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how to enforce a foreign judgment in Iceland

How to Enforce a Foreign Judgment in Iceland, Step‑by‑step (2026 Update)

By Global Law Experts
– posted 1 hour ago

If you hold a final money judgment from a court outside Iceland and need to collect against assets or a debtor located there, understanding how to enforce a foreign judgment in Iceland is essential before you spend time or money on the wrong procedure. Iceland operates a dual-track system: judgments covered by the Lugano Convention follow a streamlined registration route, while judgments from non-convention states generally require fresh proceedings on the merits. This guide sets out every stage of the process, eligibility checks, required documents, realistic timelines, estimated costs and the 2026 EFTA/ESA developments that may affect your enforcement strategy.

It is written for judgment‑creditors, international counsel and in‑house legal teams preparing to convert a foreign judgment into an enforceable Icelandic title.

Overview of the Process: Recognition vs. Enforcement

Recognition and enforcement are related but distinct concepts in Icelandic private international law. Recognition means the Icelandic court accepts the foreign judgment as conclusive on the rights it determines, it creates res judicata but does not, by itself, allow you to seize assets. Enforcement goes further: it grants the judgment the same coercive force as a domestic Icelandic court order, enabling garnishment, seizure of property and other execution measures.

For civil and commercial money judgments originating in a state party to the Lugano Convention on Jurisdiction and the Enforcement of Judgments in Civil and Commercial Matters, Iceland provides a registration-based route, sometimes referred to as the exequatur procedure. The creditor applies to the competent Icelandic district court for a declaration of enforceability, and the court examines a limited set of formal requirements rather than re-hearing the substance of the dispute. Iceland is bound by the Lugano Convention as an EFTA state, and its implementing legislation was enacted through the Althingi (Icelandic Parliament).

Where no applicable convention or treaty exists between Iceland and the state of origin, the creditor typically cannot register the judgment directly. Instead, the foreign judgment may serve as persuasive evidence in fresh Icelandic proceedings, effectively requiring the creditor to sue on the underlying claim. The distinction is critical: the convention route takes weeks to months; the fresh-action route may take a year or more. Identifying which track applies is the first task for any creditor considering recognition of a foreign judgment in Iceland.

Eligibility and Enforcement Requirements in Iceland

Before filing, the creditor must confirm that the judgment and the circumstances satisfy Iceland’s enforcement requirements. The core eligibility criteria are:

  • Finality. The judgment must be final and conclusive in the state of origin. A judgment that is still subject to ordinary appeal in the originating court will generally not qualify for recognition.
  • Civil or commercial scope. The Lugano Convention covers civil and commercial matters. Revenue, customs, administrative and most family‑law matters fall outside its scope.
  • Jurisdictional basis. The originating court must have exercised jurisdiction on grounds recognised by the applicable convention or, in non-convention cases, on grounds that Icelandic courts consider internationally acceptable.
  • No prior conflicting judgment. If an Icelandic court has already rendered a judgment between the same parties on the same cause of action, or if an earlier foreign judgment qualifies for recognition, the later judgment may be refused.
  • Due service. The defendant must have been properly served with the originating proceedings in sufficient time to arrange a defence.

Grounds for Refusal

Icelandic courts may refuse recognition of a foreign judgment on the following grounds:

  • Public policy (ordre public). Enforcement would be manifestly contrary to Icelandic public policy.
  • Default without proper service. The defendant was not served with the document instituting proceedings in sufficient time and in a manner enabling preparation of a defence.
  • Irreconcilable judgments. The judgment conflicts with a judgment given in Iceland between the same parties, or with an earlier recognisable judgment from another state.
  • Jurisdictional defects. The originating court assumed jurisdiction on a basis not permitted under the relevant convention rules.
  • Fraud. The judgment was obtained by fraud, though this ground is applied restrictively.

Which International Instruments Apply

The Lugano Convention Iceland framework is the primary treaty mechanism. Iceland acceded to the Lugano Convention as an EFTA state, and the convention governs recognition and enforcement of judgments from EU member states, Norway and Switzerland. The Althingi enacted implementing legislation to give the convention direct domestic effect.

For judgments from states outside the Lugano framework, including, in practice, the United Kingdom following Brexit, no comprehensive bilateral enforcement treaty is currently in force between Iceland and the UK. Industry observers expect that UK judgments must therefore be enforced through fresh Icelandic proceedings unless and until a new bilateral arrangement is concluded. Creditors holding UK judgments should obtain specific legal advice on the available routes, as the position continues to evolve in 2026.

How to Enforce a Foreign Judgment in Iceland: Step‑by‑Step Procedure

The following numbered steps outline the registration procedure for judgments that fall within the Lugano Convention framework. Where a creditor must bring fresh proceedings (non-convention judgments), the process diverges at Step 3; a note below each step flags the key differences.

  1. Confirm judgment finality and treaty applicability

    Verify that the foreign judgment is final and enforceable in the state of origin. Obtain a finality certificate from the originating court where available. Determine whether the Lugano Convention applies by checking the originating state’s status. If no convention applies, plan for fresh proceedings and adjust your timeline and budget accordingly. This pre-filing check should involve both foreign counsel (to confirm the judgment’s status) and Icelandic counsel (to confirm the domestic procedural route).

  2. Translate and certify all documents; obtain apostille or legalisation

    Prepare a certified copy of the foreign judgment and all supporting documents. Commission a certified translation into Icelandic from a sworn translator. If the originating state is party to the Hague Apostille Convention, obtain an apostille for the judgment and any notarised documents. If not, arrange legalisation through the relevant consulate. Incomplete authentication is one of the most common causes of delay, verify the specific requirements of both the issuing state and Icelandic practice before submission.

  3. File application for declaration of enforceability at the competent Icelandic district court

    Lodge the application with the district court (héraðsdómstóll) that has jurisdiction, typically determined by the debtor’s domicile in Iceland or, where the debtor has no Icelandic domicile, by the location of the assets to be enforced against. The application should include the certified judgment, translation, apostille, finality certificate, power of attorney for Icelandic counsel and evidence of the debtor’s Icelandic address or asset location. Pay the court filing fee at the time of submission.

  4. Serve the application on the judgment debtor

    The court will arrange or direct service on the debtor. The debtor is entitled to a period in which to respond and raise any grounds for refusal (public policy, service defects, irreconcilable judgments). Using a local process server and confirming the method of service in advance reduces the risk of procedural challenges at this stage.

  5. Obtain the court’s declaration of enforceability

    If the debtor does not oppose the application, or if the court rejects the debtor’s objections, the district court issues a declaration of enforceability. This declaration gives the foreign judgment the same status as a domestic Icelandic court order. The court’s examination is limited to the formal requirements, it does not re-hear the merits of the original dispute.

  6. Execute post-recognition enforcement measures

    With the declaration in hand, instruct the Icelandic enforcement officer (sýslumaður) to carry out enforcement measures. Available measures include garnishment of bank accounts, seizure of movable and immovable property, and attachment of receivables. Creditors may also apply for provisional measures (freezing orders) to prevent the debtor from dissipating assets during the process, applications for provisional measures can be filed even before the declaration of enforceability is granted, where urgency is demonstrated.

  7. Respond to any appeal and manage stay applications

    Either party may appeal the district court’s decision. An appeal lies to Landsréttur (the Icelandic Court of Appeal) and, in limited circumstances, onward to Hæstiréttur (the Supreme Court). The debtor may apply for a stay of enforcement pending appeal. Contested proceedings and appeals can extend the timeline to 3–12 months or more. Creditors should factor appeal risk into their enforcement strategy from the outset.

Timeline Summary Table

Step Who does it Typical duration (uncontested)
Pre‑filing eligibility check (confirm finality, treaty applicability) Creditor / foreign counsel / Icelandic counsel 1–7 days
Certified translation & apostille / legalisation Translation vendor / notary / issuing authority 3–14 days
File application for declaration of enforceability Icelandic counsel / creditor 1–3 weeks
Court registry processing & service on debtor Court registry / process server 1–3 weeks
Court decision to declare enforceable (uncontested) District court 2–8 weeks
Enforcement measures (garnishment, seizure) Enforcement officer / creditor counsel 2–6 weeks after declaration
Contested proceedings / appeals Parties / court timetable 3–12+ months

Contested matters, particularly where the debtor raises public-policy objections or challenges service, can extend enforcement timelines significantly. The 2026 EFTA/ESA developments discussed below may introduce additional administrative scrutiny for enforcement requests that engage EEA law.

Required Documents to Enforce a Foreign Judgment in Iceland

Assembling a complete filing package before approaching the court is the single most effective way to avoid delay. The table below lists the documents needed for a standard Lugano Convention enforcement application. Where a document is commonly referred to by its Icelandic name, both the English and Icelandic terms are provided.

Document Notes
Certified copy of the foreign judgment Issued by the originating court; must include judgment date and confirmation of finality. Provide original language text plus English copy if the original is in a third language.
Finality certificate (staðfesting á réttarkrafti) Issued by the originating court confirming the judgment is final and enforceable. If unavailable, an affidavit from foreign counsel may substitute.
Court record / statement of claim and judgment grounds The full text of the judgment with reasons, enabling the Icelandic court to assess jurisdiction and scope.
Apostille or legalisation certificate Apostille under the Hague Convention if the issuing state is a party; otherwise, consular legalisation. Attach to the judgment copy and any notarised documents.
Certified translation into Icelandic (löggilt þýðing) Prepared by a sworn translator with a certification note confirming accuracy. Covers the judgment, finality certificate and any supporting pleadings.
Power of attorney for Icelandic counsel (umboð) Notarised and apostilled as required. Must authorise counsel to act in recognition and enforcement proceedings.
Statement of enforcement address for service in Iceland An Icelandic address at which the creditor (or counsel) can receive court correspondence and process.
Evidence of debtor domicile or asset location in Iceland Bank account details, property register extracts (fasteignaskrá), company registry entries or other documentary proof relevant to enforcement measures.
Identity documents / company registration certificate For individuals: passport or national ID. For corporate creditors: certificate of incorporation and authority of signatory.
Treaty or jurisdiction clause evidence If relying on a choice‑of‑court agreement or arguing convention applicability, provide the relevant contract clause or treaty reference.

Practical tip: assemble the full document pack in both English and Icelandic from the outset. Courts may request supplementary materials if the initial filing is incomplete, adding weeks to the timeline for enforcement.

Timeline and Key Deadlines for Enforcement in Iceland

The overall timeline for enforcement depends primarily on whether the debtor contests the application. An uncontested registration under the Lugano Convention can move from initial filing to a declaration of enforceability in approximately 4–12 weeks, with post-declaration enforcement measures adding a further 2–6 weeks. A contested application, particularly one that proceeds to appeal at Landsréttur, can take 6–12 months or longer.

Key procedural deadlines to monitor include:

  • Time to oppose. After service of the application, the debtor has a defined period to file objections. Missing this window may result in a default declaration of enforceability.
  • Appeal deadlines. Appeals from the district court to Landsréttur must be filed within the statutory time limit. Failure to appeal within the prescribed period renders the declaration final.
  • Provisional measures. Applications for freezing orders or other provisional relief can be filed at any point, including before the declaration of enforceability is granted, where the creditor demonstrates urgency and a risk of asset dissipation. Under the Lugano Convention framework, provisional measures may be sought even during the recognition phase.
  • Enforcement after declaration. Once the declaration of enforceability becomes final (either because no appeal is filed or because the appeal is determined), the creditor should act promptly to instruct the enforcement officer. Undue delay may allow the debtor to restructure assets.

Creditors with time-sensitive claims should instruct Icelandic counsel at the earliest opportunity and explore provisional measures in parallel with the main recognition application.

Costs to Enforce a Foreign Judgment in Iceland

Costs vary depending on the complexity of the case, the length of the judgment to be translated, whether the matter is contested and the enforcement measures required. The table below provides estimated ranges for the principal cost items.

Item Estimated amount Notes
Court filing fee (declaration of enforceability) €100–€500 Varies by court and claim value. Confirm current fee schedule with the relevant district court before filing.
Certified translation (per page) €25–€80 Depends on sworn translator availability and technical complexity of the judgment text.
Apostille / legalisation €20–€150 Depends on the issuing authority and whether consular legalisation steps are required.
Process server & service costs (domestic) €50–€300 Varies by region and urgency of service.
Enforcement officer fees (seizure / garnishment) Variable May be a fixed fee or a percentage of the sum enforced; additional to court costs.
Icelandic counsel (retainer / hourly) €150–€400 per hour; fixed retainers from €3,000–€15,000+ Depends on counsel seniority and whether the matter is contested. VAT applies to legal services in Iceland.
Translation & filing bundle (uncontested project) €1,000–€5,000 Typical all-in package for an uncontested registration, including translations, apostille coordination and court filing.

VAT (currently 24% on legal services in Iceland) applies to counsel fees and most professional services. Factor this into budget estimates. For a tailored cost estimate, consult an Iceland litigation specialist before commencing the process.

What Changes in 2026: EFTA/ESA Developments and the Lugano Convention in Iceland

The enforcement landscape in Iceland is subject to potential change in 2026 following the EFTA Surveillance Authority’s (ESA) action against Iceland in Case E‑7/26, brought on 9 April 2026. While the substance of this case extends beyond judgment enforcement specifically, it forms part of a broader pattern of ESA scrutiny over Iceland’s compliance with EEA obligations, obligations that underpin the Lugano Convention framework and cross-border recognition regimes.

The likely practical effect for creditors seeking to enforce foreign judgments in Iceland will be increased judicial attention to EEA‑law compliance when processing recognition applications. Industry observers expect Icelandic courts to pay closer regard to EFTA Court jurisprudence and ESA communications when interpreting enforcement rules under the Lugano Convention. Creditors relying on EEA or EFTA instruments should monitor the progress of Case E‑7/26 through the EFTA Court and review any guidance or written observations published by ESA.

Early indications suggest that the 2026 EFTA/ESA activity will not fundamentally alter the registration procedure, but may introduce additional procedural caution, particularly where an enforcement request raises questions about Iceland’s implementation of its EEA obligations. Creditors should ensure their applications are meticulously documented and compliant with all formal requirements to avoid being caught in any administrative delays linked to this heightened scrutiny.

Common Pitfalls When Enforcing a Foreign Judgment in Iceland

  • Failure to prove finality. Submitting an application without a finality certificate or counsel affidavit is the most common deficiency. Obtain this document before engaging Icelandic counsel, it prevents avoidable adjournments.
  • Missing or defective apostille. Each jurisdiction has different apostille and legalisation requirements. Verify whether the originating state is a Hague Apostille Convention party and follow the correct authentication chain for every notarised document.
  • Choosing the wrong Icelandic court. Filing at a district court that lacks territorial jurisdiction (e.g. the debtor is domiciled in a different district) can result in the application being transferred or dismissed. Confirm the debtor’s registered address or the location of enforceable assets before filing.
  • Service defects. If the debtor is not served in strict compliance with Icelandic procedural rules, any subsequent declaration of enforceability may be vulnerable to challenge. Use a local process server and confirm the approved method of service with the court registry.
  • Ignoring provisional measures. Creditors who wait until the declaration of enforceability is granted before considering asset-preservation risk losing the opportunity to freeze accounts or restrain property. Apply for provisional measures as early as possible where there is a credible risk of asset dissipation.
  • Underestimating costs and timelines for contested matters. Uncontested enforcement is relatively swift and inexpensive; contested proceedings, especially those involving appeals to Landsréttur, can multiply both the time and cost by a factor of three or more. Obtain a realistic cost estimate from Icelandic counsel before committing to the process.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Arnar V. Arnarsson at AVA Legal slf., a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Althingi (Icelandic Parliament), Lugano Convention implementation
  2. EUR‑Lex, Judicial information (Case E‑7/26)
  3. EFTA Court / EFTA Surveillance Authority
  4. ArbitrationLaw, Iceland: Enforcement of Money Judgments
  5. Baker McKenzie, Cross‑Border Enforcement Handbook
  6. Brill, FLG: Iceland domestic & foreign judgments
  7. Practical Law (Thomson Reuters), Enforcement quick guide
  8. Hæstiréttur, Icelandic Supreme Court

FAQs

How do I enforce a foreign judgment in Iceland?
The core steps are: (1) confirm the judgment is final and that a relevant convention (typically Lugano) applies; (2) prepare certified translations and apostilled documents; (3) file an application for a declaration of enforceability at the competent Icelandic district court; (4) serve the debtor and allow time for any objections; (5) obtain the court’s declaration; and (6) instruct the enforcement officer to execute. The full step-by-step procedure is set out above.
At a minimum, you will need a certified copy of the judgment, a finality certificate, an apostille or legalisation, a certified Icelandic translation, a power of attorney for local counsel, proof of the debtor’s Icelandic domicile or asset location, and identity or corporate registration documents. The complete documents checklist with practical notes appears in the required documents section of this guide.
An uncontested application under the Lugano Convention typically takes 4–12 weeks from filing to the declaration of enforceability, with enforcement measures adding a further 2–6 weeks. Contested proceedings can extend the process to 6–12 months or longer if appeals are pursued to Landsréttur or Hæstiréttur.
The principal grounds for refusal are: the judgment is manifestly contrary to Icelandic public policy; the defendant was not properly served in the originating proceedings; the judgment conflicts with an Icelandic judgment or an earlier recognisable foreign judgment between the same parties; the originating court lacked jurisdiction under the applicable convention rules; or the judgment was obtained by fraud.
Yes. Under the Lugano Convention framework and Icelandic procedural law, a creditor may apply for provisional measures, including freezing orders over bank accounts and attachments of property, before the declaration of enforceability is granted. The applicant must demonstrate urgency and a credible risk that the debtor will dissipate or relocate assets. Apply as early as possible in the process.
Engage Icelandic counsel at the pre-filing stage, before commissioning translations or apostilles. Local counsel can confirm the correct procedural route, identify the competent court, coordinate translations with approved sworn translators, advise on provisional measures and liaise directly with the enforcement officer once the declaration is granted. Early engagement typically reduces overall costs and avoids procedural missteps.
Failure to file an objection or appeal within the statutory time limit generally results in the court’s decision becoming final and unappealable. For the debtor, this means the declaration of enforceability stands. For the creditor, missing a deadline to respond to a debtor’s challenge could result in the application being dismissed. Emergency remedies (such as applications for reinstatement of time) exist but are granted only in exceptional circumstances. Monitor all court-imposed deadlines rigorously.
Yes. A foreign company may apply for recognition and enforcement in the same way as an individual creditor. The company must provide its certificate of incorporation (or equivalent registration document from its home jurisdiction), evidence of the signatory’s authority to act on behalf of the company, and a notarised and apostilled power of attorney for Icelandic counsel. Corporate registration documents should be translated into Icelandic along with the rest of the filing package.
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How to Enforce a Foreign Judgment in Iceland, Step‑by‑step (2026 Update)

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