Europe & UK: Limiting liability in contracts
What businesses need to know when negotiating risk
2026. gada 01. aprīlis
Europe & UK: Limiting liability in contractsWhat businesses need to know when negotiating risk2026. gada 01. aprīlis Why should I read this?Liability clauses decide where financial risk sits when a contract goes wrong. In cross border deals, the same clause can produce very different results depending on the governing law. Many European and UK jurisdictions restrict how far liability can be capped or excluded, even in B2B contracts. That creates a risk that the contract does not deliver the outcome your business assumed, especially when standard templates are used. ‘Indirect’ or ‘consequential’ loss is a common example. In England and Wales, ‘consequential loss’ often means loss arising from special circumstances known at signing, not the normal result of a breach. Courts also read the words in the context of the whole agreement, so the label alone may not settle the point. In several civil law systems, these labels may have no settled meaning at all unless you define what you are excluding. This is not drafting trivia. It affects deal pricing, insurance alignment, and whether the board has a reliable view of downside exposure. The practical step is to test enforceability by jurisdiction, define excluded losses, and confirm the cap matches a credible worst case scenario. How liability works across Europe & UKA jurisdiction-specific understanding of liability rules is essential when negotiating and drafting strategic contracts in an international context. The key point for businesses is that the same liability clause can behave very differently depending on governing law.
The practical takeaway: A liability clause that looks balanced on paper may deliver a very different outcome in litigation. Key points:Civil law jurisdictions (such as Germany, France, Italy, Spain, Austria, Belgium and the Netherlands). These rely heavily on statutory rules, and mandatory protections. Common law jurisdictions (England and Wales, Ireland, Northern Ireland). These allow greater contractual freedom, but still impose hard limits through statute and reasonableness tests. ‘Indirect and consequential loss’ is a key fault line. In many civil law systems, this term has no settled meaning and bears significant risks unless the contract clearly defines excluded losses. In England and Wales, ‘consequential loss’ is often used as shorthand for losses arising from special circumstances known at signing. Courts assess the wording in the context of the whole agreement, so outcomes can still surprise. The safer approach is to define the loss types you want to exclude. Similar themes appear elsewhere in Europe. France and Germany take a tougher line where liability caps undermine core contractual obligations. In the Netherlands, courts may refuse to apply a limitation clause where doing so would be unacceptable under reasonableness standards. Standard terms increase risk. Several jurisdictions apply stricter controls where liability clauses are not individually negotiated. In the UK, standard terms can trigger statutory reasonableness tests that narrow or defeat limitation clauses. In Germany, strict controls apply to pre drafted terms, and clauses affecting core obligations are high risk. What should I do?When negotiating strategic contracts across the UK and Europe, be clear on the governing law. Review whether liability positions are genuinely enforceable in that jurisdiction. And for high value or strategic contracts, confirm that the risk outcome still matches board expectations.
Key points:
What else do I need to know?Liability drafting only works if it holds under the agreed governing law . For high value or business critical deals, treat the liability clause as a board level risk statement. It should match a credible failure scenario, not a legacy template. Define excluded loss categories, check which liabilities cannot be capped, and test clauses against mandatory local rules. That short exercise usually costs far less than discovering, in a dispute, that the contract never delivered the downside protection the business expected.
Co-authored by Clare Johnston (Knowledge) Further Reading:Europe & UK: Which governing law to choose for your contract?
Navigating EU Law | Strategic Guidance for a Shifting Regulatory Landscape
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Kelly Holmes Partner Birmingema, Apvienotā Karaliste Maarten Stassen Partner Brisele, Beļģija Manuel Boka Partner Vīne, Austria Carolin Maria Obermaier, LL.M. (IU) Senior Associate Minhene, Vācija Nicola Lattanzi Principal Associate Milāna, Italy Frédérique Swart Professional Support Lawyer Roterdama, Netherlands Olivia Hawkswell Senior Associate Londona, Apvienotā Karaliste Natalia Marín Associate Madride, Spain Dan Jackson Senior Associate Dublina, Īrija Julie Poivey Senior Associate Parīze, France Clare Johnston Business Professional Londona, Apvienotā Karaliste | Mančestra, Apvienotā Karaliste Jaunākais ziņas
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