Our Expert in Italy
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Last reviewed: 21 May 2026
How do you enforce a contract when the other party simply refuses to perform? In Italy, contract enforcement follows a structured sequence, from a formal pre‑action notice known as a diffida ad adempiere, through urgent provisional remedies that can freeze assets within days, to full litigation and eventual forced execution of a judgment. Italy’s 2025–2026 judicial reforms have introduced procedural streamlining designed to shorten first‑instance trial durations, making it more important than ever for creditors and commercial counterparties to understand each step. This guide provides the complete, practical playbook for enforcing contracts in Italy in 2026, with templates, checklists and timelines that in‑house counsel, commercial managers and litigators can put to immediate use.
Quick answer: To enforce a contract in Italy you must (1) send a diffida ad adempiere (formal pre‑action notice), (2) seek provisional measures if urgent (sequestri, injunctions), (3) file a substantive claim before the giudice civile, and (4) execute the resulting judgment through the ufficiale giudiziario.
Before taking any enforcement step, gather and organise the following documents. Having a complete file at the outset prevents delays at every subsequent stage:
Practical tip: In Italy, certified e‑mail (PEC, Posta Elettronica Certificata) carries the same evidentiary weight as a registered letter. Always send formal notices via PEC where the counterparty has a registered PEC address.
A contract is enforceable in Italy when it satisfies the essential requirements laid down in the Italian Civil Code (Codice Civile) and the party seeking enforcement can prove both its existence and the other party’s breach.
Under the Italian Civil Code, a valid contract requires four essential elements. First, there must be the consent of the parties, a clear offer met by an unqualified acceptance. Italian law does not require “consideration” in the common‑law sense, but it does require a causa (cause), the objective economic or social function that justifies the agreement. Third, the contract must have a lawful and determined (or determinable) object, the specific obligation or thing the parties have agreed upon. Finally, both parties must possess legal capacity to contract.
Certain contracts must also comply with specific formal requirements. Transfers of real property, for example, must be executed by notarial deed and registered in the land registry (conservatoria dei registri immobiliari). Failure to observe a mandatory form renders the contract void, not merely unenforceable.
A contract may be found to be an unenforceable contract, or more precisely, void or voidable, if it falls into one of several traps under Italian law:
Italian civil procedure operates on a preponderance‑of‑evidence standard. Documentary evidence is king. Courts give strong probative value to signed written contracts, PEC exchanges, and certified documents. Oral testimony is admissible but carries less weight than written proof, and certain claims (for example, those contradicting a notarial act) cannot be proven by witnesses alone. When preparing to enforce a contract, assemble a complete paper trail, including e‑mail chains, signed delivery notes, and any written acknowledgments of the debt, before proceeding to the pre‑action stage.
The diffida ad adempiere is the formal pre‑action notice that puts the defaulting party on record, sets a deadline for performance, and, critically, lays the statutory groundwork for termination of the contract if that deadline passes without compliance.
Sending a diffida ad adempiere is not merely a courtesy step; it is a procedural prerequisite with real legal consequences. Under the Italian Civil Code, the diffida formally constitutes the debtor in default (mora del debitore), which triggers the accrual of default interest and, if the deadline expires without performance, gives the creditor the right to terminate the contract automatically without needing a court order. It also demonstrates good faith and reasonableness, both of which Italian courts take seriously when assessing claims. In practice, a well‑drafted diffida frequently resolves the dispute without litigation, because it signals to the counterparty that formal enforcement is imminent.
A diffida ad adempiere should include the following elements:
Below is suggested wording that can be adapted to specific circumstances. This template is provided for illustrative purposes only; parties should obtain legal advice before sending any formal notice.
[Luogo e data / Place and date]
Spett.le [Nome della controparte / Counterparty name]
Indirizzo PEC: [PEC address]
Oggetto: Diffida ad adempiere ai sensi e per gli effetti di legge, Contratto del [data] avente ad oggetto [descrizione]
Con la presente, la scrivente [Nome del mittente] formalmente diffida e invita la Vostra società ad adempiere integralmente all’obbligazione di [descrizione dell’obbligazione inadempiuta] prevista dal contratto in oggetto, entro e non oltre il termine di [numero] giorni dal ricevimento della presente.
Si avverte che, decorso inutilmente il suddetto termine, il contratto si intenderà risolto di diritto, con riserva di ogni ulteriore azione per il risarcimento dei danni subiti e subendi.
Con osservanza,
[Firma / Signature]
The deadline set in the diffida must be reasonable. Industry observers expect Italian courts to continue treating 15 days as an accepted minimum for standard commercial obligations, though more complex performance obligations may require longer periods. Once the deadline expires without compliance, the contract terminates automatically by operation of law. The creditor may then proceed to claim damages without needing to seek a separate termination order. Default interest begins to accrue from the date the debtor was formally placed in default, i.e., from the date of receipt of the diffida.
When there is a risk that the debtor will dissipate assets or cause irreparable harm before a judgment can be obtained, Italian law provides several provisional remedies that can be sought on an urgent basis, often within days.
Sequestro conservativo (conservatory attachment). This is the most commonly used provisional remedy in contract enforcement. It allows the creditor to “freeze” the debtor’s assets, bank accounts, movable property, real estate, to prevent dissipation while the substantive claim is pending. The applicant must demonstrate a prima facie claim (fumus boni iuris) and a concrete risk that the debtor will dispose of assets, rendering any future judgment unenforceable (periculum in mora).
Sequestro giudiziario (judicial seizure). This measure is used to preserve a specific asset that is the subject of the dispute, for example, goods that the buyer claims are defective, or a piece of equipment whose ownership is contested. The applicant must show that a right to the specific asset exists and that there is a risk of its deterioration, alteration or disappearance. The court appoints a custodian (custode) to hold and preserve the asset.
Injunction / precautionary order (provvedimento d’urgenza). Where no other specific provisional remedy is available, Italian law provides a residual catch‑all injunctive relief mechanism. The applicant must demonstrate urgency and that the delay inherent in ordinary proceedings would cause irreparable and imminent harm. Courts have used this tool to order parties to continue performing under supply contracts, to prevent terminations, or to restrain breaches of non‑compete obligations.
Precautionary attachment of assets (pignoramento cautelare). In certain circumstances, a creditor may obtain a court order to attach specific debtor assets as security for a future execution. This is particularly useful when the debtor is a company with identifiable assets, machinery, inventory, receivables, that could be moved or encumbered before judgment.
Applications for provisional remedies in Italy are filed before the competent court (typically the court that will hear the substantive claim). In urgent cases, the application can be heard inaudita altera parte, without notice to the other side, with a subsequent hearing for the respondent to be heard. The evidentiary threshold requires documentary evidence supporting both the merits of the claim and the urgency.
Provisional remedies can be sought before, during or after the filing of a substantive claim. A diffida ad adempiere sent before the application strengthens the case for urgency by demonstrating that the debtor has already failed to comply with a formal demand. If provisional measures are granted before the substantive claim is filed, the applicant must commence the main proceedings within the time period set by the court.
| Remedy | Purpose / When to Use | Key Threshold / Effect |
|---|---|---|
| Sequestro conservativo | Freeze assets to secure claim | Prima facie claim + risk of dissipation |
| Sequestro giudiziario | Preserve specific asset pending judgment | Need to show right to asset exists |
| Injunction / precautionary order | Prevent imminent harm or breach | Urgency + balance of convenience |
| Pignoramento cautelare | Attach debtor assets for future execution | Court order; showing of serious risk |
If pre‑action notices and provisional measures do not resolve the dispute, the next step is to commence substantive proceedings before the Italian civil courts.
Contract disputes in Italy are heard by the ordinary civil courts (Tribunale). Jurisdiction generally lies with the court of the place where the obligation should have been performed, the defendant’s domicile, or the place specified in a jurisdiction clause. For claims below a certain value threshold, the Giudice di Pace (Justice of the Peace) has jurisdiction. Parties may also have agreed to arbitration, in which case the arbitral tribunal, not the state courts, will hear the dispute. Always check the contract for jurisdiction and arbitration clauses before filing.
The claimant files a citazione (writ of summons) setting out the factual and legal basis for the claim, the relief sought, and the evidence on which it relies. Italian procedure requires a structured exchange of pleadings and evidence, typically through written briefs filed before an oral hearing. Expert reports (consulenze tecniche di parte) should be prepared in advance where technical issues are involved, for example, construction defects, product specifications, or accounting disputes.
Italy’s 2025–2026 judicial reforms have targeted the reduction of first‑instance trial durations, which historically averaged 12–24 months in the larger courts and significantly longer in certain districts. Early indications suggest that the reforms, including stricter case‑management powers for judges and tighter deadlines for filing evidence, are beginning to compress timelines, though results remain variable across different courts.
| Stage | Typical Time (Pre‑Reform) | Typical Time (Post‑Reform, 2026 Signals) |
|---|---|---|
| Pre‑action and diffida response | Days–weeks | Days–weeks |
| Provisional remedy hearing | Days–1 month | Days–few weeks |
| First‑instance trial | 12–24 months | Reform intent: reduce duration; still variable by court |
Litigation costs in Italy include court filing fees (contributo unificato), which are calculated on a sliding scale based on the value of the claim, plus advocate fees. The losing party is generally ordered to pay the winning party’s legal costs, though the court has discretion to apportion costs differently. There is no general requirement to provide security for costs, but a defendant may request it in certain circumstances involving foreign claimants.
Once a judgment is obtained, the creditor must take active steps to execute it. An Italian judgment does not enforce itself, the creditor must instruct the ufficiale giudiziario (enforcement agent) and identify the debtor’s assets.
Italian courts may award several forms of relief for breach of contract:
For claims involving a liquid, determined sum of money supported by written evidence, the decreto ingiuntivo (injunctive decree) offers a powerful fast‑track route. The creditor applies to the court ex parte, without the debtor being heard, and if the court is satisfied that the claim is supported by adequate documentary proof, it issues an order for payment. The debtor then has 40 days from service to file opposition. If no opposition is filed, the decree becomes enforceable and carries the same weight as a final judgment.
If the creditor can show particular urgency or that the claim is based on specific categories of documentary evidence, the court may grant the decree with provisional enforceability (provvisoria esecuzione), allowing enforcement to begin immediately even if opposition is filed.
Once an enforceable judgment or decree is obtained, the creditor proceeds to execution. The key steps are:
The ufficiale giudiziario (judicial officer or bailiff) is the state official responsible for carrying out enforcement actions. In practice, however, the creditor’s legal team drives the process, identifying the debtor’s assets, selecting the most effective enforcement route, and monitoring the agent’s actions. Asset tracing in Italy can draw on publicly available data (company registries, land registries, vehicle registries) as well as information obtained through court‑ordered disclosure. For complex cases, specialised investigators may be engaged to locate undisclosed assets, particularly when the debtor operates through multiple corporate entities.
Execution costs, including the fees of the ufficiale giudiziario, auctioneer fees, and publication costs, are borne by the creditor initially but are recoverable from the debtor. Where multiple creditors compete for the same assets, priority follows the rules of the Italian Civil Code: secured creditors (mortgage holders, pledge holders) are paid first, followed by creditors with statutory privileges, and finally unsecured creditors pro rata. Certain assets are exempt from seizure, including a minimum portion of wages, essential household items, and tools necessary for the debtor’s livelihood.
| Asset Class | Common Enforcement Route | Time to Enforcement (Practical) |
|---|---|---|
| Bank accounts | Precautionary attachment → pignoramento presso terzi | Days–weeks if accounts identified |
| Movable assets | Seizure by ufficiale giudiziario; sale at auction | Weeks–months |
| Real estate | Mortgage enforcement / forced sale | Months–over 1 year |
| Receivables | Decreto ingiuntivo + pignoramento presso terzi | Weeks–months |
For creditors seeking to enforce an Italian judgment abroad, or to enforce a foreign judgment in Italy, the applicable regime depends on where the judgment was issued. Within the EU, Regulation (EU) No 1215/2012 (Brussels I recast) provides for automatic recognition and enforcement of judgments issued by courts of EU member states, without the need for an exequatur (separate enforcement declaration). The creditor simply presents the judgment and a certificate issued by the court of origin to the enforcement authorities of the target state.
For judgments from non‑EU countries, Italy applies bilateral or multilateral treaties (including applicable Hague Conventions) or, in the absence of a treaty, domestic rules on recognition of foreign judgments. Italian courts will verify that the foreign court had jurisdiction, that the defendant was properly served, and that the judgment does not conflict with Italian public policy. For cross‑border asset recovery within the EU, the European Account Preservation Order (EAPO) allows creditors to obtain a freezing order against bank accounts in another member state, providing a valuable tool for preventing the dissipation of funds before or during enforcement.
Practical tip: When enforcing across borders, ensure all documents are properly translated and apostilled. Delays frequently arise from incomplete or non‑compliant document packages.
The following timing matrix summarises the key enforcement actions, typical deadlines, and the party responsible at each stage. Use it as a project‑management tool alongside the diffida template provided above and an evidence checklist tailored to your specific claim.
| Action | Timing / Deadline | Responsible |
|---|---|---|
| Send diffida ad adempiere | Give 15 days minimum to respond (case dependent) | In‑house counsel / external lawyer |
| Seek sequestro conservativo | Immediately, if risk of asset dissipation | Litigation counsel |
| File decreto ingiuntivo | As soon as claim is liquid and documented | Counsel |
| Serve precetto (enforcement demand) | After obtaining enforceable title | Counsel / ufficiale giudiziario |
| Instruct ufficiale giudiziario for execution | After expiry of precetto deadline (typically 10 days) | Counsel / creditor |
Understanding how do you enforce a contract in Italy requires familiarity with a layered procedural system, from the initial diffida ad adempiere, through urgent provisional measures, to full‑scale litigation and judgment execution. Each stage offers opportunities to resolve the dispute efficiently or to protect assets pending resolution. With Italy’s judicial reforms continuing to reshape procedural timelines, early preparation and the right enforcement strategy are critical. Businesses operating in Italy should consult experienced litigation counsel at the first sign of a contractual breach, and can find qualified professionals through the Italy lawyer directory.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Alberto Lama at Alture Legal, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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