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how to bring a claim to the Netherlands Commercial Court (NCC)

How to Bring a Claim to the Netherlands Commercial Court (NCC): Step‑by‑step (2026)

By Global Law Experts
– posted 9 hours ago

Understanding how to bring a claim to the Netherlands Commercial Court (NCC) is essential for any business or in‑house counsel involved in an international commercial claim in the Netherlands in 2026. The NCC is a specialised chamber of the Amsterdam District Court that conducts its entire proceedings, written submissions, oral hearings and judgments, in English, making it one of the few state courts in continental Europe purpose‑built for cross‑border commercial disputes.

This guide sets out the complete Netherlands Commercial Court procedure: who is eligible, which documents are needed for an NCC filing, the step‑by‑step process from pre‑filing checks to enforcement, the NCC timeline from filing to judgment, NCC costs (court fees and estimated counsel fees), and what has changed in 2026. Whether you hold an existing NCC jurisdiction clause or are considering opting in post‑dispute, the procedure below will give you a clear, actionable roadmap.

Overview of the Netherlands Commercial Court Procedure and Who It Applies To

The NCC was established in 2019 as a dedicated international commercial court within the Dutch judiciary. It operates as a chamber of the Amsterdam District Court at first instance and as a chamber of the Amsterdam Court of Appeal (the NCCA) on appeal. Its legal foundation rests on the NCC procedural regulation published in the Staatscourant (Stcrt 2020, 68805), supplemented by the ordinary rules of the Dutch Code of Civil Procedure (Wetboek van Burgerlijke Rechtsvordering).

The NCC was created to give multinational businesses, financial institutions and international joint ventures a credible state‑court alternative to arbitration. All proceedings are conducted in English. The bench comprises experienced commercial judges, many of whom have cross‑border litigation backgrounds. Judgments are enforceable across the EU under the Brussels I Recast Regulation and globally through bilateral treaties and local enforcement procedures, an advantage over arbitral awards, which require separate recognition proceedings in many jurisdictions.

Compared with traditional Dutch litigation (conducted in Dutch) and international arbitration, the NCC offers several tactical advantages: transparent, published case law; no requirement to appoint arbitrators or administer an institution; the availability of interim and summary proceedings; and generally competitive NCC costs relative to major arbitral institutions. The process is designed to be efficient, with active case management and a structured timetable. In 2026, the court’s procedural framework has matured significantly, the practical implications of those developments are addressed in the “What Changes in 2026” section below.

NCC Eligibility and Prerequisites

Before you can file a claim, you must confirm that your dispute satisfies the NCC eligibility requirements. The court applies a four‑part test, each element of which must be met. Failure to satisfy any one criterion means the NCC will decline jurisdiction and direct you to the ordinary Dutch courts or another forum.

  • Party agreement. Both parties must have agreed, in writing, that the NCC has jurisdiction. This is typically achieved through an NCC jurisdiction clause in the underlying contract. Parties may also consent to the jurisdiction of the Netherlands Commercial Court post‑dispute.
  • International character. The dispute must have an international dimension. At least one party must be domiciled or have its registered seat outside the Netherlands, or the legal relationship must otherwise involve a meaningful cross‑border element.
  • English‑language proceedings. The parties must have agreed that proceedings will be conducted in English. This is ordinarily embedded in the jurisdiction clause itself.
  • Commercial nature. The dispute must be of a civil or commercial character. The NCC does not hear family law, public‑law, criminal, consumer‑protection or administrative matters.

NCC Jurisdiction Clause: Sample Wording and Drafting Notes

De Rechtspraak publishes model clauses for use in contracts. A typical clause reads:

“All disputes arising out of or in connection with this agreement shall be resolved by the Netherlands Commercial Court (Chamber for International Commercial Matters of the Amsterdam District Court), in accordance with the Rules of Procedure for the NCC District Court. The language of the proceedings shall be English.”

When parties wish to include an appeal route, they should add a reference to the NCCA. In arbitration‑related contexts, for example, where parties want NCC jurisdiction over challenges to or enforcement of arbitral awards connected with their contract, the clause should be adapted to reference the NCC’s summary‑proceedings jurisdiction. Drafting should be reviewed by counsel experienced in the jurisdiction of the Netherlands Commercial Court, because a poorly worded clause is among the most common pitfalls (see Section 8).

Who May Not Use the NCC

The following categories fall outside the NCC’s remit:

  • Purely domestic disputes. Both parties Dutch‑domiciled with no cross‑border element.
  • Family, succession, employment and consumer matters. Even if international, these are channelled to specialist courts.
  • Administrative or public‑law proceedings. Disputes against governmental bodies acting in a public‑law capacity are excluded.
  • Matters below the District Court threshold. Sub‑district (kantonrechter) claims, generally employment and tenancy matters or claims below €25,000, are not eligible.

How to Bring a Claim to the Netherlands Commercial Court (NCC): Step‑by‑Step Procedure

The following steps to file a Netherlands commercial claim apply to standard proceedings at first instance. Each step identifies who is responsible and the typical duration. The consolidated timeline table at the end of this section provides an at‑a‑glance schedule.

Step 1, Conduct Pre‑Filing Checks and Instruct Counsel

Before preparing any court documents, complete the following checklist:

  1. Confirm that the contract or post‑dispute agreement contains a valid NCC jurisdiction clause (or secure opponent’s written consent).
  2. Check applicable limitation periods under the governing law of the contract, Dutch limitation rules under the Civil Code or foreign law if applicable.
  3. Estimate court fees, counsel costs and disbursements (refer to the NCC costs table below).
  4. Assess in which countries enforcement of the judgment will be required and whether treaty or regulation coverage exists (Brussels I Recast, Hague Convention, bilateral treaties).
  5. Instruct Dutch‑qualified counsel, representation by a Dutch‑admitted advocate (advocaat) is mandatory before the NCC.

Who: Claimant / general counsel / external Dutch counsel. Duration: 1–2 weeks.

Step 2, Prepare the Claim Package, Statement of Claim and Translations

The core filing document is the statement of claim, drafted in English. It must set out:

  • The full names and registered offices of the parties.
  • The relief sought (monetary claim, declaration, injunction or specific performance).
  • The legal basis (contract, tort, statute, with reference to the applicable governing law).
  • A concise statement of facts and supporting evidence.
  • The NCC jurisdiction clause or evidence of post‑dispute consent.
  • A schedule of exhibits and an evidence bundle index.

All proceedings are conducted in English. Where key contracts, invoices or correspondence are in another language, supply certified translations. Certified translations may be prepared by a sworn translator (beëdigd vertaler) registered in the Netherlands.

If the defendant is domiciled outside the Netherlands, service of process must comply with the Hague Service Convention (where the defendant’s country is a signatory) or the relevant EU Service Regulation. Evidence of valid service, such as a Hague Service Certificate, must be attached to the filing. See the documents needed for an NCC filing table in Section 4 for the full checklist.

Who: Claimant / counsel. Duration: 2–4 weeks, depending on case complexity and translation requirements.

Step 3, File the Claim and Serve the Writ of Summons on the NCC

NCC proceedings are generally initiated by way of a writ of summons (dagvaarding). In certain matters, particularly corporate‑law applications, proceedings may be commenced by petition (verzoekschrift). The NCC’s initiating‑an‑action guidance published by De Rechtspraak specifies the procedure, the postal and electronic filing addresses, and any required cover forms.

In a dagvaarding procedure, the claimant’s counsel prepares the writ, which is served on the defendant by a bailiff (deurwaarder) in the Netherlands or through the applicable international service mechanism for foreign defendants. After service, the writ is filed with the NCC registry, together with proof of service and supporting documents.

The court registry confirms receipt and schedules the first procedural date. The NCC applies active case management: parties can expect early directions from the presiding judge regarding the exchange of written statements, the hearing timetable and any preliminary issues.

Who: Claimant / counsel / bailiff. Duration: Filing processed within 1–2 weeks; first registry action typically 2–6 weeks.

Step 4, Seek Interim Relief or Urgent Applications (Where Required)

If the claimant needs urgent protection, a freezing injunction, a prohibitory order, or security for costs, the NCC offers summary proceedings (kort geding) conducted entirely in English. These are available at both first instance and on appeal.

Tactical considerations for interim relief:

  • Prepare a supporting affidavit and full evidentiary package before applying; courts expect a clear prima facie case and urgency showing.
  • Ex parte relief (without hearing the defendant) is available in exceptional circumstances, particularly for attachment orders (conservatoir beslag).
  • Urgent hearings can be scheduled within days of the application, making the NCC one of the fastest forums for interim relief in cross‑border disputes.
  • NCC interim orders are enforceable across the EU under the Brussels I Recast framework, subject to standard conditions.

Who: Claimant / counsel / court. Duration: Days to 2 weeks (expedited).

Step 5, Defence, Evidence Exchange and Hearing

After filing, the defendant is given a period to submit a statement of defence. The precise deadline is set by the court but typically falls 2–4 weeks after the defendant has entered an appearance. The ordinary Dutch rules on document disclosure and inspection apply (Articles 843a–843b of the Wetboek van Burgerlijke Rechtsvordering), supplemented by any case management directions.

The parties exchange written evidence, witness statements and expert reports in accordance with the procedural schedule. The NCC may convene a case management conference to narrow the issues, set a hearing date and address preliminary points. Oral hearings are conducted in English; witnesses may testify in English or, where necessary, through interpreters. The hearing is typically scheduled 6–20 weeks after filing, depending on case complexity and court availability.

Who: Both parties / court. Duration: Case management and disclosure 4–12 weeks; hearing 6–20 weeks after filing.

Step 6, Judgment, Enforcement and Appeals

The NCC issues its judgment in English, typically 2–8 weeks after the hearing. The judgment includes a costs order, usually applying the standard Dutch litigation costs compensation system (a fixed tariff rather than full indemnity).

Enforcement follows standard Dutch enforcement rules. Within the EU, the judgment benefits from automatic recognition under the Brussels I Recast Regulation. Outside the EU, the claimant must pursue recognition and enforcement in the relevant jurisdiction, often under bilateral treaties or domestic exequatur proceedings.

Either party may appeal to the NCCA (Netherlands Commercial Court of Appeal) by filing a notice of appeal within the statutory appeal period provided by the Wetboek van Burgerlijke Rechtsvordering. A further appeal on points of law lies to the Dutch Supreme Court (Hoge Raad).

Who: Court / appellant / counsel. Duration: Judgment 2–8 weeks after hearing; appeal notice within the statutory period.

NCC Timeline Summary Table

Step Who Does It Typical Duration (est.)
Pre‑filing checks & instruct counsel Claimant / GC / external counsel 1–2 weeks
Prepare & translate claim package Claimant / counsel 2–4 weeks
File claim with NCC (initiation) Claimant / counsel Filing processed 1–2 weeks; first registry action 2–6 weeks
Defendant service / initial response Defendant / counsel Defence due 2–4 weeks from service (court may vary)
Interim / urgent hearing (if applied) Court (on application) Days to 2 weeks (expedited)
Case management & disclosure exchange Both parties 4–12 weeks (case dependent)
Hearing(s) Court & parties 6–20 weeks after filing (varies)
Judgment issued Court 2–8 weeks after hearing
Appeal to NCCA Appellant Appeal notice within the statutory period (3 months under the Wetboek van Burgerlijke Rechtsvordering)

Note: all durations are indicative and depend on case complexity, court workload and judge directions.

Documents Needed for an NCC Filing: Required Checklist

Before filing, assemble a complete claim package. Missing or defective documents are among the most frequent causes of delay. The table below sets out every required document, who issues it, the expected format and practical notes on certification and validity.

Document Notes (Who Issues It / Format / Validity)
Statement of claim (English) Prepared by claimant/counsel. Must set out relief sought, jurisdiction clause, concise summary of facts and legal grounds. PDF and hard copy as required by the registry.
Writ of summons (dagvaarding) or petition (verzoekschrift) As required by NCC rules. Served version to be attached, together with proof of service.
Contract excerpt showing NCC clause Copy of the signed contract identifying the NCC jurisdiction clause. Indicate clause location (page and clause number).
Power of attorney / instruction letter Signed and dated authority for external counsel. Certify if required for cross‑border service.
Corporate documents For corporate claimants: certified copy of incorporation, board resolution authorising the claim, recent Chamber of Commerce extract (KvK uittreksel) or equivalent foreign registry extract.
Key contracts, invoices, correspondence Chronological bundle. Include originals or certified copies. Provide certified English translations for any documents not in English.
Evidence bundle (affidavits / witness statements) Affidavits executed per Dutch procedure. Expert reports labelled. Provide a bundle index.
Proof of service (foreign service) Hague Service Certificate, EU Service Regulation certificate, postal receipt or process server affidavit. Attach translations if served under non‑English local rules.
Court fee payment evidence Receipt or bank confirmation of payment to the NCC. Attach to filing.
Confidentiality / redaction notice Where documents contain trade secrets or sensitive data, identify confidential pages and provide public and confidential bundle versions if the court requests.

Ensure every document is indexed and that the index cross‑references the statement of claim. The NCC registry may refuse to process an incomplete filing, resulting in wasted costs and lost time. Where documents originate from jurisdictions requiring apostille or legalisation, arrange this before filing, processing times for apostille certificates vary significantly by country.

NCC Timeline and Key Deadlines

While the NCC timeline table above gives indicative durations for each step, several statutory and court‑directed deadlines require special attention. Missing a deadline can result in default judgment, loss of an appeal right or forfeiture of an interim order.

  • Defence filing. The court typically sets a deadline of 2–4 weeks after appearance for the statement of defence. Where foreign service is involved, additional time may be granted.
  • Appeal notice. Under the Wetboek van Burgerlijke Rechtsvordering, the statutory appeal period for civil judgments is three months from the date of the judgment.
  • Interim relief applications. No fixed filing window, these can be brought at any stage. Urgent hearings may be scheduled within days. The tactical advantage lies in applying as early as possible, particularly where there is a risk of asset dissipation.
  • Evidence preservation. Applications for provisional evidence measures (Articles 186–188 of the Wetboek van Burgerlijke Rechtsvordering) should be made at the earliest opportunity; delay undermines urgency arguments.
  • Case management directions. The presiding judge may issue binding procedural orders, including deadlines for document production, witness lists and expert reports, at any case management conference. Non‑compliance may result in sanctions or the exclusion of late evidence.

Overall, a straightforward NCC claim from filing to first‑instance judgment typically takes 3–6 months. Complex, multi‑party or document‑heavy disputes may take considerably longer. Add approximately 12–18 months if the matter proceeds to the NCCA on appeal.

NCC Costs, Fees and Tax Considerations

The NCC applies higher court fees than ordinary Dutch court proceedings, reflecting the specialised, English‑language service. The fee schedule is published by De Rechtspraak and is subject to periodic adjustment. The following table reflects the figures published on the NCC costs page.

Item Amount Notes
Court fee, NCC District Court (standard proceedings) €19,518 per party Payable at filing. Confirm the current amount on De Rechtspraak before filing.
Court fee, NCC summary proceedings €9,759 per party For interim / urgent proceedings at first instance.
Court fee, NCCA (appeal) €26,024 per party Payable when filing a notice of appeal.
Court fee, summary proceedings on appeal €13,012 per party For appeal of summary proceedings.
Counsel fees (estimate) €10,000 – €150,000+ Wide range depending on complexity, number of hearing days, evidence volume and disbursements.
Interim relief / urgent application fee Variable Includes court fee above plus expedited counsel hours and bailiff costs.

Dutch litigation cost orders follow a fixed tariff system (liquidatietarief), meaning the losing party typically reimburses only a portion of the winner’s legal costs, not the full amount actually incurred. This is an important budgeting consideration: even a successful claimant will bear a significant share of its own counsel fees.

VAT treatment of legal fees depends on the counsel’s jurisdiction and the client’s tax status. Cross‑border VAT reverse‑charge mechanisms may apply where a non‑Dutch business engages a Dutch advocate. Seek specialist tax advice before committing to a cost structure.

What Changes in the Netherlands Commercial Court Procedure in 2026

Since its launch, the NCC has evolved from a promising experiment to a well‑established component of the Dutch court system. Several developments in 2026 are shaping how practitioners approach filing, interim relief and clause drafting.

The NCC’s dedicated procedural rules, promulgated through the NCC regulation (Stcrt 2020, 68805) and refined through practice directions, have bedded in. Early indications suggest that the court is now applying its case management powers more assertively, setting tighter procedural timetables and narrowing issues at earlier stages. The likely practical effect is shorter times between filing and hearing for well‑prepared claims.

Industry observers expect continued growth in post‑dispute opt‑ins: parties that did not include an NCC clause in their original contract agreeing, once a dispute arises, to litigate before the NCC rather than resorting to arbitration or ordinary Dutch proceedings. The NCC’s published model clauses now address a wider range of scenarios, including hybrid clauses that combine NCC jurisdiction for substantive proceedings with arbitration for specific ancillary matters.

The interaction between the NCC procedure and broader Dutch procedural reforms, including ongoing discussions around digitisation of court filings and adjustments to the Dutch Code of Civil Procedure (DCCP), has clarified the NCC’s position within the wider judicial framework. For claimants, the key practical takeaway in 2026 is that the NCC’s procedural infrastructure is robust and predictable: the filing route is well documented, interim relief practice is fast, and court fee levels have remained stable.

Common Pitfalls and How to Avoid Them

  • Defective jurisdiction clause. An ambiguous or incomplete clause is the single most common reason the NCC declines jurisdiction. Use the De Rechtspraak model clause and have it reviewed by Dutch‑qualified counsel before signature.
  • Failure to attach proof of service. Omitting the Hague Service Certificate or equivalent proof delays proceedings and may result in the court refusing to proceed. Arrange service early and retain originals.
  • Missing or uncertified translations. All non‑English documents must be accompanied by certified translations. Using an uncertified translation risks the exhibit being excluded or the filing being returned.
  • Underbudgeting court fees. NCC court fees are substantially higher than ordinary Dutch proceedings. Budget for both first‑instance and potential appeal fees from the outset.
  • Delaying interim relief applications. If you need urgent protection, apply immediately. Courts assess urgency strictly, waiting undermines the application and may allow assets to dissipate.
  • Ignoring enforcement jurisdiction. A judgment is only valuable if it can be enforced. Assess enforcement prospects in the defendant’s country before filing and consider whether pre‑judgment attachment is available.
  • Incomplete corporate authorisation. Corporate claimants must demonstrate authority to sue. A missing board resolution or outdated company extract is a preventable ground for procedural challenge.
  • Non‑compliance with case management orders. The NCC actively manages its docket. Failing to meet court‑set deadlines for evidence or submissions may result in sanctions or exclusion of late material.
  • Overlooking the costs‑compensation tariff. Even if you win, the Dutch tariff system means you will recover only a fraction of actual legal costs. Factor this into settlement calculations.
  • Failing to monitor fee updates. NCC court fees are adjusted periodically. Always check the current schedule on De Rechtspraak immediately before filing.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Marcel Fruytier at Fruytier Lawyers in Business, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. De Rechtspraak, Netherlands Commercial Court (NCC)
  2. De Rechtspraak, Initiating an Action (NCC)
  3. De Rechtspraak, NCC Costs
  4. Staatscourant, NCC Procedural Regulation (Stcrt 2020, 68805)
  5. VBK Advocaten, Bill for the Establishment of the NCC
  6. Loyens & Loeff, NCC Overview
  7. Guldemond Advocaten, The Netherlands Commercial Court
  8. Ten Advocaten, Commercial Dispute Resolution in the Netherlands
  9. Dutch Code of Civil Procedure (Wetboek van Burgerlijke Rechtsvordering)
  10. Erasmus University, Commercialising Litigation: The Case of the Netherlands Commercial Court

FAQs

Who can bring a claim to the Netherlands Commercial Court (NCC)?
Any party to an international commercial dispute that satisfies the NCC’s four‑part eligibility test: the parties have agreed to NCC jurisdiction in writing, the dispute has an international dimension, proceedings are to be conducted in English, and the matter is of a civil or commercial character.
Instruct a Dutch‑admitted advocate, prepare an English‑language statement of claim with all supporting documents, serve the writ of summons (dagvaarding) on the defendant through the appropriate service mechanism, pay the NCC court fee and file the complete package with the NCC registry.
At minimum: statement of claim (English), writ of summons with proof of service, contract excerpt showing the NCC clause, power of attorney, corporate authorisation documents, evidence bundle with index, certified translations of non‑English documents, and court fee payment evidence. See the full documents table above.
A straightforward first‑instance claim typically takes 3–6 months from filing to judgment. Complex or multi‑party cases may take longer. Interim relief hearings can be scheduled within days. An appeal to the NCCA adds approximately 12–18 months.
Yes. Foreign companies are eligible provided the four‑part test is met. Service on foreign defendants must comply with the Hague Service Convention or the EU Service Regulation. The claimant must file proof of valid service, typically a Hague Service Certificate, with the court.
Consequences can be severe. Missing a defence deadline may lead to default judgment. Missing the statutory appeal period extinguishes the right of appeal. If you have missed or are at risk of missing a deadline, seek counsel immediately, restoration or extension applications may be available in limited circumstances.
The NCC District Court fee is €19,518 per party for standard proceedings. Summary proceedings cost €9,759 per party. An appeal to the NCCA costs €26,024 per party. Counsel fees range from approximately €10,000 for simple matters to €150,000 or more for complex disputes. Always confirm the current fee schedule on De Rechtspraak before filing.
Yes. Parties must be represented by a Dutch‑admitted advocate (advocaat). Foreign lawyers may assist the team but cannot act as the lead representative on the court record.
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How to Bring a Claim to the Netherlands Commercial Court (NCC): Step‑by‑step (2026)

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