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Report a breach of EU law by an EU country

If your legal rights under EU law are affected, you must be granted access to rapid and effective redress in the EU country involved.  You can therefore bring the matter to the relevant national authorities and try to resolve it. They are the first bodies responsible for ensuring that EU law is applied correctly in individual cases.

You can also report a breach of EU law by a national authority by lodging a complaint with the Commission.

Please keep in mind that the Commission’s role is to make sure that EU law is followed properly in general by EU countries, not to resolve your individual situation.

Who Does What?

What the Commission cannot do?

The Commission does not have the power to:

  • act on the following complaints:
    • against acts by private bodies or individuals that do not involve national authorities 
    • concerning matters that do not fall under EU law (cross-reference to section What is EU law)
    • against countries that are not EU members
    • against other international organisations (e.g. NATO, UN, Council of Europe)
  • offer you individual redress or compensation for damages you have incurred
  • take over a decision-making role in place of national authorities or review decisions they have made in individual cases.

Handling complaints

Enforcing EU law is one of the Commission’s main tasks. We do this by focusing our efforts on preventing breaches of EU law from happening in the first place and by acting firmly and quickly when serious breaches occur.

The same approach applies to complaints handling. We do not follow up on every complaint but rather focus on those with the biggest impact on the interests of people and businesses generally.

Submit a Complaint

Go through our checklist to make sure that the European Commission can investigate your complaint and fill in the complaint form.

Submit a complaint

Multiple complaints

The Commission sometimes receives a large number of complaints on the same topic, against the same EU country (‘multiple complaints’).

In these cases, the Commission may decide to communicate with the complainants as a group, by publishing information on this website. Communicating like this allows the Commission services to respond swiftly and inform those concerned. It also gives the opportunity to address a potentially wider public interest around the issue raised by the complainants.

Find more information about notices on multiple complaints which are still under assessment or have been recently closed.

Useful links

  1. How to make a complaint at national level.
  2. Your rights under the EU Charter of fundamental rights – when the Charter applies, what to do if your rights are breached and where to turn for help.
  3. You also have the right to submit a petition to the European Parliament about the application of EU law. Check first if your issue has already been raised with the Parliament. If it has, you can support an existing petition.

 If the petition is admissible, the Parliament may ask the Commission to conduct an investigation. The Commission will assess the request and reply to the Parliament.