Greece has introduced sweeping new legislation aimed at protecting its cultural property from forgery and damage, marking the country’s first comprehensive legal framework for crimes against art and collectibles.

The bill, approved by Parliament in late January, establishes strict criminal penalties calibrated to the severity of the offense, including prison sentences ranging from six months to ten years and fines of up to €300,000 in the most serious cases. It also broadens the legal definition of art-related fraud to encompass issues of provenance, condition, and attribution, while clarifying what constitutes protected cultural property—extending coverage to “cinemas of historical importance.” Per the new bill, works identified as counterfeit are subject to destruction.

The law notably establishes an independent registry of art forgery experts within the culture ministry to appraise and archive cases, with the aim of fostering a more trustworthy art market. It would work with academic, business, and legal professionals to prevent the recirculation of counterfeits, promote transparency in transactions, and ensure the integrity of provenance.

With this, Greece would shift from a broad anti-forgery legal framework to one specifically tailored to art crimes. Greece, home to an extensive repository of cultural artifacts, has long contended with the proliferation of counterfeits and the looting of archaeological sites. Recent years have seen a legal crackdown on the issue. 

In 2025, 38 individuals were accused of orchestrating a forgery ring spanning Italy, Spain, France, and Belgium, with links to the sale of counterfeit works attributed to leading artists of the 19th through 21st centuries. The forgeries’ provenance traced their passage through Italian auction houses and exposed a multinational network of suppliers. The case followed closely on the seizure of more than 120 fake works by Greek modern painters slated for auction.

In a high-profile case of vandalism, 2025 saw Nikos Papadopoulos, a far-right MP with Greece’s Niki party, accused of damaging four artworks by Christoforos Katsadiotis, three of which resembled religious icons.

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