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On 22 May 2026, the Belgian government published a draft for consultation that proposes inserting a new Title 5 into Book 7 “Special Contracts” of the Civil Code, overhauling the existing regime on loans with interest (lening op interest / prêt à intérêt). This loan reform in Belgium arrives on top of the personal-security rules that already took effect on 1 January 2026, creating a double wave of compliance obligations for every institution that originates, services or enforces credit in the Belgian market. The consultation draft introduces mandatory disclosure duties, proportionality requirements and strengthened guarantor protections that will touch consumer loans, mortgages and commercial lending alike.
For in-house counsel, bank compliance officers, credit-risk managers and external advisers, the practical question is not whether to act but how quickly. The five actions below form the skeleton of the compliance programme every Belgian lender should be building right now:
Belgium’s ongoing modernisation of the Civil Code has already delivered new books on property law (Book 3, in force since 2022) and obligations (Book 5, in force since 2023). The May 2026 consultation draft extends that reform into the heart of lending law by creating a dedicated Title within Book 7, “Special Contracts”, that codifies and updates the rules on loans with interest. According to the summary published by CMS, the draft sets out core principles on how loan contracts are formed, how interest may be charged, what information must be provided before and during the life of the loan, and how guarantees securing the loan must be structured.
Separately, a reform of personal-security rights, covering suretyship, independent guarantees and related instruments, entered into force on 1 January 2026, as confirmed by KPMG Law Belgium. That earlier reform already imposes new mandatory-information obligations on creditors and grants guarantors the right to terminate indefinite guarantees. The May 2026 loan-rules draft therefore sits alongside, and must be read together with, the personal-security rules that are already live.
The draft consultation is product-agnostic in scope: it applies to any contract that qualifies as a loan with interest under Belgian law. That breadth means consumer lenders, mortgage originators, commercial banks, real-estate finance desks and structured-lending teams must all evaluate the impact. The table below maps the three main product categories to their most significant proposed changes and the immediate action required.
| Product category | Key proposed change | Immediate action |
|---|---|---|
| Consumer lending | Enhanced pre-contractual disclosures; proportionality and affordability records required; strengthened borrower remedies | Update front-end scripts and disclosure wording; implement structured affordability-evidence logging |
| Mortgage lending | New security formalities; guarantor notice and limited-term guarantees; procedural changes for enforcement and repossession | Re-audit all guarantee forms; set a re-documentation schedule for existing suretyships; revise enforcement playbook |
| Commercial lending | Clarified loan with interest classification; potential renegotiation and hardship triggers; mandatory creditor-information duties | Review hardship and material-adverse-change clauses in facility agreements; add renegotiation-workflow protocols |
Securitisation vehicles and fund-finance structures that hold Belgian-law loans must also check whether the new rules apply to the underlying receivables or to any back-to-back guarantees given by originators. Industry observers expect the reform to have ripple effects on loan-trading documentation, particularly where guarantees form part of the collateral package.
Even though the loan-rules draft is still at consultation stage, the personal-security reforms are already binding. Waiting for the final text is not an option: lender obligations in Belgium have already expanded, and further changes are certain. The five priority actions below should be treated as concurrent workstreams.
The civil code loan reform requires lenders to revisit the architecture of their standard-form agreements. Below is a loan drafting checklist of six clause categories that demand attention, together with indicative sample language. All samples are for illustrative purposes only and must be adapted by qualified Belgian counsel before use.
The reform of lender security rights in Belgium is arguably the area of greatest operational risk for banks. The personal-security rules that entered into force on 1 January 2026 introduced three headline changes that creditors must now manage on every existing and future guarantee.
First, creditors face new mandatory information obligations toward guarantors. They must disclose the nature and extent of the guaranteed obligation, the risks involved and the guarantor’s rights, before the guarantee is signed and at prescribed intervals thereafter. Second, guarantors can now terminate indefinite guarantees, with practical guidance from Bird & Bird indicating a 45-day notice mechanism. Third, the proportionality principle now applies: a guarantee that is manifestly disproportionate to the guarantor’s financial capacity may be challenged.
For high-value guarantees entered into before 1 January 2026, BDO Belgium recommends that banks review each suretyship agreement against the new mandatory requirements and prioritise re-documentation where there is a disclosure or formality gap. The likely practical effect will be a phased triage: guarantees above a defined exposure threshold are reviewed first, followed by portfolio-wide remediation. Banks should also consider whether to approach guarantors proactively to request updated financial information, which both satisfies the proportionality record-keeping obligation and strengthens the enforceability of the guarantee.
Belgium’s mortgage market has been robust, Febelfin data shows that Q1 2026 was among the four strongest year-starts in the past decade. Against that backdrop, the enforcement of loans in Belgium secured by mortgage is evolving in ways that demand immediate attention from litigation and credit-recovery teams.
The draft consultation proposes procedural safeguards that supplement existing enforcement routes. Industry observers expect these to include enhanced pre-enforcement notice requirements, mandatory borrower-engagement steps and tighter timelines for court-supervised enforcement. The table below compares the current enforcement pathway with the direction of travel under the proposed rules.
| Enforcement stage | Current framework | Proposed direction (draft consultation) |
|---|---|---|
| Pre-enforcement notice | Standard contractual notice; no prescribed minimum period in most commercial cases | Mandatory minimum notice period; prescribed form and content of borrower notification |
| Borrower engagement | No formal statutory requirement for renegotiation or mediation | Duty to offer renegotiation or repayment plan before commencing enforcement proceedings |
| Court-supervised enforcement | Judicial auction following standard civil-procedure rules | Additional proportionality review; court may consider borrower’s personal and family circumstances |
| Interaction with insolvency | Mortgage enforcement suspended during collective-debt-settlement proceedings | Clarified interaction and potential for extended moratoriums during insolvency |
Banks should map their existing enforcement workflows step by step and identify each point where the proposed rules add a new procedural obligation. Early indications suggest that lenders who fail to follow the pre-enforcement engagement requirements may face challenges to the validity of subsequent enforcement steps.
Consumer credit in Belgium is already subject to stringent regulation under the Consumer Credit Act and the transposition of the EU Consumer Credit Directive. The 2026 loan-rules draft layers additional obligations on top of that existing framework, particularly in three areas.
A practical compliance checklist for consumer credit teams should include verification that all affordability models are documented and auditable, that disclosure templates incorporate the new Civil Code requirements, and that customer-facing staff are trained on the borrower’s expanded rights.
The transition period around any loan reform in Belgium invariably produces litigation. Early indications suggest three primary risk areas. First, guarantors may challenge the enforceability of pre-reform guarantees on the basis that mandatory disclosure requirements were not met. Second, borrowers in financial difficulty may invoke the new hardship and renegotiation provisions to delay or resist enforcement proceedings. Third, regulatory supervisors, notably the FSMA and the National Bank of Belgium, are expected to issue guidance on how the new rules interact with existing prudential and conduct-of-business requirements, and banks that have not aligned their processes may face supervisory action.
Recommended mitigation steps include comprehensive document-retention policies that capture all pre-contractual disclosures and affordability assessments, periodic internal audits of compliance with the new formality requirements, and the establishment of a rapid-response protocol for any regulatory inquiry related to the reforms.
Effective implementation requires clear governance. The following checklist assigns ownership and milestones across the four key functions.
An executive sponsor, ideally the Chief Risk Officer or General Counsel, should chair a fortnightly steering committee until the final law is published and full compliance is confirmed.
The 2026 civil code loan reform represents the most significant overhaul of Belgian lending law in a generation. With the personal-security rules already live and the loan-rules consultation draft now published, the window for proactive compliance is open but narrowing. Banks that treat this as a documentation exercise alone will underestimate the reform’s reach, it touches origination, servicing, enforcement and litigation strategy in equal measure. Legal teams across Belgium should begin their template audits, disclosure updates and enforcement-playbook revisions immediately, well ahead of the final legislative text.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Dominique Blommaert at Janson Baugniet, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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