Our Expert in British Virgin Islands
No results available
Last reviewed: 17 May 2026
Foreign creditors holding claims against BVI-incorporated companies face a recurring challenge: assets can be moved, dissipated or concealed long before substantive proceedings conclude. BVI interim relief under Section 24A of the BVI Business Companies Act provides a powerful statutory gateway that allows the Eastern Caribbean Supreme Court (Commercial Division) to grant free-standing interim orders, including freezing injunctions, proprietary injunctions and the appointment of provisional liquidators, in support of foreign proceedings or to preserve assets at risk. With rising application volumes following recent Business Companies amendments and updated registry processes through 2024–2026, the practical mechanics of obtaining and enforcing these orders have become essential knowledge for cross-border enforcement counsel, insolvency practitioners and in-house legal teams.
This guide sets out the complete decision framework, step-by-step filing process, evidence requirements and enforcement tactics that foreign creditors need to succeed with a Section 24A application in the BVI in 2026.
Section 24A empowers the BVI court to grant interim relief on a free-standing basis, meaning the applicant does not need to commence or maintain substantive proceedings in the BVI itself. A foreign creditor can apply where assets located in or connected to the BVI are at genuine risk of dissipation and the applicant can demonstrate a credible underlying claim in foreign proceedings. The court will weigh urgency, the strength of the prima facie case, the risk of injustice if the order is refused, and the balance of convenience between the parties.
Where the application succeeds, the court may grant freezing orders, appoint provisional liquidators with defined powers, or make ancillary disclosure orders, all of which can be enforced directly against BVI-situated assets, registered shares and nominee structures.
Should you apply? A five-point decision checklist:
Before the enactment of Section 24 of the BVI Business Companies Act, the BVI court’s power to grant interim relief in aid of foreign proceedings rested on common-law principles, including the well-known Chabra jurisdiction (permitting relief against non-parties who hold or control the defendant’s assets). While this common-law framework proved effective in many cases, it left gaps, particularly where no substantive BVI cause of action existed and the applicant’s proceedings were entirely foreign.
Section 24 was enacted to close that gap by conferring an express statutory jurisdiction on the BVI court to grant interim relief in circumstances where proceedings had been or were to be commenced in a foreign jurisdiction. The provision created a self-contained gateway: the court could act even where the BVI had no connection to the underlying dispute other than the presence of relevant assets or entities within the jurisdiction.
Section 24A refined and expanded this framework. It clarified the scope of the court’s power, confirmed that relief could be granted on a free-standing basis (without requiring parallel BVI proceedings), and addressed practical questions about the types of orders available, from freezing injunctions and proprietary injunctions to the appointment of provisional liquidators with broad investigatory and asset-preservation mandates.
| Date | Change | Practical Effect |
|---|---|---|
| 7 January 2021 | Section 24 (statutory power for interim relief) enacted | Created express statutory jurisdiction for free-standing interim relief in aid of foreign proceedings |
| 31 July 2023 | Litigation practice changes and gateway clarifications | Broadened practical availability of BVI interim relief; procedural clarifications for cross-border cases |
| 2024–2026 | Registry and process amendments (LIA-related implementation) | New filing and registry processes; increased Section 24A applications; updated procedural expectations for applicants |
Several authorities have shaped the court’s approach to Section 24A applications:
The interaction between Section 24A and the earlier common-law powers is cumulative rather than exclusive: practitioners may rely on both the statutory gateway and the common-law Chabra principles where relevant, though Section 24A is now the primary route in most cross-border matters.
The Section 24A gateway is available to a broad range of applicants. Foreign creditors, whether individual, corporate or institutional, may apply provided they can demonstrate a sufficient connection between the relief sought and the protection of assets or meaningful relief for creditors. Insolvency practitioners, including foreign-appointed liquidators, administrators and proposed provisional liquidators, also have standing to seek interim orders where the application is connected to insolvency proceedings commenced or contemplated abroad.
The court applies a structured test when considering Section 24A applications:
Where a foreign creditor seeks BVI interim relief in the context of insolvency proceedings commenced abroad, the court will give careful consideration to principles of cross-border comity. The BVI court has shown a willingness to act in aid of foreign insolvency processes, particularly where the foreign office-holder can demonstrate that assets in the BVI are at risk and that the interim order will complement (rather than conflict with) the foreign court’s directions. This cooperative approach makes the BVI an increasingly attractive forum for asset preservation in multi-jurisdictional insolvency and fraud cases.
A successful Section 24A application requires careful preparation. The following chronological playbook reflects current court expectations and filing procedures.
Where urgency demands it, the BVI court can hear ex parte applications on short notice, in some cases within 24 to 72 hours. For ex parte applications, the evidential burden on the applicant is heightened: the court expects full and frank disclosure of all material facts, including facts unfavourable to the applicant’s case. Failure to provide full and frank disclosure is one of the most common grounds on which ex parte orders are subsequently discharged.
The applicant should prepare and file:
Where the matter is not so urgent as to justify proceeding without notice, the applicant issues the application inter partes and serves it on the respondent. The respondent will then have the opportunity to file evidence in opposition and attend the hearing. The court typically lists inter partes interim hearings within two to six weeks of filing, depending on the complexity of the matter and the availability of the court.
Hearing bundles should include all filed evidence, relevant authorities, and any correspondence bearing on the urgency or risk of dissipation. Skeleton arguments should be concise, focused on the legal test, and should address the specific elements of the Section 24A gateway.
| Document | Purpose | Who Prepares |
|---|---|---|
| Originating application / summons | Initiates the Section 24A application before the court | BVI counsel |
| Supporting affidavit(s) with exhibits | Sets out facts, claim, evidence of dissipation risk and urgency | Applicant (with input from BVI counsel) |
| Draft order | Provides the court with the precise relief sought | BVI counsel |
| Skeleton argument | Addresses legal test, authorities and why relief should be granted | BVI counsel |
| Undertaking in damages (with evidence of means) | Satisfies court requirement for protection of respondent’s interests | Applicant (evidence); BVI counsel (form) |
| Company search results / registry extracts | Confirms identity, status and registered agent of BVI target entities | BVI counsel (from Companies Registry) |
| Forensic accounting or tracing report (if applicable) | Demonstrates asset movements and supports dissipation risk narrative | Instructed forensic accountant |
The strength of a BVI interim relief application depends on the quality and completeness of the supporting evidence. The following checklist covers the core documentary requirements that practitioners should assemble before filing.
The supporting affidavit is the centrepiece of any Section 24A application. It should be structured to address each element of the legal test and should be drafted with an awareness that the court may read it as the primary (and sometimes only) evidential basis for granting relief.
Affidavit blueprint:
Where evidence is based on information and belief (hearsay), the deponent must identify the source of the information and the grounds for the belief. The court will give less weight to unsupported hearsay, and an application that relies heavily on it may fail.
The appointment of a provisional liquidator is one of the most effective forms of BVI interim relief available under Section 24A. A provisional liquidator can be appointed where the court is satisfied that the company’s assets are at risk and that an independent officeholder is needed to preserve, investigate and control those assets pending the determination of substantive proceedings.
The powers of a provisional liquidator in the BVI are defined by the terms of the court order and may include:
The effectiveness of a provisional liquidator appointment depends on the scope and clarity of the court order. Practitioners should draft proposed orders that specifically empower the provisional liquidator to take defined steps, including freezing stipulations (preventing the company from dealing with assets), preservation of books and records, and the power to instruct forensic accountants. Orders should also include directions for cooperation by the company’s directors, officers and registered agent. Ambiguity in the order is the single most common source of post-appointment enforcement difficulties.
Obtaining an order for BVI interim relief is only the first step. The practical value of the order depends on effective enforcement, a process that involves several distinct pathways depending on the nature of the relief granted and the assets involved.
Once the court has granted an interim order, the applicant (or the appointed provisional liquidator) can take immediate steps to enforce it:
Foreign creditors who have already obtained a judgment abroad will often seek to enforce that judgment in the BVI as part of their overall recovery strategy. The BVI does not have a comprehensive statutory regime for the reciprocal enforcement of foreign judgments. Instead, recognition and enforcement are pursued primarily through common-law principles: a foreign judgment may be enforced by commencing fresh proceedings in the BVI and applying for summary judgment on the basis of the foreign judgment, provided the judgment is final and conclusive, for a definite sum, and rendered by a court of competent jurisdiction.
Section 24A interim relief plays a critical supporting role in this process. By securing a freezing order or appointing a provisional liquidator at an early stage, the foreign creditor can preserve assets while the recognition process, which may take several months, is completed. Without interim protection, assets can be dissipated before a foreign judgment is recognised, rendering enforcement meaningless.
Many BVI assets take the form of registered shares in BVI companies, or interests held through nominee structures. Enforcement against these assets requires coordination with the BVI Companies Registry and, where applicable, the company’s registered agent. A provisional liquidator appointed under Section 24A can instruct the registered agent to freeze the share register, prevent transfers, and produce corporate records. Where shares are held through nominee arrangements, the court may make orders requiring the nominee to disclose the beneficial owner and to hold the shares pending further direction.
Updated registry processes implemented between 2024 and 2026, including requirements related to the Legal and Institutional Arrangements (LIA) framework, have introduced additional filing and verification steps that practitioners should account for when planning enforcement of orders against BVI entities.
Realistic expectations about timing and cost are essential for effective planning. The following table summarises typical timelines and cost bands based on current BVI court practice.
| Type of Step | Typical Timeline | Typical Cost Band (USD) |
|---|---|---|
| Urgent ex parte hearing (freezing order) | 24–72 hours from filing | $15,000–$40,000 |
| Inter partes interim hearing | 2–6 weeks from service | $25,000–$75,000 |
| Provisional liquidator appointment (contested) | 1–3 months | $40,000–$120,000+ |
| Return date / continuation hearing after ex parte order | 7–21 days from initial order | $10,000–$30,000 |
| Foreign judgment recognition (summary judgment route) | 3–9 months (if contested) | $30,000–$80,000 |
Industry observers expect that cost estimates for complex multi-entity applications, particularly those involving forensic accounting, cross-border service and contested provisional liquidator appointments, will often exceed the upper ranges indicated. Early strategic planning and focused evidence preparation can significantly reduce both cost and hearing time.
Applicants should anticipate the most common defense strategies and prepare to counter them from the outset. Respondents to Section 24A applications in the BVI typically deploy one or more of the following tactics:
The most effective way to pre-empt these defenses is rigorous evidence preparation, transparent disclosure (especially on ex parte applications), and clear, focused draft orders that are proportionate to the risk identified.
Successful applications are often won or lost on the quality of the draft order and the preparation for the hearing itself. Key practitioner guidance includes:
Section 24A has established the BVI as one of the most responsive jurisdictions for cross-border asset preservation and BVI interim relief. Foreign creditors who act early, assembling strong evidence, engaging experienced BVI counsel, and presenting focused applications with clear draft orders, stand the best chance of obtaining effective interim protection and converting that protection into meaningful asset recovery. The statutory gateway is broad, the court is experienced and efficient, and the enforcement tools available (including provisional liquidator appointments and freezing orders) are powerful. For any foreign creditor facing the risk of asset dissipation in or through BVI structures, the practical question is not whether Section 24A relief is available but whether the evidence has been properly marshalled to secure it.
Engage a qualified BVI commercial litigation practitioner at the earliest opportunity to assess jurisdiction, prepare the application, and plan the enforcement strategy that follows.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Nelcia St. Jean at McW Todman & Co, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
posted 12 minutes ago
posted 35 minutes ago
posted 36 minutes ago
posted 59 minutes ago
posted 60 minutes ago
posted 1 hour ago
posted 1 hour ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
No results available
Find the right Advisory Expert for your business
Sign up for the latest advisor briefings and news within Global Advisory Experts’ community, as well as a whole host of features, editorial and conference updates direct to your email inbox.
Naturally you can unsubscribe at any time.
Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.
Global Advisory Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional advisory services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced advisors, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.
Send welcome message