Healthy cash flow in Greek commercial practice relies on clear contract terms, EU-aligned compliance and efficient recovery tools. Proper drafting, combined with financial safeguards, reduces credit risk in domestic and cross-border dealings.
Set expectations upfront: define delivery (Incoterms where relevant), acceptance procedures, price and payment, warranties, liability limitations, force majeure and termination. Ensure alignment with EU consumer and competition rules, data protection (GDPR) and Greek sector regulations.
Late payment triggers legal or agreed interest under EU Directive 2011/7/EU (as implemented in Greece) and lump-sum recovery costs. Contracts should provide for interest, collection costs and suspension/termination for default. Use retention of title for goods sold on credit.
Combine legal and financial safeguards: bank guarantees, letters of credit, factoring and trade credit insurance. Maintain a reminder protocol and escalate to notarial notices, payment orders and enforcement where needed.
For EU trade, harmonized tools (European Payment Order, Small Claims) help streamline recovery and recognition. For non‑EU, pay attention to choice of law/jurisdiction or arbitration, and practical enforceability in the counterparty’s country.