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Understanding how to collect a claim in Slovenia is essential for any creditor, domestic or foreign, seeking to recover a civil debt efficiently and within the boundaries of Slovenian law. Slovenia offers a structured sequence of recovery options, from pre-litigation demands through the fast-track payment order procedure (plačilni nalog) to full enforcement under the Enforcement and Security Act (Zakon o izvršbi in zavarovanju, commonly known as ZIZ). This guide walks credit managers, in-house counsel, small-business owners and litigation lawyers through every stage: which court to use, what documents to file, how the 8-day objection window works, what enforcement costs to expect and the realistic timelines involved. Last updated: 2 June 2026.
Yes. Slovenian law gives creditors multiple routes to recover outstanding debts, ranging from informal demand letters to court-supervised enforcement with bailiff seizure of assets. The system is well-established, anchored in EU-compatible legislation and accessible to both domestic and foreign creditors.
A creditor pursuing debt collection in Slovenia will typically move through the following stages:
Each step builds on the previous one, and creditors can often skip directly to enforcement if they already possess an enforceable title. The sections below explain every stage in detail.
Knowing how to recover a civil debt requires understanding the full spectrum of tools available. In Slovenia, the process follows a logical escalation: voluntary payment, formal demand, court action and, if necessary, compulsory enforcement. Choosing the right entry point depends on the size and nature of the claim, the debtor’s likely response and whether the claim is disputed.
The Slovenian Civil Procedure Act (ZPP) provides the framework for conducting civil litigation. These rules outline the procedures for initiating lawsuits, serving documents and managing court proceedings. For enforcement after judgment, the Enforcement and Security Act (ZIZ) is the primary statute, giving courts and bailiffs the authority to seize assets, garnish wages and freeze bank accounts.
A creditor should always begin with a written demand letter (opomin) before initiating court proceedings. This is not a formal legal requirement for filing a payment order, but it demonstrates good faith, may prompt voluntary payment and strengthens the creditor’s position on costs if the matter goes to court. The demand should specify the exact amount owed, the legal basis for the claim, a clear payment deadline and a warning that legal proceedings will follow if the debt remains unpaid.
For high-volume, low-value receivables, or when a creditor lacks local representation, engaging a debt collection agency in Slovenia can be cost-effective. Agencies handle extrajudicial recovery, including demand letters, phone follow-ups and debtor tracing. However, they cannot represent creditors in court. For claims requiring litigation or enforcement, a Slovenian attorney is essential. Creditors should weigh agency fees (typically a percentage of the recovered amount) against the likely recovery before choosing this route.
Slovenia’s court system distinguishes between local courts (okrajno sodišče) and district courts (okrožno sodišče). According to the European e-Justice Portal, a small claims procedure is conducted before a local court. For claims exceeding the small-claims threshold, district courts have jurisdiction. The payment order procedure, the fastest route for court debt collection, is available at both levels, provided the creditor’s claim is monetary, due and supported by documentary evidence.
The payment order is the single most important procedural tool for creditors learning how to collect a claim in Slovenia. It allows the court to order the debtor to pay without a full hearing, based solely on the creditor’s documentary evidence. The procedure is governed by the Civil Procedure Act (ZPP).
To file a payment order, the creditor must submit the following:
All filings must be in the Slovenian language. Foreign creditors must appoint a person authorised to receive judicial documents in Slovenia.
Once the court issues the payment order, it must be served personally on the debtor. According to the EU Enforcement Atlas national report for Slovenia, the payment order must be served on the debtor, who is then ordered to pay the debt within 8 days. This 8-day window is the critical deadline in the entire process. The debtor has three options:
When the 8-day deadline expires without an objection, the payment order becomes a final decision. The creditor can then request a certificate of enforceability (potrdilo o pravnomočnosti in izvršljivosti) from the court. This certificate transforms the payment order into an enforceable title, the legal prerequisite for initiating enforcement proceedings under ZIZ. Industry observers expect this conversion to take approximately one to three weeks from the expiry of the objection deadline, depending on court workload.
If the debtor files a valid objection within the 8-day window, the payment order is set aside and the case automatically shifts to a standard civil procedure. The creditor’s original filing is treated as the statement of claim, and the debtor must file a statement of defence. From this point, the dispute follows the standard litigation path: exchange of written submissions, a preparatory hearing, an evidentiary hearing and, ultimately, a first-instance judgment.
Creditor checklist, documents to attach when filing a payment order:
Once a creditor holds an enforceable title, whether from an uncontested payment order, a final court judgment or a directly enforceable notarial act, the next step is enforcement. Judgments in Slovenia are enforced through a separate enforcement procedure governed primarily by the Enforcement and Security Act (ZIZ). If the losing party (debtor) does not voluntarily comply, the winning party (creditor) can initiate enforcement proceedings.
Enforcement is initiated by filing an enforcement proposal (predlog za izvršbo) with the competent local court. The creditor must specify the assets or income streams against which enforcement should be directed. Slovenian law provides several enforcement mechanisms:
When enforcement involves seizure and sale of physical assets, the court appoints a bailiff (izvršitelj). The creditor must provide the enforceable title with the certificate of enforceability, a clear description of the assets to be seized (or a request for the bailiff to identify assets at the debtor’s premises), and proof of payment of the enforcement court fee. Bailiffs operate under court supervision and follow detailed procedural rules set out in the ZIZ.
Slovenian law protects certain debtor assets from enforcement. Exempt items typically include essential household goods, tools necessary for the debtor’s trade and a minimum portion of the debtor’s salary. The precise exemptions and priority rules for competing creditors are set out in the ZIZ and should be verified with local counsel, as thresholds may be updated periodically.
When a respondent refuses to pay despite holding the means to do so, the creditor’s recourse is direct: file the enforcement proposal, request bank-account seizure or wage garnishment, and let the court-supervised process compel payment. The debtor cannot evade a valid enforceable title simply by refusing to comply.
One of the most common concerns for creditors is timing. The duration of debt collection in Slovenia varies significantly depending on whether the debtor cooperates, objects or forces full litigation. The table below provides indicative timelines for each major stage.
| Procedure | Typical Timeline (Indicative) | Key Deadline / Trigger |
|---|---|---|
| Pre-litigation demand letter | 7–15 days (creditor-set deadline) | Creditor sets payment deadline in the demand |
| Payment order, service to enforceable title (uncontested) | Service → 8 days to object; if no objection, enforceable within approximately 1–3 weeks | 8-day objection window from date of service |
| Ordinary civil claim, first-instance judgment | 3–12+ months (case-dependent; complex cases longer) | Statement of defence deadline per Civil Procedure Act; scheduling of hearings |
| Enforcement under ZIZ, bank-account seizure | Weeks (typically the fastest enforcement route) | Filing of enforcement proposal with enforceable title |
| Enforcement under ZIZ, movable/immovable property seizure | Weeks to several months (depending on asset tracing and sale procedure) | Court appointment of bailiff; scheduling of asset valuation and sale |
These timelines are indicative and drawn from practitioner experience and national enforcement reports. Actual durations depend on court workload, debtor behaviour and the complexity of asset tracing. Early indications suggest that bank-account seizure remains the most efficient enforcement method for straightforward monetary claims.
Budgeting realistically is critical when planning debt collection Slovenia strategy. Four main cost categories apply: court filing fees, attorney fees, bailiff and enforcement costs, and statutory interest.
Court fees in Slovenia are calculated as a percentage of the claim value and are set by the Court Fees Act (Zakon o sodnih taksah). Small-claims procedures (typically before a local court) carry lower fees. The creditor must pay the filing fee upfront when submitting the claim or payment order. According to the official Slovenian courts portal, the court does not send the party a payment order for the payment of the fee in enforcement proceedings, the fee must be paid proactively.
Attorney fees in Slovenia are governed by the Attorney Tariff (Odvetniška tarifa), which sets rates based on the value of the dispute. Attorneys may also agree hourly or fixed-fee arrangements with clients, but recoverable costs from the debtor are capped at the tariff rates. For a claim of €5,000, creditors should budget for attorney fees that reflect both the filing stage and any subsequent hearing appearances. A detailed litigation cost framework can help creditors prepare a realistic budget covering court fees, attorney fees, expert fees and enforcement costs.
Bailiff fees are payable by the creditor upfront when enforcement of movable or immovable property is requested. These fees cover the bailiff’s attendance, asset inventory, valuation and, where applicable, the costs of organising a public sale. The amounts are regulated and generally proportional to the complexity of the enforcement action. Where enforcement is successful, these costs are typically recoverable from the debtor as part of the enforcement order.
Creditors are entitled to statutory default interest from the date the debt becomes due until payment. For commercial transactions (B2B), the applicable rate is typically the statutory default interest rate published by the Slovenian authorities. Contractual interest clauses may apply if agreed between the parties, subject to general fairness rules. The interest calculation should be included in the payment order filing.
| Cost Type | Who Pays Initially | Recoverable from Debtor? |
|---|---|---|
| Court filing fee | Creditor | Yes, if the judgment orders the debtor to pay costs |
| Bailiff enforcement fee | Creditor (upfront) | Generally recoverable if the judgment awards costs |
| Attorney fee | Creditor (engages counsel) | Recoverable up to tariff rates if the judgment awards costs |
| Statutory default interest | N/A (added to claim) | Yes, claimed as part of the debt |
The general Slovenian rule is that the losing party bears the litigation costs. However, if the plaintiff is only partially successful, the court may apportion costs proportionally. Creditors should factor this into their cost-benefit analysis before litigating.
The following six-step checklist provides a practical roadmap for creditors pursuing how to collect a claim in Slovenia from start to finish:
This timeline assumes an uncontested claim. Contested claims add several months for litigation. Creditors should build contingency time into their recovery planning.
When the debtor is located outside Slovenia, or the creditor is a foreign entity, several EU instruments simplify cross-border debt recovery. The European Order for Payment procedure (Regulation (EC) No 1896/2006) allows creditors to obtain an enforceable order across EU member states using a standardised form, without the need for a local attorney in the initial filing stage. If the debtor does not contest, the order becomes enforceable throughout the EU.
For contested cross-border claims under €5,000, the European Small Claims Procedure (Regulation (EC) No 861/2007) provides a simplified, written procedure before a local court. Slovenia has implemented both regulations, and the European e-Justice Portal provides country-specific guidance for each.
Foreign judgments from EU member states are generally recognised and enforceable in Slovenia under the Brussels I Regulation (recast). Non-EU judgments require a separate recognition procedure governed by Slovenian private international law. Creditors with cross-border claims should seek local counsel to navigate applicable treaties and bilateral agreements.
The decision between litigation and agency referral depends on several factors. The likely practical effect will be shaped by claim size, debtor solvency and the location of assets. Consider the following decision matrix:
Collecting a claim in Slovenia follows a clear, statute-backed pathway: demand, payment order, judgment (if contested) and enforcement under ZIZ. The 8-day objection window on payment orders gives creditors a fast track to an enforceable title in uncontested cases, while the ZIZ provides robust tools, from bank seizure to forced property sales, for compelling payment from reluctant debtors. Creditors who prepare thorough documentation, file promptly and engage qualified local counsel position themselves for the most efficient recovery. For tailored guidance on your specific claim, consult an experienced Slovenia-based civil litigation lawyer.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Marko Butinar at Marko Butinar – odvetnik, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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