Why the E-Court, and Not a Traditional Court?

The Polish Electronic Payment-Order Proceedings (EPU — elektroniczne postępowanie upominawcze), popularly called the e-court, are the fastest way to obtain a payment order when your debt is undisputed (it follows from an invoice, contract, etc., and the debtor has not previously contested it).

Main advantages of EPU:

  1. Speed: The payment order is often issued within a few weeks.
  2. Cost: The court fee is only one quarter of the standard fee (1.25% of the value in dispute).
  3. Convenience: Everything is filed online, without leaving your office.

1. Initial Requirements: What You Need to Prepare

Before logging into the EPU system, make sure you have ready:

2. Step by Step: Filling Out the Online Lawsuit Form

Once logged into the EPU system, you go to the section for creating a new lawsuit. The system guides you through successive tabs:

➡️ Step 1: Choose the Procedure and Define the Debt

➡️ Step 2: Party Data and Addresses

➡️ Step 3: Detailed Claim and Factual Basis

This is the key section in which you must demonstrate the existence of the debt.

➡️ Step 4: Attachments and Evidence

In EPU you do not attach scans of invoices! It is enough to indicate what evidence you have, e.g.:

3. Paying for the Lawsuit and Finalising the Procedure

Once all sections are filled in, the system automatically calculates the court fee (1.25% of WPS) and lets you pay online, usually via fast payment methods.

  1. Monitoring: Check your EPU account regularly. You will receive notifications about the registration of the lawsuit and then about the issuance of the payment order.

4. What Happens Next? Two Scenarios

Once the payment order is issued, the court sends it to the debtor. There are only two scenarios:

A. The Debtor Does Not React

B. The Debtor Files an Objection

EPU is a powerful tool that can shorten the path to your money from months (and, increasingly, even years) to weeks. Use it whenever your debt is undisputed!

Did you know you can additionally secure your receivables by entering the debtor in the BIG register? More on that in our article 7 most common debt collection mistakes.