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IP enforcement in Greece entered a new phase on 30 January 2026 when Law 5271/2026 was published in the Government Gazette (FEK A’ 11/30.01.2026), introducing strengthened criminal and administrative sanctions, particularly for the forgery and unauthorised distribution of artworks and collectibles, while also refreshing the broader enforcement toolkit available to all intellectual-property rights holders. The law arrives alongside growing EU-level coordination on IP enforcement, including initiatives spearheaded by the EUIPO, and it requires brand owners, patent holders and their advisers to reassess litigation strategy, evidence-gathering workflows and remedy selection without delay. This guide provides the practical, step-by-step playbook that in-house counsel and IP managers need to navigate IP enforcement in Greece under the 2026 reforms.
Immediate action items for rights holders:
Law 5271/2026 was drafted with a primary focus on combating art forgery and the illicit trade in collectibles, but its impact extends to the wider intellectual-property enforcement landscape. The Hellenic Copyright Organization (OPI) published an official summary on 3 February 2026 outlining the scope and enforcement priorities of the new provisions. Independent practitioner analysis published by Bernitsas Law on 5 March 2026 confirmed the significance of the amendments for rights holders across trademark, copyright and related-rights disputes.
| Date | Event | Practical relevance for rights holders |
|---|---|---|
| 30 January 2026 | Publication of Law 5271/2026 (FEK A’ 11) | New criminal and administrative sanctions enter force; immediate review of enforcement strategies required. |
| 3 February 2026 | OPI (ΟΠΙ) news summary on Law 5271/2026 | Official guidance summarises scope and enforcement priorities, useful reference when advising clients or preparing filings. |
| 5 March 2026 | Bernitsas Law practitioner analysis published | Early independent commentary confirms market interpretation and flags areas for further guidance. |
Industry observers expect the combined effect of these reforms to accelerate enforcement activity in Greece throughout 2026, particularly in the art market and luxury-goods sector where forgery has historically been difficult to prosecute.
Understanding court structure is fundamental to any IP litigation procedure in Greece. Rights holders, whether they hold trademarks, patents, copyrights, industrial designs or related rights, can pursue enforcement through civil, criminal or administrative channels, depending on the nature of the infringement and the remedy sought.
Civil IP disputes in Greece are heard by the single-member or multi-member courts of first instance, depending on the value and complexity of the claim. Appeals from first-instance decisions are heard by the competent Court of Appeal. The Supreme Court (Areios Pagos) reviews points of law only. Standing is granted to the rights holder, an exclusive licensee (where the licence confers standing), or, in the case of collective rights, a collecting society or professional association.
Criminal complaints for IP infringement are filed with the public prosecutor. Under Law 5271/2026, certain offences related to art forgery and distribution now carry enhanced penalties, making the criminal route a more viable strategic option for rights holders in those categories. Criminal proceedings can run in parallel with civil claims.
Administrative measures, including fines and destruction orders, can be pursued through relevant administrative authorities without recourse to the courts, offering a faster resolution in clear-cut cases of counterfeiting or piracy.
Greece does not currently operate a dedicated IP court. However, trademark litigation in Greece and patent litigation in Greece benefit from the experience of judges in the Athens and Thessaloniki multi-member courts of first instance, who handle the majority of IP caseloads. The interim-measures procedure (discussed in the next section) provides a fast-track route that can deliver relief within weeks rather than months.
Preliminary injunctions are among the most powerful IP remedies in Greece, and they are frequently the first step in any enforcement campaign. Both trademark and patent owners can apply for interim measures where the infringement is ongoing and the delay of a full trial would cause irreparable harm.
The applicant must demonstrate:
| Evidence item | Why it matters | Where to collect |
|---|---|---|
| Registration certificate or patent grant | Establishes prima facie right | OBI (Hellenic Industrial Property Organisation), EUIPO, WIPO |
| Notarised screenshots / bailiff report of infringing goods or listings | Proves ongoing infringement and urgency | Notary public, court bailiff, digital-forensics provider |
| Purchase of infringing product (trap purchase) | Physical evidence for comparison with genuine goods | Investigation agency or in-house compliance team |
| Expert comparison report | Demonstrates likelihood of confusion (trademarks) or claim coverage (patents) | Commissioned from technical or branding expert |
| Sales data / licensing revenue evidence | Supports urgency and harm quantification | Internal finance/commercial records |
| Cease-and-desist correspondence (if sent) | Shows respondent’s knowledge and continued infringement | Legal file |
The entire process, from filing to enforceable order, can take as little as 3–6 weeks in straightforward cases, making preliminary injunctions in Greece one of the faster interim-relief mechanisms in the EU.
Courts may require the applicant to post a security bond to compensate the respondent if the injunction is later found to have been unjustified. The amount is at the court’s discretion and typically reflects the likely commercial impact on the respondent. Court fees for interim-measures applications are modest relative to the value of the relief sought.
An effective preliminary-injunction application should request, at minimum:
Securing an injunction stops the bleeding; damages for IP infringement provide the compensation. Greek law offers rights holders three principal methods for calculating damages, and the choice of method has significant consequences for the evidence that must be assembled.
| Method | Evidence required | Best suited to |
|---|---|---|
| Lost profits | Sales records, market-share data, expert accounting report | Rights holders with established, quantifiable revenue streams |
| Licence-fee analogy | Comparable licence agreements, industry royalty-rate surveys | Rights holders who license frequently or where direct-loss proof is weak |
| Unjust enrichment | Infringer’s financial records (obtained via disclosure order), profit-margin analysis | Cases where the infringer’s profits exceed the rights holder’s provable loss |
Successful claimants are entitled to statutory interest on the damages awarded from the date of service of the claim. The court also awards litigation costs, although the recoverable amount is typically capped at a level that may not cover full actual legal fees.
Early indications suggest that Greek courts will take a more rigorous approach to quantum evidence following the 2026 reforms. Rights holders who present well-documented damages files, including expert reports, comparable licensing data and clear causal links, are likely to achieve materially better outcomes than those who rely solely on lump-sum estimates.
The Independent Authority for Public Revenue (AADE) manages customs enforcement of IP rights at the Greek border. Rights holders can file an application for action requesting that customs officers detain suspected infringing goods upon importation.
AADE customs-detention checklist:
Goods detained at the border may be destroyed under simplified procedures where the importer does not object within the prescribed timeframe, a fast and cost-effective remedy for anticounterfeiting efforts.
Law 5271/2026 (FEK A’ 11/30.01.2026) introduced enhanced criminal sanctions targeting the forgery and distribution of artworks and collectibles. Where the infringement involves deliberate counterfeiting, particularly at scale or through organised networks, filing a criminal complaint with the public prosecutor is now a significantly more effective deterrent than under the prior regime.
When to consider criminal proceedings:
Administrative authorities may impose fines and order destruction of infringing goods without requiring a court judgment. These measures are particularly useful for clear-cut counterfeiting cases where speed of removal from the market is the priority.
Choosing the right enforcement channel, decision flow:
Rights holders who obtain IP judgments or arbitral awards abroad frequently need to enforce them in Greece, whether to seize assets, restrain ongoing infringement or collect damages. The process to enforce foreign judgments in Greece follows a structured recognition-and-enforcement procedure.
Greece is a signatory to the New York Convention. Foreign arbitral awards are recognised and enforced by the Athens Single-Member Court of First Instance upon application. The grounds for refusal mirror the New York Convention defences (invalidity of agreement, lack of due process, public policy).
Effective IP enforcement in Greece depends as much on pre-suit preparation as on courtroom advocacy. The following checklists consolidate the key steps rights holders and their advisers should follow.
The following language may be adapted for use in a Greek preliminary-injunction application (translated into Greek for filing):
Law 5271/2026 has materially expanded the enforcement toolkit available to rights holders in Greece. To capitalise on these reforms and ensure effective IP enforcement in Greece, rights holders should follow this phased action plan:
The 2026 reforms reward rights holders who act decisively and assemble robust evidence early. Engaging experienced IP litigation counsel in Greece is the single most important step to ensuring enforcement success under the new framework.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Henning Voelkel at Voelkel Kataliakos Roussou Law Office, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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