Sometimes. NDAs and general commercial contracts governed by English law can and increasingly do require an overseas party to appoint a process agent, particularly where the information protected is valuable or the contract underpins a significant trading relationship. Enforcement of a confidentiality breach is urgent work, and urgent work needs fast service.
Why confidentiality enforcement is time critical
The remedy that matters for a leaked secret is usually an injunction, and injunctions are about speed. If the counterparty misusing your information is overseas with no UK service address, weeks or months of overseas service undermine the whole exercise. A process agent clause in the NDA means proceedings can be served in England and Wales on day one, which is precisely when you need them served.
Proportionate for bigger relationships
Not every NDA justifies the requirement, and plenty are signed without one. The pattern we see is that agents are required where the NDA gates a substantial transaction, where trade secrets or pricing data are central, or where the overseas party is in a jurisdiction where service is known to be slow. The cost is modest, from £125 per year, so for material relationships the protection is cheap.
Master service and supply arrangements
The same reasoning extends to master service agreements, distribution and supply contracts, where notices and termination rights depend on valid service. One appointment can cover the NDA and the main commercial contract together for an extra £30. Our page on master service agreements covers the recurring services pattern in detail.