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Last reviewed: 20 May 2026
Enforcing a foreign judgment in the Netherlands requires a different procedural pathway depending on whether the judgment originates from an EU Member State or a non‑EU country. Under the Brussels I Recast Regulation (EU) No 1215/2012, judgments from EU courts are directly enforceable in the Netherlands without exequatur proceedings, the creditor needs only an enforcement certificate and a certified copy of the judgment. Non‑EU judgments, by contrast, generally require Dutch court leave through exequatur proceedings unless a bilateral or multilateral treaty provides an alternative route.
This international litigation guide gives judgment creditors a single, step‑by‑step resource covering route selection, required documents, asset‑tracing tactics, bailiff instructions and realistic cost and timeline estimates for how to enforce a judgment in the Netherlands in 2026.
The enforceability of a foreign judgment in the Netherlands turns on its origin and the applicable legal instrument. Understanding this threshold question before filing anything saves time, costs and procedural missteps.
The primary framework for enforcing EU judgments in the Netherlands is Regulation (EU) No 1215/2012, commonly known as the Brussels I Recast. It abolished exequatur for civil and commercial judgments rendered in EU Member States after 10 January 2015. For non‑EU judgments, the Netherlands has no general statutory regime equivalent to the UK’s Foreign Judgments (Reciprocal Enforcement) Act. Instead, Dutch courts apply case law principles, most notably those set out in the landmark Gazprombank line of authority, and the relevant provisions of the Dutch Code of Civil Procedure (Wetboek van Burgerlijke Rechtsvordering, “Rv”).
In practice, a non‑EU creditor must bring fresh proceedings before a Dutch court, relying on the foreign judgment as evidence, or apply for exequatur where a treaty permits it.
Several multilateral and bilateral treaties supplement the framework:
Quick decision rule: (1) EU judgment → Brussels I Recast, no exequatur; (2) non‑EU judgment with applicable treaty → exequatur under that treaty; (3) non‑EU judgment without treaty → fresh Dutch proceedings using the foreign judgment as decisive evidence.
For creditors holding judgments from EU Member State courts, enforcing EU judgments in the Netherlands is comparatively straightforward. The Brussels I Recast eliminated the need for a separate exequatur procedure, meaning a judgment rendered in, say, Germany or France is in principle enforceable in the Netherlands as if it were a Dutch judgment.
Article 39 of Regulation (EU) No 1215/2012 provides that a judgment given in a Member State which is enforceable in the Member State of origin shall be enforceable in other Member States without any declaration of enforceability being required. The creditor proceeds directly to enforcement, subject only to the debtor’s right to apply for refusal of enforcement on limited grounds (Articles 45–46), such as public policy or lack of proper service.
Practical caveats exist, however. The creditor must still provide specific documents to the Dutch bailiff (deurwaarder) and, where necessary, to the Dutch court before enforcement measures can begin. Industry observers expect that, in practice, document authentication delays and translation requirements remain the main bottleneck, not the legal procedure itself.
| Document | Who issues it | Notes on translation / authentication |
|---|---|---|
| Article 53 certificate (Annex I form) | Court of origin (EU Member State) | Must be completed in the language of the court of origin; sworn Dutch translation typically needed for bailiff |
| Certified copy of the judgment | Court of origin | Authenticated copy; apostille not required between EU Member States |
| Sworn Dutch translation | Certified/sworn translator in the Netherlands or origin country | Allow 5–10 business days; expedited service available at higher cost |
| Proof of service (if judgment was by default) | Court of origin or process server | Required to demonstrate the debtor was properly served in the original proceedings |
Practical tip: Request the Article 53 certificate at the same time as the judgment itself. Courts of origin can take several weeks to issue certificates separately, and this delay is easily avoidable.
Where the judgment originates outside the EU and no applicable treaty provides a streamlined enforcement mechanism, the creditor faces a more involved process. Exequatur proceedings in the Netherlands require the creditor to petition a Dutch court for leave to enforce the foreign judgment. In situations where no treaty applies at all, the creditor must commence fresh proceedings on the merits, using the foreign judgment as authoritative evidence.
Dutch courts will generally recognise a non‑EU judgment if the following conditions are satisfied:
Reciprocity is not a formal statutory requirement under Dutch law, though it may play a role in the court’s assessment in borderline cases. The Dutch Supreme Court has held that foreign judgments can be recognised and enforced provided the conditions above are met, even absent a treaty.
| Document | Purpose | Practical note |
|---|---|---|
| Certified copy of the foreign judgment | Proves the existence and content of the judgment | Must be authenticated; apostille under the Hague Apostille Convention where applicable |
| Certificate of enforceability from origin court | Confirms judgment is final and enforceable in the country of origin | Request alongside judgment; some jurisdictions issue this automatically |
| Sworn Dutch translation of all foreign‑language documents | Required for Dutch court filing | NCC accepts English; ordinary courts require Dutch |
| Evidence of proper service on the debtor in the original proceedings | Addresses due process condition | Critical for default judgments; prepare a detailed proof of service dossier |
| Power of attorney for Dutch counsel | Authorises Dutch lawyer to act | Some courts accept a simple signed letter; others require notarised PoA |
| Evidence of debtor’s Dutch domicile or Dutch assets | Establishes jurisdiction of the Dutch court and practical enforceability | Chamber of Commerce (KvK) extract; land registry (Kadaster) printout |
US judgments: Because there is no bilateral treaty between the United States and the Netherlands, a US judgment cannot be directly enforced via exequatur. Instead, the creditor must commence fresh proceedings before a Dutch court, presenting the US judgment as evidence. The Dutch court will re‑examine the conditions for recognition (jurisdiction, due process, finality, public policy) but will typically give considerable weight to the US judgment’s findings of fact and law.
Not all enforcement actions follow the same channel. Selecting the optimal route can materially reduce timelines and costs. The choice depends on the nature of the original decision (judgment vs arbitral award), applicable instruments and whether English‑language proceedings are desirable.
The Netherlands Commercial Court (NCC), a specialised chamber of the Amsterdam District Court, conducts proceedings entirely in English. For international creditors, the NCC offers a significant procedural advantage: all submissions, hearings and the judgment itself are in English, eliminating the need for sworn Dutch translations of pleadings and evidence. NCC judgments carry the same enforceability as any other Dutch court judgment. Where the debtor has agreed to NCC jurisdiction (via a forum clause) or where jurisdiction can otherwise be established, using the NCC for enforcement‑related proceedings can be a strategically efficient choice.
Foreign arbitral awards are enforced under the 1958 New York Convention, implemented through Articles 1075–1076 of the Dutch Code of Civil Procedure. The creditor files a petition (verzoekschrift) with the president of the competent district court, attaching the original award (or certified copy) and the arbitration agreement. Grounds for refusal are narrowly defined. The likely practical effect is a faster route than exequatur proceedings for court judgments.
For judgments covered by specific EU instruments (European Enforcement Order, European Payment Order, European Small Claims Procedure) or the Hague conventions, dedicated streamlined procedures apply. These are particularly relevant for smaller commercial claims and consumer disputes.
| Route | Typical timeline | Best for / Notes |
|---|---|---|
| EU judgment (Brussels I Recast) | 2–8 weeks | No exequatur needed; provide Article 53 certificate; fastest route for enforcing a foreign judgment in the Netherlands |
| Non‑EU judgment, exequatur / fresh proceedings | 3–9 months (longer if contested) | Requires Dutch court leave; produce evidence of foreign enforceability and finality |
| Arbitral award (New York Convention) | 4–12 weeks | Petition to district court president; narrow grounds for refusal; efficient for international commercial disputes |
| NCC proceedings (English language) | Varies (typically 3–6 months for substantive proceedings) | English‑language proceedings; ideal where parties agreed to NCC jurisdiction or for international commercial disputes |
Regardless of which enforcement route applies, creditors must assemble a precise document set. Incomplete filings are the most common cause of avoidable delay when enforcing a foreign judgment in the Netherlands.
For EU judgments, the Article 53 certificate (Annex I form under Regulation 1215/2012) is mandatory. For non‑EU judgments, a certificate of enforceability from the court of origin serves an equivalent purpose. All documents not in Dutch (or English, if proceeding before the NCC) must be accompanied by sworn translations prepared by a translator registered in the Netherlands or the country of origin. Apostilles are required for documents from countries party to the Hague Apostille Convention; for non‑Apostille countries, consular legalisation is necessary.
| Document | How to obtain | Typical processing time |
|---|---|---|
| Certified copy of the judgment | Court registry of origin | 1–3 weeks |
| Article 53 certificate (EU) / certificate of enforceability (non‑EU) | Court of origin | 1–4 weeks |
| Apostille or consular legalisation | Competent authority in country of origin (typically Ministry of Foreign Affairs) | 1–2 weeks (apostille); 2–6 weeks (consular) |
| Sworn Dutch translation | Registered sworn translator | 5–10 business days (standard); 2–3 days (expedited) |
| KvK extract (debtor’s company details) | Dutch Chamber of Commerce (online) | Immediate (digital extract) |
| Kadaster search (real property) | Dutch Land Registry (online) | Immediate to 2 business days |
| Power of attorney for Dutch counsel | Creditor signs; notarisation if required by court | 1–5 business days |
| Evidence of proper service in original proceedings | Court of origin or process server | Varies; prepare in advance |
A judgment is only as valuable as the assets it can reach. Identifying Dutch assets for enforcement is therefore a critical preliminary step, ideally undertaken before or during the enforcement procedure itself.
| Asset source | How to search | Practical notes and limits |
|---|---|---|
| Land Registry (Kadaster) | Online search at kadaster.nl by name or address | Reveals property ownership, mortgages and encumbrances; reliable for real estate |
| Chamber of Commerce (KvK) | Online search at kvk.nl; order official extract | Shows company details, directors, UBOs (beneficial owners) and registered addresses; useful for corporate asset mapping |
| Bank accounts | No public register; identify via prior business dealings, court‑ordered disclosure or conservatory attachment | Bailiffs can levy on known bank accounts; the debtor has a post‑attachment disclosure obligation |
| Vehicle register (RDW) | Online check at rdw.nl by licence plate | Reveals registered owner; useful for high‑value vehicles |
| Share registers (for BVs / NVs) | KvK for company data; shareholders’ register held by the company | Shares in Dutch private companies (BVs) can be attached; requires notarial involvement |
| Intellectual property registers (Benelux Office, EUIPO) | Searchable online databases | Trademarks, patents and designs can be valuable enforcement targets |
Dutch law provides a powerful pre‑judgment tool: conservatory attachment (conservatoir beslag). A creditor can apply ex parte to the provisional relief judge (voorzieningenrechter) for leave to attach the debtor’s Dutch assets before the enforcement proceedings have concluded. The application is typically decided within days, sometimes within 24 hours. The attachment freezes the assets (bank accounts, real property, shares, receivables) pending the outcome of the main proceedings. After attachment, the creditor must commence the main proceedings (or enforcement action) within a period set by the court, usually 14 days.
For creditors dealing with regulated entities such as banks or crypto‑asset service providers in the Netherlands, additional considerations around regulatory holds and compliance obligations may apply when seeking conservatory attachment over accounts or digital assets.
Practical tip: Apply for conservatory attachment before the debtor becomes aware of the enforcement action. Once served, the debtor will have a strong incentive to move assets beyond reach. Speed is the creditor’s greatest advantage in asset preservation.
The Dutch bailiff (deurwaarder) is a public officer authorised to serve court documents, execute judgments and carry out enforcement measures including seizure and public auction of assets. Instructing a Dutch bailiff is the essential final step in converting a paper judgment into actual recovery.
A deurwaarder is a court‑appointed officer with exclusive authority to perform acts of execution. Their powers include serving enforceable titles on debtors, levying execution on movable and immovable property, attaching bank accounts and receivables, conducting public sales and, in limited circumstances, evicting occupants from real property. Bailiffs operate under the supervision of the Dutch courts and must comply with professional regulations.
When instructing a Dutch bailiff, provide the following information as a minimum:
Fees: Bailiff fees are partly regulated by the Besluit tarieven ambtshandelingen gerechtsdeurwaarders (Decree on bailiff tariffs). Fixed statutory fees apply for specific acts (e.g., service of documents, execution levies). Additional costs, including travel, storage of seized goods and auction expenses, are charged separately. Early indications suggest that, for a straightforward bank account attachment, statutory fees start at approximately €100–€150 per act, with total bailiff costs for a full enforcement cycle (service, attachment, collection) typically ranging from €500 to €2,500 depending on complexity.
Realistic expectations on timelines and enforcement costs Netherlands creditors face are essential for budgeting and strategic decision‑making.
| Procedure | Typical timeline | Typical direct costs (ranges) |
|---|---|---|
| EU judgment enforcement (Brussels I Recast) | 2–8 weeks (document preparation + bailiff execution) | €1,500–€5,000 (translations, bailiff fees, counsel coordination) |
| Non‑EU judgment, exequatur / fresh proceedings (uncontested) | 3–9 months | €5,000–€25,000 (court fees, counsel, translations, bailiff) |
| Non‑EU judgment, contested proceedings | 9–18+ months | €15,000–€75,000+ (full litigation costs) |
| Arbitral award (New York Convention) | 4–12 weeks | €2,000–€8,000 (petition, translations, bailiff) |
| Conservatory attachment (ex parte) | 1–7 days (application to grant) | €1,500–€4,000 (counsel + court fees) |
Under Dutch procedural law, the prevailing party may recover a portion of legal costs from the losing party, but the Dutch system of cost awards is based on standardised tariffs (liquidatietarief) that typically fall well below actual legal spend. In enforcement proceedings, certain execution costs (bailiff fees, court fees) are recoverable from the debtor as part of the enforcement. However, creditors should budget on the basis that a substantial portion of legal and advisory fees will not be reimbursed. For international commercial claims, consider whether the original judgment includes a costs order that can itself be enforced.
Enforcing a foreign judgment in the Netherlands is a well‑defined process, but the route, timing and cost depend entirely on the judgment’s origin and the debtor’s asset profile. EU creditors benefit from a streamlined Brussels I procedure, while non‑EU creditors must navigate exequatur proceedings or fresh Dutch litigation. In all cases, early asset identification, strategic use of conservatory attachment and precise document preparation are the keys to effective recovery. Creditors who need tailored enforcement advice should consult an experienced cross‑border litigation specialist through the Global Law Experts lawyer directory.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Evelyn Tjon-En-Fa at Bird & Bird, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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