Court of Justice of the European Union | European Union (original) (raw)

Overview

The Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) interprets EU law to make sure it is applied in the same way in all EU countries, and settles legal disputes between national governments and EU institutions.

It can also, in certain circumstances, be used by individuals, companies or organisations to take action against an EU institution, if they feel it has somehow infringed their rights.

What does the CJEU do?

The CJEU gives rulings on cases brought before it. The most common types of case are:

Composition

The CJEU is divided into 2 courts:

Each judge and advocate general is appointed for a renewable 6-year term, jointly by national governments. In each Court, the judges select a President who serves a renewable term of 3 years.

How does the CJEU work?

In the Court of Justice, each case is assigned 1 judge (the "judge-rapporteur") and 1 advocate general. Cases are processed in 2 stages:

The CJEU and you

If you – as a private individual or as a company – have suffered damage as a result of action or inaction by an EU institution or its staff, you can take action against them in the Court, in one of 2 ways:

If you feel that the authorities in any country have infringed EU law, you must follow the official complaints procedure.

More on your legal rights

Access to documents

Access to information

CJEU case-law judicial calendar

CJEU streaming service

Further information

Who's who

Annual report

Most recent judgements & opinions

Case-law

Publications

CJEU library

Visit the Court

Jobs