Widespread progress in implementing ECtHR rulings
Many countries made significant progress in implementing judgments and decisions from the European Court of Human Rights in 2025 but a number of important challenges remain, according to the latest annual report from the Council of Europe’s Committee of Ministers.
The report shows that the Committee of Ministers, which is responsible for supervising the implementation of the court’s judgments by member states, closed a total of 949 cases during the year, compared to 894 cases in 2024 (an increase of 6.2 per cent).
The committee closed 194 leading cases, which often require new laws or practices to stop similar violations recurring, compared to 161 leading cases the previous year (up 20 per cent). The UK had seven leading cases last year and seven in 2024, down from eight in 2023 and 11 in both of the preceding two years.
“In 2025, the committee closed nearly 1,000 cases, including nearly 200 leading cases that led to more general positive changes in the member states. This is more than a statistic: it represents justice delivered and is a powerful sign of the system’s vitality and relevance,” explained the Council of Europe’s director general of human rights and rule of law, Gianluca Esposito.
The report specifically highlighted positive developments in Ukraine, which led to the closure of 97 cases – including 11 leading cases – in 2025, despite the difficult circumstances caused by Russia’s ongoing war of aggression.
According to the report, Romania recorded the highest drop in total and leading cases pending full implementation during the year (-124 and -27 respectively). Austria, Estonia, France, Germany and Lithuania also recorded significant decreases in the number of leading cases pending.
At the same time, significant challenges to the implementation of judgments remain. These include the complexity of incoming cases, continued growth in the number of leading cases pending and the fact that over 500 leading cases have been pending for more than five years.
In the light of the increasing complexity of the pending caseload, the report underlined the strategic importance of states further increasing their domestic capacity for implementing the court’s rulings, highlighting the positive example of Romania.
The report further underlined the on-going lack of participation and information from the Russian Federation as a major systemic obstacle. Russia was excluded from the Council of Europe in 2022, but remains legally obliged to implement relevant rulings from the court.




