Our Expert in Greece
No results available
Last updated: 28 May 2026
Understanding how to bring a class action in Greece in 2026 is essential for consumer organisations, in‑house counsel and claimant law firms confronting mass‑harm events such as product defects, data breaches or anticompetitive conduct. Greece does not replicate the US‑style class action; instead, it operates a representative action framework anchored in Directive (EU) 2020/1828 (the Representative Actions Directive, or “RAD”) and shaped by broad civil‑procedure reforms introduced through Law 5221/2025 (FEK A’ 133/28.07.2025). This guide walks through every stage of the collective action procedure in Greece, from eligibility checks and document preparation to filing, case management, settlement approval and enforcement, reflecting the tighter deadlines and streamlined processes that Greek courts have begun applying since the start of 2026.
A representative action in Greece allows a designated “qualified entity”, rather than an individual consumer, to seek injunctive relief, redress measures or both on behalf of a group of affected persons. The mechanism serves sectors where large numbers of consumers or businesses suffer comparable harm from the same trader practice, defective product or regulatory breach.
The substantive rules governing who may sue, what remedies are available and how the court supervises the action derive from Greece’s transposition of Directive (EU) 2020/1828. Procedural timelines, service windows, pleading deadlines and case‑management scheduling, are now governed by the Civil Procedure Code as amended by Law 5221/2025 (FEK A’ 133/28.07.2025), which tightened pre‑trial preparation, introduced strict calendaring and reduced scope for adjournments.
Typical use cases include mass consumer claims against financial institutions, product liability actions, competition‑damages follow‑on claims, and regulatory compliance disputes arising from EU‑harmonised legislation. The procedure is also available for cross‑border infringements where a qualified entity designated in another EU Member State meets the Greek standing requirements.
Not every organisation can launch a representative action. The class action requirements in Greece centre on the concept of a “qualified entity”, an organisation pre‑designated or recognised as meeting specific governance and transparency standards. Failing the eligibility threshold is one of the most common reasons actions are dismissed at the outset.
Under the RAD transposition, the following categories may qualify:
To prove eligibility for a representative action in Greece, the entity must file its certificate of incorporation or statute, evidence of active operations (annual reports, membership records) and, critically, a board resolution expressly authorising the specific action.
Greece’s transposition generally follows an opt‑in model for redress measures: individual consumers must express their wish to be represented, either through signed mandates or through a documented enrolment mechanism operated by the qualified entity. For injunctive measures (cease‑and‑desist orders), no individual opt‑in is required because the relief benefits the collective interest automatically. The qualified entity must, however, describe the class of affected persons with sufficient precision at filing. Where a settlement is proposed, notice must be given to all identifiable class members, who then have a defined window to opt out.
The following numbered steps reflect the collective action procedure in Greece as it operates under the 2026 framework. Each step corresponds to a row in the consolidated timeline table at the end of this section.
Before any filing, claimant counsel and the qualified entity must build the factual and legal foundation for the claim. Key tasks include:
This preparation phase typically takes 7–60 calendar days depending on the complexity of the underlying facts and the number of potential class members.
The qualified entity’s governing body must pass a formal resolution authorising the action. This resolution should identify the defendant, the nature of the infringement, the remedies sought and the counsel appointed. In line with the transparency obligations under Directive (EU) 2020/1828, many qualified entities also publish a notice on their website announcing the intended action and inviting affected persons to register interest.
Although Greek law does not impose a mandatory pre‑action protocol for representative actions equivalent to the English system, early notification to the defendant can serve tactical purposes, it may prompt voluntary cessation of the infringement or open settlement channels before court costs accrue. Allow 7–30 calendar days for this stage.
The statement of claim is filed at the multi‑member first instance court (Polymeles Protodikeio) in the judicial district where the defendant has its registered seat or, in certain consumer matters, where the infringement produced its effects. The filing must include:
Once the clerk registers the action, the claimant must arrange formal service on the defendant. Service must typically be completed within 3–14 calendar days of filing, following the Greek Code of Civil Procedure rules (as amended by Law 5221/2025). Where the defendant is domiciled abroad, service via the Hague Service Convention or the EU Service Regulation applies and takes longer.
Under the revised scheduling rules introduced by Law 5221/2025 (FEK A’ 133/28.07.2025), the court issues a case‑management timetable shortly after service. The likely practical effect of the 2025 reforms is that pleading windows are tighter than under the prior regime: defence and reply briefs are commonly required within 30–90 calendar days of service, depending on the court’s order. Practitioners should expect judges to enforce these windows strictly and resist adjournments.
If the claimant needs urgent interim relief, for instance, a preliminary injunction to halt ongoing harm or preserve evidence, the application is filed alongside or immediately after the main claim. Expedited interim hearings typically take place within 7–30 calendar days. The court may also appoint its own expert or order disclosure of specific documents at this stage.
Settlement is encouraged at any point, but a representative‑action settlement involving redress measures must receive court approval to bind the class. The settlement approval procedure involves:
This process typically spans 30–120 calendar days from filing of the settlement to final approval, depending on the size of the class and the complexity of the distribution mechanism.
If the case proceeds to judgment rather than settlement, the court issues a reasoned decision. A favourable judgment on injunctive relief takes effect immediately upon service; redress orders become enforceable after the appeal period lapses (typically 30 days from service of the reasoned decision) or after the appellate court confirms the decision.
Enforcement follows standard Greek civil‑enforcement rules. For monetary awards, the winning party may pursue seizure of bank accounts, attachment of assets or garnishment. Class members who opted out of the action are not bound by the judgment, whether favourable or unfavourable, and retain the right to pursue individual claims.
| Step | Who Does It | Typical Duration |
|---|---|---|
| Case assessment & evidence gathering | Qualified entity / claimant counsel | 7–60 days (complexity‑dependent) |
| Qualified entity board approvals & pre‑filing notice | Qualified entity board / counsel | 7–30 days |
| File statement of claim with court | Claimant / counsel | Filing is immediate; service within 3–14 days |
| Court case‑management and pleadings exchange | Court / both parties | 30–90 days per Law 5221/2025 scheduling |
| Preliminary injunctive measures (if urgent) | Claimant (request) / Court | Interim ruling within 7–30 days (expedited) |
| Settlement negotiation + court approval | Parties / Court | 30–120 days (including notice and approval) |
| Judgment enforcement | Winning party / enforcement authorities | Begins after judgment finality (appeal: 30 days) |
Assembling the correct documents needed for a class action is critical, missing or deficient filings can delay the action by weeks or provide the defendant with grounds to challenge standing. The following table sets out every document typically required at commencement and during the proceedings.
| Document | Notes (Who Issues It / Format / Validity) |
|---|---|
| Statement of claim / writ | Drafted by claimant counsel; must include a summary of the representative scope, the class definition and the remedies sought. Signed power of attorney attached. |
| Power of attorney | Signed by qualified entity officers and notarised. If foreign signatories are involved, consular legalisation or apostille is required. |
| Certificates of incorporation / statute of qualified entity | Issued by the competent registry (e.g., Court of First Instance registry for associations). Proves standing and representative mandate. |
| Board resolution authorising the action | Issued by the qualified entity’s governance body. Must identify the defendant, infringement and remedies. Typically dated within 6 months of filing. |
| List of representative members (sample or full list) | Full list if available; otherwise, a methodology for identifying class members. Data‑privacy redactions permitted for personal identifiers. |
| Exhibit index & key evidence | PDF attachments of expert reports, contracts, invoices and correspondence. Expert CVs and methodology summaries are required where opinions are relied upon. |
| Notice materials (drafts for class dissemination) | Draft notice text, proposed dissemination channels (website, press, registered mail). Translations required if the class includes non‑Greek speakers. |
| Settlement distribution plan (if settlement proposed) | Prepared by claimant counsel or a proposed administrator. Includes calculation methodology, payment timetable and unclaimed‑funds protocol. |
| Fee payment receipt or exemption request | Court cashier receipt for the judicial filing fee. Where applicable, a formal fee‑exemption request with supporting documentation. |
Practitioners should prepare a master filing bundle in both hard copy and electronic form. Courts in Athens and Thessaloniki increasingly accept or require electronic filing for certain document categories, though the statement of claim itself is still filed in hard copy at most Polymeles Protodikeio registries. It is advisable to confirm the specific filing requirements with the court clerk before submission.
The timeline for representative actions in Greece is shaped by both the RAD transposition and, since mid‑2025, the civil‑procedure reforms of Law 5221/2025. Early indications suggest that courts are enforcing the new scheduling provisions with greater rigour than the pre‑reform practice. The table below consolidates the critical deadlines that practitioners must calendar.
| Stage | Deadline / Practical Timing | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Service after filing | 3–14 calendar days | Follow court rules for domestic service. Foreign service via the Hague Convention or EU Service Regulation takes longer; appoint a Greek process agent where necessary. |
| Pleadings exchange (defence / reply) | 30–90 calendar days post‑service | Law 5221/2025 tightens case‑management windows. The court order sets specific dates; adjournments are granted only in exceptional circumstances. |
| Interim injunctive relief hearing | 7–30 calendar days (expedited) | File evidence supporting urgency and irreparable harm alongside the application. |
| Settlement notice to class | Commonly 30–60 calendar days (court‑set) | Notice must include opt‑out mechanics, claims‑submission forms and a summary of the proposed settlement terms. |
| Final judgment appeal | 30 calendar days from service of reasoned decision | Check appeal routes: appeal (efesi) to the Court of Appeal; further cassation (anaireisi) to the Supreme Court (Areios Pagos) on points of law only. |
Missing a deadline can have severe consequences. Courts may strike late‑filed pleadings, refuse to admit evidence or dismiss interim applications. Where a deadline is missed, counsel should immediately file a restoration motion (aitisi epanaforis) explaining the reason for the delay, though success is not guaranteed, especially under the stricter ethos of Law 5221/2025. For litigation involving property‑related claims in Greece, parallel regulatory timelines may also need to be tracked.
Budgeting accurately is essential. Class action costs in Greece vary considerably depending on the claim value, the number of class members and whether injunctive or redress measures are sought. The following table provides indicative ranges for the main cost categories.
| Item | Typical Amount (EUR) / Range | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Judicial filing fee | Varies by claim value; some representative actions may attract reduced fees or exemptions | The fee schedule is set by ministerial decree and depends on the monetary value of the claim. Qualified consumer entities may apply for exemptions in specific circumstances. Confirm with the court cashier. |
| Lawyer retainers / conditional fees | €10,000–€100,000+ (retainer); success fees negotiated separately | Greek law permits contingency‑style arrangements subject to proportionality rules. Fee structures are typically agreed in the engagement letter. |
| Expert report(s) | €3,000–€60,000+ per expert | Depends on technical complexity, volume of data analysis and the number of experts required. |
| Administration & notice costs | €5,000–€50,000+ | Covers publication of notices, postal or electronic dissemination, claims administration and database management for large classes. |
| Court‑ordered distribution administrator fee | Contracted per settlement | Included in the settlement budget and approved by the court as part of the distribution plan. |
| Tax on settlement amounts | Depends on the nature of the remedy | Compensation payments may be treated differently from contractual rescission or penalty payments. Seek specialist tax advice before finalising the distribution plan. |
The losing party in Greek litigation is generally ordered to contribute to the winning party’s costs, though the award rarely covers the full amount. In representative actions, courts have discretion over cost allocation and may take into account the public‑interest nature of the claim. Where third‑party funders are involved, disclosure requirements should be checked against current court practice, which is still evolving.
Two legislative instruments define the current landscape for anyone considering how to bring a class action in Greece in 2026:
The likely practical effect of these combined reforms is faster case resolution, more structured pre‑trial preparation and greater judicial oversight of settlement quality, all of which raise the bar for claimant preparation but also reduce the scope for defensive delay tactics by respondents. Greece’s broader 2026 regulatory reform programme also signals a continued emphasis on procedural efficiency across multiple areas of law.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Nikos Christoforidis at Law Office of Nikos Christoforidis, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
posted 10 minutes ago
posted 46 minutes ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
posted 4 hours ago
posted 4 hours ago
posted 5 hours ago
posted 5 hours ago
No results available
Find the right Legal Expert for your business
Sign up for the latest legal briefings and news within Global Law Experts’ community, as well as a whole host of features, editorial and conference updates direct to your email inbox.
Naturally you can unsubscribe at any time.
Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.
Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.
Send welcome message