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how to enforce a contract in netherlands

How to Enforce a Contract in the Netherlands: Notice of Default, Freezing Assets and Enforcing Judgments

By Global Law Experts
– posted 1 hour ago

Understanding how to enforce a contract in the Netherlands is essential for any business or creditor facing a counterparty that refuses to perform. Dutch contract enforcement follows a staged approach, from formal notice, through forum selection and interim asset preservation, to final judgment and execution, and each stage carries procedural requirements that can determine whether a claim succeeds or fails. This playbook provides a step-by-step guide to the key mechanisms available under Dutch law, including the notice of default (ingebrekestelling), conservatory attachment (conservatoir beslag), arbitration and court proceedings, and the cross-border recognition of judgments and awards.

Whether you are an in-house counsel managing a commercial dispute or a foreign creditor with a Dutch counterparty, the checklist below maps the critical decision points and timelines you need to act on immediately.

Quick-reference enforcement checklist:

  1. Send a formal notice of default (ingebrekestelling) setting a reasonable cure period.
  2. Choose your forum, arbitration or Dutch civil courts, based on the contract’s dispute-resolution clause.
  3. Apply for interim measures (conservatory attachment, preliminary injunction) to freeze assets at risk.
  4. Obtain a judgment or arbitral award on the merits.
  5. Execute through a bailiff (deurwaarder): attachment, garnishee and sale of assets.

Dutch Legal Framework for Contract Enforcement: Formation, Evidence and Remedies

Contract enforcement in the Netherlands is governed primarily by the Dutch Civil Code (Burgerlijk Wetboek, or BW), particularly Book 6 (law of obligations) and Book 7 (specific contracts). Dutch law takes a flexible approach to contract formation: an agreement arises from a valid offer and acceptance, and, unlike some civil-law jurisdictions, there is generally no requirement that a contract be in writing. Oral agreements are legally binding, although proving their terms in the absence of written documentation can be significantly more difficult.

The principle of good faith (redelijkheid en billijkheid) pervades Dutch contract law. Courts may supplement or restrict contractual rights on the basis of reasonableness and fairness, and parties are expected to act loyally throughout the life of the agreement. This means that enforcement strategies must be proportionate and procedurally sound; a party that bypasses mandatory notice steps or acts in bad faith risks having its claims reduced or dismissed.

Key Statutory Provisions to Check

  • Article 6:74 BW, establishes liability for breach of contract (toerekenbare tekortkoming), requiring that a debtor compensate losses arising from non-performance.
  • Article 6:82 BW, governs the notice of default (ingebrekestelling) and when it is required before a debtor is considered to be in default (verzuim).
  • Article 6:265 BW, permits a creditor to dissolve (ontbinden) a contract in whole or in part when the other party fails to perform, unless the breach is too minor to justify dissolution.
  • Article 6:162 BW, tort liability, relevant when contractual and extra-contractual claims overlap.

To make an agreement enforceable from the outset, ensure your contract includes clear payment terms, a jurisdiction or dispute-resolution clause, default remedies, and, where appropriate, security instruments such as pledges or bank guarantees.

Notice of Default in the Netherlands: Pre-Suit Preservation and Setting the Cure Period

A notice of default (ingebrekestelling) is a formal written communication that places the debtor in default (verzuim) under Dutch law. Sending a proper notice of default in the Netherlands is a prerequisite for most breach-of-contract claims, and omitting this step can deprive a creditor of the right to claim damages or dissolve the agreement.

When to Send a Notice of Default

A notice of default should be sent as soon as the counterparty has failed, or is likely to fail, to perform its obligations on time or in full. Under Article 6:82 BW, the notice must grant the debtor a reasonable period to cure the breach. There are limited exceptions where a notice is not required, for example, where a fixed deadline has passed (fatale termijn) or where the debtor has expressly stated it will not perform, but best practice is to send one in every case to eliminate later procedural objections.

Required Content and Evidence to Include

The notice must clearly identify the obligation in breach, specify a reasonable deadline for cure, and state the consequences of non-compliance (e.g., damages claim, dissolution, legal proceedings). Attach copies of the underlying contract, relevant correspondence, invoices or delivery records, and any prior warnings. Service by bailiff (deurwaarder) provides the strongest proof of delivery, but registered mail or email with a confirmed read receipt is also commonly accepted.

Sample Notice of Default (Template)

Template: Notice of Default (example, adapt to the specific contractual relationship):

“Dear [Counterparty],We refer to our agreement dated [date] regarding [subject matter] (the “Agreement”). Under clause [X] of the Agreement, you were obligated to [describe obligation] by [deadline/date]. As of today’s date, this obligation has not been fulfilled. By this letter, we formally place you in default (ingebrekestelling) pursuant to Article 6:82 of the Dutch Civil Code. We grant you a final period of [14/21/30] days from receipt of this notice to comply in full with the above obligation.

Should you fail to do so within this period, we reserve all rights under the Agreement and Dutch law, including but not limited to: (i) claiming full compensation for damages suffered and to be suffered; (ii) dissolving the Agreement pursuant to Article 6:265 BW; and (iii) commencing legal or arbitration proceedings without further notice. This notice is sent without prejudice to any other rights and remedies available to us.

Notice Timeline

Trigger Event Recommended Cure Period Evidence to Attach
Payment overdue 14 days Contract, invoices, proof of delivery, prior reminders
Delivery / performance failure 21–30 days Contract, purchase orders, correspondence, inspection reports
Quality or specification breach 21–30 days Contract, specifications, expert inspection report, photos/samples
Anticipatory breach (express refusal) No cure period required (but notice still recommended) Written refusal, meeting minutes, email chain

Arbitration vs Courts in the Netherlands: Which Forum to Choose for Contract Enforcement

The choice between arbitration and courts in the Netherlands is one of the most consequential decisions in any contract enforcement strategy. If the contract contains an arbitration clause, Dutch courts will generally decline jurisdiction, and the dispute must be arbitrated. Where no clause exists, or where it is ambiguous, the default forum is the competent Dutch civil court.

When Arbitration Is the Better Choice

Arbitration is typically preferred in international commercial disputes where confidentiality matters, where the parties want a neutral forum or specialist arbitrators, and where the resulting award needs to be enforced across borders. The Netherlands is a party to the New York Convention, which means a Dutch arbitral award can be recognised and enforced in over 170 contracting states. The Netherlands Arbitration Institute (NAI) administers the majority of institutional arbitrations seated in the Netherlands. For a deeper comparison, see our guide on the key differences between arbitration and litigation.

When Dutch Courts Are the Better Choice

Courts are preferable when urgent preservation of assets is required, conservatory attachment and preliminary injunctions are only available through Dutch courts, even if the underlying dispute is subject to arbitration. Courts also offer advantages where insolvency proceedings overlap, where enforcement will take place primarily within the Netherlands or the EU, and where lower filing costs are a concern. Industry observers expect that courts will remain the first stop for creditors needing rapid asset-freezing measures, regardless of the dispute-resolution clause in the underlying contract.

Comparison Table: Arbitration vs Courts

Factor Arbitration Courts (Dutch Civil Courts)
Speed (typical) Medium, depends on institution and complexity; faster if parties cooperate on timetable Variable, urgent interim relief can be obtained within days; full proceedings may take 12–18 months
Interim measures Limited, courts often needed for conservatory attachment and urgent freezes Full suite: conservatory attachment, preliminary injunctions, garnishee orders
Confidentiality High, proceedings and award remain private Low, hearings and judgments are generally public
Cost predictability Moderate to high, arbitrator fees, institution fees plus counsel costs Court fees generally lower, though extended hearings and expert appointments add cost
Party autonomy High, parties choose arbitrators, procedural rules, seat and language Limited, governed by Dutch Code of Civil Procedure
Appeal / annulment risk Very limited grounds for annulment in Dutch courts Standard appeal rights (appeal and cassation)
Cross-border enforcement Enforceable in 170+ countries under the New York Convention Enforceable within EU under Brussels I Recast; outside EU requires bilateral treaties or fresh proceedings

Tactical consideration: even when arbitration is the agreed forum, a creditor can, and often should, apply to the Dutch courts for conservatory attachment before or simultaneously with commencing the arbitration. This secures assets during the period needed to obtain a final award. For practical guidance on structuring arbitration hearings, consult our dedicated resource.

Freezing Assets in the Netherlands: Emergency Relief and Conservatory Attachment

Freezing assets in the Netherlands is a powerful and frequently used tool for creditors. Conservatory attachment (conservatoir beslag) allows a creditor to freeze a debtor’s bank accounts, movable property, real estate, shares and even receivables owed by third parties, often before the debtor is aware proceedings are imminent.

Provisional Measures in Dutch Courts

A creditor applies for leave to attach assets by filing a petition (verzoekschrift) with the preliminary relief judge (voorzieningenrechter). The application is made ex parte, the debtor is not notified in advance. The judge assesses whether the claim is plausible and whether there is a genuine risk that assets will be dissipated. If leave is granted, a bailiff executes the attachment immediately. The creditor must then commence proceedings on the merits (in court or arbitration) within a deadline set by the judge to validate the attachment.

Freezing Assets in Cross-Border Cases

For cross-border enforcement in the Netherlands, creditors can attach Dutch-located assets (including bank accounts held at Dutch branches of international banks) irrespective of the debtor’s domicile. Within the EU, the European Account Preservation Order (EAPO) under Regulation (EU) No 655/2014 offers an additional mechanism for freezing bank accounts across member states. The likely practical effect of combining Dutch conservatory attachment with the EAPO is that creditors gain overlapping layers of protection when a debtor holds assets in multiple jurisdictions.

Practical Checklist: Preparing an Urgent Freezing Application

  • Draft petition. State the claim, its basis, estimated value and the assets to be attached.
  • Gather evidence. Compile the contract, notice of default, correspondence, proof of non-payment and any asset information (bank statements, trade register extracts, land registry searches).
  • Demonstrate risk. Show why there is a real danger the debtor will move, hide or deplete assets.
  • Instruct a bailiff. The deurwaarder will execute the attachment order as soon as leave is granted.
  • Set a follow-up deadline. Note the court-imposed deadline to file main proceedings and diarise it immediately.
Step Typical Timeline Key Success Factor
Filing the petition Same day (urgent applications accepted) Complete evidence bundle and clear claim valuation
Court decision on leave Often within 24–48 hours Demonstrating plausibility of the claim and risk of dissipation
Bailiff executes attachment Immediately upon grant of leave Having a bailiff on standby and knowing which assets to target
Main proceedings must commence Within deadline set by judge (commonly 14 days) Timely filing to prevent the attachment from lapsing

How to Enforce a Contract in the Netherlands: Obtaining a Judgment or Arbitral Award

Litigated Judgment: Court Proceedings and Enforcement Steps

Court proceedings in the Netherlands are initiated by serving a summons (dagvaarding) through a bailiff. The defendant has the opportunity to file a defence, after which the court may schedule a hearing or order further written submissions. If the defendant fails to appear, a default judgment (verstekvonnis) can be obtained relatively quickly. Once a judgment is final and enforceable (uitvoerbaar bij voorraad), the creditor instructs a bailiff to execute it, through attachment, garnishee or public sale of assets.

Arbitral Awards: Recognition and Enforcement Under the New York Convention

The Netherlands is a party to the 1958 New York Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards. To enforce a foreign arbitral award in the Netherlands, the award-holder files a petition for exequatur (leave for enforcement) with the competent Dutch court. The court may refuse recognition only on narrow grounds, including lack of a valid arbitration agreement, violation of due process, the award exceeding the scope of the submission, or conflict with Dutch public policy. In practice, enforcement is granted in the overwhelming majority of cases.

Converting an Award into an Enforceable Title

For awards rendered in the Netherlands (e.g., under NAI rules), the award-holder applies to the District Court for leave to enforce. Once exequatur is granted, the award has the same force as a court judgment and can be executed through bailiff measures. Early indications suggest that Dutch courts continue to apply a creditor-friendly approach to exequatur applications, consistent with the Netherlands’ pro-arbitration reputation. For further detail on dispute-resolution mechanisms, see our dedicated guide.

Enforcement Mechanics: Seizure, Garnishee and Sale of Assets

How Execution Works

The bailiff (deurwaarder) is the central figure in Dutch enforcement. After a judgment or award becomes enforceable, the bailiff serves the title on the debtor and proceeds with execution. Movable property can be seized and sold at public auction. Immovable property (real estate) follows a separate procedure through the land registry (Kadaster), requiring a notarial deed of sale after public auction. The bailiff also handles service of documents, garnishee orders and other enforcement steps.

Garnishee Orders

A garnishee order (derdenbeslag) freezes and redirects amounts owed by third parties, most commonly bank balances, to the creditor. The creditor instructs the bailiff to serve the order on the third party (e.g., the debtor’s bank), which is then obligated to hold and eventually pay over the attached funds. This mechanism is highly effective for enforcing a judgment in the Netherlands because bank balances are immediately identifiable and liquid.

Priority Among Creditors and Public Record Searches

Where multiple creditors compete, priority is generally determined by the order in which attachments were levied, subject to statutory preferences (such as tax claims and employees’ wages). Before commencing enforcement, creditors should search the Dutch trade register (Handelsregister, maintained by the Chamber of Commerce) and the land registry (Kadaster) to identify assets and any prior encumbrances.

Cross-Border Enforcement and Recognition of Foreign Judgments in the Netherlands

EU Judgments: Brussels I Recast

Within the EU, judgments rendered in one member state are recognised and enforceable in the Netherlands under Regulation (EU) No 1215/2012 (Brussels I Recast). Since the 2015 reforms, a judgment from another EU member state no longer requires a separate exequatur in the Netherlands, it is directly enforceable, subject to limited grounds for refusal (such as public policy or irreconcilable judgments). The creditor simply presents a certified copy of the judgment and the prescribed certificate to the bailiff.

Non-EU Judgments and the New York Convention

For judgments from outside the EU, the Netherlands generally does not recognise foreign judgments unless a bilateral or multilateral treaty applies. In the absence of a treaty, the creditor must commence fresh proceedings in the Netherlands, using the foreign judgment as evidence. Foreign arbitral awards, by contrast, benefit from the New York Convention and are enforceable through the exequatur procedure described above, a significant advantage of cross-border enforcement in the Netherlands via arbitration.

Practical Steps for Foreign Creditors

  • Engage local counsel. A Dutch advocaat is required for court proceedings and recommended for all enforcement actions.
  • Serve documents correctly. Improper service is a frequent ground for objection; use a bailiff or the Hague Service Convention where applicable.
  • Provide certified translations. All foreign-language documents must be accompanied by sworn Dutch translations.
  • Apply for provisional relief immediately. Assets can be frozen before or alongside recognition proceedings.
  • Monitor insolvency risk. If the debtor enters Dutch insolvency proceedings (faillissement or surseance van betaling), individual enforcement is stayed, act quickly to preserve priority.

Practical Enforcement Playbook: Timeline, Decision Points and Templates

The following 10-step playbook summarises the entire contract enforcement process in the Netherlands, from first breach to final execution. Use it as a decision-tree and adapt timelines to the specific facts of your case.

  1. Identify the breach and gather all documentary evidence (contract, invoices, correspondence, delivery records).
  2. Send a formal notice of default (ingebrekestelling) granting a reasonable cure period.
  3. If the debtor has assets at risk, apply immediately for conservatory attachment (conservatoir beslag).
  4. Determine the correct forum: check the dispute-resolution clause for arbitration or court jurisdiction.
  5. Commence proceedings (summons for court; request for arbitration if arbitration clause applies).
  6. Pursue interim relief (preliminary injunction, further attachments) as needed during proceedings.
  7. Obtain a judgment or arbitral award on the merits.
  8. If the award is arbitral, apply for exequatur to convert it into an enforceable title.
  9. Instruct a bailiff to execute: serve the enforceable title, attach assets, issue garnishee orders.
  10. Monitor enforcement, search for additional assets if necessary, and consider cross-border execution where the debtor holds assets abroad.

Evidence Bundle Checklist

  • Signed contract (or exchange of correspondence forming the agreement).
  • Invoices and payment records, showing amounts due and unpaid.
  • Notice of default, with proof of delivery (bailiff service report, registered mail receipt or email read confirmation).
  • Correspondence, all communications with the counterparty documenting the breach.
  • Asset information, trade register extracts, land registry searches, known bank account details.
  • Expert reports, inspection reports, valuation reports, damage calculations where relevant.

Cost and Fee Considerations

Enforcement costs vary depending on the forum and complexity. Court filing fees in the Netherlands are relatively modest and are set by statute, adjusted annually. Arbitration costs include institution fees, arbitrator fees and counsel costs, and can be significantly higher for complex disputes. Bailiff fees for executing attachments and public sales are regulated. In most cases, a portion of legal costs can be recovered from the losing party, though Dutch courts apply a standardised fee schedule (liquidatietarief) that typically covers only a fraction of actual costs. Consult with local counsel to prepare a realistic cost budget at the outset.

Conclusion and Recommended Next Steps

Successfully enforcing a contract in the Netherlands requires a structured, multi-stage approach: formal notice, strategic forum selection, rapid asset preservation, and disciplined execution through the bailiff system. The most common mistake is delay, failing to freeze assets before the debtor can dissipate them, or neglecting to send a proper notice of default before commencing proceedings. If you are facing a breach of contract by a Netherlands-based counterparty, the priority is to act immediately: send the notice, assess whether conservatory attachment is warranted, and engage experienced Netherlands-based contract counsel who can guide you through the enforcement process from start to finish.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Jeroen Burger at The Legal Group Advocaten, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Dutch Civil Code (Burgerlijk Wetboek), wetten.overheid.nl
  2. Rechtspraak.nl, Dutch Judiciary
  3. Business.gov.nl, Government Guidance for Businesses
  4. New York Convention, UNCITRAL
  5. EU Regulation Brussels I Recast (Regulation (EU) No 1215/2012), EUR-Lex
  6. Netherlands Arbitration Institute (NAI)

FAQs

How can a contract be enforced in the Netherlands?
By following a staged approach: preserve evidence and assets through a notice of default and urgent court applications, pursue the dispute in the agreed forum (arbitration or court), obtain a judgment or award, then execute through bailiff measures including attachment, garnishee orders and public sale.
Ensure clear offer and acceptance, written terms for key obligations, a jurisdiction or arbitration clause, and evidence of performance. Include payment terms, default remedies and, where appropriate, security instruments such as pledges or bank guarantees.
A notice of default (ingebrekestelling) is a formal letter placing the counterparty in default, specifying a reasonable cure period and the consequences of non-compliance. Send one before starting court or arbitration proceedings to preserve your rights and satisfy contractual notice requirements.
Yes. Through conservatory attachment (conservatoir beslag), Dutch courts can grant leave to freeze bank accounts, property and receivables on an ex parte basis, often within 24 to 48 hours. Success depends on demonstrating a plausible claim and a risk that assets will be dissipated.
Apply for exequatur (leave for enforcement) at the competent Dutch court under the New York Convention. The court may refuse recognition only on narrow grounds such as invalid arbitration agreement, due-process violations or public-policy conflicts.
Arbitration is preferable for international commercial disputes requiring confidentiality, party autonomy and worldwide enforceability under the New York Convention. Courts are better for urgent local asset-preservation measures, lower-cost proceedings and disputes where public enforcement powers are needed.
If a Dutch debtor is declared bankrupt (faillissement) or granted a suspension of payments (surseance van betaling), individual enforcement actions are automatically stayed. Creditors must file their claims with the insolvency administrator (curator) and participate in the collective insolvency distribution.
Costs depend on the forum and complexity. Court filing fees are regulated and comparatively modest; arbitration carries additional institution and arbitrator fees. Bailiff execution fees are statutory. A portion of legal costs may be recoverable from the losing party, but Dutch courts apply a standardised fee schedule that rarely covers full costs.
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How to Enforce a Contract in the Netherlands: Notice of Default, Freezing Assets and Enforcing Judgments

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