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Understanding how to file a commercial suit in Algeria is essential for any business, domestic or foreign, that needs to recover unpaid invoices, enforce a breached contract, or resolve a trade dispute through the courts. The commercial suit procedure in Algeria changed significantly after Law No. 22‑13 amended the Code of Civil and Administrative Procedure, creating specialised commercial courts and introducing mandatory conciliation as a prerequisite for many claims. This guide walks in‑house counsel, commercial managers, SMEs and foreign investors through every stage of the 2026 process, from eligibility checks and document preparation to hearing, judgment and enforcement.
Whether you are initiating a claim or responding to one, the numbered steps, timeline table, document checklist and cost breakdown below provide the procedural roadmap you need before engaging Algerian counsel.
Commercial disputes in Algeria are heard either by the section commerciale of a tribunal (the traditional route) or, following the reforms introduced by Law No. 22‑13, by a specialised commercial court (tribunal commercial spécialisé) with exclusive jurisdiction over designated categories of complex commercial, banking, financial and intellectual‑property matters. The foundational procedural framework remains the Code of Civil and Administrative Procedure (Law No. 08‑09), which governs filing formalities, service of process, evidence rules, hearings and appeals.
The steps to sue in Algeria in a commercial matter follow a predictable sequence: pre‑litigation demand → mandatory conciliation attempt → formal filing of the claim (assignation) → service on the defendant → exchange of evidence and submissions → hearing → judgment → enforcement. The conciliation requirement, now operational across specialised commercial courts, means claimants must file a conciliation petition with the court registry (Greffe) before the court will register a formal claim. Failing to complete this step can render the action inadmissible.
For disputes that involve an arbitration clause or where the parties prefer a private resolution mechanism, Algeria’s arbitration framework (governed by Articles 1006–1061 of Law No. 08‑09) offers an alternative. However, where no valid arbitration agreement exists, or where a party seeks interim or conservatory relief from a state court, the commercial litigation route described in this guide applies.
Any natural or legal person with a legitimate interest and legal standing may initiate a commercial claim. This includes registered merchants, commercial companies (SARL, SPA, SNC and other forms), partnerships, and non‑merchant entities where the dispute arises from a commercial act. Foreign companies and individuals may also sue, provided they comply with legalisation, apostille and representation requirements outlined below.
Territorial jurisdiction generally lies with the court of the defendant’s domicile or registered office. For contractual disputes, the parties may agree on a forum‑selection clause, subject to statutory limits. The specialised commercial courts created by Law No. 22‑13 have exclusive competence over certain high‑value or complex categories, including banking and financial disputes, commercial insolvency matters and intellectual‑property claims connected to trade. All other commercial disputes continue to be heard by the section commerciale of the ordinary tribunal.
Under Law No. 22‑13, a claimant must attempt conciliation before a formal claim will be enrolled by the specialised commercial court. The practical action is straightforward: file a written request for conciliation with the Greffe of the competent court (or, where available, through the court’s online portal). The court sets a conciliation hearing, at which a judge or designated conciliator attempts to mediate. If the attempt fails, the court issues a procès‑verbal de non‑conciliation (PV of non‑conciliation), which the claimant must attach to the formal claim. Without this document, the court may refuse to register the case. Early indications suggest that courts are applying the conciliation requirement strictly, and claimants should budget 15–30 days for this stage.
The following numbered steps represent the core commercial suit procedure Algeria practitioners follow from first demand letter through to enforcement. Each step identifies who is responsible, the key documents or forms involved, and the typical duration.
Before approaching the court, the claimant (or external counsel) should send a formal demand letter (mise en demeure) to the debtor or opposing party by registered post with acknowledgement of receipt. This letter must clearly state the nature of the claim, the sums or performance demanded, and a deadline for response. Simultaneously, collate all supporting evidence: contracts, invoices, delivery notes, correspondence and bank statements. Verify the defendant’s legal status by obtaining a recent CNRC extract (extrait du registre du commerce) from the SIDJILCOM portal. Conduct preliminary asset checks where possible. This stage typically takes 1–4 weeks depending on document volume.
Under Law No. 22‑13, the claimant must lodge a written conciliation petition with the Greffe of the competent specialised commercial court (or section commerciale). The petition should identify the parties, summarise the dispute, and attach the demand letter and key supporting documents. The court sets a conciliation hearing date, typically within 15–30 days. Both parties are summoned. If the conciliation succeeds, the agreement is recorded and may be made enforceable. If it fails, the court issues a PV of non‑conciliation, which the claimant retains for the next step. This phase usually takes 2–6 weeks from filing to issuance of the PV.
With the PV of non‑conciliation in hand, the claimant prepares the formal claim, known as an assignation or introductory petition, in accordance with the requirements of the Code of Civil and Administrative Procedure (Law No. 08‑09). The document must contain: the full identity and address of the claimant and defendant; the competent court; a clear statement of facts and legal grounds; the relief sought; and the supporting documents annexed. It must be signed by a qualified attorney (avocat) admitted to the bar of the relevant jurisdiction. Multiple copies are required, one for the court file and one for each defendant.
Where a foreign party is involved, all documents must be translated into Arabic or French by a certified translator, and foreign‑issued documents must be legalised or apostilled. File the assignation at the Greffe; registration is normally immediate upon payment of the court filing fee.
Once the Greffe registers the claim, it assigns a case number and schedules the matter. Service of the assignation on the defendant is carried out by a court‑appointed process server (huissier de justice) or, in certain cases, by registered post. For domestic defendants, service typically takes 1–3 weeks. For foreign defendants, service must comply with applicable international treaties or diplomatic channels, which extends the timeline. The defendant then has a court‑directed period, generally 15–45 days, to file a written defence and any counter‑claims.
During this phase, both parties exchange documents and written submissions. Either party may request the court to appoint an expert (expert judiciaire) to investigate technical or accounting issues. If the claimant faces an urgent risk, such as the defendant dissipating assets, they may apply for conservatory or provisional measures (mesures conservatoires). Applications for emergency relief can be decided within 24–72 hours; other interim measures typically take 1–4 weeks. The court sets a calendar for the exchange of evidence and fixes a hearing date.
At the hearing, both parties (through counsel) present oral arguments supplementing their written submissions. Depending on case complexity and court backlog, the period from first hearing to judgment ranges from 3 to 12 months. The court issues its judgment in writing. A party wishing to appeal must file a notice of appeal within 30 days of notification of the judgment, as prescribed by the Code of Civil and Administrative Procedure. Appeals are heard by the competent Cour (Court of Appeal). A further extraordinary remedy, cassation before the Supreme Court (Cour suprême), is available on limited grounds. Appeal proceedings typically take 6–18 months.
Once the judgment becomes final and enforceable (exécutoire), the successful party applies for an enforcement order. A court‑appointed enforcement officer (huissier de justice) executes the judgment, which may involve seizing bank accounts, attaching assets, or garnishing receivables. Enforcement steps typically take 1–6 months depending on the defendant’s cooperation and asset location. For foreign arbitral awards, a separate exequatur proceeding is required before enforcement. The enforcement process is critical, obtaining judgment without effective execution renders the entire procedure hollow.
| Step | Who does it | Typical duration |
|---|---|---|
| Pre‑litigation demand and evidence collation | Claimant / in‑house or external counsel | 1–4 weeks |
| Request for conciliation + conciliation hearing | Claimant files with Greffe; court schedules hearing | 2–6 weeks (hearing set within 15–30 days) |
| File formal claim (assignation) and registration | Claimant / counsel files at Greffe | Registration immediate; enrolment 1–3 weeks |
| Service of process on defendant | Court‑appointed huissier or postal service | 1–3 weeks (domestic); longer for foreign service |
| Written defence and document exchanges | Defendant / counsel | 15–45 days (court‑directed deadline) |
| Interim measures (if requested) | Claimant applies; court decides | Emergency: 24–72 hours; other: 1–4 weeks |
| First hearing to judgment | Court and parties | 3–12 months |
| Appeal / cassation | Appellant / appellate court | Appeal deadline: 30 days; proceedings: 6–18 months+ |
| Enforcement (execution of judgment) | Successful party / enforcement officer | 1–6 months+ |
Gathering the correct documents before filing is one of the most important requirements for a commercial suit in Algeria. Missing or improperly formatted documents can delay registration, give the defendant grounds for procedural objections, or lead to inadmissibility. The table below lists the documents needed for both domestic and foreign claimants.
| Document | Notes |
|---|---|
| Written power of attorney / mandate for counsel | Issued by claimant; notarised if issued abroad. Must be in Arabic or French, or accompanied by a certified translation. |
| Demand letter (mise en demeure) | Drafted by claimant; attach proof of transmission (registered post receipt or email delivery confirmation). |
| PV of non‑conciliation | Issued by the court following the mandatory conciliation attempt under Law No. 22‑13. Must be attached to the formal claim. |
| Commercial contract(s) and annexes | Originals and authenticated copies. Contracts in languages other than Arabic or French require certified translation. |
| Commercial invoices / delivery notes / performance records | Originals or certified copies arranged in chronological order. |
| CNRC extract (extrait du registre du commerce) | Issued by CNRC via the SIDJILCOM portal or local chamber of commerce. Should be recent (within the last 3 months) to confirm legal status. |
| Identification documents / company articles (statuts) | Passport or national ID for natural persons; articles of association for legal persons. Notarised copies required if foreign. |
| Power of attorney for foreign company representation | Notarised, legalised or apostilled in the country of origin, with certified Arabic or French translation. |
| Evidence of payment default / bank statements | Certified copies referencing specific transaction dates and amounts. |
| Expert reports (if available) | Attach existing reports or reserve a request for court‑appointed expert. |
| Documents supporting interim‑measure requests | Affidavits, asset‑location evidence, proof of urgency or risk of dissipation. |
Foreign‑party note: All documents originating outside Algeria must be legalised or bear an apostille (if the issuing country is party to the Hague Apostille Convention) and be accompanied by a certified translation into Arabic or French. Verify the defendant’s company status through an up‑to‑date CNRC online extract before filing.
The timeline for a commercial suit in Algeria varies by court location, case complexity and whether interim measures or appeals are involved. However, several deadlines are statute‑driven and non‑negotiable under the Code of Civil and Administrative Procedure (Law No. 08‑09 as amended by Law No. 22‑13).
A practical sample calendar for a typical commercial debt claim illustrates how the stages connect:
Critical statutory deadlines include the 30‑day appeal window from notification of judgment, missing this deadline extinguishes the right to appeal (subject to narrow extraordinary remedies such as cassation or opposition in specific circumstances). Claimants should also be aware that limitation periods for commercial claims are generally subject to a statute of limitations that varies depending on the nature of the obligation, consult counsel to confirm the applicable period before the claim becomes time‑barred.
The cost of filing a commercial suit in Algeria comprises court fees, service fees, professional fees and, where required, translation, notarisation and expert costs. The table below provides indicative ranges; exact amounts should be confirmed with the local Greffe and your counsel.
| Item | Indicative amount | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Court filing fee (registration at Greffe) | Modest; varies by claim value and court | Confirm current schedule with the competent Greffe. Filing fees in Algeria are generally low relative to other jurisdictions. |
| Service of process (domestic huissier) | Varies per defendant and distance | Foreign service significantly higher; multiple defendants increase total cost. |
| Lawyer retainer / professional fees | Varies widely by case complexity | Simple debt claims attract lower flat or fixed fees; complex commercial litigation is typically billed on hourly or percentage‑of‑recovery basis. Obtain a detailed fee proposal from qualified Algerian counsel. |
| Expert / technical report | Depends on expertise required | Court may order appointment and apportion cost between parties. Obtain quotes early. |
| Translation and notarisation / apostille | Depends on volume of documents | Essential for all foreign‑issued documents. Budget for certified translator and notary fees. |
| Enforcement fees (bailiff / executor) | Percentage of sums recovered + fixed fees | Local enforcement tariffs apply; confirm with enforcement officer. |
Algerian courts may order the losing party to bear all or part of the costs, including court fees and certain professional expenses. VAT treatment on professional fees should be confirmed with your counsel or tax adviser. Claimants pursuing large claims should factor in potential expert and appeal costs when budgeting.
The most consequential reform for anyone learning how to file a commercial suit in Algeria is Law No. 22‑13, which amended the Code of Civil and Administrative Procedure. Its key procedural effects, now fully operational, include:
In parallel, the CNRC/SIDJILCOM digitalisation programme has expanded online services for the commercial register. Businesses can now obtain digital CNRC extracts through the SIDJILCOM portal, and early indications suggest that certain court registries are piloting electronic notification and preliminary e‑filing features. Industry observers expect e‑filing to become the default submission channel for specialised commercial courts in major centres within the next few years. In the interim, claimants should confirm the available filing method, paper or electronic, with the specific court Greffe before preparation.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Rabah Macha at Droit penal, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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