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Payment of fines

EU procedures to ensure penalties incurred abroad are collected.

Mutual recognition of fines

People can freely move around in the EU. Occasionally, they commit an offence while abroad and are liable to pay a fine. However, often those fines incurred abroad remain unpaid. The EU has to ensure that all Europeans are treated equally, wherever they live or travel to.

Non-residents should not be in a more favourable position than residents simply because they can escape paying a fine by going back to their home country.

The EU works to ensure all financial penalties are collected. A Council framework decision lays down the rules for mutual recognition of financial penalties.

How does it work?

A judicial or administrative authority can transmit a financial penalty directly to an authority in another EU country and to have that penalty recognised and executed without any further formality.

The procedure applies in situations where a fine is imposed on a person who is not a resident of the EU country where the offence was committed, fails to pay the fine and then leaves the territory of that country.

Documents

31 AUGUST 2017
Council framework decision 2005/214/JHA on applying of the principle of mutual recognition to financial penalties