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The debate over commercial courts vs arbitration in Germany has entered a new phase. Germany’s introduction of specialised Commercial Courts and Commercial Chambers, enabling proceedings in English and targeting faster resolution of complex international disputes, now offers contracting parties a credible state-court alternative to institutional arbitration for the first time. Alongside this, the German Federal Ministry of Justice published draft proposals in 2026 to modernise the country’s arbitration law, signalling that both forums are evolving simultaneously. For general counsel, in-house teams and M&A lawyers negotiating cross-border contracts, especially Franco‑German transactions, the question is no longer abstract: it demands clause-level drafting decisions right now.
TL;DR: There is no universally correct choice of forum in Germany. Arbitration remains the stronger option where confidentiality, multi-jurisdictional enforcement via the New York Convention, or party-appointed specialist arbitrators are priorities. German commercial courts are increasingly attractive where parties want state-backed interim relief, lower procedural costs, or the legitimacy of public adjudication, particularly for high-quantum, document-heavy commercial disputes.
| Date | Milestone | Impact on Clause Drafting |
|---|---|---|
| 2025 | Commercial Courts Act enters into force; first federal states begin implementation | English-language proceedings become available at designated courts; parties can now draft exclusive jurisdiction clauses naming a Commercial Court |
| 2025–2026 | Progressive roll-out across additional federal states | Availability varies by state, counsel must verify which courts are operational before finalising jurisdiction clauses |
| 2026 | Federal Ministry of Justice publishes draft proposals for arbitration-law reform | Potential modernisation of §§ 1025 ff. ZPO (German Code of Civil Procedure); parties should monitor for changes to emergency arbitrator recognition and interim-measure enforcement |
TL;DR: Germany created a new dispute resolution forum, the Commercial Court, to attract international commercial cases that previously defaulted to arbitration. Separately, the government proposed reforms to Germany’s arbitration law. Together, these changes reshape the choice of forum in Germany for cross-border contracts.
The reform, driven by the Federal Ministry of Justice’s “Justizstandort” initiative, introduced two tiers of specialised state courts for commercial disputes. Commercial Chambers (Kommerzielle Kammern) were established at the regional court (Landgericht) level, while Commercial Courts (Commercial Courts) were introduced at the higher regional court (Oberlandesgericht) level. Both are designed to handle complex, high-value commercial disputes with international dimensions. According to the BMJV, the overarching policy objective is to strengthen Germany as a forum for international dispute resolution and offer a viable public-court alternative to arbitration.
The reforms introduced several features directly relevant to contracting teams. Proceedings can be conducted in English where both parties consent and the court agrees, removing a traditional barrier for international parties. A minimum value-in-dispute threshold applies, typically at or above €500,000, ensuring cases heard by these courts are genuinely complex. Procedural management is enhanced, with tighter case-management timelines modelled on leading arbitration institutions. As Gleiss Lutz has documented, implementation is proceeding on a state-by-state basis: not every federal state has activated its Commercial Court or Commercial Chamber, meaning drafting teams must confirm operational status before committing to a specific court in a jurisdiction clause.
In parallel, the Federal Ministry of Justice published draft proposals to amend the arbitration provisions of the German Code of Civil Procedure (§§ 1025 ff. ZPO). As analysed by Wolters Kluwer’s arbitration blog, the proposed reforms are targeted rather than sweeping: they focus on codifying best practices around emergency arbitrators, clarifying the interface between arbitral interim measures and state-court enforcement, and updating procedural provisions to reflect modern arbitration practice. The proposals remain at draft stage as of mid-2026. Industry observers expect that, if enacted, they would reinforce Germany’s position as a pro-arbitration jurisdiction while also clarifying the procedural boundary between arbitration and the new Commercial Courts.
| Milestone | Date | Impact |
|---|---|---|
| Federal government announces Justizstandort initiative | Pre-2025 | Signals intent to create English-language commercial courts |
| Commercial Courts Act enacted | 2025 | Legal basis for Commercial Courts and Commercial Chambers established |
| First federal states begin implementation | 2025 | Parties can begin referencing operational courts in jurisdiction clauses |
| Draft arbitration-law reform published by BMJV | 2026 | Signals modernisation of emergency arbitrator and interim-measure provisions; still at proposal stage |
| Ongoing state-level roll-out | 2025–2026 | Drafting teams must confirm jurisdiction-by-jurisdiction availability before specifying a court |
TL;DR: The choice of forum in Germany should be driven by five core priorities: enforceability, speed, cost, confidentiality and the availability of interim relief. No single forum wins on every criterion. The decision depends on the specific commercial relationship, the counterparty’s jurisdiction, and the type of disputes most likely to arise.
| Priority | Arbitration (ICC / DIS) | German Commercial Courts |
|---|---|---|
| International enforcement | ★★★★★ (New York Convention) | ★★★☆☆ (EU strong; non-EU variable) |
| Confidentiality | ★★★★★ | ★★☆☆☆ |
| Speed (standard case) | ★★★☆☆ | ★★★★☆ (reform-driven improvements) |
| Cost control | ★★☆☆☆ (institution + arbitrator fees) | ★★★★☆ (statutory fee schedule) |
| Interim relief (direct enforceability) | ★★★☆☆ (needs court cooperation) | ★★★★★ (state enforcement power) |
| Specialist expertise | ★★★★★ (party-appointed) | ★★★☆☆ (judges assigned by court) |
| Appealability | ★☆☆☆☆ (very limited challenge grounds) | ★★★★☆ (full appellate review) |
| English-language proceedings | ★★★★★ (standard) | ★★★★☆ (available at designated courts) |
Scenario 1, Franco‑German sale of goods (€2 million). A French manufacturer supplies components to a German assembler. Disputes are most likely over quality defects or late delivery. The French party’s assets are in France (EU enforcement applies). Early indications suggest that a German Commercial Court jurisdiction clause, specifying English-language proceedings and the court nearest to the German party, offers the best combination of speed, enforceable interim relief (e.g., ordering delivery or replacement) and cost efficiency. If confidentiality is important (e.g., proprietary specifications), arbitration under DIS or ICC rules would be preferable.
Scenario 2, German‑headquartered buyer acquiring a French target (M&A, €50 million). Post-closing disputes, purchase-price adjustments, warranty claims, indemnities, are the primary risk. Enforcement may need to reach assets in multiple jurisdictions. Industry observers expect that ICC arbitration seated in Frankfurt or Paris, with an emergency arbitrator clause, remains the strongest choice here because of the New York Convention’s reach and the ability to appoint arbitrators with M&A expertise. A hybrid clause reserving German court jurisdiction for interim relief in Germany is a common fallback.
Scenario 3, High-tech IP cross-border joint venture (Franco‑German, ongoing relationship). Disputes may arise over IP ownership, licence fees, or deadlock. Confidentiality is critical; but interim injunctions to prevent IP misuse may be urgent. The likely practical effect will be that a multi-tier clause works best: mandatory negotiation, followed by mediation, with arbitration (ICC or DIS) as the final tier, and an express carve-out permitting either party to seek interim relief directly from any competent state court, including a German Commercial Court.
TL;DR: Below are three dispute resolution clause templates covering the most common scenarios for cross-border contracts involving German parties. Each is annotated with drafting notes and guidance on negotiable points. These templates should be adapted to the specific transaction; they are starting points, not final language.
“All disputes arising out of or in connection with this Agreement shall be finally settled under the Rules of Arbitration of the International Chamber of Commerce [or: the DIS Arbitration Rules] by one or three arbitrators appointed in accordance with the said Rules. The seat of arbitration shall be Frankfurt am Main, Germany. The language of the arbitration shall be English. The Emergency Arbitrator Provisions shall apply. Nothing in this clause shall prevent either party from seeking interim or conservatory measures from any competent judicial authority, and any such request shall not be deemed incompatible with this arbitration agreement.”
“The parties agree that the [Commercial Court at the Oberlandesgericht / Commercial Chamber at the Landgericht] in [city], Germany, shall have exclusive jurisdiction for all disputes arising out of or in connection with this Agreement. The parties consent to proceedings being conducted in English in accordance with the applicable provisions of the Commercial Courts Act. German law shall apply to this Agreement.”
“All disputes arising out of or in connection with this Agreement shall be finally settled by arbitration under the ICC Rules [or DIS Arbitration Rules], with the seat in Frankfurt am Main and proceedings conducted in English. Notwithstanding the foregoing, either party may apply to any competent court, including the Commercial Court at the Oberlandesgericht in Frankfurt am Main, for interim or conservatory measures. Any such application shall not constitute a waiver of the arbitration agreement.”
| Clause Element | Typically Boilerplate | Typically Negotiated |
|---|---|---|
| Choice of forum (arbitration or court) | ✔, core commercial negotiation | |
| Seat / place of arbitration | ✔, both parties will advocate for “home” seat | |
| Arbitration rules (ICC, DIS, other) | ✔, familiarity and cost differ | |
| Number of arbitrators | ✔, 1 vs 3; cost and speed implications | |
| Language of proceedings | ✔, critical for Franco‑German deals | |
| Emergency arbitrator opt-in/out | ✔ (default under most rules) | |
| Interim-relief carve-out to courts | ✔ (standard in hybrid clauses) | |
| Governing law | ✔, often linked to forum choice |
TL;DR: Enforcement and interim relief are often the decisive factors when evaluating commercial courts vs arbitration in Germany. Arbitral awards enjoy near-universal enforceability through the New York Convention. German court judgments are readily enforceable within the EU but face friction in non-EU states. State courts offer faster, directly enforceable interim relief.
| Topic | Arbitration (ICC / DIS) | German Commercial Courts (Post‑Reform) |
|---|---|---|
| Recognition and enforcement | High internationally, awards enforceable in 170+ jurisdictions under the 1958 New York Convention. In Germany, enforcement under §§ 1060–1061 ZPO. | German judgments enforceable across the EU under Brussels I Recast Regulation. Non-EU enforcement depends on bilateral treaties or local recognition rules, robust in many states but may require domestication proceedings. |
| Interim relief availability | Emergency arbitrator procedures available under ICC and DIS rules. However, enforcing arbitral interim measures may require court assistance under § 1041 ZPO; enforcement speed varies. | Immediate access to state enforcement machinery. Commercial Courts streamline urgent applications and can hear them in English at designated locations. No intermediate recognition step required. |
| Timing | Faster where expedited rules are used (e.g., ICC expedited procedure for claims under a specified threshold). Complex ad hoc arbitrations can extend beyond 18 months. | Reforms target faster case management with tighter procedural timelines. Early indications suggest predictable scheduling and potentially shorter timelines for standard commercial disputes. |
| Costs | Arbitrator fees plus institutional administration fees; cost allocation typically negotiated or decided by tribunal. Overall costs can be significantly higher than court proceedings, especially with three arbitrators. | Court fees calculated on a statutory schedule (Gerichtskostengesetz) and are typically lower for the same value in dispute. Counsel fees under the Rechtsanwaltsvergütungsgesetz (RVG) or by agreement. |
| Confidentiality | Proceedings are private; awards are generally confidential unless parties agree otherwise or publication is required by law. | Hearings are public by default. Some procedural orders and interim measures may have limited confidentiality protections, but there is no general confidentiality equivalent to arbitration. |
| Appealability | Very limited grounds for challenge (§ 1059 ZPO): procedural irregularity, lack of jurisdiction, or public-policy violation. No review on the merits. | Full appellate review available (Berufung to OLG, and in certain cases Revision to BGH). Provides parties with a second chance but extends overall timeline. |
TL;DR: In the arbitration vs litigation calculus, cost and timing often tip the balance. German Commercial Courts offer statutory fee predictability, while arbitration costs scale with tribunal composition and institutional fees. Below are practical benchmarks and resource-management strategies.
TL;DR: Forum selection is a negotiation, not a default. Knowing which concessions to trade, and which to protect, is critical. Below are tactical approaches and sample language for counsel negotiating dispute-resolution clauses in Franco‑German contracts.
Initial draft (from counterparty): “All disputes shall be submitted to the exclusive jurisdiction of the courts of Paris, France.”
Proposed redline: “All disputes arising out of or in connection with this Agreement shall be finally resolved by arbitration under the ICC Rules, with the seat in Frankfurt am Main, Germany, and proceedings in English. Either party may apply to any competent court for interim or conservatory measures.”
Fallback (if counterparty rejects arbitration entirely): “The parties submit to the exclusive jurisdiction of the Commercial Court at the Oberlandesgericht Frankfurt am Main, Germany. Proceedings shall be conducted in English.”
“Any dispute arising out of or in connection with this Agreement shall first be referred to the senior management of each party for negotiation in good faith for a period of [30] days. If the dispute is not resolved within that period, either party may submit the dispute to mediation in accordance with the ICC Mediation Rules. If the dispute is not settled within [60] days of the commencement of the mediation, it shall be finally resolved by arbitration under the ICC Rules, seated in Frankfurt am Main, with proceedings in English.”
The evolving landscape of commercial courts vs arbitration in Germany requires contracting teams to make deliberate, informed choices. Use Template A (arbitration) where international enforcement and confidentiality are paramount. Use Template B (German Commercial Courts) where state-backed interim relief, cost efficiency, and English-language proceedings are priorities, and the counterparty’s assets are within the EU. Use Template C (hybrid) for high-value transactions where both enforcement breadth and urgent relief are critical. In all cases, verify the operational status of the relevant Commercial Court, confirm language-of-proceedings availability, and ensure the clause is consistent with the governing law and the contract’s language hierarchy.
For tailored guidance on drafting jurisdiction and dispute-resolution clauses for your specific transaction, find a specialist lawyer through the Global Law Experts directory or contact us directly.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Götz Gaiser at Prelia, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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