Debt Collection Statute of Limitations in Europe: Jurisdiction-by-Jurisdiction Briefing
A perfectly valid commercial claim. Documented. Undisputed. Enforceable in every respect except one: the limitation period expired while your finance team debated whether to escalate. This happens more frequently than any creditor would care to admit.
Why Limitation Periods Matter More Than You Think
The statute of limitations is not a technicality. It is an absolute bar to enforcement. Once the limitation period expires in the debtor's jurisdiction, the claim ceases to exist as a legal instrument regardless of its commercial validity. No court will hear it. No enforcement mechanism will activate. The debtor can acknowledge the debt openly and still face zero legal consequence for non-payment.
For international receivables, the relevant limitation period is almost always that of the debtor's jurisdiction, not the creditor's. A UK company owed money by a French debtor is operating under French limitation rules, not English ones.
The European Landscape
Short Limitation Jurisdictions (3-5 years)
France — 5 years. The French commercial limitation period under Article L.110-4 of the Code de Commerce is five years from the date the creditor knew or should have known of the facts giving rise to the claim. This is shorter than many creditors expect from a major European economy.
Belgium — 5 years. Commercial claims between merchants prescribe in five years. The period runs from the due date of the invoice.
Netherlands — 5 years. The standard commercial limitation under Dutch law is five years from the day following the date on which the claim became due and the creditor became aware of both the claim and the debtor's identity.
Switzerland — 5 years. Commercial claims under the Swiss Code of Obligations prescribe in five years. Switzerland is not in the EU but is a significant trading partner for European businesses.
Medium Limitation Jurisdictions (6-10 years)
Germany — 3 years. The general limitation period under Section 195 BGB is three years, running from the end of the year in which the claim arose. This makes Germany one of the shortest limitation jurisdictions in Europe for commercial claims. Creditors accustomed to longer UK periods are frequently caught off guard.
United Kingdom — 6 years. Simple contract claims in England and Wales have a six-year limitation period under the Limitation Act 1980. Scotland operates differently, with a five-year prescriptive period for most obligations.
Spain — 5 years. Following the 2015 reform, the general limitation period for personal actions was reduced from fifteen years to five years under Article 1964 of the Civil Code.
Italy — 10 years. The general limitation period for contractual claims under Article 2946 of the Italian Civil Code is ten years. However, certain commercial obligations have shorter specific periods.
Austria — 3 years. The general limitation period under Section 1489 ABGB is three years for claims where the creditor knows or ought to know the facts. The absolute long-stop is thirty years.
Long Limitation Jurisdictions (10+ years)
Portugal — 20 years. The general limitation period for civil obligations under Portuguese law is twenty years, making it one of the most creditor-friendly jurisdictions in Europe for limitation purposes.
Ireland — 6 years. Contract claims prescribe in six years under the Statute of Limitations 1957.
Germany: 3 years. Portugal: 20 years. Same continent, same currency area, seventeen years of difference in enforcement windows. This is why jurisdiction-specific intelligence is not optional.
Interruption and Suspension
Most European jurisdictions allow the limitation period to be interrupted or suspended by specific actions. Filing a lawsuit typically interrupts limitation in all jurisdictions. In some, a formal demand letter or acknowledgment of debt by the debtor also interrupts the period. The rules vary significantly:
In Germany, sending a reminder does not interrupt limitation. Only filing a court action, obtaining a Mahnbescheid (payment order), or the debtor's written acknowledgment interrupts the period. In France, a formal mise en demeure (demand letter sent by registered post) can serve as evidence but does not interrupt the limitation period — only judicial action or the debtor's acknowledgment does.
Practical Implications
Track limitation periods by jurisdiction, not by internal policy. A blanket twelve-month internal collection period works when all your debtors are domestic. When your receivables span multiple European jurisdictions, that same policy means you are pursuing German claims with nine months remaining and Portuguese claims with nineteen years of runway. The resource allocation should differ accordingly.
InterStation monitors limitation exposure across every active case. When a claim approaches its jurisdiction-specific deadline, escalation is automatic, not discretionary. The intelligence we deploy includes current knowledge of interruption mechanisms in each jurisdiction — because the rules change, and last year's advice may no longer be accurate.
