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Understanding how to foreclose a mortgage in Belgium is essential for any lender, in-house credit team or distressed-asset lawyer preparing to enforce real-estate security after a borrower default. The Belgian mortgage foreclosure procedure, known formally as the saisie immobilière or saisie-exécution immobilière, is a court-supervised enforcement process governed primarily by Articles 1560–1626 of the Code judiciaire. It proceeds through a defined sequence: a formal payment order served by bailiff, seizure and transcription at the land registry, judicial appointment of a notary, and a forced public sale or, in certain circumstances, a private sale of the mortgaged property.
This guide sets out each stage, the documents needed, realistic timelines and estimated costs, updated to reflect the 2026 regulatory refresh by the FOD Economie and the National Bank of Belgium (NBB).
In Belgium, a mortgage (hypothèque) is constituted by authentic notarial deed and registered at the mortgage registry (formerly the bureau de la conservation des hypothèques, now the bureau de la publicité foncière). When a borrower defaults, the registered mortgagee, or any creditor holding a valid enforceable title (titre exécutoire), may initiate a saisie immobilière to seize and force the sale of the encumbered property.
The procedure is not self-help. It is judicial in nature: a bailiff (huissier de justice) serves the formal payment order, executes the seizure, and transcribes it at the land registry. A judge (juge des saisies) then appoints a notary to organise the sale. Proceeds are distributed to creditors according to their ranking. The entire enforcement of mortgage in Belgium framework rests on the Code judiciaire, with Article 1564 requiring that a commandement de payer, a formal demand, must be signified by bailiff exploit before any seizure can take place.
This procedure is available to banks, institutional lenders, investment funds that have acquired mortgage-secured receivables, and, subject to recognition formalities, foreign creditors holding an enforceable title recognised under EU or Belgian law.
Any creditor who holds an enforceable title may initiate the saisie immobilière. This includes the original mortgagee bank, an assignee of the mortgage-secured claim (provided the assignment has been notified or acknowledged), and receivers or administrators acting on behalf of creditors in insolvency-adjacent situations. For consumer mortgage loans, lenders should also verify compliance with pre-enforcement notice obligations under the mortgage-lending regime supervised by the FSMA and the FOD Economie.
Under Article 1494 of the Code judiciaire, enforcement requires a titre exécutoire. The following instruments qualify:
Before launching a saisie immobilière, creditors should assess whether a negotiated sale (vente de gré à gré), a restructuring arrangement or a voluntary surrender of the property would achieve faster recovery at lower cost. Industry observers expect that Belgian courts increasingly scrutinise whether pre-enforcement dialogue was meaningful, particularly for consumer mortgages following the 2026 FOD Economie guidance refresh. Where a borrower is cooperating, the judicial sale may not be the most cost-effective remedy.
The mortgage foreclosure procedure in Belgium follows a structured sequence. Each step involves specific actors, documents and statutory deadlines. The numbered stages below track the process from the initial bailiff order through to completion of the sale of mortgaged property.
The creditor’s counsel prepares the commandement de payer, a formal demand for payment, and instructs a bailiff to serve it on the debtor by exploit. This is a mandatory prerequisite under Article 1564 of the Code judiciaire. The commandement must identify the enforceable title, the amount owed (principal, interest and costs), the property to be seized (with cadastral references), and a clear demand for payment within the statutory period.
Who: Creditor’s counsel + bailiff (huissier de justice).
Key deliverables: Commandement (exploit), attached enforceable title (or certified copy), debt calculation.
Practical tip: Verify the debtor’s current address and confirm the exact cadastral parcel numbers with the land registry before service. Errors in property identification are a leading cause of transcription failures.
Once the statutory waiting period after the commandement has elapsed, typically 15 calendar days in practice, referenced in connection with Articles 1564 and 1566 of the Code judiciaire, the bailiff may proceed to execute the seizure. The bailiff draws up the seizure exploit (procès-verbal de saisie) describing the property, and this document is transcribed at the competent bureau de la publicité foncière (land registry office) for the arrondissement where the property is located.
Transcription has critical legal effects: it renders the property unavailable for voluntary disposition by the debtor. From the moment of transcription, any sale, donation or further encumbrance by the debtor is unenforceable against the seizing creditor. Third parties, including tenants and other registered creditors, are placed on notice.
Who: Bailiff + land registry + creditor’s counsel.
Practical tip: Confirm the exact transcription office for the relevant arrondissement. Transcription offices are arrondissement-specific, and filing at the wrong office causes procedural delay.
After transcription, the creditor applies to the juge des saisies (seizure judge, also referred to as juge de l’exécution) to appoint a notary to organise the sale. Under Article 1580 of the Code judiciaire, the judge designates a notary, typically within approximately one month of the seizure transcription, although congested court dockets may extend this to four to six weeks.
The appointed notary takes charge of the sale modalities: commissioning a property valuation, setting the reserve price (mise à prix), advertising the sale, and preparing the conditions of sale (cahier des charges). The creditor’s counsel should coordinate early with the appointed notary to agree on the valuation approach and the preferred sale method (public auction or, where applicable, private sale).
Who: Court (juge des saisies), appointed notary, creditor’s counsel.
Practical tip: Engage with the notary promptly after appointment. Delays in supplying property documentation or cooperating on valuations will extend the overall foreclosure timeline in Belgium.
The standard route is a public auction (adjudication publique). The notary organises the sale, which may take place physically at the notary’s office or via an authorised online auction platform such as Biddit or Finimmoweb. The sale is advertised in accordance with statutory requirements, and bidders compete openly.
In certain circumstances, the judge may authorise a private sale (vente de gré à gré) if all parties, creditor, debtor and any intervening creditors, consent, or if the judge determines that a private sale will achieve a better price. This route is less common but can significantly reduce costs and time.
Upon adjudication, the winning bidder pays the purchase price (plus costs and taxes) to the notary. The notary issues the sale deed, and the transfer is registered. If the debtor or occupants do not vacate voluntarily, eviction proceedings follow, executed by the bailiff.
Who: Notary (sale administration), auctioneer or platform, judge (if contested), bailiff (eviction).
Practical tip: Set a realistic reserve price informed by at least one independent valuation. Assess VAT and registration tax consequences early, these vary depending on the property type (residential, commercial, new-build) and the buyer’s status. Consult tax counsel before the sale conditions are finalised.
After the sale, the notary distributes the proceeds according to the legally prescribed order of priority. Enforcement costs (bailiff fees, notary fees, court costs) are deducted first. Secured creditors are then paid in order of their mortgage registration date. Any surplus is returned to the debtor. The mortgage registrations are cancelled, and the land registry is updated to reflect the new owner.
Who: Notary + court + land registry.
Key deliverable: Judgment of adjudication or private-sale deed; cancellation of mortgage registrations; updated land-registry records.
| Step | Who does it | Typical duration (estimate) |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Prepare and serve commandement de payer | Creditor’s counsel + bailiff | 3–14 days |
| 2. Execute seizure and transcribe at land registry | Bailiff + land registry | 15-day waiting period after commandement; transcription processed promptly thereafter |
| 3. Judge appoints notary | Juge des saisies | 2–6 weeks after transcription |
| 4. Notary appraisal, advertising and sale organisation | Appointed notary (with auction platform) | 1–3 months |
| 5. Public sale / adjudication and distribution of proceeds | Notary, judge (if contested), bailiff (eviction) | 1–4 months (auction to completion); eviction 1–3 months post-sale if required |
| Total: commandement to sale completion | Creditor-managed process | 4–9 months (uncontested); 9–18+ months (contested or complex) |
Lenders and their counsel should assemble the following documents before commencing the saisie immobilière. Incomplete or inaccurate documentation is a frequent source of delay.
| Document | Notes |
|---|---|
| Enforceable title (grosse of authenticated mortgage deed or court judgment) | Issued by the notary (authentic deed) or the court registry (judgment). Must be the enforceable copy (grosse). Attaches to the commandement. |
| Commandement de payer (exploit) | Prepared by creditor’s counsel. Signified by bailiff. Must comply with the content requirements of Article 1564 of the Code judiciaire. |
| Cadastral extract (extrait de la matrice cadastrale) | Issued by the cadaster / land registry. Identifies the exact parcel(s) to be seized. |
| Certificate from mortgage registry | Confirms existing encumbrances, liens and priority ranking. Obtained from the bureau de la publicité foncière. |
| Debt calculation and interest breakdown | Creditor’s detailed statement of outstanding principal, accrued interest, default interest and costs. Attach to the commandement. |
| Power of attorney / creditor authorisation | Required if counsel or a third party instructs the bailiff on behalf of the creditor. Notarised or signed POA. |
| Valuation or appraisal report | Typically commissioned by the appointed notary or the creditor. Include the date of appraisal and qualifications of the valuer. |
| Identification documents | ID/passport for natural-person creditors; company registration and authorised-signatory documentation for institutional creditors. |
The foreclosure timeline in Belgium depends on court caseloads, property complexity and whether the debtor opposes. The table below consolidates the principal statutory and practical deadlines that drive the schedule.
| Event | Statutory / practical deadline | Practical note |
|---|---|---|
| Commandement → permissible seizure | 15 calendar days (practice rule; see Articles 1564/1566 of the Code judiciaire) | Some arrondissements enforce a strict 15-day waiting period. Verify local court practice before instructing the bailiff to execute the seizure. |
| Judge appointment of notary | Approximately 1 month after seizure transcription | Congested dockets may extend this to 4–6 weeks. File the application promptly after transcription. |
| Notary sale process | Sale should proceed within 3–6 months of seizure (practical rule) | Prolonged inactivity risks the seizure lapsing or being challenged. Keep the notary and court informed of progress. |
| Debtor opposition deadlines | Typically 15–30 days after signification of the commandement or publication of the conditions of sale | Monitor service dates carefully. Missed opposition deadlines by the debtor cannot be revived; missed response deadlines by the creditor can derail the process. |
The likely practical effect for most uncontested consumer-mortgage defaults is a total enforcement period of four to nine months from the date of the commandement to completion of the sale and distribution. Where the debtor files an opposition, challenging the validity of the title, the debt calculation, or procedural regularity, the timeline may extend to nine to eighteen months or longer, depending on court scheduling and the complexity of the dispute.
The costs of the mortgage foreclosure procedure in Belgium are borne initially by the creditor but are typically recoverable from the sale proceeds, subject to the statutory order of priority. The table below provides estimated ranges; exact figures depend on the arrondissement, property value and complexity of the case. All figures should be verified locally before budgeting.
| Item | Typical range (estimate) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Bailiff fees (service, seizure, transcription) | €100–€1,000+ | Depends on number of signification attempts and complexity. Generally recoverable from debtor/sale proceeds. |
| Court fees / filing costs | €100–€800 | Varies by court and procedure type. |
| Notary fees (sale administration) | 0.5%–2% of sale price, plus fixed handling fees | Notary tariffs are regulated. Confirm the applicable fee schedule with the appointed notary. |
| Valuation / appraisal | €300–€2,500 | Depends on property type and valuer. Often commissioned by the notary. |
| Auction / platform fees | Variable (fixed fee + percentage commission) | Applies if sold via Finimmoweb, Biddit or a physical auction house. |
| Enforcement interest accrual | Contractual rate + statutory interest | Calculate pre- and post-judgment interest carefully. Overstated interest claims are a common ground for opposition. |
| Eviction costs (bailiff + logistics) | €200–€2,000+ | Physical eviction, locksmith, storage of debtor’s belongings. Scope-dependent. |
| Registration taxes / VAT (buyer-side) | Variable | Registration duties or VAT apply depending on property type and seller status. Tax counsel should be consulted before sale conditions are finalised. |
Enforcement costs are deducted from the sale proceeds before distributions to secured creditors. The order of priority is prescribed by statute: costs of enforcement rank first, followed by secured creditors in order of their mortgage registration date. Any residual surplus is returned to the debtor. Creditors should factor all anticipated foreclosure costs into their recovery projections at the outset.
In June 2026, the FOD Economie (the Belgian Federal Public Service for Economy) refreshed its public-facing guidance on the repayment of mortgage loans, including updated information on borrower rights when facing default and enforcement. While these updates are primarily consumer-facing, they carry practical implications for lenders initiating the saisie immobilière process.
Lenders must ensure that pre-enforcement communications, including default notices and the commandement itself, comply with current consumer information expectations set out in the FOD Economie guidance. The likely practical effect is that courts may scrutinise whether a creditor provided the debtor with adequate information about available remedies (restructuring, grace periods, mediation) before commencing enforcement proceedings.
Separately, the National Bank of Belgium (NBB) has published updated Q&A guidance on mortgage moratoria and postponement frameworks. Although no general statutory moratorium was in force at the time of writing, lenders with consumer-mortgage portfolios should monitor NBB supervisory communications closely. Early indications suggest that the NBB expects lenders to demonstrate proportionate engagement with borrowers before resorting to judicial enforcement, particularly for primary-residence mortgages.
For institutional creditors and distressed-asset teams, the 2026 updates do not alter the core procedural steps of the saisie immobilière. They do, however, raise the standard of pre-enforcement documentation and borrower dialogue that a court may expect to see evidenced in the enforcement file.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Dominique Blommaert at Janson Baugniet, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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