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how long can retention money be held for

How Long Can Retention Money Be Held for in Belgium (2026)?, Provisional & Final Acceptance, Percentages, Interest and Contractor Remedies

By Global Law Experts
– posted 46 minutes ago

Last reviewed: 17 July 2026

Understanding how long retention money can be held for is one of the most common payment questions in Belgian construction, and one of the least clearly answered online. In Belgium, retention is typically held from the moment interim certificates are issued until release is triggered in two stages: a first tranche at provisional acceptance (réception provisoire) and the balance at final acceptance (réception définitive), which in practice follows roughly twelve months later. The standard construction retention percentage in Belgium is 5 % of the contract sum, though the figure is contractual and may vary.

Where an employer withholds retention beyond the agreed or legally implied deadlines, contractors have access to statutory interest claims, formal notice procedures and, if necessary, summary court proceedings to compel release.

  • Key takeaway 1. Retention release in Belgium is a two-stage process, half at provisional acceptance, half at final acceptance (commonly twelve months later).
  • Key takeaway 2. The typical retention percentage is 5 %, consistent with Wet Breyne practice for housing sales and widely adopted in commercial construction contracts.
  • Key takeaway 3. Late release triggers a right to interest and, potentially, enforcement action, contractors should document deadlines carefully from the outset.

What Is Retention Money in Belgian Construction Contracts?

Key answer: Retention money in construction is a percentage of each interim payment that the employer (or head contractor) withholds as security for the proper completion of the works and the remedy of defects discovered during the guarantee period.

Belgian law does not contain a single overarching “retention statute.” Instead, the mechanism is governed by the contract itself, supplemented by specific rules where applicable, most notably the Wet Breyne (Loi Breyne) for the sale of housing to be built or under construction, and the Royal Decree on execution rules for public procurement contracts (Arrêté royal fixant les règles générales d’exécution des marchés publics). In purely private commercial contracts, the parties enjoy wide freedom to agree retention terms, subject to general principles of Belgian contract law.

Retention vs retention bond

A retention holdback is cash deducted from invoices and held by the paying party. A retention bond (or bank guarantee) is a third-party instrument that replaces the cash holdback: the contractor obtains a guarantee from a financial institution, and the employer draws on it only if defects materialise. Many Belgian contracts allow the contractor to substitute a bank guarantee for cash retention, freeing up working capital while giving the employer equivalent security.

Who holds the retention money?

In most Belgian projects, retention is held by the employer (developer or principal). In sub-contract chains, the head contractor may in turn withhold retention from sub-contractors on matching terms. Belgian law does not require retention to be held in a segregated trust account, an important distinction from some common-law jurisdictions, meaning the retained sums form part of the holder’s general assets unless the contract provides otherwise.

Typical Retention Percentages and How They Are Calculated in Belgium

Key answer: The construction retention percentage in Belgium is most commonly 5 % of the contract sum, applied as a deduction from each interim payment certificate.

This 5 % figure aligns with the guarantee percentage required under the Wet Breyne for housing construction sales and is widely mirrored in private commercial contracts and standard-form agreements used in the Belgian market. Some contracts adopt a split approach, for example, 2.5 % retained on each certificate with a separate 2.5 % bank guarantee, but the aggregate rarely exceeds 5 %.

Worked example, sample invoice and retention holdback

Consider a contract with a total value of €1,000,000 and a 5 % retention clause. Each month, the contractor submits an interim payment application:

Item Amount (€)
Interim certificate value (month 4) 120,000
Less 5 % retention –6,000
Net payment due 114,000
Cumulative retention held after month 4 24,000

By project completion the total retention held will equal 5 % of the certified contract sum (here, €50,000). This retention money example illustrates how the holdback accumulates progressively and why timely release matters for contractor cash flow.

How Long Can Retention Money Be Held For? Release at Provisional Acceptance

Key answer: In Belgian practice, the first half of retention (typically 2.5 % of the contract sum) is released at provisional acceptance, provided the works are substantially complete and acceptance minutes are signed without reservations affecting the retained amount.

Provisional acceptance in Belgium, known as réception provisoire, marks the moment the employer acknowledges that the works are substantially complete and fit for their intended purpose. It is recorded in formal minutes (procès-verbal de réception provisoire) signed by both parties (or, in public contracts, issued by the contracting authority). From this point, the defects-liability or guarantee period begins to run.

Step-by-step: issuing the final account and triggering retention release

  1. Contractor submits a final account, including all variations, claims and the retention balance, within the contractually stipulated period after practical completion.
  2. Employer conducts an acceptance inspection and records any minor outstanding items (réserves) in the provisional acceptance minutes.
  3. Provisional acceptance minutes are signed, this formally triggers the right to release the first tranche of retention, subject to any reservations noted.
  4. Employer pays the first retention release, typically within thirty days of the signed minutes (or the payment period stated in the contract). Under public procurement execution rules published in the Moniteur Belge, specific certification and payment timelines apply and must be followed by the contracting authority.

Sample clause to trigger release

“Upon the signing of the procès-verbal de réception provisoire without material reservations, the Employer shall within [30] calendar days release to the Contractor 50 % of the total retention held, being €[amount]. The remaining 50 % shall be released at final acceptance in accordance with Article [X].”

Where the Wet Breyne applies (sale-of-housing context), the guarantee, functionally equivalent to retention, is released in two halves: the first at provisional acceptance and the second at final acceptance, as set out in the FPS Finance guidance on the Wet Breyne regime.

Release at Final Acceptance, Timing, Steps and Legal Effects

Key answer: The remaining retention is released at final acceptance (réception définitive), which in most Belgian contracts occurs twelve months after provisional acceptance, provided the contractor has remedied all notified defects.

Final acceptance closes the guarantee period. Once the employer confirms, again by formal minutes, that the works are free from defects (or that all notified defects have been remedied), the balance of the retention must be released. Under Wet Breyne practice and widely adopted Belgian market convention, this twelve-month interval between provisional and final acceptance is standard.

Cases where final acceptance is extended or withheld

An employer may delay or refuse final acceptance where:

  • Defects remain unremedied. If the contractor has not addressed items noted at provisional acceptance, the employer may withhold the corresponding portion of retention until remediation is complete.
  • New defects emerge during the guarantee period. Latent defects discovered before final acceptance can justify continued retention, but only to the extent the contract or applicable rules permit.
  • Dispute over scope of remedial works. Where parties disagree on whether a defect falls within the contractor’s responsibility, the retention may remain contested pending resolution by negotiation, mediation or litigation.

How retention interacts with the ten-year liability regime

Belgian law imposes a ten-year liability on contractors and architects for serious structural defects affecting the stability or essential soundness of a building. This obligation survives final acceptance and the release of retention. Industry observers expect that employers concerned about long-tail exposure increasingly use retention bonds or decennial insurance as alternatives rather than attempting to extend cash retention beyond the final acceptance date, a practice that would be difficult to enforce contractually and disproportionate for the contractor.

Interest for Late Release and Legal Remedies for Contractors

Key answer: Belgian contractors can claim interest, both contractual and statutory, when retention money is withheld beyond the agreed release date, and may pursue enforcement through formal notice, court proceedings or arbitration.

The rules for retention money release are primarily contractual, but Belgian law backstops them with general payment obligations. Where the contract is silent on interest, the statutory interest rate for commercial transactions applies. In public procurement contexts, the Royal Decree on execution rules sets mandatory payment periods and late-payment interest calculations that the contracting authority must observe.

Interest calculation example

Assume €25,000 of retention is due for release at provisional acceptance on 1 March, but the employer does not pay until 1 June, a delay of 92 days. If the applicable interest rate is 3.5 % per annum:

Interest = €25,000 × 3.5 % × (92 ÷ 365) = €220.55

While this sum may appear modest, on larger projects with prolonged delays the amounts become material. Importantly, the interest obligation is automatic once the payment deadline has passed; the contractor need not prove specific loss.

Enforcement routes

  • Formal notice (mise en demeure). The first step is a written demand by registered letter stating the amount due, the contractual or legal basis for release, and a deadline for payment (typically fifteen days). This letter is a prerequisite for most court actions and triggers the running of interest if not already accruing.
  • Summary proceedings (référé / kort geding). Where urgency can be demonstrated and the debt is not seriously contested, a contractor may apply to the President of the Commercial Court for an order compelling release. Early indications suggest that Belgian courts are receptive to such applications where the provisional or final acceptance minutes clearly evidence entitlement.
  • Full court proceedings. If the employer raises substantive defences (e.g., unresolved defects), the contractor may need to commence ordinary proceedings. Belgian procedural timelines vary, but a first-instance judgment can typically be expected within twelve to eighteen months.
  • Arbitration. Many Belgian construction contracts include arbitration clauses. Arbitral proceedings often resolve retention disputes more quickly than court litigation, though costs can be higher.
  • Conservatory attachment (saisie conservatoire). In cases where there is a risk the employer may dissipate assets, the contractor can seek a pre-judgment attachment to freeze funds equal to the retention owed.

Contractor Rights and Enforcement Options in Belgium

Key answer: Contractors have a clear toolkit of rights when retention is wrongly withheld, but they must also check social-security obligations under Article 30bis before pursuing payment.

Before initiating enforcement, contractors should verify their own compliance. Under Belgian social-security rules (Article 30bis), an employer or head contractor is obliged to withhold a portion of payments if the contractor has outstanding social-security debts. These withholding obligations apply to all construction-sector payments, including retention releases. A contractor who is not in good standing with the National Social Security Office (ONSS/RSZ) may find that even a court-ordered retention release is reduced by the mandatory withholding.

Checklist for contractors before suing

  1. Confirm Article 30bis compliance. Check the contractor’s status on the ONSS/RSZ database to ensure no social-security debts will trigger withholding.
  2. Gather documentation. Assemble the signed contract, interim certificates, provisional/final acceptance minutes, all correspondence and a clear calculation of the sum withheld.
  3. Send a formal mise en demeure. Specify the amount, cite the contract clause or applicable rule, and set a reasonable deadline.
  4. Assess urgency. If the contractor’s cash flow is critically affected, consider summary proceedings.
  5. Evaluate dispute resolution clause. If the contract mandates arbitration or mediation, commencing court proceedings may be premature and could be challenged.

When to use a retention bond vs enforce retention cash

If the contract permits substitution of cash retention with a bank guarantee, the contractor should consider obtaining a retention bond early, ideally at contract signature. This avoids the enforcement problem entirely: the contractor receives full payment on each certificate, and the employer holds security via the bond. The likely practical effect for contractors negotiating new contracts is that proposing a retention bond as an alternative to cash deduction strengthens their position while giving the employer equivalent protection against defects.

Practical Drafting Tips and Sample Retention Release Clauses

Key answer: A well-drafted retention clause in a Belgian construction contract should specify the percentage, the release triggers, the payment timeline, interest for late release and the option to substitute a bank guarantee.

Template 1, Balanced retention clause

“The Employer shall retain 5 % of each certified interim payment. Upon provisional acceptance, 50 % of the total retention held shall be released within 30 calendar days. The remaining 50 % shall be released within 30 calendar days of final acceptance. If the Employer fails to release any tranche within the stated period, interest shall accrue at the statutory commercial rate from the due date until payment. The Contractor may at any time substitute the cash retention with an unconditional, on-demand bank guarantee for the equivalent amount.”

Template 2, Employer-favouring clause

“The Employer shall retain 5 % of each certified interim payment until final acceptance. No partial release shall occur at provisional acceptance. The full retention shall be released within 60 calendar days of final acceptance, provided all notified defects have been remedied to the Employer’s reasonable satisfaction.”

Negotiation tips

  • Contractors should push for a split release (half at provisional, half at final) and a short payment window (thirty days). They should also insist on an express interest clause and the right to substitute a bank guarantee.
  • Employers who prefer to hold retention until final acceptance should recognise that this concentrates cash-flow risk on the contractor and may result in higher tender prices. A balanced approach, with clear release triggers and a substitution option, generally produces better value.
  • Both parties should ensure the clause addresses the scenario where defects are disputed: specify whether only the value of disputed remedial works may be withheld, or whether the entire remaining retention stays frozen pending resolution.

Retention Release in Belgium: Comparison Table

Event Typical Timing (Practice) Authoritative Source / Notes
Provisional acceptance (réception provisoire) At practical completion, first half of retention released; payment within 30 days of signed minutes (or as per contract) Moniteur Belge / public procurement execution rules; Wet Breyne (FPS Finance guidance) for housing sales, first half of guarantee released at provisional acceptance
Final acceptance (réception définitive) Approximately 12 months after provisional acceptance, remaining retention released, unless reservations persist Wet Breyne practice (housing sales); consolidated Royal Decree on execution of public contracts (Moniteur Belge)
Public procurement, special rules Formal reception minutes required; mandatory certification steps and payment timelines set by Royal Decree Belgian Royal Decree on execution rules for public contracts (consolidated text, BOSA); EU procurement financial regulation (EUR-Lex)

Conclusion

The question of how long retention money can be held for in Belgium comes down to two milestone events: provisional acceptance and final acceptance, typically separated by twelve months. Contractors and employers alike benefit from clarity, specifying the 5 % rate, split-release mechanics, interest for delay and the option to substitute a bank guarantee. Where retention is withheld beyond the agreed deadlines, Belgian law provides effective remedies, from statutory interest to summary court proceedings. For project-specific advice on drafting, negotiating or enforcing retention terms in Belgium, consult a qualified Belgian construction lawyer through the Global Law Experts lawyer directory.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Wim Nackaerts at Strada Legale, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. FPS Finance, Wet Breyne (Loi Breyne) Construction Consumer Protection Guidance
  2. Moniteur Belge, Consolidated Royal Decree on Execution Rules for Public Contracts (BOSA)
  3. Federal Public Service Employment, Construction Sector Joint Liability and Remuneration Protection
  4. Socialsecurity.be, Article 30bis Withholding Obligations (Construction Sector)
  5. EUR-Lex, EU Financial Regulation (Delegated Regulation 1268/2012, Consolidated)
  6. RICS, Retention in the Construction Industry (Professional Guidance)

FAQs

What is retention money in construction?
Retention money is a percentage of each payment that the employer withholds from the contractor as security for defect remediation. In Belgium, it is governed primarily by the contract terms and, for housing sales, by the Wet Breyne consumer-protection regime.
Retention is typically held until provisional acceptance (first half released) and then until final acceptance roughly twelve months later (balance released). The exact timing depends on the contract; public procurement contracts follow mandatory certification and payment rules under the Royal Decree on execution of public contracts.
The standard construction retention percentage in Belgium is 5 % of the contract sum, often split equally between provisional and final release. Some contracts adopt different figures, but 5 % is the most widely used benchmark, consistent with Wet Breyne guarantee requirements.
Yes. Contractors can claim contractual interest (if specified) or statutory interest for late commercial payments once the release deadline has passed. They may also pursue enforcement through formal notice, summary proceedings, or arbitration depending on the dispute resolution clause in the contract.
An enforceable and balanced retention clause should specify the exact percentage, the release triggers (provisional and final acceptance), the payment window after each trigger, the applicable interest rate for late payment, and whether the contractor may substitute a bank guarantee for cash retention.
It can. Under Belgian social-security rules, an employer or head contractor must withhold a portion of any payment, including retention, if the contractor has outstanding social-security debts with the ONSS/RSZ. Contractors should confirm their compliance status before seeking release.

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How Long Can Retention Money Be Held for in Belgium (2026)?, Provisional & Final Acceptance, Percentages, Interest and Contractor Remedies

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