Enforce Foreign Court Judgment in Serbia

Recognition and execution of foreign court judgments and arbitral awards against debtors located in Serbia — handled remotely, with full procedural compliance.

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3-6 Months

Typical recognition timeline.

170+ Countries

NY Convention coverage.

Bilateral Treaties

With EU member states.

Remote Process

Via Power of Attorney.

Overview

This page is intended for international creditors holding a final court judgment or arbitral award against a debtor located in Serbia — whether the creditor is a European exporter with an unpaid invoice judgment, a financial institution with a loan recovery decision, a municipality enforcing administrative penalties, or any other party seeking to convert a foreign decision into actual recovery on Serbian territory. It explains the legal framework for the recognition and enforcement of foreign judgments in Serbia, the documentation requirements, the procedural steps, the timelines, and the practical obstacles that determine whether the recognition will succeed.

The focus is on cross-border enforcement as a practical recovery exercise, not merely a procedural formality. A foreign judgment does not produce direct legal effect in Serbia and cannot be used as a basis for enforcement proceedings until it has been formally recognised by a Serbian court. The recognition procedure is well-defined and predictable when handled correctly, but it requires careful preparation of documentation, accurate determination of the applicable legal basis (bilateral treaty, multilateral convention, or reciprocity), and coordination between the creditor’s home jurisdiction and Serbia. Pre-recognition due diligence on the debtor’s assets and solvency is equally important — the goal is not to obtain a paper recognition, but to recover the underlying debt.

Cross-Border Enforcement in Serbia — Comprehensive Legal and Procedural Overview

Serbian law operates on the principle that foreign court decisions do not have automatic legal effect within Serbia. The Serbian Private International Law Act regulates the recognition and enforcement of foreign judgments, requiring that a foreign decision pass through a formal recognition procedure before it can be treated as equivalent to a domestic Serbian judgment. Only after recognition is granted does the foreign judgment acquire the legal force necessary to serve as a basis for enforcement proceedings before the competent Serbian court.

This requirement applies to all foreign court judgments regardless of the country of origin, including judgments rendered by courts in European Union member states. Although Serbia is in the process of EU accession and has progressively aligned several areas of its legislation with EU law, it remains outside the scope of EU regulations such as Brussels I bis (Regulation 1215/2012), which provides for automatic recognition of judgments between EU member states. For Serbian purposes, an EU judgment is treated according to the same standards as any other foreign judgment, with the substantive conditions of recognition governed either by an applicable bilateral treaty or by the general rules of the Serbian Private International Law Act.

Injac Attorneys manages the complete recognition and enforcement process for foreign creditors: from initial assessment of the foreign judgment’s enforceability in Serbia, through preparation and filing of the recognition motion before the competent court, to subsequent enforcement proceedings against the debtor’s bank accounts, real estate, movable property, and receivables in Serbia. The process can be conducted entirely remotely, without the creditor travelling to Serbia, through a duly executed Power of Attorney.

Bilateral Treaties

Serbia maintains bilateral treaties on legal assistance and recognition of judgments with a significant number of states, including Austria, Germany, Italy, France, Hungary, the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Romania, Bulgaria, Greece, Cyprus, Poland, and others. Where such a treaty exists between Serbia and the country of origin of the judgment, the treaty governs the recognition procedure and its specific requirements take precedence over the general rules of the Serbian Private International Law Act. The substantive conditions for recognition are typically more streamlined under bilateral treaties than under the general regime.

Multilateral Conventions

Serbia is a party to several multilateral conventions that affect the recognition of specific types of decisions — most notably the New York Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards (covering over 170 contracting states), and the European Convention on Human Rights, which has implications for judgments touching fundamental rights. Serbia has not, however, acceded to the 2019 Hague Judgments Convention, so multilateral coverage of ordinary commercial judgments remains limited.

Reciprocity

Where no bilateral treaty or multilateral convention applies, recognition proceeds on the basis of reciprocity. This means a Serbian court will recognise a foreign judgment only if the courts of the foreign country would, in equivalent circumstances, recognise a Serbian judgment. Reciprocity is presumed by Serbian law, which means the burden falls on the party opposing recognition to demonstrate that reciprocity does not exist. In practice, reciprocity is rarely contested with creditors from established commercial jurisdictions; it can become an issue with judgments from less common or geographically distant jurisdictions.

Substantive Conditions for Recognition

Beyond the legal basis, the Serbian court reviewing the recognition request will examine whether the foreign judgment meets several substantive conditions: the judgment must be final and enforceable in the country of origin; the defendant must have been properly served and afforded the right to participate in the original proceedings; the foreign court must have had jurisdiction according to the rules of the country of origin; the judgment must not contradict an earlier decision rendered between the same parties on the same subject matter by a Serbian court or by another recognised foreign court; and recognition must not be manifestly contrary to Serbian public policy. A foreign judgment is not re-tried in Serbia — only its formal validity and compatibility with Serbian public policy are reviewed.

Considering recognition and enforcement in Serbia?

Whether you hold a court judgment, an arbitral award, or a payment order from a foreign jurisdiction, our cross-border enforcement team can assess the case, prepare the recognition motion, and manage the entire process remotely. 

The Recognition Procedure in Practice

The procedure for recognition is initiated by filing a motion before the competent court — generally the higher court in the place of the debtor’s residence or registered seat. The motion is filed by the creditor or by their authorised representative, which in practice is typically a Serbian attorney acting under a Power of Attorney executed by the foreign creditor.

Step 1: Case Assessment

Before any formal steps, the case is assessed to determine the applicable legal basis for recognition (bilateral treaty, multilateral convention, or reciprocity), to identify the documentation requirements, and to evaluate the debtor’s asset position in Serbia. Recognition without recovery is of limited value — the assessment establishes whether enforcement against the debtor’s Serbian assets is realistically achievable.

Step 2: Documentation

The motion must be accompanied by a complete certified copy of the foreign judgment along with a confirmation from the issuing court that the judgment is final and enforceable. Both documents must be translated into Serbian by a certified court interpreter and, depending on the country of origin, may require apostille certification under the Hague Apostille Convention or, where Serbia and the country of origin have a bilateral treaty waiving legalisation, may be submitted without apostille.

Step 3: Filing the Recognition Motion

The motion is filed electronically or in person before the competent higher court. The court reviews the documentation and the substantive conditions for recognition without re-examining the merits of the underlying dispute. The debtor is served and has the opportunity to object. Where the conditions are met and no successful objection is raised, the court issues a decision recognising the foreign judgment.

Step 4: Provisional Measures (where appropriate)

Where there is concern about asset preservation during the recognition procedure — for example, where the debtor is known to be transferring assets or is otherwise at risk of dissipating recoverable value — provisional measures (privremene mere) may be sought before or during the recognition procedure, freezing the debtor’s assets pending the outcome.

Step 5: Enforcement

Once the recognition decision becomes final, the creditor may initiate enforcement proceedings under the Serbian Law on Enforcement and Security, using the recognised foreign judgment as the enforceable title. Enforcement is conducted through public enforcement officers (javni izvršitelji), targeting the debtor’s bank accounts, real estate, movable property, and receivables. The enforcement procedure follows standard Serbian rules and is, at this stage, identical to the enforcement of a domestic Serbian judgment.

Timeline

For a properly prepared motion with complete documentation, the recognition decision is typically obtained within three to six months. Contested cases, or cases involving complex jurisdictional or public policy questions, may take longer. The subsequent enforcement phase depends on the type of assets being pursued and the debtor’s cooperation.

Foreign Arbitral Awards — A Different and More Favourable Regime

Foreign arbitral awards are subject to a separate and generally more favourable regime than court judgments. Serbia is a party to the 1958 New York Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards, which provides a streamlined and largely standardised mechanism for the recognition of awards across the more than 170 contracting states. The grounds on which recognition of an arbitral award may be refused under the New York Convention are narrowly defined and include defects in the arbitration agreement, procedural irregularities in the arbitration, and conflict with Serbian public policy.

For creditors holding arbitral awards from international arbitration institutions — the ICC in Paris, the LCIA in London, the VIAC in Vienna, the ICSID for investment disputes, or others — the New York Convention regime typically delivers recognition and enforcement faster and with fewer obstacles than the regime applicable to court judgments. The standardised grounds for refusal and the global treaty coverage make arbitration a particularly effective dispute resolution mechanism for parties anticipating potential enforcement in Serbia.

Ready to begin recognition and enforcement proceedings?

Send us the foreign judgment or arbitral award along with key case details. We will assess the recognition prospects, identify the applicable legal basis, and provide a transparent fee quotation for the full procedure — from recognition through to asset realisation in Serbia.

Who We Act For

Cross-border enforcement is one of the core areas of our debt recovery practice. The clients who approach us with recognition matters fall into several recurring profiles.

European Exporters and B2B Suppliers

Companies based in Germany, Italy, Austria, France, and other European jurisdictions that have supplied goods or services to Serbian buyers and obtained a judgment in their home jurisdiction for unpaid invoices. The typical scenario involves a German manufacturer or Italian supplier with a final court decision from their home country, who needs to convert that decision into actual recovery against the Serbian buyer’s assets. Cross-border enforcement converts a paper judgment into recovered value.

Financial Institutions

Banks, financing companies, and investment funds holding loan recovery judgments or insolvency-related claims against Serbian counterparties. These clients typically have substantial documented claims and require coordination between their home-jurisdiction enforcement teams and Serbian counsel to ensure the procedural requirements are met from the outset.

Municipal Authorities and Public Bodies

Foreign municipalities, public agencies, and government-affiliated bodies enforcing administrative decisions, traffic fines, or other public-law obligations against Serbian residents and entities. The volume-based nature of these enforcement matters requires a structured, scalable approach that we provide through dedicated case management.

International Arbitration Award Holders

Parties holding awards from ICC, LCIA, VIAC, SCC, or other recognised arbitration institutions, seeking enforcement against Serbian counterparties under the New York Convention. The arbitration regime typically provides a more predictable path to enforcement than the court judgment regime.

Insolvency Trustees and Liquidators

Insolvency practitioners from foreign jurisdictions seeking to recover assets located in Serbia on behalf of insolvent estates. These cases often involve complex cross-border coordination and may require parallel recognition of insolvency-related orders alongside the underlying judgment.

Common Practical Obstacles

In our practice advising foreign creditors on cross-border enforcement in Serbia, certain practical issues recur. Three are worth highlighting in advance, because each can be prevented through proper coordination from the outset of the foreign litigation.

Improperly Authenticated Documentation

The certified copy of the foreign judgment must reflect not only the operative part of the decision but also confirmation of its finality. Where this confirmation is missing, the recognition motion will be rejected and must be refiled, adding months to the timeline. Foreign creditors are frequently surprised to learn that an enforceable judgment in their home jurisdiction is not the same as a judgment that meets Serbian formal requirements for recognition.

Service of Process in the Original Proceedings

If the Serbian-based defendant in the foreign proceedings was not properly served according to the rules applicable to international service of judicial documents — most commonly the Hague Service Convention or the relevant bilateral treaty — the Serbian court may refuse recognition on the basis that the defendant was deprived of the right to be heard. This is the single most common ground on which recognition is refused, and it is most often the result of the foreign creditor having pursued the original litigation in their own jurisdiction without coordinating service with Serbian or international legal assistance procedures. The defect is locked in at the time of the original proceedings — there is no retroactive cure at the recognition stage.

Delay Between Judgment and Recognition

While there is no specific statute of limitations governing the recognition procedure itself, the underlying claim remains subject to its original limitation period under the substantive law that governs it. A creditor who waits years between obtaining a foreign judgment and seeking recognition in Serbia risks finding that the claim itself has become time-barred from enforcement, even though the judgment remains formally valid in the country of origin.

Strategic Assessment

For foreign creditors with a final judgment or arbitral award against a debtor in Serbia, recognition is a prerequisite to enforcement, not an optional step. The procedure is well-defined and predictable when handled properly, but it requires careful preparation of documentation, accurate determination of the applicable legal basis, and coordination between the creditor’s home jurisdiction and Serbia from the outset. Pre-recognition due diligence on the debtor’s assets and solvency is equally important — the goal is not to obtain a paper recognition, but to recover the underlying debt.

Where the matter involves an arbitral award rather than a court judgment, the New York Convention regime provides a more streamlined and globally standardised path to recognition. For court judgments, the determination of whether a bilateral treaty applies, and which one, is the single most important early-stage analysis. For arbitral awards, the focus shifts to the procedural integrity of the arbitration and the absence of public policy concerns.

Injac Attorneys acts for foreign creditors — primarily companies, financial institutions, and public bodies from Germany, Italy, Austria, France, and other European jurisdictions — in the full sequence of cross-border enforcement matters in Serbia, from initial assessment of the case through to asset realisation. The process is conducted remotely, with full procedural compliance and clear communication throughout.

Need legal support? Get in touch — our team is here to guide you every step of the way. When the law gets complicated, we make things clear — and get things done.

Email:

inquiry@injac.rs

Tel:

+381 11 2458 945

Address:

Makenzijeva 17,

11000 Belgrade - Serbia

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