Our Expert in Liechtenstein
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Last updated: May 11, 2026
Liechtenstein’s revised Arbitration Act, which entered into force on 1 January 2026, represents the most significant overhaul of arbitration law Liechtenstein has undertaken in more than a decade. For banks, insurers, trustees and fund managers that routinely seat disputes in the principality, the reforms change the calculus on three fronts: courts now hold an express statutory power to grant interim measures, including freezing orders, in support of arbitration; emergency-arbitrator decisions can, for the first time, be presented to local courts for recognition and enforcement; and new transitional rules clarify which proceedings fall under the old versus the new regime. Together, these changes reshape tactical options for financial disputes in Liechtenstein and demand prompt updates to dispute-resolution playbooks across the sector.
TL;DR, Three things financial institutions should do now:
The amended Arbitration Act introduces four headline changes that directly affect financial disputes in Liechtenstein. Each reform addresses a gap that practitioners had identified under the former regime, where the interplay between courts and arbitral tribunals on interim relief was governed more by inference than by express statutory language.
Practical takeaway: Industry observers expect these reforms to encourage more financial-sector parties to seat arbitrations in Liechtenstein, as the interim-relief framework now competes directly with those of Switzerland, England and Singapore.
| Date | Reform Element | Practical Effect |
|---|---|---|
| 1 January 2026 | Revised Arbitration Act enters into force | All arbitrations seated in Liechtenstein and commenced from this date fall under the new rules |
| 1 January 2026 | Express court interim-measure power operative | Banks and insurers can apply directly to the Liechtenstein Court of Justice for freezing orders in support of arbitration |
| 1 January 2026 | Emergency-arbitrator recognition pathway available | Emergency orders under ICC, LCIA, Swiss Rules and other institutional frameworks can be filed for court recognition |
| Pre-2026 proceedings | Transitional regime: old rules apply | Parties in legacy proceedings must rely on the prior framework unless they opt in to the new provisions by agreement |
Liechtenstein courts can now grant freezing and interim orders in arbitration matters on an express statutory basis. This resolves what had been an area of interpretive uncertainty, where applicants were forced to argue that court support jurisdiction existed by implication from general civil procedure rules. Under the 2026 Act, the Liechtenstein Court of Justice is designated as the competent body to receive and determine applications for interim measures connected to arbitral proceedings.
The scope of available relief is broad. Courts may order asset freezes (prohibiting a respondent from disposing of identified assets), security for the amount in dispute, seizure and preservation of documents or electronic data, and the appointment of an independent custodian to manage disputed property pending the outcome of the arbitration. In urgent cases, local court intervention in international arbitration can take the form of ex parte orders, granted without notice to the respondent, where delay would risk rendering the eventual award unenforceable.
The procedural standard that applicants must satisfy mirrors the approach familiar in other developed arbitration jurisdictions. Courts will assess urgency (genuine risk of dissipation or irreparable harm), a prima facie case on the merits, proportionality (the order must not impose disproportionate hardship on the respondent) and a sufficient nexus to the arbitration seated or connected to Liechtenstein.
Freezing orders Liechtenstein courts issue are not without constraints. Where the respondent is subject to insolvency or bank-resolution proceedings, a statutory moratorium may override or suspend the private freezing order. Applicants must also be mindful that an unsuccessful application, or one later discharged, can trigger liability on the security undertaking. Early and thorough evidence gathering is therefore essential before filing.
Practical takeaway: For banks seeking to freeze counterparty assets before an arbitral tribunal is constituted, the court route now offers a clear, codified pathway. Anticipate filing within 24–48 hours of identifying the risk, and prepare translated evidence packages in advance.
Emergency-arbitrator orders can now be recognised and enforced by Liechtenstein courts under a dedicated statutory mechanism. Before the 2026 reforms, the enforceability of emergency-arbitrator measures in the principality was uncertain, there was no express provision addressing such measures, and practitioners debated whether they could be treated as arbitral awards or interim orders for enforcement purposes.
The new framework resolves this by creating a specific pathway. An emergency-arbitrator order issued under any recognised institutional rules, including those of the ICC, LCIA, SIAC, Swiss Arbitration Centre (Swiss Rules) and the Liechtenstein Arbitration Association, may be presented to the Court of Justice with a request for recognition and, if necessary, conversion into an enforceable interim court measure. The court examines the order on a limited basis: it verifies jurisdiction, procedural regularity (whether the respondent had an opportunity to be heard or, if the order was ex parte, whether due process safeguards were met), and compatibility with Liechtenstein public policy.
This mechanism operates in the critical window between the appointment of an emergency arbitrator and the constitution of the full arbitral tribunal. For financial disputes in Liechtenstein, where a rogue counterparty may attempt to dissipate assets during precisely that window, the ability to convert an emergency order into a court-backed injunction is a significant tactical tool.
Practical takeaway: The likely practical effect of this reform is that institutions now have a two-track strategy, seek an emergency-arbitrator order for speed, then present it for court recognition to obtain state-backed enforceability. Prepare parallel filing packages from the outset.
The core question for general counsel at banks and insurers under the reformed arbitration law Liechtenstein framework is straightforward: should you apply to the Liechtenstein court for a freezing order, or seek emergency-arbitrator relief through institutional rules? The answer depends on several intersecting factors, each of which may tip the balance differently depending on the specific dispute.
Speed. Liechtenstein courts, according to practice-guide commentary, can process urgent ex parte applications within 24–72 hours. Emergency arbitrators under institutional rules (ICC, LCIA, Swiss Rules) are typically appointed within one to two days, but must then render a decision, usually within 14–15 days. Where hours matter, the court route may be faster for a first-response freeze. However, where the institution allows expedited timelines or where the applicant has pre-prepared the application, the emergency-arbitrator route can rival court speed.
Scope of relief. Courts can grant any interim measure available under Liechtenstein procedural law, including asset freezes, document preservation orders and custodian appointments. Emergency arbitrators are limited to the powers granted under the applicable institutional rules, which are typically broad but may not include certain enforcement-backed remedies (such as contempt sanctions) that only a court can impose.
Cross-border enforceability. Court orders issued in Liechtenstein may benefit from treaty-based recognition in certain jurisdictions, but Liechtenstein is not an EU member state, which limits automatic recognition under the Brussels regime. Emergency-arbitrator orders, once recognised by the Liechtenstein court, carry domestic enforceability but face the same cross-border constraints. Where the respondent’s assets are held in Switzerland, the EFTA framework and bilateral arrangements may facilitate recognition more readily than in EU member states.
Confidentiality. Court proceedings in Liechtenstein are generally not public, but the filing of applications and orders creates a court record that may, in limited circumstances, be accessible. Emergency-arbitrator proceedings, conducted under institutional rules, offer a higher degree of confidentiality, a significant advantage for banks managing reputational risk.
Bank-resolution constraints. If the counterparty is a regulated financial institution subject to resolution proceedings or a statutory moratorium, court-based freezes may be stayed or overridden by resolution-authority action. Emergency-arbitrator measures face the same constraint once presented for court recognition. In these scenarios, coordination with the FMA (Financial Market Authority Liechtenstein) is essential before either route is pursued.
Cost and security. Courts may require the applicant to post security (a bond) as a condition of granting the freeze. Emergency-arbitrator proceedings involve institutional fees (which can be substantial under ICC or LCIA scales) plus the applicant’s own legal costs. Budget both paths in advance.
| Scenario | Recommended Forum | Rationale |
|---|---|---|
| Pre-arbitration asset flight (assets in Liechtenstein) | Court (ex parte freezing order) | Fastest route to a domestically enforceable freeze; no need to constitute a tribunal first |
| Pre-arbitration asset flight (assets abroad) | Emergency arbitrator, then court recognition | Emergency-arbitrator order may carry greater weight in foreign enforcement proceedings under institutional frameworks |
| Confidentiality-critical dispute (reputational exposure) | Emergency arbitrator | Institutional proceedings offer stronger confidentiality protections than court filings |
| Counterparty in bank-resolution proceedings | Coordinate with FMA before either route | Resolution-authority powers may supersede private interim measures; regulatory clearance required |
| Need for contempt or penal sanctions for non-compliance | Court | Only courts can impose enforcement-backed sanctions for breach of an interim order |
| Parallel proceedings risk (anti-suit concerns) | Emergency arbitrator (with tribunal consolidation strategy) | Keeps the dispute within the arbitral framework; reduces risk of conflicting court orders across jurisdictions |
Financial disputes in Liechtenstein frequently intersect with bank-resolution frameworks, and the 2026 reforms do not operate in a vacuum. Where a counterparty bank or insurer is subject to resolution tools, including minimum requirements for own funds and eligible liabilities (MREL) enforcement, bail-in, or a transfer of assets to a bridge institution, the availability and enforceability of private freezing orders may be significantly constrained.
Resolution-authority powers held by the FMA Liechtenstein under the national transposition of the Bank Recovery and Resolution Directive (BRRD) framework include the ability to impose a statutory moratorium on claims and enforcement actions against a distressed institution. The likely practical effect of such a moratorium is that a court-granted freezing order, or a recognised emergency-arbitrator measure, may be stayed or overridden for the duration of the resolution process. This creates a risk that a bank seeking to freeze a counterparty’s assets discovers, mid-application, that the FMA has intervened with public-law measures that take priority.
For trustees and fund managers, the overlay is even more complex. Trust assets held by a Liechtenstein-regulated trustee may be subject to both the arbitration and the trustee’s own regulatory obligations. Where the trustee entity enters resolution, the ring-fencing of trust assets from the trustee’s own estate becomes a critical threshold question, and one that a freezing order alone may not resolve.
Practical takeaway: Before filing any interim-relief application against a regulated counterparty, verify the institution’s resolution status with the FMA. Build regulatory coordination steps into the pre-filing checklist and escalation protocol.
Post-award enforcement under Liechtenstein law follows a well-established framework. Domestic awards, those rendered in arbitrations seated in Liechtenstein, are enforceable through application to the Court of Justice. The court’s review is limited to the grounds of refusal recognised under the Act (broadly mirroring those of the New York Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards, to which Liechtenstein is a party). Foreign awards are likewise enforceable under the New York Convention framework.
The 2026 reforms interact with enforcement in one important way: where a freezing order was granted in support of an arbitration, the successful award creditor can apply to convert the freeze into a final enforcement attachment, avoiding the need to obtain a separate enforcement order from scratch. This conversion pathway is faster and reduces the risk of asset dissipation in the gap between award and enforcement. As broader context, Liechtenstein consistently features among the top countries for international arbitration precisely because of its pro-enforcement posture.
For cross-border enforcement, practitioners must account for Liechtenstein’s specific position: it is an EEA/EFTA member but not an EU member state. This means that the Brussels I Recast Regulation does not apply directly. Enforcement in EU member states of a Liechtenstein court order (including one recognising an emergency-arbitrator measure) requires reliance on the Lugano Convention or bilateral arrangements, which may involve additional procedural steps.
| Step | Liechtenstein (Domestic) | Switzerland (via Lugano / bilateral) | EU Member State (via New York Convention) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Filing of enforcement application | Immediate upon award | After apostille and certified translation | After apostille, translation and local counsel instruction |
| Typical court processing time | 2–4 weeks (standard); days (urgent) | 4–8 weeks (varies by canton) | 6–16 weeks (varies widely by member state) |
| Conversion of existing freeze to final enforcement | Available under 2026 Act | Not directly available; separate enforcement proceedings required | Not directly available; separate proceedings required |
Practical takeaway: Where assets are located in Liechtenstein, the domestic enforcement pathway, especially the freeze-to-enforcement conversion, is significantly faster than cross-border alternatives. Factor jurisdictional asset mapping into the dispute strategy from day one.
The following checklists summarise the key actions and documents for the two primary interim-relief tracks under the reformed arbitration law Liechtenstein framework. For detailed procedural guidance, see our preparation for and conduct of arbitration hearings resource.
| Timeframe | Action |
|---|---|
| Day 0 (risk identified) | Instruct local counsel; begin evidence assembly; decide court vs EA track |
| Day 0–1 | File ex parte court application (court track) or emergency-arbitrator request (EA track) |
| Day 1–3 | Court hearing or EA appointment; expect initial order within 24–72 hours (court) or 1–2 days for EA appointment |
| Day 3–14 | EA renders decision (if EA track); file for court recognition of EA order if enforcement needed |
| Day 7–14 | Inter partes hearing (if ex parte order granted); respondent given opportunity to challenge |
The 2026 reforms deliver meaningful improvements for banks, insurers, trustees and fund managers that use Liechtenstein as an arbitration seat. The express court powers for interim relief, combined with the new emergency-arbitrator recognition pathway, provide a toolkit that is now competitive with leading arbitration jurisdictions worldwide. To capitalise on these changes, financial institutions should update arbitration clauses in new contracts, build pre-positioned evidence packages for rapid filing, incorporate regulatory-coordination steps for counterparties that may be subject to resolution, and ensure that internal dispute-escalation protocols reflect the dual-track (court and emergency arbitrator) options now available. Early engagement with experienced Liechtenstein dispute-resolution counsel remains the most effective way to translate these legislative changes into practical advantage.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Sabine Fröhlich at Fröhlich Attorneys at Law AG, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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