Changeflow GovPing Trade & Export Greece Enacts New Law to Combat Art Forgery and...
Priority review Rule Added Final

Greece Enacts New Law to Combat Art Forgery and Protect Cultural Heritage

Favicon for www.jdsupra.com JD Supra Trade Law
Published March 2nd, 2026
Detected March 3rd, 2026
Email

Summary

Greece has enacted Law No. 5271/2026, establishing a new legal framework to combat art forgery and protect cultural items. The law introduces autonomous criminal offenses for forgery and damage to artworks, alongside stricter penalties and a new register for certified art experts. This aims to enhance the protection of the art market and cultural heritage.

What changed

Law No. 5271/2026 introduces a comprehensive legal framework in Greece specifically designed to prevent and prosecute art forgery and protect the integrity of artworks and collectible items. This new legislation moves beyond general fraud provisions in the Penal Code by establishing autonomous criminal offenses for manufacturing, altering, distributing, exhibiting, or possessing counterfeit works of art with intent to distribute. Notably, proof of financial fraud is no longer a prerequisite for criminal liability. The law also criminalizes damage or destruction of artworks as a distinct offense, recognizing their cultural value.

Key innovations include the creation of a state-supervised Register of Certified Art Experts to ensure reliable authentication and the establishment of an Autonomous Department for Works of Art within the Ministry of Culture to oversee market practices and coordinate enforcement. Penalties are significantly escalated, with basic offenses carrying imprisonment from six months to five years and fines from EUR 5,000 to EUR 120,000. These penalties can reach up to ten years imprisonment and EUR 300,000 fines for professional, habitual, or organized criminal conduct, or when damage exceeds EUR 120,000. Regulated entities involved in the art market, including manufacturers, retailers, and importers, should familiarize themselves with these new offenses and penalties to ensure compliance.

What to do next

  1. Review Law No. 5271/2026 for specific implications on art authentication and distribution processes.
  2. Ensure all artworks and collectible items intended for sale or exhibition comply with new authentication requirements.
  3. Verify that any personnel involved in the art market are aware of the expanded criminal offenses and associated penalties.

Penalties

Imprisonment from six months to ten years and monetary fines ranging from 5,000 EUR to 300,000 EUR, depending on the severity and nature of the offense.

Source document (simplified)

March 2, 2026

A New Legal Framework for the Protection of Works of Art and Collectible Items

International Lawyers Network + Follow Contact LinkedIn Facebook X Send Embed

[author: Stavros Varveris]*

Law No. 5271/2026 introduces a new specialized legal framework combining administrative and criminal regulation for the prevention and repression of art forgery, the protection of the physical integrity of works of art and collectible items, and the establishment of certified expert mechanisms for authentication.

Until now, the criminal treatment of art forgery relied exclusively on the general provisions of the Greek Penal Code on fraud and forgery. In this context, the establishment of criminal liability generally required the completion of a financial transaction and proof of pecuniary damage or deception of a third party, a requirement that significantly limited the effectiveness of the existing framework for such offences.

The new law operates as a lex specialis and introduces autonomous criminal offences covering the manufacture or alteration of counterfeit works of art, their distribution, exhibition or commercial placement, as well as possession with intent to distribute. The completion of economic fraud is therefore no longer a prerequisite for criminal liability.

The criminal framework is accompanied by stricter and escalating sanctions. The basic penalty aligns with that provided for fraud under the Penal Code, providing for imprisonment from six months to five years and a monetary fine ranging from 5.000 EUR to 120.000 EUR. However, in cases of professional or habitual conduct, commission on a commercial scale, action by an organized group, abuse of professional capacity, or where the damage caused exceeds 120.000 EUR, the penalties are significantly increased, reaching up to ten years’ imprisonment and a monetary fine of up to EUR 300,000.

Furthermore, damage, destruction or alteration of works of art now constitutes a distinct criminal offence, reflecting the public cultural value of such assets when compared to ordinary damage to property.

A key innovation of the law is the establishment of a state-supervised Register of Certified Art Experts, responsible for the official verification and certification of the authenticity of works of art and collectible items. According to the relevant provisions, the register operates under clearly defined eligibility and qualification criteria, is subject to ethical and professional conduct rules, and provides for formal accreditation procedures, ensuring reliability and consistency in the assessment of authenticity.

At the same time, an Autonomous Department for Works of Art is established within the Ministry of Culture, entrusted with the supervision of art market practices, coordination with law-enforcement authorities, and the development of preventive policies.

In conclusion, the new legislative framework takes a broader approach to the protection of works of art. By expanding the scope of relevant criminal offences, the law reinforces the cultural value of artworks and their role as part of the common cultural heritage. At the same time, the provision of criminal protection against damage to works of art and collectible items in public, municipal and museum spaces provide stronger protection for cultural heritage. The prevention and suppression of offences in the field of art thus emerge, particularly in the present era of rapid technological development, as a fundamental factor in protecting the value of art more generally.

  • A. & K. Metaxopoulos and Partners Law Firm

Send Print Report

Latest Posts

©
International Lawyers Network

Written by:

International Lawyers Network Contact + Follow more less

What do you want from legal thought leadership?

Please take our short survey – your perspective helps to shape how firms create relevant, useful content that addresses your needs:

Take the survey now »

Published In:

Art + Follow Criminal Prosecution + Follow Enforcement Actions + Follow Forgery + Follow Greece + Follow Intellectual Property Protection + Follow New Legislation + Follow Penalties + Follow Regulatory Oversight + Follow Regulatory Reform + Follow Administrative Agency + Follow Art, Entertainment & Sports + Follow Criminal + Follow International Trade + Follow more less

International Lawyers Network on:

"My best business intelligence, in one easy email…"

Your first step to building a free, personalized, morning email brief covering pertinent authors and topics on JD Supra: Sign Up Log in ** By using the service, you signify your acceptance of JD Supra's Privacy Policy.* - hide - hide

Source

Analysis generated by AI. Source diff and links are from the original.

Classification

Agency
Various
Published
March 2nd, 2026
Instrument
Rule
Legal weight
Binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Substantive

Who this affects

Applies to
Manufacturers Retailers Importers and exporters
Geographic scope
National (Greece)

Taxonomy

Primary area
Government Contracting
Operational domain
Legal
Topics
Criminal Law Intellectual Property Authentication

Get Trade & Export alerts

Weekly digest. AI-summarized, no noise.

Free. Unsubscribe anytime.

Get alerts for this source

We'll email you when JD Supra Trade Law publishes new changes.

Free. Unsubscribe anytime.