Commercial agreements in Greece
Every business relationship in Greece rests on a contract – whether written, oral, or implied. The quality of that contract determines what happens when things go well, and what options you have when they don’t. We draft, review, and negotiate commercial agreements for foreign businesses operating in Greece. Our role isn’t to produce boilerplate – it’s to make sure your agreements actually work under Greek law, anticipate the problems that arise in practice, and protect you where it matters.
Supply and procurement agreements
covering quality specifications, delivery terms, pricing mechanisms, liability for defects, and the allocation of risk in ongoing commercial relationships.
Distribution and agency agreements
with particular attention to the mandatory protections under PD 219/1991, termination consequences, territory and exclusivity arrangements, and the distinction between independent distributors and commercial agents (which determines which legal regime applies).
Service and consulting agreements
defining scope, deliverables, performance standards, intellectual property ownership, and liability caps. These are common for foreign companies engaging Greek service providers or offering services into the Greek market.
Joint venture and partnership agreements
structuring capital contributions, profit-sharing, governance, decision-making, and exit mechanisms for collaborative ventures in Greece.
Franchise agreements
addressing the operational, IP, quality control, and territorial elements of franchise relationships, with attention to Greek competition law and the potential applicability of commercial agent protections.
Shareholders’ agreements
essential for any foreign investor entering a Greek company alongside local or international partners. Greek corporate law – particularly for the IKE – assigns significant weight to the articles of association, and default rules on share transfers, voting, deadlock, and exit may not align with what a foreign shareholder expects. A well-drafted shareholders’ agreement fills those gaps: it governs decision-making, protects minority positions, defines drag-along and tag-along rights, and establishes clear exit mechanisms before disagreements arise.
Confidentiality and non-disclosure agreements
protecting sensitive commercial information in the context of negotiations, partnerships, or employment relationships.
Commercial lease agreements
Foreign businesses setting up in Greece need premises, and Greek commercial lease law (PD 34/1995 and Law 4242/2014) has specific mandatory provisions on minimum duration, termination, and tenant protections that differ significantly from what most foreign tenants expect. This is a practical, high-frequency service for the firm’s audience.
Employment agreements
Greek labour law is heavily protective of employees, with mandatory provisions on termination, severance, working hours, and collective bargaining that cannot be contracted around. Any foreign business hiring in Greece – even one or two people – needs contracts that comply with Greek law, not adapted versions of their home-country templates.