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how do you enforce a contract

How Do You Enforce a Contract? Practical Steps for Businesses in Nigeria (2026)

By Global Law Experts
– posted 3 hours ago

When a counterparty refuses to honour its obligations, how do you enforce a contract under Nigerian law? The answer depends on the type of agreement, the remedies available and whether the dispute is best resolved through alternative dispute resolution (ADR) or formal court proceedings. This guide covers only commercial contracts, supply agreements, service-level contracts, joint ventures, distribution deals and similar business-to-business arrangements governed by Nigerian law. With Nigerian courts placing increasing emphasis on active case-management and with arbitration gaining traction for cross-border transactions, businesses that follow a structured set of contract enforcement steps in 2026 stand the best chance of a swift, cost-effective outcome.

How Do You Enforce a Contract in Nigeria, the Quick 7-Step Checklist

Before diving into detailed procedures, the checklist below gives every business owner and in-house counsel a bird’s-eye view of the process. Each step is expanded in the sections that follow.

  1. Review the contract thoroughly. Re-read every clause, dispute-resolution provisions, governing law, notice requirements, limitation periods and any conditions precedent to a claim. Check whether the agreement was executed with proper authority; for Nigerian companies, the Companies and Allied Matters Act (CAMA) 2020 sets out the rules on corporate capacity and signatory power. A contract signed by someone without board or shareholder authority may create complications at enforcement stage.
  2. Issue a formal demand letter. A well-drafted demand letter Nigeria practitioners consider best practice should identify the breach, cite the relevant contractual clause, state the remedy sought and set a clear deadline for compliance. Serving this letter by recorded delivery and email with read receipts creates a paper trail that courts and arbitrators take seriously.
  3. Preserve all evidence immediately. Gather the signed contract, purchase orders, invoices, delivery receipts, email chains, WhatsApp messages and any other communications that show the counterparty’s obligations and failure to perform. Where electronic records are at risk of deletion, consider applying for a preservation order early.
  4. Activate any ADR clause. Many Nigerian commercial contracts include a mandatory arbitration or mediation clause. Ignoring it can lead to a court striking out or staying proceedings. Review the clause, comply with any notice requirements and decide whether alternative dispute resolution in Nigeria, mediation, negotiation or arbitration, is the most efficient path.
  5. Seek interim or urgent relief where needed. If delay would cause irreparable harm, for example, a counterparty dissipating assets or a supplier delivering defective goods to a third party, apply for an interim injunction, a Mareva-type freezing order or an Anton Piller-type search order from the appropriate court.
  6. File substantive proceedings. Whether you proceed by arbitration (under the Arbitration and Conciliation Act) or by litigation in the Federal High Court, a State High Court or a designated Commercial Court division, ensure your statement of claim is supported by documentary evidence and witness statements.
  7. Enforce the judgment or award. A favourable decision is only valuable if you can execute it. Register the judgment with the court’s sheriff, identify assets, apply for garnishee or charging orders and, for arbitral awards, seek recognition and enforcement through the court. For foreign awards, Nigeria’s ratification of the New York Convention provides an established enforcement pathway.

What success looks like:

  • The counterparty complies after receiving the demand letter (Steps 1–2 resolve many disputes without court involvement).
  • A mediated settlement is reached within weeks, preserving the business relationship.
  • An arbitral award or court judgment is obtained and enforced against identified assets.

Pre-Action Steps, Demand Letters, Notices and Preserving Evidence

The strongest enforcement outcomes are built before any formal proceedings are filed. This section covers the practical pre-action work every business should complete.

Demand Letter, What to Include (Template Guide)

A demand letter in Nigeria serves two purposes: it demonstrates to the counterparty that you are serious, and it provides a court or tribunal with evidence that you attempted to resolve the matter amicably. Industry observers expect that tribunals and judges in 2026 will continue to look favourably on parties who can show they took reasonable steps before commencing proceedings.

A well-structured demand letter should include the following elements:

  • Heading and formal address. Issue the letter on company or solicitor’s letterhead. Address it to the counterparty’s registered office (check the Corporate Affairs Commission records if in doubt).
  • Contract reference. State the date of the agreement, the parties and any reference number.
  • Description of the breach. Specify the clause breached, the date of breach and the factual circumstances in clear, non-emotive language.
  • Remedy sought. State precisely what you require, payment of a specified sum, delivery of goods, performance of services or any other contractual remedy.
  • Deadline for compliance. Give a reasonable period (seven to fourteen days is common in commercial disputes) for the counterparty to respond or comply.
  • Consequence of non-compliance. State that you will commence arbitration or court proceedings if the demand is not met, and that you will seek costs.
  • Proof of service. Send by courier with a signed delivery receipt and by email with a read receipt. Retain copies of both.

A downloadable demand letter template and notice of default template tailored to Nigerian commercial disputes will be available as a companion resource. These templates are for guidance only, always have them reviewed by qualified legal counsel before use.

Notice of Default, When and How to Use It

Some contracts distinguish between a demand letter and a formal notice of default. A notice of default typically triggers a contractual cure period, the counterparty is given a stated number of days to remedy the breach before the innocent party may terminate the agreement or escalate to dispute resolution. Check your contract for the exact notice provisions, including the method of service and the address for notices. Failure to comply with the contractual notice mechanism is one of the most common procedural errors that can delay or derail enforcement.

Evidence Checklist

Begin gathering and securing the following items as soon as a dispute becomes apparent:

  • The executed contract (and any amendments, addenda, side letters or variation agreements).
  • Correspondence, emails, letters, WhatsApp and text messages between the parties and their representatives.
  • Financial records, invoices, receipts, bank statements showing payments made or due, purchase orders.
  • Delivery and performance records, goods-received notes, completion certificates, inspection reports.
  • Internal documents, board minutes, internal memos and reports that record the commercial context.
  • Third-party records, shipping documents, customs clearance forms, insurance certificates.

When to Involve Legal Counsel

Engage a commercial litigation lawyer at the earliest opportunity, ideally before sending the demand letter. Early legal involvement ensures that your correspondence is privileged where appropriate, that the demand is procedurally correct and that any urgent preservation steps are taken promptly. Where the counterparty is a company, counsel can conduct asset searches and verify the company’s status on the Corporate Affairs Commission register under CAMA 2020.

ADR vs Court, How to Choose When You Enforce a Contract in Nigeria

Choosing between alternative dispute resolution in Nigeria and formal litigation is one of the most consequential decisions a claimant makes. The right forum affects cost, speed, confidentiality and, critically, the enforceability of the final outcome.

Arbitration

Nigeria’s Arbitration and Conciliation Act provides the statutory framework for domestic and international commercial arbitration. Institutional arbitration is administered by bodies such as the Lagos Court of Arbitration (LCA) and the Regional Centre for International Commercial Arbitration, Lagos (RCICAL). As a signatory to the 1958 New York Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards, Nigeria enables parties to enforce foreign arbitral awards through its domestic courts, a significant advantage for cross-border transactions.

Industry observers expect that arbitration will continue to grow as the preferred mechanism for high-value and international commercial disputes in Nigeria through 2026 and beyond. Recent commentary highlights the Nigerian courts’ increasingly pro-arbitration stance, with courts generally reluctant to interfere with arbitral proceedings except on limited statutory grounds.

Mediation and Settlement

Mediation offers the fastest and least expensive route to resolution. The Lagos Multi-Door Courthouse (LMDC) and similar centres in other states provide structured mediation services. Mediation is particularly useful where the parties have an ongoing commercial relationship and want to preserve it, or where the amounts in dispute do not justify the cost of formal proceedings. Any settlement reached can be recorded as a consent judgment and enforced through the courts.

Litigation, Commercial Court Practice in 2026

For disputes that require interim relief, involve allegations of fraud or concern parties with assets only in Nigeria, litigation in the Federal High Court, a State High Court or a designated Commercial Court division remains the default pathway. The likely practical effect of recent case-management reforms will be to shorten commercial trials in well-managed court divisions, with active pre-trial conferences, strict filing timelines and firm hearing dates reducing the scope for delay.

Comparison: Arbitration vs Litigation vs Mediation in Nigeria

Option Typical Timeline and Cost Best For / Advantages
Arbitration (institutional) 6–18 months; institutional fees vary by amount in dispute and administering body Confidential disputes; specialist tribunals; international parties; awards enforceable under the New York Convention
Litigation (Commercial Court) 12–36 months (active case-management may shorten some stages); court filing fees are generally modest Domestic enforcement against uncooperative parties with local assets; interim relief (injunctions, freezing orders) readily available
Mediation / Settlement Days to weeks; cost is low relative to arbitration or litigation Fast resolution; low cost; preserves business relationships; parties retain control over the outcome

Decision Checklist, ADR or Court?

Use the following questions to guide your choice of forum when deciding how to enforce a contract:

  • Does the contract contain a mandatory arbitration or mediation clause? If yes, you must generally comply with it before commencing court proceedings.
  • Is confidentiality important? Arbitration and mediation are private; court proceedings are generally a matter of public record.
  • Do you need urgent interim relief? Courts can grant injunctions and freezing orders more readily than most arbitral tribunals, although some institutional rules now allow emergency arbitrator procedures.
  • Where are the counterparty’s assets? If assets are in Nigeria, domestic court enforcement is straightforward. If assets are abroad, an arbitral award enforceable under the New York Convention may be more effective.
  • What is the value and complexity of the dispute? High-value, technically complex disputes often benefit from arbitration before specialist arbitrators. Lower-value claims may be resolved more quickly through mediation or summary judgment in court.
  • Is the business relationship worth preserving? Mediation allows both parties to craft a commercial solution. Litigation and arbitration produce a winner and a loser.

Starting Court Proceedings in Nigeria, Procedure and Timelines

Where ADR is not appropriate or has been exhausted, the next contract enforcement step is to commence formal litigation. This section outlines the procedural framework.

Which Court Has Jurisdiction?

Jurisdiction in Nigeria depends on the subject matter and the parties involved:

  • Federal High Court. Has exclusive jurisdiction over matters connected with the revenue of the Federal Government, banking, foreign exchange, admiralty and certain corporate disputes involving federal agencies.
  • State High Courts. Have general jurisdiction over civil and commercial matters between private parties. Most contract disputes between Nigerian businesses are filed in the State High Court of the state where the contract was performed or the defendant resides.
  • Commercial Court divisions. Several states, notably Lagos, have established dedicated Commercial Court divisions with specialised judges and streamlined procedures for business disputes. Early indications suggest that cases filed in these divisions benefit from shorter timelines and more rigorous case-management.

Pre-Action Protocols and Pleadings

Before filing a writ of summons or originating process, check whether the applicable court rules impose a pre-action protocol, a mandatory step requiring the claimant to notify the defendant and attempt settlement before issuing proceedings. Failure to comply can result in cost sanctions or a stay of proceedings.

Once proceedings are commenced, the claimant files a statement of claim accompanied by:

  • All documents relied upon (the contract, demand letters, invoices, correspondence).
  • Witness statements on oath from individuals with direct knowledge of the facts.
  • A list of additional documents to be disclosed.

The defendant files a statement of defence (and any counterclaim) within the timeframe prescribed by the court’s rules of procedure.

Case-Management and Pre-Trial Conferences

Under current practice, judges in Commercial Court divisions hold regular pre-trial conferences to narrow the issues, set firm hearing dates and encourage settlement. The likely practical effect of this approach in 2026 is to compress trial timelines significantly in well-managed divisions, though delays remain possible where interlocutory applications proliferate or where appellate proceedings intervene.

Interim Remedies

Nigerian courts have broad powers to grant interim relief to preserve the status quo pending trial. The most common forms of interim relief in commercial disputes include:

  • Interim and interlocutory injunctions. Preventing a party from disposing of assets, breaching a restrictive covenant or continuing a harmful course of action.
  • Mareva-type freezing orders. Restraining a defendant from dissipating or moving assets out of the jurisdiction.
  • Anton Piller-type orders. Permitting inspection and seizure of documents or property where there is a real risk of destruction of evidence.
  • Receivership. Appointing a receiver over specific property or the business of a company to protect the claimant’s interests.

To obtain interim relief, the applicant must generally demonstrate a prima facie case, a risk of irreparable harm if the relief is not granted, and that the balance of convenience favours the grant of the order.

Enforcing Awards and Judgments, Domestic and Foreign

Obtaining a favourable judgment or arbitral award is only half the battle. Successful enforcement requires careful post-judgment strategy.

Enforcing Domestic Judgments

Once a Nigerian court delivers judgment, the successful party may enforce it through the following mechanisms:

  • Writ of execution (writ of fieri facias). Directs the court’s sheriff to seize and sell the judgment debtor’s property to satisfy the debt.
  • Garnishee proceedings. Attaches debts owed to the judgment debtor by third parties, most commonly, funds held in bank accounts.
  • Charging orders. Places a charge on the judgment debtor’s land or other property, preventing disposal and enabling eventual sale.
  • Judgment summons. Requires the judgment debtor to attend court and be examined on their means, with the possibility of committal for wilful refusal to pay.

Enforcing Arbitral Awards in Nigeria

A domestic arbitral award is enforceable by application to the court under the Arbitration and Conciliation Act. The court registers the award, and it becomes enforceable as if it were a judgment of the court. Courts will refuse enforcement only on limited grounds, such as a party’s incapacity, invalidity of the arbitration agreement, lack of proper notice, the award dealing with matters outside the scope of the submission, or a finding that enforcement would be contrary to public policy.

For foreign arbitral awards, Nigeria’s accession to the New York Convention means that awards made in other contracting states can be recognised and enforced in Nigerian courts, subject to the same limited grounds for refusal. The procedure involves filing the original award (or a certified copy) and the arbitration agreement with the court, along with certified translations if the documents are not in English.

CAMA Enforcement, Enforcing Against Companies

When the judgment debtor is a company incorporated under CAMA 2020, specific considerations apply. The claimant should verify the company’s status on the Corporate Affairs Commission register, confirm whether it has assets that can be reached and consider whether winding-up proceedings may be appropriate where the company is unable to pay its debts. CAMA also governs the registration of charges over company property, which affects the priority of creditors in enforcement and insolvency scenarios. Where directors have misapplied company assets or acted in breach of their fiduciary duties, it may be possible to pursue personal liability against them, a step that requires careful legal analysis and evidence gathering.

Cross-Border Enforcement Considerations

Where a counterparty’s assets are located outside Nigeria, enforcement requires either an arbitral award enforceable under the New York Convention or registration of the Nigerian court judgment in the foreign jurisdiction under applicable reciprocal enforcement treaties. International asset tracing, often involving forensic accountants and legal counsel in multiple jurisdictions, may be necessary. The cost and complexity of cross-border enforcement underscores the importance of choosing the right dispute-resolution forum from the outset.

Costs, Timescales and Practical Risks

Realistic expectations are essential. The following benchmarks are indicative; actual costs and timelines vary considerably depending on complexity, the court or tribunal, and the conduct of the parties.

  • Arbitration. Institutional fees are set by the administering body’s fee schedule and are typically calculated as a percentage of the amount in dispute. Arbitrator fees, counsel fees, expert costs and administrative expenses can bring the total cost to a significant sum for high-value disputes. The timeline for an institutional arbitration in Nigeria is commonly 6–18 months from commencement to final award.
  • Litigation. Court filing fees in Nigeria are relatively modest. The major cost driver is counsel’s fees and the length of proceedings. A straightforward commercial claim in a well-managed Commercial Court division may be resolved in 12–24 months; complex cases with interlocutory appeals can take 36 months or longer.
  • Mediation. Costs are typically a fraction of arbitration or litigation. Sessions at the Lagos Multi-Door Courthouse and similar centres can be completed in days.

Key practical risks and mitigation tips:

  • Delay. Build realistic timelines into your commercial planning. Use active case-management provisions and resist unnecessary adjournments.
  • Counterparty insolvency. Conduct early asset searches and apply for freezing orders where there is a real risk of dissipation.
  • Enforcement friction. Even with a judgment, execution can be slow if the judgment debtor obstructs the sheriff or hides assets. Garnishee proceedings against bank accounts are often the most effective enforcement tool.
  • Costs exposure. Nigerian courts have discretion to award costs to the successful party, but cost recovery rarely covers the full expense of litigation. Factor this into your commercial assessment of whether to proceed.

Conclusion, Next Steps to Enforce a Contract in Nigeria

The question of how do you enforce a contract in Nigeria in 2026 has a clear, structured answer: review your agreement, issue a formal demand, preserve evidence, comply with any ADR clause, seek interim relief where needed, commence proceedings in the right forum and enforce the resulting judgment or award against identifiable assets. Each stage requires precision, timeliness and, above all, early legal advice.

Businesses should not wait until a dispute escalates before taking action. The most effective contract enforcement steps begin with a well-drafted contract that includes clear dispute-resolution and notice provisions. When a breach does occur, acting swiftly and methodically gives you the strongest possible position.

If you are facing a contract dispute in Nigeria and need practical guidance on your next steps, contact a qualified Nigerian commercial lawyer through Global Law Experts for a confidential discussion of your options.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Theo Osanakpo at Dr. T.C Osanakpo & CO, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Mondaq, Arbitration in Nigeria: What International Businesses Should Know in 2026
  2. Global Arbitration Review, Commercial Arbitration: Nigeria
  3. Thomson Reuters Legal Solutions, The Principles of Contract Law
  4. Northeastern University / CBC Q&A, How to Enforce Contracts and Seek Remedies
  5. PandaDoc, A Useful Guide to Contract Enforcement
  6. Delos Dispute Resolution, Delos GAP Nigeria
  7. Nigerian Journals Online, ADR in Nigeria (NM Akano)
  8. UNCITRAL, New York Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards
  9. Companies and Allied Matters Act (CAMA) 2020, Official Text

FAQs

How do you enforce a contract in Nigeria?
Start with a thorough contract review, then issue a formal demand letter. Preserve all evidence, attempt ADR if the contract requires it or if it is practical, seek interim relief if assets are at risk, and file proceedings in the appropriate court or arbitral forum. Once you have a judgment or award, register it and execute against the debtor’s assets.
Yes. Under Nigerian law, unsigned or oral contracts can be enforceable where the evidence demonstrates offer, acceptance, consideration and an intention to create legal relations. Proof such as emails, conduct of the parties and payment records is critical. Seek legal advice early, as the evidential burden is higher for unwritten agreements.
The essential elements are offer, acceptance, consideration, capacity of the parties, lawful purpose and, where statute requires it, compliance with formalities such as writing or registration. For companies incorporated under CAMA 2020, the contract must also be signed by a person with proper authority.
A demand letter should state the breach clearly, reference the relevant contract and clause, specify the remedy sought (such as payment of a sum or performance of an obligation), set a reasonable deadline for compliance and warn that legal proceedings will follow if the demand is not met. Serve it by recorded delivery and email with read receipts.
Arbitration is often faster for complex and international commercial disputes, with institutional proceedings typically concluding in 6–18 months. Commercial Court divisions with active case-management are improving litigation timelines, but complex cases can still take 12–36 months. The right choice depends on the nature of the dispute, the need for interim relief and the location of assets.
Apply to the court for recognition and enforcement under the Arbitration and Conciliation Act. The court registers the award, and it becomes enforceable as a judgment. For foreign awards, Nigeria’s accession to the New York Convention provides an enforcement pathway, subject to limited grounds for refusal such as public policy or invalidity of the arbitration agreement.
The principal remedies are damages (monetary compensation for loss suffered), specific performance (a court order compelling the breaching party to fulfil its obligations), injunctions (preventing ongoing or threatened breaches) and, in appropriate cases, rescission or rectification of the contract. The remedy available depends on the nature of the breach and the terms of the agreement.
Consider insolvency proceedings, international asset tracing, or pursuing enforcement of an arbitral award in the jurisdiction where assets are located under the New York Convention. Early preservation measures, including freezing orders, are critical. Consult enforcement specialists as soon as you suspect the counterparty may be unable to satisfy a judgment.

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How Do You Enforce a Contract? Practical Steps for Businesses in Nigeria (2026)

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