtor may dissipate assets (periculum in mora). This tool is especially valuable for bank recovery teams dealing with debtors who may move assets once enforcement proceedings become known.
Costs depend on claim value and complexity. For uncontested monetary judgments with identifiable assets, legal fees and court costs typically range from EUR 3,000 to EUR 8,000 for the exequatur phase. Contested cases, particularly those involving punitive damages or cross-border asset tracing, can cost EUR 10,000 to EUR 80,000 or more. Enforcement steps (garnishment, forced sale) carry additional costs calculated separately.
By Kerwin Tan

posted 3 hours ago

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Enforcing Foreign Judgments in Italy 2026: Exequatur, Punitive Damages & Hague Convention

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