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Understanding how to obtain an injunction in Greece in 2026 is essential for any creditor, landlord, rights-holder or business facing an urgent threat of irreparable harm. Greek interim injunctions, formally known as ασφαλιστικά μέτρα (precautionary or interim measures), are governed by the Code of Civil Procedure (CCP), as substantially amended by Law 5221/2025 (FEK A΄133/28. 07. 2025), with many core provisions effective from 1 January 2026. This guide sets out the complete injunction procedure in Greece: eligibility criteria, the seven-step filing process, required documents, the 2026 timeline, indicative costs, and the procedural changes introduced by the new electronic case file (ψηφιακός φάκελος).
Whether you are seeking emergency ex parte relief or defending against an application, the procedural map below reflects current practice as of June 2026.
Interim measures in Greece provide rapid, court-ordered protection while the main action is pending or before it is even filed. Their purpose is to preserve the status quo, prevent dissipation of assets, or stop ongoing harm that cannot be adequately compensated through later damages. The legal framework sits primarily in Articles 682–738 of the CCP, now read alongside the procedural reforms introduced by Law 5221/2025.
Businesses, creditors, landlords and individuals all use interim injunctions. Common commercial scenarios include: a debtor moving assets offshore, a competitor misappropriating trade secrets, a tenant refusing to vacate, an infringer selling counterfeit goods, or a contractual counterparty threatening to destroy evidence. In each case, the applicant must show that waiting for a final judgment would render the remedy meaningless.
Applications are heard by the Single-Member Court of First Instance (Μονομελές Πρωτοδικείο) in most commercial disputes. Jurisdiction is determined by the location of the defendant’s domicile or the place where the measures are to be enforced. Under Greek law, injunctive or interim measures generally apply only to assets located in Greece, there is no provision for a worldwide freezing order.
Greek courts apply a two-limb test before granting interim measures. Both limbs must be satisfied on a prima facie basis, the standard of proof is lower than in main proceedings, but the evidence must still be persuasive.
Fumus boni iuris (likelihood of success). The applicant must demonstrate a plausible right or claim. This does not require certainty, a prima facie showing that the underlying right probably exists is sufficient. Courts consider the strength of the documentary evidence, any undisputed facts, and any prior judicial or arbitral findings.
Periculum in mora (danger in delay). The applicant must prove urgency, specifically, that an imminent danger exists which, if not addressed immediately, would cause irreparable or difficult-to-repair harm. Greek law frames this as requiring either an “urgent case” or “imminent danger,” and courts treat this threshold seriously. Delay between the triggering event and the filing of the application is a factor, though recent Greek case law has clarified that procedural delays alone do not automatically negate urgency.
Any natural or legal person with locus standi, that is, a legally recognised interest in the claim, may apply. This includes creditors, contractual counterparties, rights-holders (IP owners, licensees), landlords, and third parties with a demonstrable legal interest. Corporate applicants must prove authorisation to bring the proceedings, typically through a board resolution or power of attorney.
The respondent must be served and must be subject to the jurisdiction of the Greek courts. Measures can only be enforced against assets situated in Greece. For foreign respondents, service must comply with applicable EU regulations or international conventions (e.g., the Hague Service Convention). Where the respondent’s assets are outside Greece, international recognition and enforcement of the Greek order will require separate proceedings in the relevant foreign jurisdiction.
An ex parte injunction in Greece, granted without notice to the respondent, is available only when the applicant proves that giving notice would frustrate the remedy (e.g., the debtor would immediately dissipate assets) or that the situation is so urgent that any delay, even for service, would cause irreparable harm. Courts expect clear, documentary evidence of this risk. If granted, the ex parte order is typically temporary and the court will schedule a full hearing shortly afterwards.
The temporary injunction process involves seven sequential stages. The timeline below reflects the injunction procedure in Greece following the Law 5221/2025 reforms and the introduction of the electronic case file.
Before filing, the applicant and counsel must identify the correct type of interim relief and confirm jurisdiction. Obtain any necessary corporate authorisation, for a company, this means a board resolution or power of attorney empowering counsel to file on its behalf. Gather all supporting evidence: contracts, invoices, bank statements, correspondence, screenshots of infringing activity, expert reports, police reports, and customs notices. Digitise every document into PDF/A format with bookmarks and a paginated exhibit index, as the 2026 electronic filing platform requires fully digital submissions. Prepare a concise chronology of events to establish urgency.
Counsel drafts the interim application (αίτηση ασφαλιστικών μέτρων), which must include: a statement of the facts, the legal basis for the claim, an explanation of why the matter is urgent, the specific measure requested, and the wording of the proposed court order. Include a separate affidavit or sworn statement from the applicant or an authorised representative setting out the factual basis, the harm suffered or anticipated, and any attempts to resolve the dispute. A draft proposed order, short and precisely worded, should be prepared for the judge’s signature. Where the applicant is willing to offer security, attach a bank guarantee template or bond proposal. This step typically takes one to three days.
Filing is now conducted through the mandatory electronic case file (ψηφιακός φάκελος) introduced under Law 5221/2025. Counsel uploads all documents to the court’s e-filing platform, where a timestamp is generated immediately upon submission. This timestamp is legally determinative, it records the exact moment of filing and triggers all subsequent deadlines. Court fees must be paid electronically at the time of filing; attach the e-stamp receipt. Service on the respondent can be performed electronically (e-service) where the respondent has a registered electronic address, or by court bailiff for physical service. In some provincial courts, parallel physical filing may still be required during the staged 2026 rollout, counsel should verify the specific court registry’s current requirements.
Where the applicant seeks urgent relief in Greece without prior notice to the respondent, the application is placed before a single judge for immediate review. The judge assesses the papers and may grant a provisional order on the same day or within 48–72 hours if the facts demonstrate genuine urgency. The judge will examine whether the applicant has provided clear evidence of imminent, irreparable harm and whether notice to the respondent would defeat the purpose of the order. The court may require the applicant to deposit security or post a bond as a condition of granting ex parte relief. If the application is rejected at this stage, it can be re-filed as an inter partes application.
Once provisional relief is granted (or where the application proceeds inter partes from the outset), the court sets a date for the full interlocutory hearing. The respondent is served with the application and supporting evidence and given the opportunity to file a response. Under the 2026 CCP reforms, hearing windows have been compressed, industry observers expect most interlocutory hearings to be scheduled within 14 to 60 days of filing, depending on the court’s caseload and the complexity of the dispute.
At the hearing, both parties present their evidence and legal arguments. The standard of proof remains prima facie, the court does not conduct a full trial. Witness statements and affidavits are typically the primary form of evidence; cross-examination is generally not available at the interlocutory stage, although the judge retains discretion to hear oral testimony. The court considers whether the applicant’s right is plausible, whether the urgency persists, and whether the balance of convenience favours granting, modifying, or refusing the measure. The decision is usually issued shortly after the hearing, often on the same day or within a few days.
Once the court issues its order, enforcement is carried out by court bailiffs or the competent enforcement office. For asset seizures or freezing orders, the bailiff serves the order on the relevant bank, registry, or custodian. Prohibitory injunctions are enforceable by their terms, violation may give rise to contempt proceedings or additional damages claims. The court may impose a security or bond requirement on the applicant to cover potential damages if the injunction is later found to have been wrongly granted. Injunctive orders in Greece apply only to assets within the jurisdiction, for cross-border enforcement, separate recognition proceedings abroad are required.
The injunction remains in force until the interlocutory hearing decision, until the court varies or revokes it, or until the main action is resolved.
| Step | Who Does It | Typical Duration |
|---|---|---|
| Pre-filing triage and evidence collation | Claimant / counsel | Same day to 3 days (urgent matters) |
| Draft interim application and proposed order | Counsel | 1–3 days |
| File via electronic case file and pay fees | Counsel / court e-platform | E-filing timestamp immediate; registry review same day to 3 business days |
| Ex parte decision (if sought) | Single judge / court | Same day to 3 days |
| Service on respondent | Court / bailiff / counsel | 1–7 days (e-service faster; physical service slower) |
| Interlocutory hearing (full hearing) | Court (single judge or panel) | 14–60 days from filing (varies by court and complexity) |
| Enforcement of injunction order | Court bailiffs / enforcement office | Immediate if court so directs; physical acts may take additional days |
Every interim application must be accompanied by a complete set of supporting documents. Under the 2026 electronic case file rules, all documents must be uploaded digitally in the prescribed format. Missing or non-compliant filings risk rejection by the court registry or, at minimum, a delay that can undermine the urgency of the application. The table below lists the documents needed for a standard interim injunction filing.
| Document | Notes (Issuer / Format / Key Requirements) |
|---|---|
| Interim application (αίτηση ασφαλιστικών μέτρων) | Drafted by counsel. PDF format, digitally signed. Must include the exact wording of the order requested. |
| Affidavit / sworn statement | Signed by applicant or authorised representative. Sets out factual basis, urgency, harm, and prior attempts to resolve. Attach evidence references. |
| Exhibits index and digital exhibits | All documentary evidence (contracts, invoices, bank records, screenshots, correspondence) in tabbed, paginated PDFs with bookmarks. Must mirror the order referenced in the affidavit. |
| Proof of corporate authority / board resolution | Required for corporate applicants. Company secretary certificate, board minutes, or certified power of attorney. |
| Power of Attorney for counsel | Original or certified copy. For foreign entities: include apostille or consular legalisation, plus certified Greek translation. |
| Evidence of urgency / prima facie right | Short chronology, expert reports (if available), bank freeze notices, police reports, customs notices, or other evidence establishing the imminent threat. |
| Draft proposed order | Short, precisely worded order for the judge’s signature. Speeds processing, particularly for ex parte applications. |
| Security / bond proposal | If the applicant is offering or the court is likely to require security: bank guarantee template or bond proposal document. |
| Court fee receipt / e-stamp proof | Paid electronically via the court platform. Amount depends on the claim value; attach the electronic receipt to the filing. |
| Certified translations | Any document not in Greek must be accompanied by a certified translation and the translator’s certificate. |
| Electronic filing compliance statement | A declaration confirming all documents have been uploaded and indexed in compliance with the 2026 electronic case file requirements. |
For foreign companies applying for injunctive relief, ensure that all corporate documents (certificates of incorporation, board resolutions, powers of attorney) carry apostille certification under the Hague Convention and are accompanied by certified Greek translations. Failure to provide compliant documents is one of the most common grounds for registry rejection. For a broader view of commercial litigation practice, including contested enforcement and cross-border disputes, consult the relevant practice area guidance.
The injunction timeline in Greece has been materially affected by Law 5221/2025. E-filing timestamps now determine many procedural deadlines. The moment a document is uploaded to the electronic case file platform, the system generates an immutable timestamp. This timestamp triggers service deadlines, response periods, and hearing scheduling windows. Industry observers expect the overall timeline from filing to hearing to shorten as the electronic platform matures and courts adapt to the compressed scheduling framework.
| Milestone | Deadline / Window | Triggered By |
|---|---|---|
| Filing of application | Immediate (e-filing timestamp) | Upload to electronic case file platform |
| Ex parte provisional order | Same day to 3 days | Filing with ex parte request |
| Service on respondent (e-service) | 1–3 days | Court order or counsel action post-filing |
| Service on respondent (physical / bailiff) | 3–7 days | Court order or counsel instruction to bailiff |
| Respondent’s time to prepare response | Variable, typically 5–15 days before hearing | Date of service (e-service or physical) |
| Interlocutory hearing date | 14–60 days from filing | Court scheduling (compressed under 2026 CCP reforms) |
| Issuance of decision | Same day to 7 days post-hearing | Conclusion of hearing |
| Enforcement of order | Immediate upon issuance if court so directs | Court order; bailiff instruction |
Courts in major centres such as Athens and Thessaloniki are further advanced in implementing the electronic platform. Provincial courts may operate with slightly longer registry review periods during the staged 2026 rollout. Counsel should confirm local court timelines before filing, particularly for emergency applications. For additional context on the reform landscape, the Greece lawyer directory provides access to practitioners with direct experience of the new filing regime.
The costs of an injunction in Greece vary depending on the claim value, the complexity of the application, and whether the court orders security. The table below provides indicative ranges; exact court fees depend on the applicable court fee schedule, which is determined by the monetary value of the underlying claim.
| Item | Indicative Amount | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Court filing fee (interim application) | Varies by claim value, per court fee schedule | Paid electronically at filing. Amount scales with the value of the claim; counsel should confirm the current schedule with the court registry. |
| Bailiff / enforcement fees | €100–€500+ (varies by act) | Payable for each physical enforcement act (service, seizure, attachment). Varies by registry and type of action. |
| Security / bond (if ordered by court) | Set by the court | Typically a bank guarantee or cash deposit. Amount calibrated to cover potential damages if the injunction is later found to have been wrongly granted. |
| Counsel fees (emergency application) | €1,500–€15,000+ | Depends on firm, complexity, and urgency. Emergency ex parte applications carry a premium. Fixed-fee arrangements may be available for standard applications. |
| Translation / notarisation / apostille | €50–€500 per document | Required for all foreign-language documents. Cost depends on document length and language pair. |
Legal fees in Greece are subject to VAT at the standard rate. Any damages recovered through enforcement of the injunction may have tax implications depending on the nature of the claim and the applicant’s tax status. Applicants should consult tax counsel alongside litigation counsel when budgeting for the overall cost of injunctive proceedings.
Law 5221/2025 (FEK A΄133/28.07.2025) introduced the most significant reform of Greek civil procedure in recent years. Many of its provisions took effect on 1 January 2026, with the electronic case file being rolled out in stages throughout the year. The practical consequences for interim injunction applicants are substantial.
Mandatory electronic case file. All filings, including interim applications, must now be submitted through the electronic case file platform. Documents are uploaded in PDF/A format with digital signatures. The e-filing timestamp is legally binding and triggers all subsequent procedural deadlines. This replaces the previous paper-based filing and manual court registry timestamping processes.
E-service and deadline computation. Service on respondents can now be performed electronically where the respondent has a registered address on the platform. The date and time of e-service are recorded automatically, and the respondent’s deadline to respond runs from that timestamp. This has accelerated the overall injunction timeline in Greece and reduced disputes over whether and when service was effected.
Compressed hearing schedules. The likely practical effect of the 2026 reforms will be shorter intervals between filing and hearing. While exact statutory hearing windows vary by type of proceeding, early indications suggest that courts are scheduling interim-measures hearings more quickly than under the pre-reform regime.
Digital evidence requirements. Exhibits must be submitted in structured, bookmarked digital format. Courts expect indexed, paginated PDF bundles, handwritten annotations or loose physical documents are no longer accepted in courts that have fully migrated to the electronic platform.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Konstantinos Bairaktaris at Papachatzis I Bairaktaris (PB legal), a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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