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If you are asking how do I cancel a building contract in Turkey, the short answer is that you can, but the method, timing, and notice language will determine whether you walk away cleanly or face counter-claims, bond calls, and drawn-out litigation. The Turkish Code of Obligations (Law No. 6098) provides the statutory framework governing works contracts, while Public Procurement Law No. 4734 imposes additional requirements on publicly funded projects. Turkey’s post-earthquake enforcement climate has intensified scrutiny of building standards and contractor compliance, making it more important than ever to follow the correct termination procedure.
This guide sets out the step-by-step process, from preserving evidence through to choosing between arbitration and court, that contracts managers, developers, and in-house counsel need in 2026.
Before issuing any formal termination notice, take these immediate steps to protect your legal position and preserve evidence for any future dispute:
Industry observers expect that parties who document the breach trail meticulously before termination face significantly fewer procedural challenges when the dispute reaches arbitration or court.
Turkish law recognises several distinct grounds on which an employer or contractor may terminate a building contract. Understanding whether your right arises from the contract itself or from statute is critical, because the notice requirements and consequences differ.
Most commercial construction contracts in Turkey contain an express termination clause that defines trigger events, typically prolonged delay, persistent defects, insolvency, or failure to maintain required insurances. Where such a clause exists, follow it precisely: courts will scrutinise whether the contractual procedure was exhausted before termination took effect.
Where the contract is silent, the Turkish Code of Obligations (Law No. 6098) supplies default rules. The employer may terminate for repudiatory breach, a fundamental failure that renders continued performance pointless, after giving the contractor a reasonable additional period to perform and serving a formal declaration of termination. Force majeure (impossibility of performance) and the contractor’s insolvency or loss of professional licence also constitute statutory grounds.
On public projects, the contracting authority must comply with Public Procurement Law No. 4734 and its implementing regulations. Termination typically requires a formal administrative decision, written notification to the contractor, and compliance with specific guarantee-forfeiture procedures. Administrative court review may apply, and the contracting authority’s discretion is more constrained than in private-sector contracts. Any party involved in a public works termination should verify whether administrative remedies must be exhausted before civil or arbitral proceedings can commence.
Delay is the most common trigger for cancelling a building contract. The procedure and the financial consequences depend on whether the contract includes a construction delay penalty clause, how grace periods are structured, and whether the employer has contributed to the delay.
The standard approach involves three stages:
Where the contract incorporates FIDIC conditions, Clause 15.2 (Termination by Employer) overlays additional procedural requirements, including a 14-day notice to correct followed by a second 14-day notice of termination. These FIDIC timelines apply alongside (not in place of) any mandatory Turkish statutory requirements.
A typical Turkish construction contract imposes a daily penalty rate, often expressed as a per-mille fraction of the total contract value. For example, on a contract valued at TRY 50,000,000 with a daily penalty rate of 0.1 %, each day of culpable delay costs TRY 50,000. Over a 60-day delay, the liquidated damages amount to TRY 3,000,000. Turkish courts will generally enforce such clauses unless the penalty is manifestly disproportionate, in which case the court may reduce the amount under Article 182 of Law No. 6098.
“We hereby notify you that the Works under Contract No. [●] dated [●] remain incomplete as of [date], representing [●] days beyond the contractual completion date of [●]. Despite our notice dated [●] granting an additional [●]-day cure period under Clause [●], you have failed to achieve meaningful progress. We therefore terminate the Contract with immediate effect and reserve all rights to claim liquidated damages, call the performance bond, and engage a replacement contractor at your cost.”
Dispatch this notice by notarised service (noter aracılığıyla ihtar) or registered post with acknowledgement of receipt (APS/iadeli taahhütlü). Retain the notarised receipt or postal tracking record as proof of delivery.
Article 478 of the Turkish Code of Obligations (Law No. 6098) establishes a three-tier limitation framework for claims arising from defective works. This regime applies to both the employer’s right to withhold acceptance and the limitation period for bringing a defects claim after acceptance:
| Category | Limitation Period | Application |
|---|---|---|
| Movable / non-immovable works | 2 years from delivery | Equipment installations, temporary structures, prefabricated units |
| Immovable (building) works | 5 years from delivery | Residential, commercial, and infrastructure construction |
| Works where contractor acted with gross negligence or intent | 20 years from delivery | Fraudulent concealment of structural defects, use of substandard materials with knowledge |
The defects liability period in Turkey begins running from the date the employer accepts, or is deemed to have accepted, the completed works. During this window, the employer may demand repair, replacement, a price reduction, or, if the defect is sufficiently serious, full termination of the contract and return of payments made.
To support a defects-based termination, the employer should:
A structural defect, such as non-compliant foundation works violating Zoning Law No. 3194 specifications, or reinforcement shortfalls, will normally justify immediate termination once the cure period expires without remedy. Minor cosmetic or finishing defects generally entitle the employer only to a price reduction or a damages claim, not full termination. The distinction matters because Turkish courts apply a proportionality test: termination must be a proportionate response to the severity of the breach.
Most Turkish construction contracts require the contractor to provide a performance bond, typically a bank guarantee (banka teminat mektubu) equal to 6–10 % of the contract price. Calling this guarantee after termination is one of the employer’s most powerful remedies, but it must be handled carefully to avoid injunction proceedings.
Retention money, if contractually stipulated, follows a similar logic: the employer may set off retention against its termination damages claim, but should document the set-off in writing and include it in the final account.
After termination of a construction contract in Turkey, the non-defaulting party may pursue several remedies concurrently:
Termination does not extinguish all payment obligations. The employer must still pay for works properly completed and accepted before termination. A joint site survey and interim valuation, ideally with an independent quantity surveyor, should be conducted promptly to determine the value of completed works and to identify materials that belong to the employer or the contractor. Failing to conduct this valuation can leave the employer vulnerable to counter-claims for unjust enrichment.
Choosing the right dispute-resolution forum is one of the most consequential decisions after cancelling a building contract. Turkish law offers three main paths: domestic litigation in the civil courts, domestic arbitration, and international arbitration under Law No. 4686.
| Factor | Turkish Courts | Arbitration (ISTAC / ad hoc) |
|---|---|---|
| Typical duration | 2–4 years (first instance + appeal) | 12–18 months (institutional) |
| Cost | Lower filing fees; expert costs borne by parties | Higher institutional fees; faster resolution may reduce overall cost |
| Interim relief | Courts may grant injunctions; effective but can be slow | ISTAC emergency arbitrator available within days; court assistance also available |
| Confidentiality | Court proceedings generally public | Arbitration proceedings confidential by default |
| Enforcement (international) | Requires bilateral treaty or reciprocity | Enforceable under the New York Convention in 170+ countries; Turkey is a signatory |
| Governing procedural law | Code of Civil Procedure (HMK) | Law No. 4686 (international); HMK Part 11 (domestic) |
For cross-border projects, International Arbitration Law No. 4686 governs proceedings where the dispute has an international element. Awards rendered under Law No. 4686 are recognised and enforced in Turkey through the Private International and Procedural Law (IPPL) No. 5718 and abroad under the New York Convention, to which Turkey acceded with a reciprocity reservation.
If urgent action is needed, for example, to prevent the contractor from removing equipment from site or to freeze a counter-party’s assets, parties can apply to Turkish courts for an interim injunction even where the main dispute is subject to arbitration. Under ISTAC’s rules, an emergency arbitrator can be appointed within days and issue binding interim measures before the full tribunal is constituted. The likely practical effect is that parties in institutional arbitration gain speed without sacrificing the broader benefits of the arbitral process.
A valid notice of termination in Turkey must be clear, unambiguous, and capable of proof. Below are three template notice types, each adapted to a different termination ground. All should be dispatched via notarised service or registered post with acknowledgement of receipt:
Service methods and proof: the safest method is notarised service through a Turkish noter, which produces an official record of content and delivery date. Registered post with acknowledgement of receipt (iadeli taahhütlü) is also effective. Email may serve as supplementary evidence but should not be relied upon as the sole method of service, especially for contracts governed by Turkish law.
Once a building contract is formally terminated, a structured demobilisation process protects both parties’ interests:
If the contractor enters insolvency proceedings, the employer should file its claims with the insolvency estate, verify whether any personal guarantees from directors are enforceable, and take immediate steps to call the performance bond before any moratorium restricts payment. Developers with property interests at stake may also wish to explore the interaction between Turkish construction law and property ownership rules when the contractor’s insolvency affects title registration.
Not every construction dispute requires immediate legal action, but certain trigger points should prompt engagement with qualified Turkish construction counsel:
Early indications suggest that parties who engage specialist Turkish construction counsel at the first sign of a material breach, rather than after termination, achieve more favourable outcomes, both in terms of preserved evidence and tactical positioning.
| Ground / Trigger | Contractual (Private Projects) | Public Procurement (Law 4734) |
|---|---|---|
| Delay sufficient to terminate | Follow contract notice and cure provisions; contractual liquidated damages; preserve evidence | Contracting authority must follow statutory termination provisions; administrative remedies may apply; stricter procurement rules |
| Defects / latent defects | TBK Art. 478 timelines apply (2 / 5 / 20-year regimes); expert and cure opportunity required | Procurement rules plus construction warranty obligations may differ; retention and guarantee enforcement often specifically regulated |
| Bond / performance security | May call commercial bank guarantee per contractual clause; risk of injunction if call deemed improper | Bank guarantee mechanisms and review by procurement authority; different thresholds and procedural requirements |
Knowing how do I cancel a building contract is only the starting point, executing the termination correctly under Turkish law determines whether you preserve your remedies or create new liabilities. By following the statutory notice procedures, documenting every breach, understanding your defects liability rights under TBK Art. 478, and choosing the right dispute-resolution path, employers and contractors operating in Turkey can protect their commercial interests and move decisively when a project fails.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Ceren İşcioğlu Ulutürk at Uluturk Attorney Partnership, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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