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Malaysia’s arbitration landscape changed fundamentally on 1 January 2026, when the Arbitration (Amendment) Act 2024 (Act A1737) came into force alongside the newly published AIAC Arbitration Rules 2026. For the first time, arbitration lawyers in Malaysia are operating within a statutory framework that expressly recognises third‑party funding, imposes mandatory disclosure obligations, and expands tribunal powers, while the AIAC’s updated rules introduce an emergency arbitrator mechanism, recalibrated expedited‑procedure thresholds, and strengthened case‑management tools. Whether you are a general counsel evaluating funding options, a commercial party selecting a seat, or a funder structuring an investment in Malaysian disputes, these reforms demand immediate changes to how you manage case intake, draft arbitration clauses, handle disclosure and plan enforcement strategy.
The Arbitration (Amendment) Act 2024 (Act A1737) received Royal Assent in 2024 and was gazetted with a commencement date of 1 January 2026, as confirmed by the Legal Affairs Division of the Prime Minister’s Department (BHEUU). It represents the most substantial overhaul of the Arbitration Act 2005 since its enactment, introducing new provisions on third‑party funding, the law applicable to the arbitration agreement, and refinements to the recognition and enforcement regime for both domestic and international arbitration awards.
In parallel, the Asian International Arbitration Centre (AIAC) launched the AIAC Suite of Rules 2026, which took effect on the same date. These institutional rules build on the 2021 edition and introduce, among other innovations, a formal emergency arbitrator procedure, recalibrated monetary thresholds for the expedited procedure, an AIAC Court mechanism for administrative decisions, and expanded tribunal powers in respect of disclosure and case management.
Two key dates anchor the reform timeline:
Third‑party funding in Malaysia is now expressly permitted for arbitration proceedings seated in the country. Act A1737 inserts a new Chapter 2 into Part III of the Arbitration Act 2005, providing the first statutory basis for funders, funded parties and their counsel to operate within a regulated structure. The Malaysian Bar has publicly supported the reform, while calling for stakeholder vigilance in implementation.
The Code of Practice for Third Party Funding 2026, issued alongside the Amendment Act, sets out mandatory requirements for the content and conduct of funding arrangements. Funders must maintain adequate capital to meet their funding obligations, must not seek to influence the funded party’s counsel in the conduct of the proceedings, and must comply with confidentiality obligations regarding privileged material. The Code also requires that the funding agreement specify the funder’s maximum financial commitment, the circumstances triggering termination, and the agreed method for calculating the funder’s return.
The disclosure obligations under Act A1737 are among the most practically significant provisions for arbitration lawyers in Malaysia. A funded party must disclose the existence of a third‑party funding agreement, together with the name of the funder, at the commencement of arbitration. Where the funding agreement is entered into after proceedings have already commenced, disclosure must be made within 15 days of the agreement being executed. Disclosure is made to the tribunal and to every other party to the arbitration.
| Discloser | What to Disclose | When |
|---|---|---|
| Funded party | Existence of the third‑party funding agreement; name of the funder | On commencement of arbitration, OR within 15 days after agreement is executed (if post‑commencement) |
| Funder (per Code) | Identity and relevant contact information | At the same time as the funded party; funder must also comply with Code of Practice terms |
| Counsel | Conflicts of interest; source of instructions; any funder influence on strategy | As part of client due diligence and whenever material issues arise |
| Tribunal | Notices received that affect jurisdiction, privilege or conflicts | On receipt, during case management conferences, and as needed for award considerations |
The introduction of statutory third‑party funding Malaysia requirements creates new compliance burdens. Counsel must perform conflict checks that now extend to the funder and its affiliates, since a funder’s financial interest in the outcome could create a conflict with a tribunal member or opposing party’s counsel. In‑house teams must establish internal approval processes for engaging funders and ensure that communications between the funder and legal team are structured to preserve privilege. Industry observers expect that disputes over the scope of disclosure, particularly whether the terms of the funding agreement (beyond the funder’s name) must be produced, will be among the first contested issues under the new regime.
Every funding agreement entered into for Malaysian‑seated arbitrations should address at minimum the following:
The AIAC Arbitration Rules 2026 introduce the most significant procedural updates in the institution’s recent history, directly affecting how arbitration lawyers in Malaysia structure their case strategy. Three changes stand out: the emergency arbitrator procedure, revised expedited‑arbitration thresholds, and expanded tribunal powers.
For the first time, the AIAC Rules provide a dedicated emergency arbitrator mechanism. A party that requires urgent interim or conservatory relief before the tribunal is constituted may file an application with the AIAC Director. The AIAC will appoint an emergency arbitrator, typically within one business day. The emergency arbitrator may grant any interim measures they consider necessary, including orders for the preservation of assets, maintenance of the status quo, or protection of evidence.
Practical drafting tips for emergency arbitrator applications:
The AIAC Arbitration Rules 2026 recalibrate the monetary thresholds for the expedited procedure. International arbitrations with amounts in dispute not exceeding USD 3 million, and domestic arbitrations with amounts not exceeding RM 2 million, are automatically placed on the expedited track unless the parties agree otherwise or the AIAC Director determines that the case is unsuitable. On this track, the tribunal is expected to render its final award within six months of the tribunal’s constitution. This compressed timeline demands that counsel prepare submissions, documentary evidence, and witness statements in parallel with the early procedural stages.
The 2026 Rules strengthen the tribunal’s case‑management powers considerably. Tribunals may issue procedural directions on their own initiative, order the production of documents, require parties to identify and disclose third‑party funding arrangements, and impose costs sanctions for non‑compliance. These expanded powers align with global best practices and give Malaysian‑seated tribunals tools comparable to those available under the ICC, SIAC and HKIAC rules. For a broader look at how arbitration hearings are conducted under modern institutional rules, see our guide on the preparation for and conduct of arbitration hearings.
Counsel should assess each case on its facts. An emergency arbitrator application under the AIAC Rules is generally faster, more confidential, and more likely to be decided by a specialist. However, a Section 9 application to the Malaysian High Court may be preferable where the opposing party is unlikely to comply voluntarily and a court order, enforceable through contempt proceedings, is needed. Where cross‑border enforcement is critical, a court order may carry stronger persuasive weight in foreign jurisdictions that do not yet recognise emergency arbitrator orders.
The combined effect of Act A1737 and the AIAC Arbitration Rules 2026 creates a layered disclosure regime that arbitration lawyers in Malaysia must navigate carefully. The statutory disclosure obligations (funding identity and existence) operate alongside the tribunal’s broader power to order production of documents, including funding‑related communications.
From the outset of any funded arbitration, counsel should prepare a client memorandum that addresses three core questions. First, what must be disclosed, and to whom, under Act A1737? Second, what additional information might the tribunal order to be produced under its case‑management powers? Third, what categories of funder communications are protected by legal privilege, and which are not? This memo should be updated each time the funding arrangement changes, for example, if a new funder enters or the funding agreement is amended.
Privilege risks are the most frequently underestimated compliance issue in funded arbitrations. Communications between the funded party’s counsel and the funder are not automatically privileged. To reduce the risk of inadvertent disclosure, counsel should adopt a structured information‑sharing protocol. Provide the funder with periodic case summaries prepared specifically for that purpose, clearly marked as non‑privileged, rather than forwarding internal legal advice. Any legal advice shared with the funder should be provided under a common‑interest arrangement, documented in writing before the information is exchanged.
Opposing parties are likely to test the boundaries of disclosure obligations in the early cases under the new regime. Counsel should prepare template objections addressing three scenarios: requests for the full text of the funding agreement (beyond what the statute requires); requests for funder communications (raising privilege); and requests for the funder’s financial information (relevance objections). The tribunal’s discretion under the AIAC Rules 2026 is broad, so proactive compliance with the statutory minimum, combined with clear privilege logs, is the most effective defence. The principle of iura novit curia in international arbitration may also arise where tribunals consider the applicable disclosure standard of their own motion.
Sample Disclosure Timing Calendar
| Milestone | Disclosure Action | Deadline |
|---|---|---|
| Commencement of arbitration | Funded party discloses existence of funding agreement and funder name | Day 0 (with notice of arbitration or response) |
| Post‑commencement funding agreement signed | Same disclosure | Within 15 days of execution |
| First case management conference | Counsel confirms disclosure is up to date; tribunal issues further disclosure directions | As scheduled by tribunal |
| Change of funder or amendment to agreement | Updated disclosure to tribunal and all parties | Promptly upon change |
| Pre‑hearing stage | Confirm privilege log is current; respond to outstanding disclosure requests | As per procedural timetable |
Beyond the statutory minimum, the Code of Practice for Third Party Funding 2026 imposes ethical and conduct standards that directly affect how funding agreements are structured. Counsel advising funded parties must ensure that the agreement addresses both commercial terms and regulatory compliance, while funders must satisfy themselves that they can meet the Code’s capital‑adequacy and non‑interference requirements.
A compliant funding agreement should include, at minimum, the following provisions:
For arbitration lawyers in Malaysia, the enforcement provisions represent the culmination of the dispute resolution process, and the 2024 Amendment Act introduces refinements designed to streamline recognition and enforcement of both domestic and foreign arbitral awards. The amendments to the enforcement regime under Part IV of the Arbitration Act 2005 reinforce Malaysia’s pro‑enforcement stance and narrow the grounds on which recognition can be resisted.
Malaysia is a signatory to the 1958 New York Convention, and the amended Act preserves this framework while clarifying procedural steps. A party seeking to enforce a foreign arbitral award files an ex parte application in the High Court, supported by the original award (or certified copy), the arbitration agreement, and, where relevant, translations. The court will grant leave to enforce unless the respondent establishes one of the limited grounds for refusal, which mirror Article V of the New York Convention: incapacity of a party, invalid arbitration agreement, lack of due process, the award exceeding the scope of the submission, improper tribunal composition, or public policy.
The practical enforcement checklist for counsel includes the following steps:
| Key Date / Phase | Tribunal / Arbitration Step | Enforcement Window |
|---|---|---|
| 1 January 2026 | Act A1737 and AIAC Rules 2026 in force | New enforcement provisions apply to awards rendered after this date |
| Arbitration commencement | Disclosure obligations triggered; tribunal constituted | Begin asset tracing and preservation planning |
| Final award rendered | Tribunal issues award; AIAC administers deposit release | File ex parte enforcement application in High Court within limitation period |
| High Court leave granted | N/A | Serve enforcement order; respondent has prescribed period to apply to set aside |
| Enforcement completed | N/A | Execution against assets; garnishee, seizure or winding‑up proceedings as appropriate |
For additional context on how awards are recognised and enforced across jurisdictions, see Global Law Experts’ dedicated resource page.
The 2026 reforms affect different stakeholders in different ways. The playbooks below outline the priority actions for each role in the first 30, 90 and 180 days.
The 2026 reforms position Malaysia as one of the most modern and funder‑friendly arbitration seats in Asia. For arbitration lawyers in Malaysia, the immediate priority is threefold: first, embed the statutory disclosure obligations into every new retainer, engagement letter and funding agreement; second, master the procedural options under the AIAC Arbitration Rules 2026, particularly the emergency arbitrator and expedited track, to deliver faster outcomes for clients; and third, begin enforcement planning earlier in the dispute lifecycle to take full advantage of Malaysia’s pro‑enforcement judicial framework.
These changes are not optional adjustments. They are mandatory compliance requirements backed by tribunal powers and institutional oversight. Counsel, corporates, funders and arbitrators who adapt quickly will secure a significant practical advantage in the new Malaysian arbitration environment.
To connect with experienced arbitration counsel in Malaysia, visit the Global Law Experts Malaysia lawyer directory or contact us directly for a referral.
This article is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Readers should seek independent legal counsel before acting on any of the information contained herein. Last reviewed: 7 May 2026.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Lim Tuck Sun at Chooi & Co, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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