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enforce arbitral award Indonesia 2026

Enforcing Foreign Arbitral Awards and Cross‑border Judgments in Indonesia, 2026 Practical Guide

By Global Law Experts
– posted 2 hours ago

Last reviewed: 2 May 2026

Multinationals that win an arbitral award or obtain a favourable court judgment abroad still face a critical final hurdle: converting that paper victory into cash recovery inside Indonesia. The ability to enforce arbitral awards in Indonesia in 2026 is shaped by Law No. 30 of 1999 on Arbitration and Alternative Dispute Resolution, Indonesia’s accession to the 1958 New York Convention, a January 2025 Constitutional Court clarification that narrowed the definition of “foreign arbitral award,” and ongoing Mahkamah Agung harmonisation discussions that industry observers expect will reshape execution practice. Regulatory pressure from the Indonesian Competition Commission (KPPU), including its Regulation 2/2026, adds a compliance layer that general counsel cannot ignore.

This guide delivers the step‑by‑step enforcement playbook, timeline benchmarks, cost estimates, and risk‑mitigation checklists that in‑house teams need right now.

Quick enforcement checklist

  1. Confirm whether the award qualifies as a “foreign” arbitral award under Law No. 30/1999.
  2. Verify that the award originates from a New York Convention signatory state.
  3. Obtain certified Indonesian‑language translations and consular legalisation of all award documents.
  4. Register the award with the Central Jakarta District Court (Pengadilan Negeri Jakarta Pusat) and request an exequatur.
  5. Notify the judgment debtor of the registration and court proceedings.
  6. Respond to any opposition or setting‑aside application.
  7. Apply for provisional measures or freezing orders where asset dissipation risk exists.
  8. Locate debtor assets, obtain the writ of execution, and enforce through garnishment, seizure, or sale.

Core legal framework, statutes, conventions and key 2026 signals to enforce arbitral awards in Indonesia

Indonesia’s enforcement architecture rests on a handful of interlocking instruments. Understanding each one, and the 2026 developments altering their practical application, is the prerequisite for every enforcement strategy.

Law No. 30 of 1999 remains the principal statute governing arbitration in Indonesia. It establishes the procedural pathway for recognising and enforcing both domestic and international arbitral awards, sets out the grounds on which Indonesian courts may refuse enforcement, and designates the Central Jakarta District Court as the sole first‑instance court competent to register foreign awards.

Indonesia ratified the New York Convention in 1981 by way of Presidential Decree No. 34 of 1981, subject to a reciprocity reservation and a commercial‑relationship reservation. In practice, this means that only awards rendered in another contracting state and arising from a dispute considered “commercial” under Indonesian law qualify for recognition.

In January 2025, the Constitutional Court issued a clarification that tightened the definition of what constitutes a “foreign arbitral award” for the purposes of Law No. 30/1999. The likely practical effect will be greater scrutiny at the registration stage, making accurate classification of the award a threshold compliance step.

Two further 2026 signals demand attention. First, the Mahkamah Agung (Supreme Court) has opened formal discussions on harmonising the procedural rules applicable to the execution of foreign legal instruments, early indications suggest this could streamline, but also potentially add procedural requirements to, the exequatur process. Second, KPPU Regulation 2/2026 introduces new enforcement‑related review powers that may be triggered where cross‑border award execution intersects with competition‑sensitive markets.

Date Instrument / Decision Practical effect for enforcement
1999 Law No. 30 of 1999 on Arbitration and ADR Statutory foundation: registration, recognition and annulment procedures for arbitral awards.
1981 New York Convention (1958), ratified via Presidential Decree No. 34/1981 Enables enforcement of foreign arbitral awards through exequatur at the Central Jakarta District Court.
January 2025 Constitutional Court clarification on “foreign arbitral award” Narrower definition, increases classification scrutiny at registration.
2026 (ongoing) Mahkamah Agung harmonisation discussions / KPPU Regulation 2/2026 Potential procedural changes to execution; new regulatory review for competition‑sensitive enforcement.

Practitioner tip: Before filing, map every award against both the New York Convention reservations and the post‑2025 Constitutional Court definition. Misclassification is the single most common reason for procedural delay.

Step‑by‑step enforcement of arbitration awards in Indonesia, the practical playbook

The enforcement of arbitration awards in Indonesia follows a centralised, court‑driven pathway. Below is the detailed sequence that award creditors should follow.

Step 1, Confirm “foreign award” status

Determine whether the award was rendered outside Indonesia and within a New York Convention contracting state. Following the January 2025 Constitutional Court clarification, the test focuses on the seat of arbitration, not the nationality of the parties. Awards seated in non‑Convention states must be enforced, if at all, through a fresh Indonesian suit, a materially different and more burdensome route.

Practitioner tip: Retain a certified copy of the arbitral institution’s confirmation of seat. This document pre‑empts classification challenges.

Step 2, Translate and legalise documents

All documents submitted to the Central Jakarta District Court must be in Indonesian (Bahasa Indonesia). Arrange certified translations by a sworn translator (penerjemah tersumpah) registered with the relevant Indonesian court. The original award, the arbitration agreement, and any annexes must also be legalised through the Indonesian embassy or consulate in the country where the award was rendered.

Practitioner tip: Legalisation backlogs at certain consulates can add weeks. Start the process as soon as the award is issued.

Step 3, Prepare the supporting document bundle

The filing bundle typically comprises:

  • Original or certified copy of the arbitral award, with apostille or consular legalisation.
  • Original arbitration agreement (or the relevant clause within the contract).
  • Certified Indonesian translation of all the above.
  • Statement from the Indonesian diplomatic representative in the country of the seat confirming the award is final and binding.
  • Power of attorney in favour of the Indonesian advocate lodging the application.

Step 4, File the registration application at the Central Jakarta District Court

Under Law No. 30/1999, the Pengadilan Negeri Jakarta Pusat (Central Jakarta District Court) holds exclusive jurisdiction over the initial registration of foreign arbitral awards. The application is filed at the court registry and assigned to the Chief Justice of the court, who issues the exequatur, a formal order recognising and permitting enforcement. No adversarial hearing is required at this stage, although the court examines the documents on the papers.

Practitioner tip: Engage local counsel familiar with the Central Jakarta registry’s internal scheduling. Procedural delays often arise from incomplete bundles rather than substantive objections.

Step 5, Respond to any opposition

Once the debtor is notified, it may challenge enforcement. Common opposition tactics include arguing that the award falls outside the New York Convention’s scope, that the subject matter is not arbitrable under Indonesian law, or that enforcement would violate Indonesian public policy. Detailed rebuttal strategies are discussed in the refusal and setting‑aside section below.

Step 6, Obtain the writ of execution

After the exequatur becomes final and any challenge period expires, the creditor applies to the district court with jurisdiction over the debtor’s assets for a writ of execution (penetapan eksekusi). This is the document that empowers the court bailiff to seize, garnish, or sell identified assets.

Step 7, Locate assets and execute

Asset tracing in Indonesia relies heavily on local intelligence. Creditors should conduct due diligence on real property certificates (held at the local Land Office, or Badan Pertanahan Nasional), bank accounts, corporate shareholdings (via the Ministry of Law and Human Rights company registry), and moveable assets. Execution remedies are discussed further below.

Practitioner tip: Begin asset‑tracing work in parallel with the registration process, not after. Early identification of asset‑dissipation risk supports an application for provisional measures.

Enforcing foreign court judgments in Indonesia, route options and practical differences

Unlike foreign arbitral awards, the recognition of foreign judgments in Indonesia has no comprehensive statutory or treaty framework. Indonesia has not entered into broad bilateral or multilateral treaties on the mutual recognition and enforcement of court judgments. The practical effect is that a foreign court judgment cannot be directly registered and enforced through the exequatur route available for arbitral awards.

Practical route for foreign judgments

Award creditors holding a foreign court judgment typically must commence a fresh lawsuit before an Indonesian district court, using the foreign judgment as persuasive (but not binding) evidence. The Indonesian court will examine the merits de novo, albeit often giving considerable weight to a well‑reasoned foreign judgment. Reciprocity considerations, whether the foreign jurisdiction would enforce an Indonesian judgment, play a role in the court’s willingness to give effect to the foreign ruling.

When to seek a fresh Indonesian judgment versus recognition

If the dispute involves assets located exclusively in Indonesia and no arbitration clause exists, commencing proceedings locally from the outset can be more time‑ and cost‑efficient than litigating abroad and then relitigating in Indonesia. Where an international commercial agreement is still being negotiated, the strongest protective step is to include an arbitration clause governed by a recognised institutional framework, this ensures access to the far more efficient New York Convention enforcement pathway.

Enforcement route Legal basis Practical viability for multinationals
Foreign arbitral award (exequatur) Law No. 30/1999 + New York Convention High, established centralised procedure at Central Jakarta District Court; strongest route.
Foreign court judgment (fresh suit) No direct treaty; general civil procedure (HIR/RBg) Moderate, requires de novo proceedings; foreign judgment used as evidence only.
Local Indonesian judgment Indonesian Code of Civil Procedure (HIR/RBg) Direct execution via writ, no recognition step needed.

Practitioner tip: Where enforcement of a foreign judgment is the only option, gather admissibility evidence on reciprocity early. Courts respond well to certified examples of the foreign jurisdiction enforcing Indonesian decisions.

Common grounds for refusal or setting aside arbitration awards in Indonesia, and how to defend against them

Indonesian courts may refuse the enforcement of a foreign arbitral award on grounds that broadly mirror those set out in Article V of the New York Convention. Understanding these grounds is essential both for creditors seeking to anticipate opposition and for respondents considering a challenge.

  • Public policy (ketertiban umum). The award must not conflict with Indonesian public policy. This is the most commonly invoked, and most unpredictable, ground. Courts have historically interpreted public policy broadly, though recent practitioner commentary suggests a trend toward narrower application.
  • Non‑arbitrability. Certain subject matters (e.g., disputes involving criminal elements, family law, or administrative decisions) are considered non‑arbitrable under Indonesian law.
  • Invalidity of the arbitration agreement. If the underlying agreement to arbitrate is found to be void, inoperative, or incapable of being performed, the award may be refused.
  • Improper composition of the tribunal or procedural irregularity. The respondent may argue it was not given proper notice of the arbitral proceedings, that the tribunal was constituted contrary to the parties’ agreement, or that the award addresses matters beyond the scope of the submission to arbitration.
  • Award not yet binding. Enforcement can be refused if the award has been set aside or suspended by a court in the seat of arbitration.
  • Fraud or corruption. Though rarely successful, allegations of fraud in the arbitral proceedings or corruption of the arbitrator can be raised.

Setting aside arbitration awards in Indonesia, timelines and defence strategies

A party seeking to set aside a domestic arbitral award must file an application within 30 days of registration under Law No. 30/1999. For foreign awards, challenges are primarily brought as defences to the exequatur application. Early indications from Mahkamah Agung harmonisation discussions in 2026 suggest that procedural deadlines for foreign award challenges may be formalised further.

Effective defence strategies for creditors include filing comprehensive evidence of procedural regularity at the outset, pre‑emptively addressing public‑policy arguments in the petition, and engaging local counsel with direct experience before the Central Jakarta bench. When public policy is raised, the strongest rebuttal typically demonstrates that the award’s subject matter is routinely enforced in comparable Indonesian commercial disputes.

Practitioner tip: Never assume a public‑policy challenge will fail on its own. Prepare a point‑by‑point rebuttal brief at the time of filing the exequatur application.

Provisional measures, freezing orders and urgent relief in Indonesia

Asset dissipation is a material risk in cross‑border enforcement. Indonesian law offers several avenues for interim relief, though each has practical limitations that creditors must weigh carefully.

  • Conservatory seizure (sita jaminan). The creditor may apply to the district court for a pre‑judgment attachment of the debtor’s assets. The court may grant this ex parte where urgency is demonstrated, although Indonesian courts exercise this power cautiously.
  • Tribunal‑ordered interim measures. If the arbitration is still pending, the tribunal itself may issue interim orders. However, tribunal‑ordered measures have limited direct enforceability in Indonesia without a supporting court order.
  • Court injunctions. General civil procedure permits applications for injunctive relief, though these are uncommon in the enforcement context and courts often require significant evidence of irreparable harm.

Creditors pursuing enforcement should consider applying for a conservatory seizure simultaneously with, or immediately after, filing the exequatur application. The interplay between the exequatur process at the Central Jakarta District Court and asset seizure proceedings at the district court where assets are located requires careful coordination between counsel teams.

Practitioner tip: Draft the conservatory seizure application before filing the exequatur petition, so it is ready to lodge the moment the debtor learns of the enforcement action.

Execution of arbitral awards in Indonesia, locating assets and the creditor’s enforcement playbook

Once the writ of execution is in hand, the creditor’s focus shifts entirely to practical recovery. Execution of arbitral awards in Indonesia involves the court bailiff acting on the creditor’s instructions to seize identified assets.

Asset tracing toolkit

Indonesia does not maintain a single centralised asset registry. Creditors typically need to search across multiple databases: the Badan Pertanahan Nasional (National Land Agency) for real property; the Ministry of Law and Human Rights’ AHU Online system for company shareholdings and directorship records; bank account information (accessible only through court order or voluntary disclosure); and vehicle registration databases held by the police (SAMSAT system).

Available execution remedies

Remedy Typical timeline Best use case
Garnishment of bank accounts Weeks (once court order obtained) Debtor holds liquid assets in identifiable Indonesian bank accounts.
Seizure and public auction of real property Several months (valuation, auction process) Debtor’s principal assets are land or buildings with clear title.
Seizure of moveable assets / equipment Weeks to months Manufacturing or operational debtors with identifiable physical plant.
Share seizure and forced transfer Months (requires company registry coordination) Debtor holds valuable equity stakes in Indonesian companies.

Where the debtor is a local subsidiary of a multinational group, creditors should assess whether the subsidiary holds sufficient assets independently. Piercing the corporate veil is exceptionally difficult under Indonesian law, so enforcement should target the entity named in the award. If assets have been transferred to related entities, fraudulent conveyance (actio pauliana) claims may be available as a supplementary remedy.

Practitioner tip: Conduct a thorough intellectual property audit as well, registered IP rights (trademarks, patents) are enforceable assets that are frequently overlooked.

Regulatory and competition risks, KPPU Regulation 2/2026 enforcement and compliance checklist

KPPU Regulation 2/2026 has introduced enhanced review mechanisms for transactions and enforcement actions that may affect competitive market dynamics. While primarily aimed at merger control and abuse‑of‑dominance conduct, the regulation’s broad language means that certain award enforcement scenarios, particularly those involving the forced transfer of business assets, shares, or exclusive commercial rights, could trigger KPPU scrutiny.

Industry observers expect the KPPU to take an increasingly proactive stance in monitoring cross‑border enforcement that results in structural market changes, especially in sectors such as telecoms, mining, and financial services.

Compliance checklist for in‑house counsel

  • Pre‑filing screen: Assess whether the execution remedy sought (asset transfer, share seizure) could cross KPPU notification thresholds.
  • Sector sensitivity review: Identify whether the debtor operates in a sector subject to heightened KPPU oversight.
  • Timeline coordination: Factor potential KPPU review periods into the enforcement timeline, failure to notify where required can result in fines and unwinding of the transaction.
  • Documentary trail: Maintain records demonstrating that the enforcement is a court‑ordered execution of a valid award, not a voluntary commercial acquisition.
  • Local counsel integration: Ensure competition counsel is briefed in parallel with enforcement counsel from the outset.

Practitioner tip: The distinction between court‑ordered execution and voluntary acquisition is the creditor’s strongest argument against KPPU intervention. Document it meticulously.

Practical timeline and cost guide to enforce arbitral awards in Indonesia in 2026

Timelines and costs vary considerably depending on whether enforcement is contested. The table below provides benchmark ranges drawn from practitioner experience.

Step Best‑case timeline Contested timeline Estimated legal costs (USD)
Document preparation (translation, legalisation) 2–4 weeks 4–8 weeks $3,000–$8,000
Exequatur registration at Central Jakarta DC 1–3 months 6–12 months $10,000–$25,000
Opposition / setting‑aside proceedings N/A 6–18 months $15,000–$50,000
Writ of execution application 2–4 weeks 1–3 months $5,000–$10,000
Asset seizure / auction / garnishment 1–3 months 3–12 months $5,000–$20,000 (plus court fees)
Total (registration through recovery) 4–8 months 18–36+ months $38,000–$113,000+

Budgeting guidance: contested enforcement regularly exceeds initial estimates. Build a 30 % contingency buffer and authorise local counsel retainers early to avoid interruptions.

Sample filings and drafting pointers for enforcement in Indonesia

The following excerpts illustrate the type of language and structure used in key enforcement documents. They are provided as indicative guidance, all filings must be adapted by qualified Indonesian counsel.

Sample petition paragraph, exequatur registration

“The Applicant respectfully requests that this Honourable Court register and grant an exequatur for the arbitral award dated [date], rendered by [tribunal/institution] in [city, country], a state party to the 1958 New York Convention. The award is final and binding, arises from a commercial dispute within the meaning of Law No. 30 of 1999, and does not contravene Indonesian public policy.”

Sample emergency motion, conservatory seizure

“The Applicant submits that there is a demonstrable and urgent risk that the Respondent will dissipate, transfer, or encumber the assets identified in Annex A before the exequatur proceedings conclude. The Applicant therefore respectfully requests that this Court issue an order for conservatory seizure (sita jaminan) over the specified assets, pursuant to Articles 227 and 261 HIR.”

Model dispute‑resolution clause for Indonesia‑facing contracts

“Any dispute arising out of or in connection with this Agreement shall be finally resolved by arbitration administered by [recognised institution, e.g., SIAC, ICC, BANI] under its rules in force at the date of commencement of the arbitration. The seat of arbitration shall be [Singapore / Hong Kong / other New York Convention state]. The language of the arbitration shall be English. The award shall be final and binding and may be enforced in any court of competent jurisdiction, including the Central Jakarta District Court pursuant to Law No. 30 of 1999 and the 1958 New York Convention.”

Practitioner tip: Specifying both the New York Convention and Law No. 30/1999 in the clause itself reduces the scope for jurisdictional challenges at the enforcement stage. For a deeper analysis of drafting enforcement‑proof dispute resolution clauses for Indonesia, a dedicated companion guide is forthcoming.

Case studies and common pitfalls, anonymised examples

Case A, Successful exequatur and recovery (construction sector)

A European contractor obtained a USD 12 million ICC award against an Indonesian joint‑venture partner following a construction dispute. The contractor filed for exequatur at the Central Jakarta District Court with a complete document bundle, including a pre‑emptive public‑policy memorandum. The debtor opposed on public‑policy grounds, arguing the award improperly allocated project risk. The court rejected the challenge within eight months, finding that the award concerned purely commercial risk allocation. Asset tracing identified real property and bank deposits; full recovery was achieved through garnishment and a judicial auction within fourteen months of the initial filing.

Key lesson: The pre‑emptive public‑policy rebuttal saved months of procedural uncertainty. Complete documentation at filing is non‑negotiable.

Case B, Failed enforcement (technical defects and public policy)

An Asian financial institution attempted to enforce a foreign ad hoc arbitral award against an Indonesian borrower. The award was rendered in a jurisdiction that had ratified the New York Convention, but the institution submitted only a photocopied arbitration agreement without consular legalisation. The debtor challenged on the basis that the arbitration agreement’s authenticity was unverified and that the award related to a financing structure that arguably contravened Indonesian banking regulations (public policy). The Central Jakarta District Court refused the exequatur. By the time the defects were remedied and a fresh application filed, the debtor had divested its Indonesian assets.

Key lesson: Document legalisation failures are fatal. Provisional seizure applications should be filed at the earliest possible moment to prevent asset dissipation.

Conclusion, recommended next steps for in‑house teams seeking to enforce arbitral awards in Indonesia in 2026

The enforcement landscape in Indonesia is evolving. The combination of the 2025 Constitutional Court clarification, the Mahkamah Agung harmonisation 2026 discussions, and KPPU Regulation 2/2026 enforcement activity means that playbooks written even two years ago may already be outdated. In‑house teams should take four immediate steps:

  1. Audit existing dispute‑resolution clauses in all Indonesia‑facing contracts to ensure they specify a New York Convention seat and a recognised arbitral institution.
  2. Classify pending awards against the post‑2025 Constitutional Court definition before filing for exequatur.
  3. Screen enforcement strategies for KPPU risk, engage competition counsel alongside dispute resolution counsel from the outset.
  4. Engage Indonesia‑qualified enforcement counsel early to begin asset tracing and prepare provisional‑measure applications in parallel with exequatur filings. The Global Law Experts lawyer directory connects multinationals with experienced practitioners across Indonesia’s commercial disputes landscape.

For deeper context on how Indonesia compares to other enforcement‑friendly jurisdictions, see the 2025 guide to the top countries for international arbitration and dispute resolution. For practical guidance on preparing and conducting arbitration hearings, the companion guide provides a concise overview of best practices.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Narendra Airlangga Tarigan at NARA Law, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Indonesian Arbitration Law, Law No. 30 of 1999 (Official Text)
  2. New York Convention (UNCITRAL/UN)
  3. Mahkamah Agung (Supreme Court of Indonesia)
  4. KPPU (Indonesian Competition Commission), Regulation 2/2026
  5. AHP Client Alert, Constitutional Court Clarification (31 January 2025)

FAQs

How do you enforce a foreign arbitral award in Indonesia?
You must register the award with the Central Jakarta District Court and obtain an exequatur under Law No. 30 of 1999. The award must originate from a New York Convention signatory state, be translated into Indonesian, and be consularly legalised. Once the exequatur is granted, you apply for a writ of execution at the court where the debtor’s assets are located.
Yes. Courts may refuse enforcement if the award violates Indonesian public policy, concerns non‑arbitrable subject matter, is based on an invalid arbitration agreement, was rendered by an improperly constituted tribunal, or has been set aside at the seat. Breach of due process and fraud are additional grounds.
Uncontested enforcement can be completed in four to eight months. Contested proceedings, including opposition, appeals, and execution, commonly take eighteen to thirty‑six months or longer. Total legal costs typically range from approximately USD 38,000 to over USD 113,000 depending on complexity.
Industry observers expect two developments to have a practical impact: the Mahkamah Agung harmonisation discussions may alter procedural requirements for the exequatur process, while KPPU Regulation 2/2026 could trigger competition‑law review where enforcement involves significant asset transfers in sensitive sectors.
Indonesia ratified the 1958 New York Convention in 1981, with reciprocity and commercial reservations. The Convention provides the treaty basis for recognising and enforcing foreign arbitral awards through the exequatur procedure. Without it, a foreign award holder would have no direct enforcement route in Indonesia.
All foreign arbitral awards must be registered with the Pengadilan Negeri Jakarta Pusat, the Central Jakarta District Court. This court has exclusive first‑instance jurisdiction over exequatur applications under Law No. 30 of 1999, regardless of where the debtor or its assets are located in Indonesia.
You can enforce against the subsidiary only if it is the entity named in the award. Piercing the corporate veil is extremely difficult under Indonesian law. If assets have been transferred to a related entity, an actio pauliana (fraudulent conveyance) claim may help, but this requires a separate legal proceeding.
The primary mechanism is a conservatory seizure (sita jaminan), which can be sought from the district court where assets are located. Courts may grant this ex parte where urgency and asset‑dissipation risk are demonstrated. Tribunal‑ordered interim measures have limited direct enforceability in Indonesia without a supporting court order.

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Enforcing Foreign Arbitral Awards and Cross‑border Judgments in Indonesia, 2026 Practical Guide

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