In cross-border sales, retention-of-title clauses are generally recognised, but their legal effect depends on the applicable law—particularly the property law of the country where the goods are located. Under widely accepted conflict-of-law rules, rights in rem over movable goods are governed by the lex rei sitae, i.e., the law of the place where the goods are situated at the relevant time. As a result, even where the parties have agreed that German law governs their contract, questions regarding ownership, enforceability against third parties, and insolvency treatment may fall under the law of the country in which the goods are physically located.
For example, if a German seller delivers goods to a buyer in another jurisdiction, that jurisdiction’s property and insolvency law will typically determine when ownership passes and whether the retention-of-title clause is effective. While many European countries recognise such clauses, the legal requirements can vary. Some jurisdictions may require that the clause be agreed in writing prior to delivery, while others mandate public registration to ensure enforceability against third-party creditors.
Within the European Union, retention-of-title clauses benefit from a degree of harmonisation. The EU Late Payment Directive (2011/7/EU) requires Member States to ensure that a seller’s retention-of-title remains effective until full payment, provided the clause was agreed before delivery. Accordingly, a validly incorporated retention-of-title clause under German law will generally be upheld across the EU, allowing the seller to retain ownership until payment is received.
Further protection is provided under the EU Insolvency Regulation (Regulation (EU) 2015/848). Article 10 of the Regulation safeguards the seller’s rights under a retention-of-title clause when goods are located in a Member State other than the one where insolvency proceedings are opened. This prevents a debtor’s cross-border insolvency from defeating the seller’s ownership rights solely due to the goods having moved across borders. Likewise, if the seller becomes insolvent after dispatching the goods, the buyer’s right to acquire ownership upon payment remains protected under the applicable law of the goods’ location.
It is also important to consider the possible application of the UN Convention on Contracts for the International Sale of Goods (CISG) in international transactions. The CISG governs contract formation and the incorporation of standard terms but does not regulate the transfer of ownership or the legal effect of retention-of-title clauses—those matters are left to national law. Therefore, parties relying on retention-of-title in CISG-governed contracts must ensure their standard terms are effectively incorporated under CISG rules, which typically require that the terms be made available to the other party at the time of contracting.
In sum, retention-of-title remains a powerful security mechanism in cross-border transactions, particularly within the EU, where its recognition is supported by harmonised legislation. Nonetheless, parties must always consider the lex situs and ensure compliance with local legal requirements to ensure the clause is enforceable in the jurisdiction where the goods are located.