Belgium offers a sophisticated and business-friendly legal environment, but corporate disputes here follow rules that differ materially from those in common law jurisdictions and from neighbouring civil law systems. When a shareholder dispute in Belgium escalates, or when a deadlock paralyses a board, the applicable framework is the Companies and Associations Code (Wetboek van vennootschappen en verenigingen / Code des sociétés et des associations, hereinafter 'CSA'), which entered into force in 2019 and replaced the earlier Companies Code entirely. The CSA introduced significant flexibility in corporate governance while simultaneously sharpening the tools available to minority shareholders and creditors. This article maps the legal landscape for international entrepreneurs: the procedural routes, the protective mechanisms, the costs involved and the strategic choices that determine whether a dispute is resolved efficiently or drags into years of litigation.
Understanding the Belgian framework matters because a common mistake among international clients is to assume that the rules they know from the UK, the Netherlands or Germany apply here. They do not. Belgian courts have their own doctrine on fiduciary duty, on the abuse of majority rights, and on the conditions under which a court will dissolve a company or appoint a judicial administrator. Getting the strategy wrong at the outset - for instance, by filing the wrong type of claim or missing a pre-trial step - can cost months and significant legal fees without advancing the client's position.
The CSA is the primary source of corporate law in Belgium. It governs all Belgian legal entities, from the private limited company (besloten vennootschap / société à responsabilité limitée, 'BV/SRL') to the public limited company (naamloze vennootschap / société anonyme, 'NV/SA') and the cooperative (coöperatieve vennootschap / société coopérative, 'CV/SC'). Each form carries its own governance rules, and disputes must be analysed against the specific provisions applicable to the entity in question.
Several provisions of the CSA are directly relevant to corporate disputes:
Beyond the CSA, Belgian corporate disputes are also shaped by the Judicial Code (Gerechtelijk Wetboek / Code judiciaire), which governs procedure, and by a substantial body of case law from the Brussels Enterprise Court (Ondernemingsrechtbank Brussel / Tribunal de l'entreprise de Bruxelles) and the Court of Appeal (Hof van Beroep / Cour d'appel).
The Brussels Enterprise Court has exclusive jurisdiction over most corporate disputes involving Belgian-registered entities. Disputes involving international elements - for instance, a foreign parent company or a cross-border shareholders' agreement - may also engage EU Regulation 1215/2012 (Brussels I Recast) on jurisdiction and the recognition of judgments.
One non-obvious risk for international clients is the interaction between the company's articles of association (statuten / statuts) and the CSA's mandatory provisions. The CSA allows considerable contractual freedom, but certain protections - particularly for minority shareholders - cannot be waived by the articles. A shareholder who signs articles that purport to strip minority rights may still be able to invoke the statutory protections.
The most commercially significant disputes in Belgian closely held companies involve the forced exit of a shareholder - either by exclusion (uitsluiting / exclusion) or by withdrawal (uittreding / retrait). These mechanisms, codified in Articles 5:154 and 5:155 CSA for the BV/SRL, are among the most powerful tools in Belgian corporate litigation.
Exclusion allows a majority of shareholders to petition the Enterprise Court to compel a shareholder to transfer their shares at a judicially determined fair value. The grounds are broad: serious cause (ernstige reden / juste motif) is the threshold, and Belgian courts have applied this to situations including breach of fiduciary duty, persistent obstruction of management, competition with the company, and serious personal conflicts that make continued cooperation impossible.
Withdrawal is the mirror image: a minority shareholder who is being oppressed, excluded from management or denied information can petition the court to compel the majority to buy out their shares at fair value. This is a critical protection for minority investors in Belgian family businesses or joint ventures where the majority has effectively frozen out the minority.
In practice, it is important to consider that the valuation of shares in these proceedings is often the most contested element. Belgian courts appoint an independent expert (deskundige / expert) to determine fair value, and the expert's methodology - whether based on net asset value, discounted cash flow or comparable transactions - can produce dramatically different results. The cost of expert proceedings adds to the overall expense of the litigation, which typically runs into the tens of thousands of euros in legal and expert fees for a mid-size dispute.
Deadlock situations - where a 50/50 shareholder structure or a supermajority requirement prevents any decision from being taken - are a recurring problem in Belgian joint ventures. The CSA does not provide a single statutory deadlock-breaking mechanism. Instead, Belgian practice relies on a combination of:
A common mistake is to rely solely on the articles of association without a separate shareholders' agreement containing deadlock provisions. Belgian courts will enforce well-drafted contractual deadlock mechanisms, but they cannot create them retroactively.
To receive a checklist for managing shareholder disputes and deadlock situations in Belgium, send a request to info@vlo.com.
Belgian law imposes a dual standard on directors. Under Articles 2:44 to 2:46 CSA, directors owe duties both to the company and, in certain circumstances, to third parties including creditors. The standard is that of the 'normally prudent and diligent director placed in the same circumstances' - an objective benchmark that Belgian courts apply rigorously.
Fiduciary duty in Belgium is not a single codified concept as in common law systems. Instead, it is assembled from several overlapping obligations:
The conflict of interest procedure under the CSA is procedurally demanding. A director who has a direct or indirect financial interest conflicting with a decision must notify the board, abstain from the deliberation and the vote, and ensure the conflict is recorded in the minutes. Failure to follow this procedure exposes the director to personal liability for any damage caused to the company.
Director liability claims are brought either by the company itself (through a decision of the general meeting or, in insolvency, by the liquidator or administrator) or by individual shareholders acting on behalf of the company (minderheidsvordering / action minoritaire) under Article 5:79 CSA. The minority action threshold in a BV/SRL is low: any shareholder can bring the action, but the proceeds go to the company, not to the individual shareholder. This is a structural feature that international clients often misunderstand - a successful director liability claim enriches the company, not the claimant directly.
A non-obvious risk is the liability of de facto directors (feitelijke bestuurder / administrateur de fait) under Article 2:87 CSA. A parent company that exercises day-to-day control over a Belgian subsidiary without formal appointment as director can be treated as a de facto director and held personally liable for management decisions. This is particularly relevant for international groups that manage Belgian operations informally.
The risk of inaction is real: director liability claims in Belgium are subject to a five-year limitation period from the date the claimant knew or should have known of the damage, but no later than ten years from the act causing the damage. Waiting too long to file can extinguish an otherwise valid claim.
Belgian law provides minority shareholders in closely held companies with a meaningful toolkit, but the effectiveness of each instrument depends heavily on the size of the shareholding, the type of entity and the provisions of the articles.
Information rights are foundational. Under Article 5:72 CSA, shareholders in a BV/SRL have the right to request written information from the board before a general meeting, and the board must respond unless disclosure would seriously harm the company's interests. In practice, boards sometimes invoke this exception broadly, and shareholders who believe the refusal is unjustified can challenge it before the Enterprise Court on an urgent basis (kort geding / référé).
The right to convene a general meeting is available to shareholders holding at least 10% of the shares in a BV/SRL (Article 5:75 CSA). If the board refuses to convene the meeting within three weeks of the request, the requesting shareholders can apply to the Enterprise Court for authorisation to convene it themselves.
Challenging general meeting decisions is possible under Article 2:15 CSA, which allows any interested party to seek the nullity of a decision taken in violation of the CSA or the articles of association. The action must be brought within six months of the decision becoming enforceable against the claimant. Belgian courts have annulled decisions on grounds including procedural irregularities, abuse of majority rights (misbruik van meerderheid / abus de majorité), and violation of the principle of equal treatment of shareholders.
The doctrine of abuse of majority rights is a particularly important tool in Belgian corporate litigation. It applies where the majority uses its voting power not to serve the corporate interest but to harm the minority or to obtain a personal advantage at the minority's expense. Belgian courts have applied this doctrine to decisions on dividend policy, capital increases that dilute the minority, and amendments to the articles that restrict minority rights.
Practical limits are significant. Minority shareholders in a BV/SRL with less than 10% of shares have limited procedural standing for certain actions. Shareholders in a NV/SA face higher thresholds for some remedies. And the cost of litigation - legal fees typically starting from the low thousands of euros for straightforward matters and rising substantially for complex multi-party disputes - means that the economic viability of pursuing a claim must be assessed carefully against the value at stake.
To receive a checklist for assessing minority shareholder rights and remedies in Belgium, send a request to info@vlo.com.
Belgian corporate litigation follows the Judicial Code, with specific adaptations for enterprise disputes. Understanding the procedural architecture is essential for international clients who may be accustomed to different systems.
The Brussels Enterprise Court is the primary forum for corporate disputes. It has specialised chambers for commercial and corporate matters, and its judges include both professional magistrates and lay judges with business experience (consulenten / juges consulaires). The court's territorial jurisdiction covers Brussels, but parties can agree on a different Enterprise Court if the company's registered office is located elsewhere in Belgium.
Pre-trial procedures are not always mandatory in Belgian corporate law, but they are strategically important. Belgian courts expect parties to have attempted to resolve disputes before filing, and a demonstrated effort at negotiation or mediation can influence the court's attitude on costs. The CSA does not impose a statutory pre-trial mediation requirement for corporate disputes, but the Judicial Code provides a general framework for voluntary mediation (bemiddeling / médiation) that parties can invoke at any stage.
Urgent proceedings (kort geding / procédure en référé) before the Enterprise Court allow a party to obtain provisional measures - including the suspension of a board decision, the appointment of a provisional administrator, or an injunction against a shareholder - within days or weeks rather than months. The threshold is urgency and the appearance of a right (fumus boni iuris). These proceedings are frequently used in Belgian corporate disputes to preserve the status quo while the main action proceeds.
Electronic filing is available through the Belgian e-Box and the DPA (Digital Platform for the Administration of Justice) system. Belgian courts have progressively expanded electronic case management, and most procedural documents in enterprise court proceedings can be filed electronically. International parties should ensure their Belgian counsel is set up for electronic filing, as paper-only submissions can cause delays.
Arbitration is a viable alternative for Belgian corporate disputes, particularly where the shareholders' agreement contains an arbitration clause. Belgian arbitration law (Part VI of the Judicial Code, Articles 1676 to 1723) is based on the UNCITRAL Model Law and is considered modern and arbitration-friendly. The Belgian Centre for Arbitration and Mediation (CEPANI) administers most domestic and international arbitrations seated in Belgium. However, certain corporate law matters - including the nullity of general meeting decisions and director liability claims - are considered non-arbitrable under Belgian law, meaning they must be brought before the state courts regardless of any arbitration clause.
Three practical scenarios illustrate the procedural choices:
Belgian insolvency law intersects with corporate disputes in several important ways. The Law of 11 August 2017 on insolvency proceedings (Wetboek van economisch recht / Code de droit économique, Book XX) governs bankruptcy (faillissement / faillite) and judicial reorganisation (gerechtelijke reorganisatie / réorganisation judiciaire). When a company enters insolvency, the corporate dispute landscape shifts significantly.
Director liability in insolvency is governed by Article XX.225 of the Economic Law Code, which allows the insolvency administrator (curator / curateur) to bring claims against directors for gross negligence (grove fout / faute grave) that contributed to the company's insolvency. This is distinct from the general director liability regime under the CSA and has its own procedural rules and limitation periods.
Wrongful trading - continuing to incur debts when the directors knew or should have known that insolvency was inevitable - is a recognised basis for director liability in Belgian law, derived from the general duty of care under Article 2:44 CSA and from the specific provisions of Book XX. Belgian courts have held directors personally liable for debts incurred after the point at which a prudent director would have filed for insolvency.
The early warning system (vroegtijdige detectie / détection précoce) under Article XX.25 of the Economic Law Code requires the Enterprise Court to monitor companies showing signs of financial distress. The court can summon directors to appear and explain the company's financial position. This mechanism is often the first formal signal that a company is approaching insolvency, and it creates an obligation on directors to act - or face liability for inaction.
A common mistake among international clients is to treat Belgian insolvency proceedings as purely administrative. In practice, the Enterprise Court plays an active role in supervising the process, and disputes between shareholders, directors and creditors frequently arise within the insolvency framework. These disputes are litigated before the same Enterprise Court that handles pre-insolvency corporate disputes, which creates continuity but also complexity.
The risk of inaction is particularly acute in insolvency-adjacent situations: a director who delays filing for bankruptcy after the company has met the legal criteria for insolvency (cessation of payments and inability to obtain credit) faces personal liability for all debts incurred during the delay. Belgian courts have applied this rule strictly, and the financial exposure can be substantial.
To receive a checklist for managing director liability risks and insolvency-related corporate disputes in Belgium, send a request to info@vlo.com.
What is the most significant practical risk for a foreign shareholder in a Belgian company?
The most significant risk is the combination of information asymmetry and procedural unfamiliarity. A foreign minority shareholder may not receive adequate financial information from the majority, and may not know that Belgian law provides specific remedies - including urgent court applications and the withdrawal mechanism - to address this. The risk is compounded if the shareholders' agreement is silent on information rights or if the articles of association have been drafted to minimise minority protections. Acting early, before the relationship deteriorates completely, significantly improves the range of available remedies. Waiting until the company is in financial difficulty narrows the options considerably.
How long does a shareholder exclusion or withdrawal case take in Belgium, and what does it cost?
A shareholder exclusion or withdrawal action before the Brussels Enterprise Court typically takes between twelve and twenty-four months from filing to a first instance judgment, depending on the complexity of the share valuation and whether the parties contest the expert's methodology. Appeals before the Court of Appeal add a further twelve to eighteen months. Legal fees for a straightforward case start from the low tens of thousands of euros; complex multi-party disputes with contested valuations can cost significantly more. The share valuation expert's fees are additional and are typically shared between the parties or allocated by the court. The economic viability of the proceedings must therefore be assessed against the value of the shareholding at stake.
When should a party choose arbitration over court litigation for a Belgian corporate dispute?
Arbitration is preferable when the dispute is primarily contractual - for instance, a breach of a shareholders' agreement or a warranty claim under a share purchase agreement - and when confidentiality and speed are priorities. Belgian arbitration under CEPANI rules can produce a final award in twelve to eighteen months for a straightforward case. However, arbitration is not available for all corporate law claims: the nullity of general meeting decisions, director liability claims and insolvency-related disputes must go to the Enterprise Court. A well-drafted shareholders' agreement should therefore distinguish between arbitrable contractual claims and non-arbitrable statutory claims, routing each to the appropriate forum. Failing to make this distinction can result in jurisdictional challenges that delay the proceedings by months.
Corporate disputes in Belgium are governed by a modern, flexible but technically demanding legal framework. The CSA provides powerful tools for minority shareholders, directors and creditors, but each tool has specific conditions, procedural requirements and time limits. International business owners operating in Belgium need to understand the distinction between the BV/SRL and NV/SA frameworks, the role of the Brussels Enterprise Court, and the interaction between contractual arrangements and statutory protections. Acting early, with properly structured advice, is consistently more effective - and less costly - than attempting to recover a position after the dispute has escalated.
Our law firm Vetrov & Partners has experience supporting clients in Belgium on corporate dispute matters. We can assist with shareholder exclusion and withdrawal proceedings, director liability claims, deadlock resolution, minority shareholder protection and insolvency-related corporate disputes. To receive a consultation, contact: info@vlo.com.