The International Monetary Fund and the 19-nation single currency area are battling over how much debt relief Greece needs, and over economic targets required of Athens that the IMF says are too stringent.
"Today we will not be able to go into depth on the Greek issue... We will have to wait," said German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble, the Eurogroup's most influential member, as he arrived for talks with his eurozone counterparts to discuss Greece.
The months of bickering have delayed progress of Greece's 86-billion-euro (USD 92.4 billion) bailout programme agreed in 2015 and stalled crucial loan payments that Athens will need by this summer to avert rekindling the debt crisis.
Despite the conflict, Eurogroup head Jeroen Dijsselbloem insisted that Lagarde had promised him that the IMF remained committed to the Greek bailout programme.
"She reassured me that the IMF still has strong intent... to participate in the programme in full," said Dijsselbloem, who is also Dutch finance minister.
But he warned: "They've always made their terms very clear -- reforms need to be credible, the fiscal path needs to be credible, and debt sustainability needs to be credible."
"It's up to the Greeks to solve the problem," said Schaeuble.
At heart of the problem is a demand by the eurozone that Greece deliver a primary balance, or surplus on public spending before debt repayments, of 3.5 per cent of GDP.
The target is very high -- and most countries do not even come close -- but Germany and other eurozone hardliners are insistent that Greece reach it over the next few years.
Already huge, Greece's debt hit 311 billion euros in 2016 or around 180 per cent of output, according to the latest EU data.
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