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Preliminary Insolvency Proceedings in Germany: Register Your Creditor Claim, the Insolvency Table & Inso Deadlines

By Global Law Experts
– posted 2 hours ago

When a German debtor enters preliminary insolvency proceedings, creditors face a narrow compliance window that determines whether their claims survive into the main insolvency case or are lost entirely. Under the German Insolvency Code (Insolvenzordnung, or InsO), the preliminary stage, known as vorläufiges Insolvenzverfahren, is the critical period during which the court appoints a preliminary insolvency administrator, assesses whether sufficient assets exist to cover procedural costs, and invites creditors to register claims in accordance with InsO §§174–177. Understanding the insolvency process in Germany from the creditor’s perspective requires familiarity with exact filing steps, mandatory documents, and the strict deadlines that German courts impose.

This guide provides a compliance-first roadmap for domestic and foreign creditors navigating preliminary insolvency proceedings in Germany, including the practical checklists and worked examples that generic overviews typically omit.

The Primary Compliance Decision Creditors Must Make

The moment you learn that a debtor has entered preliminary proceedings, a single question should drive every subsequent action: should you register your claim immediately, or wait for the court’s formal invitation? The answer depends on the stage of proceedings and the type of claim you hold.

During the preliminary phase, the court has not yet opened formal insolvency proceedings. However, the preliminary insolvency administrator will typically begin contacting known creditors to gather information about outstanding liabilities. Although the formal deadline for filing claims to the insolvency table is set only when the court issues the opening order (Eröffnungsbeschluss), creditors should begin preparing documentation immediately. Delay at this stage is the most common reason claims are rejected or deprioritised later.

  • Gather all supporting evidence now. Contracts, invoices, delivery confirmations, correspondence and any security documents should be compiled and organised before the filing deadline is announced.
  • Monitor the German insolvency register. Check Insolvenzbekanntmachungen.de, the official publication portal, for court orders, administrator appointments and claim-filing deadlines.
  • Appoint German counsel early if you are a foreign creditor. Translation, notarisation and local representation requirements can consume weeks.
  • Decide whether to assert set-off rights. If you owe money to the debtor, a declaration of set-off may be more effective than filing a standalone claim, but the rules differ depending on when the set-off is declared relative to the opening of proceedings.

How Insolvency Works in Germany, Quick Overview

Insolvency proceedings in Germany follow a three-stage sequence prescribed by the German Insolvency Code: the preliminary stage, the opening order, and the main proceedings (which may include either liquidation or a reorganisation plan). Each stage imposes distinct obligations on both the debtor and its creditors.

Who Can Apply, Debtor and Creditor Petitions

Either the debtor or a creditor may file for insolvency at the competent local court (Amtsgericht). Debtors are obliged to file without undue delay upon becoming illiquid (zahlungsunfähig) or over-indebted (überschuldet), with a maximum filing window of three weeks for illiquidity and six weeks for over-indebtedness under InsO §15a. Creditors may also petition the court, although they must demonstrate a legitimate interest and prove the existence of the insolvency ground, a higher procedural threshold than a debtor-initiated application.

Role of the Preliminary Insolvency Administrator and the Court

Once a petition is filed, the court typically appoints a preliminary insolvency administrator (vorläufiger Insolvenzverwalter) to investigate the debtor’s financial position, secure the insolvency estate and determine whether proceedings can be opened. The preliminary administrator may be granted either full or limited management authority over the debtor’s assets. During this stage, the court may also impose protective measures, including a prohibition on enforcement actions by individual creditors and restrictions on the debtor’s ability to dispose of assets. The insolvency court uses this period to decide whether to open main proceedings or dismiss the petition, for example, where assets are insufficient to cover the costs of the proceedings.

The insolvency process in Germany generally follows this sequence:

  1. Filing date, debtor or creditor submits petition to Amtsgericht.
  2. Appointment of preliminary administrator, typically within days of filing.
  3. Preliminary investigation, administrator reviews assets, liabilities and business viability (6–12 weeks in most cases).
  4. Opening order or dismissal, court either opens main proceedings (setting claim-filing deadlines) or dismisses the case.
  5. Main proceedings, claim examination, creditors’ meetings, distribution or plan confirmation.

Court Windows and Typical Timelines for Preliminary Insolvency Proceedings in Germany

There is no fixed statutory duration for preliminary insolvency proceedings under the German Insolvency Code. In practice, most courts conclude the preliminary stage within six to twelve weeks of the initial filing, although complex cases, particularly those involving cross-border assets, ongoing litigation or large workforces, may extend the preliminary phase to approximately three months. Academic research on German insolvency case data confirms these observed timeframes.

The court’s opening order is the key milestone. It triggers the formal deadline for creditors to file their claims to the insolvency table and sets the date for the first creditors’ meeting (Gläubigerversammlung) and the examination hearing (Prüfungstermin). The filing period set by the court must be no less than two weeks and no more than three months from the date of publication of the opening order (InsO §28).

Event Typical Timeframe After Filing Who Issues / Acts
Appointment of preliminary administrator 1–5 days Insolvency court (Amtsgericht)
Protective measures imposed (e.g., enforcement freeze) 1–7 days Insolvency court
Preliminary administrator’s investigation report 4–10 weeks Preliminary insolvency administrator
Court decision: opening order or dismissal 6–12 weeks (up to ~3 months in complex cases) Insolvency court
Claim-filing deadline announced in opening order 2 weeks to 3 months after opening order Insolvency court (InsO §28)
Examination hearing (Prüfungstermin) Typically 1–2 months after claim deadline Insolvency court / administrator

Industry observers expect that courts with heavy insolvency dockets, particularly those in Frankfurt, Munich and Hamburg, tend to resolve the preliminary stage more efficiently due to well-established procedural routines, while smaller courts may require additional time.

Creditor Claim Registration: Exact Steps Under InsO §174 et seq.

Filing a claim in insolvency proceedings in Germany is a strictly regulated process. InsO §174 requires every creditor to register its claim in writing with the insolvency administrator, stating the amount, the legal basis for the claim and any facts that establish its ranking. The claim must be accompanied by documentary evidence.

Where to File

Claims are filed directly with the insolvency administrator, not with the court. The administrator’s contact details and the claim-filing deadline are published in the opening order, which is available on the German insolvency register at Insolvenzbekanntmachungen.de. The administrator receives, reviews and enters each claim into the insolvency table. Creditors should confirm receipt of their filing and request written acknowledgment.

Required Documents

The quality and completeness of your documentary evidence will determine whether your claim is admitted to the insolvency table or challenged at the examination hearing. German insolvency administrators expect detailed substantiation. The following checklist outlines the core documents needed:

Document Why It Is Needed Format
Claim registration letter Formal statement of claim amount, basis and ranking Written (signed original or certified copy)
Underlying contract(s) Establishes legal basis of the obligation Copy (certified if foreign-language)
Invoices / account statements Quantifies the outstanding amount Copies with payment history
Delivery or performance confirmations Proves goods/services were provided Signed delivery notes, completion certificates
Correspondence with debtor Demonstrates awareness and non-payment Copies of letters, emails, payment reminders
Security or collateral documentation Identifies secured portion of the claim Original or certified copy (e.g., mortgage deed, pledge agreement)
Assignment or subrogation proof Required where claim has been transferred Certified deed of assignment
Interest calculation Substantiates any interest component of the claim Spreadsheet or written calculation
Court judgments or arbitral awards Pre-existing enforceable title strengthens claim Certified copy with apostille if foreign
Power of attorney (if filed by representative) Authorises counsel or agent to file on behalf of creditor Signed, notarised if from outside Germany
German translation of key documents Court and administrator may reject untranslated submissions Certified translation
Statement on set-off (if applicable) Declares mutual obligations and intended set-off under InsO §94 Written declaration

Electronic Filing and the German Insolvency Register

While the German insolvency register (Insolvenzbekanntmachungen.de) is the official platform for publishing insolvency notices and court orders, claim filings themselves are typically submitted to the insolvency administrator by post, fax or, where accepted, secure email. Creditors should use the register to monitor the progress of proceedings, verify deadlines and confirm the identity and address of the appointed administrator. There is currently no centralised electronic claim-filing portal, although some larger administrators accept filings via dedicated online platforms.

The Insolvency Table: What It Is and How It Works

The insolvency table (Insolvenztabelle) is the central registry of all claims filed against the debtor’s estate. Maintained by the insolvency administrator, the table records each claim, its amount, its legal basis, its ranking and whether it has been admitted, disputed or rejected. Only claims registered in the insolvency table are eligible to participate in any distribution from the insolvency estate.

How Claims Are Examined and Admitted

After the filing deadline, the administrator examines each claim against the available evidence. At the examination hearing (Prüfungstermin), claims may be:

  • Admitted without objection, the claim is included in the table as an established claim and participates in distributions.
  • Disputed by the administrator or another creditor, the creditor must then pursue a declaratory judgment (Feststellungsklage) to have the claim confirmed by the court.
  • Partially admitted, only the undisputed portion is recorded; the creditor may contest the remainder.

Priority and Distribution by Creditor Type

Not all creditors are treated equally in insolvency in Germany. The following comparison table summarises how different creditor types are handled:

Creditor Type Filing Requirement Practical Treatment in the Insolvency Table
Secured creditor (e.g., mortgage, pledge) File claim and attach all security documents; register security interest prior to opening if possible Security may be enforced separately; secured portion often excluded from general insolvency estate or ranks higher in distribution
Preferential creditor (employee wages, certain tax claims) File with proof of status and confirmation of claim period Treated with priority in distribution; must prove that the claim accrued within the relevant statutory period
Unsecured trade creditor File invoices, delivery notes, contracts and any evidence of set-off Ranks after secured and preferential creditors; timely and complete filing is essential to participate in dividends

Common Pitfalls, Late Filings and Remedies

Even experienced creditors can fall into procedural traps during preliminary insolvency proceedings in Germany. The consequences of a misstep are severe: exclusion from the insolvency table means losing any right to a share of the insolvency estate.

Consequences of Late Filing

Claims filed after the court-imposed deadline are not automatically rejected, but they carry significant disadvantages. Late-filing creditors bear the additional costs of a subsequent examination hearing (InsO §177). They are excluded from distributions that have already been made and may lose the right to vote at creditors’ meetings. If the proceedings are substantially advanced, a late claim may be rendered practically worthless.

How to Challenge Decisions

If your claim is disputed at the examination hearing, you may file a declaratory action (Feststellungsklage) before the competent court to have the claim recognised. The procedural costs of such an action fall on the creditor unless the claim is ultimately established. Where the administrator has rejected a claim on formal grounds, for example, insufficient documentation, the creditor may cure the deficiency and re-submit.

Avoidable Transactions and Challenge Periods (Anfechtung)

The German Insolvency Code grants the insolvency administrator broad powers to challenge pre-insolvency transactions that prejudice the insolvency estate. Under InsO §§129–147, transactions may be avoided if they were made within certain look-back periods, up to four years for gratuitous transfers and up to ten years for transactions made with the intent to disadvantage creditors. Creditors should assess whether any payments received from the debtor in the period before insolvency filing might be subject to clawback by the administrator.

Practical Creditor Checklist and Sample Claim Template

Use this step-by-step checklist to ensure your claim filing is complete, timely and resistant to challenge:

  1. Identify the insolvency proceedings on Insolvenzbekanntmachungen.de and note the case number, administrator’s details and claim-filing deadline.
  2. Compile all contracts, invoices, delivery confirmations and correspondence with the debtor.
  3. Calculate the total claim amount, including principal, interest accrued to the date of opening, and any ancillary costs.
  4. Identify and document any security interests (mortgages, pledges, retention of title).
  5. Prepare a formal claim registration letter stating: (a) your identity and address, (b) the claim amount, (c) the legal basis, (d) the ranking claimed, and (e) a list of attached evidence.
  6. Obtain certified German translations of all foreign-language documents.
  7. If filing through a representative, prepare and notarise a power of attorney.
  8. Submit the complete package to the insolvency administrator by the deadline, retain proof of submission (registered post receipt or confirmation email).
  9. Attend or arrange representation at the examination hearing.
  10. If your claim is disputed, consult German restructuring counsel on whether to file a declaratory action.

At a minimum, your claim registration letter should contain the following fields: creditor name and registered address; insolvency case number and court; claim amount (broken down by principal, interest and costs); legal basis (contract reference, invoice numbers); ranking (secured, preferential or unsecured); list of enclosed evidence; date and signature.

What Foreign Creditors Must Do Differently

Foreign creditors face additional hurdles when filing claims in insolvency proceedings in Germany. The European e‑Justice Portal confirms that cross-border creditors retain the right to file claims under the same procedural rules as domestic creditors, but practical requirements add complexity. All documents not in German must be accompanied by certified translations, uncertified translations are routinely rejected. Documents originating outside the EU may require apostille or legalisation through the relevant embassy or consulate. Foreign creditors are strongly advised to appoint German counsel, particularly for representation at the examination hearing and for any follow-on litigation if the claim is disputed.

Payment of any filing-related costs must be made in euros, and creditors should ensure that bank transfers reference the correct case number to avoid misallocation.

Worked Example: Foreign Supplier Files a Claim

Consider a UK-based components supplier owed €340,000 by a German manufacturer that enters preliminary insolvency proceedings. The court appoints a preliminary administrator on 3 March. The supplier learns of the proceedings via Insolvenzbekanntmachungen. de on 10 March and immediately instructs German counsel. Over the following three weeks, counsel compiles the supply contract, twenty-seven invoices, delivery confirmations, and a certified English-to-German translation of all key documents. The court issues its opening order on 28 April, setting a claim-filing deadline of 15 June. The supplier files its claim package with the administrator on 20 May, well before the deadline, and receives written confirmation of receipt on 25 May. At the examination hearing on 18 July, the claim is admitted without objection.

By acting within the preliminary window rather than waiting for the formal deadline, the supplier secured its place in the insolvency table and avoided the costs and risks of late filing. For further context on restructuring transactions that may arise during such proceedings, see our guide to distressed M&A in Germany.

Protecting Your Position in German Insolvency: Key Takeaways

Preliminary insolvency proceedings in Germany impose tight compliance windows that reward preparation and punish delay. Creditors who begin gathering evidence, monitoring the German insolvency register and engaging local counsel during the preliminary phase, rather than waiting for the formal claim-filing deadline, consistently achieve better outcomes. The core statutory framework under InsO §§174–177 is clear: register your claim in writing, substantiate it with documentary evidence and submit it to the insolvency administrator before the court-imposed deadline. Late filings carry additional costs, reduced rights and, in many practical scenarios, no meaningful recovery at all.

Whether you are a domestic trade creditor, a secured lender or a foreign supplier encountering insolvency in Germany for the first time, the procedural steps outlined in this guide provide the framework needed to protect your claim. For creditors navigating complex or high-value proceedings, early engagement with experienced restructuring counsel remains the most reliable way to safeguard rights and maximise recoveries.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Dr. Anja Dachner at Kliemt.HR Lawyers, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. German Insolvency Code (InsO), Official English Translation (Gesetze im Internet)
  2. Insolvenzbekanntmachungen, Official German Insolvency Announcements Register
  3. European e-Justice Portal, Insolvency/Bankruptcy (Germany)
  4. Bundesministerium der Justiz (BMJ), German Federal Ministry of Justice
  5. Universität Paderborn, Insolvency Process in Germany (Ahlers et al.)
  6. Deutscher Anwaltverein (German Bar Association)

FAQs

How does insolvency work in Germany?
Insolvency in Germany follows a three-stage process governed by the German Insolvency Code (InsO): preliminary proceedings, the opening order and main proceedings. The court appoints an administrator to investigate the debtor’s financial position, and creditors register claims to the insolvency table for examination, admission and eventual distribution from the estate.
The insolvency court appoints a preliminary administrator who secures the debtor’s assets, investigates liabilities and determines whether sufficient assets exist to cover the costs of proceedings. Enforcement actions by individual creditors may be frozen. The court then decides whether to open main proceedings or dismiss the petition.
You must submit a written claim to the insolvency administrator, not the court, stating the amount, legal basis and ranking of your claim, accompanied by documentary evidence. The filing deadline is set by the court in the opening order and published on the German insolvency register at Insolvenzbekanntmachungen.de.
The “10-10-10 rule” is an informal reference sometimes used in restructuring contexts to describe staged payment plans or creditor negotiation frameworks. It does not appear as a formal provision of the German Insolvency Code. Creditors should rely on the specific statutory deadlines and ranking rules set out in the InsO rather than informal shorthand.
Preliminary insolvency proceedings in Germany typically last six to twelve weeks from the date the petition is filed. Complex cases, involving cross-border assets, large workforces or disputed filings, may extend the preliminary phase to approximately three months before the court issues or declines the opening order.
You will need the underlying contract, invoices, delivery confirmations, any security documentation, an interest calculation, correspondence with the debtor, and a formal claim registration letter. Foreign creditors must also provide certified German translations and, where applicable, notarised powers of attorney and apostilled documents.
Secured creditors retain their security interests, but individual enforcement is generally suspended once insolvency proceedings are opened. The insolvency administrator assumes the right to realise secured assets on behalf of the estate, although secured creditors are entitled to preferential satisfaction from the proceeds. Specific rules apply depending on the type of security (InsO §§49–51).
By Global Law Experts

posted 1 hour ago

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Preliminary Insolvency Proceedings in Germany: Register Your Creditor Claim, the Insolvency Table & Inso Deadlines

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