WHICH LANGUAGE TO CHOOSE WHEN DRAFTING CONTRACT IN TURKEY

Which Language to Choose?

Options:

  1. Single version in English: Most common solution in international contracts
  2. Bilingual version (French/Turkish or English/Turkish): Each party in their language
  3. Single version in Turkish: If required by law or Turkish party

Our RecommendationVersion in English with clause specifying that in case of dispute, the English version prevails.

Example clause"This Agreement is drafted in English. In the event of any discrepancy between the English version and any translation, the English version shall prevail."

Beware of Turkish Translations: If a Turkish version is required (Turkish courts, registration), have it translated by a certified sworn translator to avoid interpretation errors.

Common Translation Errors:

  • Legal terms without exact equivalent
  • French/English law concepts not existing in Turkish law
  • Ambiguities created by translation

Structure of an International Contract

Recommended Standard Format

Preamble

  • Presentation of parties
  • Context and contract objective
  • Definitions

Contract Body

  • Contract subject
  • Obligations of each party
  • Price and payment terms
  • Delivery / Performance
  • Contract duration
  • Warranties
  • Liability and limitations
  • Intellectual property
  • Confidentiality
  • Force majeure and hardship
  • Termination
  • Applicable law and dispute resolution
  • General provisions

Annexes

  • Technical specifications
  • Price schedules
  • Document templates
  • Contact lists

Definitions: Crucial Section

Precisely define key terms to avoid any ambiguity:

Example:

  • "Products": means the [precise description]
  • "Territory": means the Republic of Turkey, excluding [any excluded zones]
  • "Price": means the price indicated in Annex 1, expressed in [currency], [excluding/including VAT], [Incoterm]
  • "Delivery": means the transfer of possession in accordance with [precise conditions]
  • "Intellectual Property Rights": means all patents, trademarks, copyrights, know-how, and other intellectual property rights
  1. Choice of Applicable Law and Competent Jurisdiction

Applicable Law to the Contract

Principle of Party Autonomy

Parties are free to choose the law applicable to their contract (principle recognized by Turkish law and most legal systems).

Common Choices:

  1. Turkish Law: Natural if the contract is mainly executed in Turkey
  2. French Law: If the French party insists
  3. English Law: Very common in international contracts (neutral, predictable)
  4. Swiss Law: Compromise between civil law systems
  5. Vienna Convention (CISG): For international sales

Recommended Choice of Law Clause:

"This Agreement shall be governed by and construed in accordance with the laws of [Country], excluding its conflict of laws provisions and the United Nations Convention on Contracts for the International Sale of Goods (CISG)."

⚠️ Important: Even if you choose foreign law, certain Turkish mandatory rules may still apply (labor law, consumer protection, competition law).

In Absence of Choice: Applicable Default Rules

If parties have not chosen applicable law:

  • Turkish courts will apply Turkish private international law rules
  • Generally: law of the country where the characteristic performance is located
  • For sale: seller's country
  • For services: service provider's country

Our RecommendationAlways explicitly choose applicable law to avoid uncertainty.

Choice of Jurisdiction: Courts or Arbitration?

Option 1: Turkish Courts

Jurisdiction Clause Example:

"The courts of Istanbul, Turkey, shall have exclusive jurisdiction to settle any dispute arising out of or in connection with this Agreement."

Advantages:

  • Lower cost than arbitration
  • Enforcement in Turkey easier
  • Public proceedings (transparency)

Disadvantages:

  • Proceedings in Turkish (translation costs)
  • Longer delays (2-5 years)
  • Less predictable than arbitration
  • Difficulty enforcing abroad

When to Choose Turkish Courts:

  • Low-value contracts (< €50,000)
  • Disputes requiring interim measures in Turkey
  • Both parties comfortable with Turkish system

Option 2: International Arbitration

Arbitration Clause Example:

"Any dispute arising out of or in connection with this Agreement shall be finally settled by arbitration in accordance with the Rules of the International Chamber of Commerce (ICC). The place of arbitration shall be Istanbul, Turkey. The language of the arbitration shall be English. The arbitral tribunal shall consist of [one/three] arbitrator(s)."

Advantages:

  • Neutrality: Neither party's home court
  • Confidentiality: Private proceedings
  • Expertise: Choice of specialized arbitrators
  • Enforceability: New York Convention (160+ countries)
  • Speed: Faster than courts (12-24 months)
  • Finality: Limited appeal possibilities

Disadvantages:

  • Cost: €50,000-€500,000+ depending on stakes
  • No interim measures (must go to courts)
  • Complexity: Sophisticated process

When to Choose Arbitration:

  • High-value contracts (> €100,000)
  • International parties from different countries
  • Need for confidentiality
  • Complex technical/commercial disputes
  • Desire to avoid local courts

Main Arbitration Institutions

  1. ICC (International Chamber of Commerce)
  • Seat: Paris
  • Most prestigious
  • Highest costs
  • Duration : long
  1. ECAM (European Court of Arbitration and Mediation)
  • Seat: Strasbourg
  • Excellent reputation
  • Neutral location
  • Moderate costs
  • Duration : short, optimized

3. SCAI (Swiss Chambers' Arbitration Institution)

  • Seat: Switzerland
  • Excellent reputation
  • Neutral location
  • Moderate to high costs
  • Duration : Medium 

 

Essential Clauses in International Contracts in Turkey

Price and Payment Terms

Currency and Exchange Rate Risk

Challenge: Turkish Lira volatility (significant depreciation in recent years)

Solutions:

Option 1: Hard Currency (EUR, USD, GBP)

  • Protects foreign party from devaluation
  • Turkish party bears exchange rate risk
  • May require Central Bank approval for certain transactions

Option 2: Turkish Lira with Adjustment Clause "The price is set at [X] TRY. If the EUR/TRY exchange rate varies by more than 10% compared to the reference rate of [date], either party may request a price adjustment."

Option 3: Dual Currency "The price is [X] EUR, payable in TRY at the exchange rate published by the Turkish Central Bank on the payment date."

Our Recommendation: For significant long-term contracts, use EUR or USD to avoid exchange rate disputes.

Payment Terms

Common Terms:

  • Advance Payment: 10-30% upon order
  • Progress Payments: Based on milestones
  • Payment on Delivery: COD or against documents
  • Payment Terms: Net 30/60/90 days

Late Payment Interest: Always specify rate (e.g., "3-month EURIBOR + 5%") and cap it to avoid exorbitant Turkish commercial rates (30-40%).

"In case of late payment, interest shall accrue at the rate of [X]% per annum, not to exceed 15% per annum, from the due date until full payment."

Payment Security

For Turkish Buyer:

  • Letter of Credit (LC) - irrevocable confirmed
  • Bank guarantee
  • Documentary collection
  • Advance payment

For Foreign Seller:

  • Payment against documents
  • Letter of credit
  • Credit insurance (Coface, Euler Hermes)
  • Title retention clause

Force Majeure Clause

Purpose: Suspend or terminate obligations when unforeseeable events make performance impossible.

Turkish Law Position: Turkish Code of Obligations recognizes force majeure (Article 136: impossibility of performance releases debtor).

Essential Elements of FM Clause:

  1. Definition of Force Majeure"Force Majeure means any unforeseeable event beyond the reasonable control of a Party, including but not limited to: acts of God, war, terrorism, riots, strikes, epidemics, pandemics, government actions, embargoes, natural disasters, earthquakes, fires, floods."
  2. Exclusions:
  • Economic hardship
  • Lack of funds
  • Supplier failure (unless FM)
  • Labor disputes (if controllable)
  1. Consequences: *"Upon occurrence of Force Majeure:
  • Affected Party's obligations are suspended
  • Notice must be given within [X] days
  • Parties shall negotiate in good faith
  • If FM lasts more than [90] days, either party may terminate"*

 

Mitigation Obligation"The affected Party shall use reasonable efforts to mitigate the effects of Force Majeure."

COVID-19 Lesson: After the pandemic, many contracts now explicitly include "epidemic" and "government-ordered lockdowns" in FM definitions.

Hardship Clause (Imprévision / Aşırı Ifa Güçlüğü)

Different from Force Majeure: Performance remains possible but becomes excessively onerous due to unforeseen circumstances.

Turkish Law: Article 138 TBK recognizes hardship - judge may adapt or terminate contract if:

  • Extraordinary circumstances arose
  • Unforeseeable at contract time
  • Not attributable to either party
  • Performance becomes excessively difficult

Recommended Hardship Clause:

*"If, after conclusion of this Agreement, unforeseeable extraordinary circumstances occur that fundamentally alter the economic balance of the contract (including but not limited to: exchange rate variations exceeding 30%, significant inflation, import/export restrictions, sanctions), making performance excessively onerous for one Party, that Party may request renegotiation.

The Parties shall negotiate in good faith within 30 days. If no agreement is reached, the matter may be submitted to [arbitration/courts] for contract adaptation or termination."*

Practical Application:

  • Turkish Lira devaluation > 30%
  • Dramatic commodity price increases
  • New taxes or customs duties
  • Import/export restrictions

Limitation of Liability

Purpose: Cap financial exposure in case of breach or damages.

Key Elements:

Cap on Damages"In no event shall either Party's aggregate liability exceed [X]% of the total contract price, or [€X], whichever is lower."

Typical Caps:

Services contracts: 100-200% of annual fees

Sales contracts: 50-100% of contract price

Technology licenses: 12-24 months of royalties

Exclusions from Cap: Certain liabilities cannot be capped. Ex. Fraud or willful misconduct, personal injury or death, Intellectual property infringement…

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