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For general counsel and international litigation leads weighing enforcement options in the Netherlands, three tactical priorities dominate in 2026: securing debtor assets before they vanish, choosing the fastest recognition route for your foreign judgment, and managing Dutch litigation costs from the outset. The Netherlands offers powerful pre‑judgment asset freezing (conservatoir beslag), streamlined EU judgment recognition under the Brussels I Recast Regulation, and a specialist judiciary experienced in high‑value cross‑border disputes.
When to act now:
The Netherlands has long been a preferred forum for cross‑border litigation in Europe. Its courts, including the Netherlands Commercial Court (NCC), which conducts proceedings entirely in English, attract international disputes across sectors from energy trading to technology licensing. In 2026, leading directories such as Chambers and Partners and The Legal 500 continue to rank the Dutch dispute resolution market among Europe’s most sophisticated, citing a deep bench of specialist litigation lawyers in the Netherlands capable of handling complex multi‑jurisdictional enforcement work.
This guide provides a practical, step‑by‑step framework for general counsel, in‑house litigation leads and external counsel assessing whether to litigate or seek interim relief in the Netherlands. It covers recognition and enforcement of foreign judgments, the mechanics of conservatoir beslag (freezing orders), interim injunctions, Dutch litigation costs, service of process, and tactical playbooks for both claimants and defendants engaged in cross‑border litigation in the Netherlands.
The threshold question in any cross‑border dispute involving Dutch‑connected assets is whether the Netherlands is the right forum, or whether enforcement should be pursued elsewhere. This decision framework helps structure that analysis.
Litigating or enforcing in the Netherlands is typically advantageous when one or more of the following conditions apply:
Enforcement abroad may be more efficient when the debtor holds no meaningful assets in the Netherlands, when the originating jurisdiction already provides adequate enforcement mechanisms, or when the costs of a separate Dutch exequatur proceeding outweigh the likely recovery. Industry observers note that a careful asset‑tracing exercise before committing to a forum is the single most valuable step a claimant can take in cross‑border litigation in the Netherlands.
The route to enforce a foreign judgment in the Netherlands depends primarily on where the judgment was rendered and whether the originating state is covered by an EU regulation, bilateral treaty or multilateral convention. There is no single automatic enforcement path, each route carries distinct procedural requirements.
For judgments rendered in another EU Member State in civil and commercial matters, Regulation (EU) No 1215/2012 provides the most streamlined path. Under the Brussels I Recast, a judgment given in one Member State is recognised in the Netherlands without any special procedure being required. Enforcement requires only that the judgment creditor present specified documents to the competent Dutch court or bailiff:
No declaration of enforceability (exequatur) is needed for Brussels I Recast judgments. The debtor may, however, apply for refusal of recognition or enforcement on limited grounds, including public policy, default of appearance without proper service, or irreconcilability with a Dutch judgment.
For judgments from jurisdictions outside the EU, including the United States, the United Kingdom (post‑Brexit), and most Asian and Middle Eastern states, the Netherlands generally requires a fresh set of proceedings. Because the Netherlands is not party to a broadly applicable bilateral enforcement treaty with most non‑EU countries, a foreign judgment from such jurisdictions does not receive automatic recognition.
In practice, the judgment creditor typically has two options:
Checklist, documents for an exequatur petition or fresh proceedings:
Where the Netherlands is party to a bilateral or multilateral treaty covering recognition of foreign judgments (such as specific treaties with certain countries or the Hague Convention on Choice of Court Agreements 2005), the treaty provisions govern. These frameworks typically provide a more structured path than fresh proceedings but remain narrower in scope than Brussels I Recast.
The ability to obtain pre‑judgment attachment of assets, conservatoir beslag, is one of the most powerful tools available to litigation lawyers in the Netherlands. Governed by the Dutch Code of Civil Procedure (Wetboek van Burgerlijke Rechtsvordering, or Rv), conservatoir beslag in the Netherlands allows a claimant to freeze the debtor’s assets before proceedings on the merits have even commenced.
To obtain leave for conservatoir beslag, the claimant must file a petition (verzoekschrift) with the provisional relief judge (voorzieningenrechter) at the competent district court. The petition must demonstrate:
The procedure is typically ex parte: the debtor is not heard before leave is granted. In urgent cases, Dutch courts can issue leave within 24 to 48 hours. Once leave is obtained, a deurwaarder (bailiff) executes the attachment by serving the appropriate documents on the asset holder (for example, the bank or the land registry). The claimant must then commence proceedings on the merits within a deadline set by the court, commonly 14 days.
Conservatoir beslag petition checklist:
Once the claimant obtains a judgment on the merits (or enforces a foreign judgment through one of the routes described above), the conservatoir beslag converts into executoriaal beslag, an executory attachment. At this point, the bailiff can proceed to sell the attached assets and distribute the proceeds to the judgment creditor. The conversion is a critical procedural milestone, and litigation lawyers in the Netherlands typically advise clients to plan the main proceedings timeline carefully to avoid the attachment lapsing.
Beyond conservatoir beslag, Dutch law offers a range of interim injunctions and provisional measures through kort geding (summary proceedings). These are distinct from asset freezing and serve different tactical purposes in cross‑border litigation in the Netherlands.
A kort geding is heard by the provisional relief judge, typically within two to four weeks of filing, though in genuinely urgent cases hearings can be scheduled within days. The judge can grant any provisional order that the circumstances require, including:
In cases of extreme urgency where notifying the opposing party would defeat the purpose of relief, for instance, risk of immediate destruction of evidence or irreversible harm, the court can act ex parte. The applicant must demonstrate that the urgency is genuine and that the harm is irreparable without immediate court intervention. Early indications in 2026 practice suggest that Dutch courts continue to apply this power judiciously, requiring robust evidence of urgency.
Under Article 35 of the Brussels I Recast Regulation, a party may apply for provisional measures (including interim injunctions) in the Netherlands even if the courts of another Member State have jurisdiction over the substance of the case. This gives claimants a powerful option to seek urgent asset protection or injunctive relief in the Netherlands while the main dispute is litigated elsewhere in the EU.
Understanding Dutch litigation costs is essential for any general counsel evaluating enforcement or interim relief strategies. The Netherlands operates a modified “loser pays” system, but actual cost recovery is limited compared to common‑law jurisdictions.
Court fees in the Netherlands are set by statute and vary based on the claim amount and the type of party (natural person vs. legal entity). The following table provides illustrative ranges for 2026:
| Claim value | Court fee (legal entities, approximate) | Court fee (natural persons, approximate) |
|---|---|---|
| Up to €100,000 | €2,000 – €4,200 | €500 – €1,200 |
| €100,001 – €500,000 | €4,200 – €5,700 | €1,200 – €1,700 |
| Over €500,000 | €5,700 – €8,500+ | €1,700 – €2,100+ |
Note: these figures are illustrative and subject to annual adjustment. Current rates should be confirmed on the official court fee schedule published by De Rechtspraak.
The Netherlands does not follow full indemnity cost‑shifting. While the losing party is ordered to contribute to the winner’s legal costs, recovery is calculated according to a standardised liquidatietarief (liquidation tariff), a fixed scale based on the number and type of procedural acts performed. In practice, the amount recovered rarely covers the winner’s actual legal fees, particularly in complex commercial disputes. Actual attorney fees are typically agreed between client and counsel on an hourly‑rate basis, with senior litigation partners at leading Dutch firms charging in the range of €400 to €700+ per hour in 2026.
Dutch law provides for security for costs (zekerheidstelling voor proceskosten) in limited circumstances. Under Article 224 Rv, a defendant may request that a foreign claimant without habitual residence in the Netherlands (or in a state where enforcement of a Dutch cost order would be difficult) provide security for the defendant’s anticipated legal costs. Key practical points:
Proper service of process in the Netherlands is a prerequisite for valid proceedings and, critically, for the future enforceability of any judgment obtained. Errors in service are among the most common grounds on which recognition is challenged.
The Netherlands does not recognise the doctrine of forum non conveniens. Instead, jurisdictional disputes in cross‑border litigation Netherlands are governed by:
Defendants should raise jurisdictional challenges at the earliest procedural opportunity. Failure to do so may result in acceptance of the court’s jurisdiction by implied submission.
| Enforcement Route | Typical Timeline | Pros / Cons |
|---|---|---|
| Brussels I Recast (EU judgments) | 2–6 months | + No exequatur required; streamlined recognition across all EU Member States. – Limited to EU‑origin judgments; debtor may apply for refusal on narrow grounds. |
| Exequatur / fresh proceedings (non‑EU) | 4–12 months | + Available for all non‑EU judgments; Dutch courts may give substantial weight to the foreign judgment. – Requires full proceedings; court may reassess public policy and service issues; higher costs. |
| Treaty / Hague Convention basis | 3–9 months | + Specific procedural framework may expedite recognition. – Narrow treaty coverage; depends on reciprocity and the specific convention’s scope. |
Timelines are illustrative and depend on case complexity, court workload and whether the debtor contests recognition. Consult experienced litigation lawyers in the Netherlands for case‑specific estimates.
Cross‑border enforcement and interim relief in the Netherlands reward preparation, speed and jurisdictional expertise. Whether you are a claimant seeking to freeze assets before they disappear or a defendant responding to an unexpected conservatoir beslag, the first 48 hours are often decisive.
To position your matter for the best possible outcome, consider these immediate steps:
For a curated listing of experienced practitioners, visit the litigation lawyer directory or explore the Netherlands practice area overview to connect with qualified counsel who can advise on your specific enforcement or interim relief needs.
Last reviewed: 6 May 2026
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Evelyn Tjon-En-Fa at Bird & Bird, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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