[codicts-css-switcher id=”346″]

Global Law Experts Logo

Insolvency Lawyers Indonesia 2026: MK Decision 74/PUU‑XXIV, PKPU & Bank Takeover Rules

By Global Law Experts
– posted 3 hours ago

Two landmark regulatory developments in 2026 have fundamentally altered the compliance landscape for insolvency lawyers in Indonesia and the creditors, debtors, and financial institutions they advise. Constitutional Court Decision No. 74/PUU‑XXIV/2026 (MK Decision 74) has imposed explicit transparency and notification duties on kurator (receivers), while Peraturan Pemerintah No. 11/2026 (PP 11/2026) has codified the mechanics by which the Indonesia Deposit Insurance Corporation (LPS) may execute a forced takeover of a failing bank under the Program Restrukturisasi Perbankan (PRP). Together, these instruments reshape creditor notification requirements, PKPU negotiation strategy, and bank resolution practice across the archipelago.

This guide is written for general counsel, CFOs, restructuring advisors, secured and unsecured creditors, kurator, and bank legal teams who need a single, actionable reference for compliance in 2026.

Whether you hold distressed debt in an Indonesian corporate borrower or serve as counterparty to a bank now subject to LPS oversight, immediate action is required. The checklist below summarises priority steps within the first 30, 90, and 180 days following these changes:

  • Within 30 days: Audit all pending kurator reports for compliance with MK Decision 74 notification duties; update registered service addresses with courts and kurator.
  • Within 90 days: Reassess PKPU filing strategy and evidence packages in light of enhanced disclosure obligations; review bank counterparty contracts for LPS takeover trigger clauses.
  • Within 180 days: Implement internal protocols for monitoring LPS/OJK implementation guidance; complete cross-border recognition filings where foreign proceedings are pending.

Background: Indonesia’s Insolvency Framework and the 2026 Legal Timeline

Key statutes governing bankruptcy law Indonesia 2026

Indonesia’s insolvency regime is anchored in Law No. 37 of 2004 on Bankruptcy and Suspension of Obligation for Payment of Debts (Undang-Undang Kepailitan dan PKPU). This statute establishes two primary judicial pathways: a bankruptcy petition (permohonan pailit) filed in the Commercial Court, and PKPU, a court-supervised suspension of payments designed to facilitate a composition plan between the debtor and its creditors. The law assigns the kurator the role of administering bankrupt estates under the supervision of a hakim pengawas (supervising judge), while creditors exercise voting rights in verification meetings.

For the banking sector, the regulatory architecture adds layers of complexity. The Otoritas Jasa Keuangan (OJK) supervises financial institutions and determines whether a distressed bank qualifies for the PRP. LPS, established under Law No. 24 of 2004 (as amended), acts as the deposit insurer and, under certain conditions, as the resolution authority. PP 11/2026 now provides the implementing regulation that governs the forced-takeover mechanics when a bank enters PRP, a critical gap that practitioners had identified for years.

Timeline of 2024–2026 developments

Date / Period Instrument Practical Effect
2004 (as amended) Law No. 37/2004, Bankruptcy & PKPU Core statutory framework for corporate insolvency proceedings, kurator duties, and creditor voting.
2023–2025 Various OJK regulations on bank supervision Strengthened OJK powers to designate PRP candidates; gaps remained on LPS takeover mechanics.
2026 MK Decision No. 74/PUU‑XXIV/2026 Kurator must provide copies (tembusan) of asset reports to creditors and debtors, not only to the supervising judge. Transparency obligations reinforced.
2026 Peraturan Pemerintah No. 11/2026 Codifies LPS forced-takeover authority over failing banks under PRP; sets out OJK-to-LPS handover procedures and LPS operational powers during resolution.

MK Decision No. 74/PUU‑XXIV/2026, Key Holdings and Immediate Compliance Effects

Summary of the ruling

Constitutional Court Decision No. 74/PUU‑XXIV/2026 addresses a longstanding procedural grievance: under prior practice, kurator were only required to submit asset and progress reports to the supervising judge, leaving creditors and the debtor itself without direct access to critical estate information. MK Decision 74 holds that the relevant provisions of Law No. 37/2004 must be interpreted to require kurator to provide copies (tembusan) of bankruptcy estate reports to both creditors and the bankrupt debtor. The Court’s reasoning centres on constitutional principles of due process and the right to information, concluding that restricting report circulation to the supervising judge alone undermines creditors’ ability to protect their claims and the debtor’s ability to challenge estate administration.

The operative paragraphs of the decision, published on the official Mahkamah Konstitusi website, establish that this notification duty applies immediately to all pending and future bankruptcy proceedings. Industry observers expect the practical effect to be a significant increase in creditor oversight and a corresponding rise in challenges to kurator conduct.

Notification and kurator reporting obligations

The MK Decision 74 notification requirements represent the most significant change to creditor notification requirements in Indonesian insolvency practice in over two decades. Specifically, the decision imposes three core obligations on kurator:

  • Copies of asset reports (tembusan laporan harta pailit). Every periodic report on the composition and status of the bankruptcy estate must be served on all registered creditors and the debtor, not merely filed with the supervising judge.
  • Progress reports on estate administration. Quarterly (triwulan) progress reports detailing liquidation activities, asset recoveries, and distributions must likewise be circulated.
  • Service documentation. Kurator must maintain proof of service, registered post receipts, courier delivery confirmations, or email delivery logs, to demonstrate compliance.

The MKRI press release accompanying the decision emphasises that these obligations aim to “strengthen the position of creditors and the bankrupt debtor in overseeing estate administration.” Early indications suggest that supervising judges at the Commercial Courts in Jakarta and Surabaya have begun requiring kurator to file proof of service alongside their regular reports.

Practical steps for kurator, creditors, and counsel

For insolvency lawyers in Indonesia advising kurator, the immediate compliance task is to establish a documented notification protocol. The following checklist provides a starting framework (practitioners should adapt it to case-specific circumstances with local counsel review):

  • Step 1: Compile a verified list of all registered creditor addresses (physical and email) and the debtor’s last known address. Update this list at each creditors’ meeting.
  • Step 2: Within 7–14 days of finalising any asset or progress report, serve copies by registered post and email to every address on the list.
  • Step 3: Retain certified mail receipts, courier tracking numbers, and email delivery logs as proof of service.
  • Step 4: File proof of service with the supervising judge contemporaneously with the report submission.
  • Step 5: Where a creditor’s address is outside Indonesia, consider using internationally trackable courier services and preserving tracking documentation.

Example notice language (for adaptation by local counsel): “Pursuant to MK Decision No. 74/PUU‑XXIV/2026, please find enclosed a copy (tembusan) of the Kurator’s [Quarterly/Asset] Report dated [date], filed with the Supervising Judge of [Commercial Court]. This report is provided for your records and review.”

PKPU 2026: Tactical Implications and Creditor Playbook

When to file PKPU versus a bankruptcy petition

The 2026 changes have materially shifted the cost-benefit analysis for creditors weighing PKPU against a direct bankruptcy petition. Under PKPU 2026 practice, the enhanced transparency obligations from MK Decision 74 mean that creditors who participate in a PKPU proceeding now have stronger rights to demand and receive information from the debtor and any appointed administrator. This makes PKPU a more attractive forum for creditors who previously avoided it due to information asymmetry concerns.

Conversely, for debtors, the increased disclosure burden during PKPU may reduce the strategic advantage that opacity previously offered. Industry observers expect more debtors to seek pre-filing negotiated settlements to avoid the enhanced scrutiny, potentially accelerating the trend toward out-of-court restructuring options in Indonesia.

The decision framework for creditors now involves assessing:

  • Disclosure leverage: Will PKPU’s enhanced transparency yield information that supports a better recovery than a direct bankruptcy liquidation?
  • Voting dynamics: Can the creditor coalition secure sufficient votes (more than half of recognised creditors representing at least two-thirds of claims) to approve or reject a composition plan?
  • Timeline constraints: PKPU’s statutory timeline, temporary suspension of up to 45 days, extendable to a maximum of 270 days, imposes urgency on evidence gathering.

Evidence and notice checklist for PKPU filings

Creditors filing or responding to a PKPU petition should prepare the following documentation, particularly given the heightened notification standards under bankruptcy law Indonesia 2026:

  • Proof of claim: Loan agreements, invoices, guarantees, or other instruments evidencing the debt, together with a claim calculation and interest computation.
  • Proof of service: Evidence that the debtor received the creditor’s demand or notice, certified mail receipts, courier records, or notarised delivery confirmations.
  • Financial evidence: The debtor’s most recent audited financial statements, management accounts, and any available asset valuations.
  • Address verification: Confirmed service addresses for the debtor, its directors, and any guarantors, essential for ensuring MK Decision 74 notification compliance.
  • Voting authority: Board resolution or power of attorney authorising the creditor’s representative to vote at creditors’ meetings.

How MK Decision 74 affects disclosure during PKPU

While MK Decision 74 directly addresses kurator reporting in bankruptcy proceedings, the likely practical effect extends to PKPU. Where a PKPU administrator (pengurus) is appointed, creditors can now argue, by analogy with the Constitutional Court’s reasoning, that the same transparency principles apply. This means creditors should formally request copies of all financial reports, asset inventories, and restructuring proposals prepared during the PKPU period.

A typical PKPU timeline post-2026, incorporating these enhanced disclosure points, proceeds as follows:

Stage Timeline Key Actions (Post-MK Decision)
Filing Day 0 Creditor or debtor files PKPU petition with Commercial Court; serve all parties with notice and supporting evidence.
Temporary PKPU Day 1–45 Court grants temporary suspension; administrator appointed; creditors register claims and demand disclosure of financial reports.
Creditors’ meeting (verification) Within 45 days Claims verified; creditors exercise right to receive copies of all administrator reports under MK Decision 74 principles.
Permanent PKPU (if extended) Day 46–270 Composition plan negotiated; creditors monitor through regular reports; voting on plan.
Voting & confirmation Before Day 270 Creditors vote; if plan approved, court confirms (homologasi); if rejected, automatic bankruptcy declaration.

Peraturan Pemerintah No. 11/2026, Bank Takeover and LPS Powers

Summary of PP 11/2026

Peraturan Pemerintah No. 11/2026 provides the long-awaited implementing regulation for the forced takeover of failing banks by LPS under the Program Restrukturisasi Perbankan. As analysed by Veritask, PP 11/2026 governs how LPS assumes control of a bank that OJK has determined to be a failing institution eligible for the PRP. The regulation addresses LPS’ authority over the bank’s assets, liabilities, and ongoing operations during the resolution period, filling a critical regulatory gap that had created uncertainty for bank resolution in Indonesia for more than a decade.

The regulation is also summarised by DDTC Perpajakan, which confirms that PP 11/2026 establishes the procedural framework for LPS’ exercise of takeover powers, including the handover process from OJK and the scope of LPS’ operational authority during PRP.

Interaction between OJK and LPS: the handover mechanics

The practical operation of bank resolution Indonesia under PP 11/2026 involves a defined sequence of regulatory handovers:

  • OJK assessment: OJK determines that a bank meets the criteria for a failing institution and qualifies as a PRP candidate.
  • Formal handover: OJK transfers supervisory authority to LPS, which assumes operational control of the bank.
  • LPS operational powers: LPS exercises authority over the bank’s management, assets, and liabilities. This includes the power to restructure operations, dispose of assets, and manage depositor claims.
  • Resolution or liquidation: LPS determines whether the bank can be restructured or must proceed to liquidation, with depositor and creditor claims treated according to LPS regulations and the statutory priority waterfall.

Practitioners should monitor the LPS JDIH portal and OJK publications for implementing directives that will provide additional procedural detail on notification timelines and claims submission processes.

What counterparties must do immediately

For depositors, secured creditors, and contractual counterparties of banks that may enter PRP, the following action items apply:

Action Who Is Affected Deadline or Consequence
Preserve all contracts, security documents, and correspondence with the bank All counterparties (depositors, creditors, swap counterparties, service providers) Immediately upon announcement of PRP candidacy; failure to preserve may prejudice claims.
Suspend unilateral set-offs or netting without LPS/OJK confirmation Secured and unsecured creditors, derivatives counterparties Effective from handover date; unilateral action risks being challenged or reversed by LPS.
Register claims with LPS when claims submission process is announced All creditors, including depositors above insured limits Per LPS-announced deadlines; late claims may be subordinated or excluded.
Obtain local counsel advice on collateral enforcement rights during PRP Secured creditors holding real property, fiduciary security, or pledge over bank assets Before any enforcement action; LPS takeover may impose a moratorium on enforcement.
Monitor LPS JDIH and OJK publications for implementation guidance All affected parties and their advisors Ongoing; implementation directives expected to provide claims deadlines and procedural detail.

Reporting and Disclosure Obligations, Comparison Table by Entity Type

The 2026 changes create differentiated reporting obligations depending on the entity’s role in the insolvency or resolution process. The following table consolidates the key requirements for insolvency lawyers in Indonesia advising different stakeholders:

Entity Mandatory Reporting / Notice Obligations (Post-MK Decision & PP 11/2026) Practical Timeframe / Notes
Kurator / Receiver Must provide copies (tembusan) of asset reports to creditors and debtor (MK Decision No. 74); file reports with supervising judge; quarterly (triwulan) reporting requirement reinforced. Serve by registered post/email to creditor addresses on file within 7–14 days of report finalisation; retain proof of service.
Corporate debtor (during PKPU) Enhanced duty to cooperate in disclosure; respond to creditor information requests; produce financial evidence for restructuring proposals. Prepare data room and evidence within 14 days of PKPU filing; ongoing cooperation throughout PKPU period.
Bank subject to LPS takeover (PP 11/2026) LPS receives handover from OJK; counterparties must be notified per LPS/OJK mechanics; depositors and secured creditors have treatment determined by PRP/LPS rules. Notification by OJK/LPS on handover date; counterparties should freeze disputed settlements until LPS guidance issued.
OJK / LPS OJK determines PRP candidate and executes handover to LPS; LPS exercises takeover and restructuring powers; must publish guidance on takeover mechanics and claims processes. LPS/OJK to publish implementation guidance following PP 11/2026; practitioners should check LPS JDIH regularly.

Cross-Border Recognition and Coordination

Recognition framework for foreign insolvency recognition Indonesia

Indonesia has not adopted the UNCITRAL Model Law on Cross-Border Insolvency, and there is no dedicated statutory mechanism for automatic recognition of foreign insolvency proceedings. However, Indonesian courts have, in practice, considered foreign insolvency orders on a case-by-case basis, typically through general principles of international comity and bilateral judicial cooperation arrangements. The 2026 developments, MK Decision 74 and PP 11/2026, do not directly alter the cross-border recognition framework, but they do strengthen the procedural infrastructure that foreign trustees and creditors must navigate when seeking to enforce claims in Indonesia.

For restructuring options Indonesia involving multinational debtors, the absence of a formal recognition statute means that foreign-appointed administrators or trustees cannot automatically exercise powers over Indonesian assets. Local recognition through Indonesian commercial or district courts remains necessary, and the process requires careful coordination with Indonesian counsel.

Practical steps for foreign trustees and creditors

  • Engage local counsel early. Foreign trustees should retain insolvency lawyers in Indonesia before initiating any recognition or enforcement proceedings to ensure procedural compliance.
  • File local claims in parallel. Where the debtor holds assets in Indonesia, file claims directly in the Indonesian proceeding (whether bankruptcy or PKPU) to preserve priority and voting rights.
  • Provide authenticated foreign court orders. Any foreign insolvency order must be apostilled or legalised and translated into Bahasa Indonesia by a sworn translator.
  • Monitor MK Decision 74 notification rights. Foreign creditors who have registered claims in Indonesian proceedings should ensure their international addresses are on file with the kurator to receive report copies under the new transparency obligations.

Risk Matrix and Practical Checklist for Creditors

The following 30/90/180-day action plan consolidates the compliance steps arising from MK Decision 74/PUU‑XXIV and PP 11/2026 into a structured priority framework for creditors and their insolvency lawyers in Indonesia:

30-day priorities (immediate)

  • Verify that your registered address (physical and email) is current with the kurator and the Commercial Court registry.
  • Request copies of all outstanding kurator reports under MK Decision 74 if you have not already received them.
  • For bank counterparties: identify all contracts, security interests, and exposures to banks that may be PRP candidates; preserve documentation.
  • Suspend any planned unilateral set-off or netting against a bank under OJK/LPS review pending confirmation of PRP status.
  • Retain or engage local Indonesian insolvency counsel if not already instructed.

90-day priorities (medium-term)

  • Reassess PKPU filing strategy: evaluate whether enhanced disclosure under MK Decision 74 favours PKPU over direct bankruptcy petitioning for your specific claim.
  • Prepare a complete evidence package (proof of claim, proof of service, financial evidence, address verification, voting authority) for current or anticipated PKPU proceedings.
  • Conduct a cross-border asset search if the debtor has multinational operations; coordinate with local counsel in each jurisdiction.
  • Review and update internal protocols for handling kurator report notifications and responding within prescribed timelines.

180-day priorities (strategic)

  • Monitor the LPS JDIH portal and OJK publications for implementation guidance under PP 11/2026; adjust bank counterparty risk assessments accordingly.
  • Evaluate fraudulent conveyance or avoidance action opportunities using information obtained through enhanced kurator reporting.
  • For foreign creditors: complete any pending cross-border recognition filings in Indonesian courts; ensure foreign court orders are apostilled and translated.
  • Establish regular review cadence (quarterly) to align internal compliance with evolving court practice and regulatory guidance.

Sample claim submission checklist

Document Purpose Status (✓ / Pending)
Executed loan agreement / contract Evidence of underlying obligation
Claim calculation with interest Quantification of creditor’s claim
Proof of service / demand letter Evidence debtor received creditor’s demand
Debtor’s financial statements Evidence of debtor’s financial condition
Security documents (if secured creditor) Evidence of priority / collateral
Board resolution / power of attorney Authority to represent creditor at meetings
Address verification form Ensure MK Decision 74 notification compliance
Apostilled foreign court order (if cross-border) Support recognition filing in Indonesia

How Insolvency Lawyers in Indonesia Can Help, Services and Retainer Checklist

When selecting local counsel for Indonesian insolvency matters in 2026, the following service capabilities and due diligence questions should guide your evaluation:

  • PKPU and bankruptcy petition experience: Has the firm successfully represented creditors or debtors in Commercial Court PKPU and bankruptcy proceedings? Can they demonstrate familiarity with MK Decision 74 compliance protocols?
  • Bank resolution advisory: Does the firm have experience advising bank counterparties during LPS/OJK-supervised resolution processes? Are they monitoring PP 11/2026 implementation guidance?
  • Cross-border coordination: Can the firm coordinate with foreign trustees and counsel on recognition filings, parallel proceedings, and international asset tracing?
  • Fraudulent conveyance and avoidance actions: Does the firm have litigation capability to pursue or defend against avoidance claims using enhanced disclosure from kurator reports?
  • Regulatory monitoring: Does the firm maintain a watching brief on LPS JDIH, OJK publications, and Supreme Court circulars for insolvency practice updates?

To connect with experienced Indonesia insolvency lawyers or browse the broader insolvency practice directory, visit the Global Law Experts platform.

Conclusion

The convergence of MK Decision No. 74/PUU‑XXIV/2026 and Peraturan Pemerintah No. 11/2026 marks the most consequential shift in Indonesian insolvency practice in two decades. Three immediate actions stand out for every stakeholder: first, verify and update your notification infrastructure, every creditor, debtor, and bank counterparty must ensure that service addresses are current and that kurator reports are being received under the new transparency regime. Second, reassess your PKPU and bankruptcy filing strategy in light of enhanced disclosure obligations, which materially change the tactical calculus for both creditors and debtors. Third, for bank counterparties, implement a watching brief on LPS and OJK implementation guidance and suspend unilateral enforcement actions until the regulatory picture under PP 11/2026 stabilises.

The role of experienced insolvency lawyers in Indonesia has never been more critical. Whether you are navigating a PKPU composition, defending a bankruptcy petition

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Martin Patrick Nagel at FKNK Law Firm, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

FAQs

What does MK Decision No. 74/PUU‑XXIV/2026 change about creditor notifications in bankruptcy and PKPU?
MK Decision No. 74 requires kurator (receivers) to provide copies (tembusan) of asset and progress reports directly to all registered creditors and the bankrupt debtor, not only to the supervising judge. This enhances transparency and gives creditors direct access to estate information for the first time as a constitutional obligation.
PP No. 11/2026 establishes the procedural mechanics by which LPS (Indonesia Deposit Insurance Corporation) may execute a forced takeover of a failing bank under the Program Restrukturisasi Perbankan. It governs the handover process from OJK to LPS and defines LPS’ authority over the bank’s assets, management, and operations during resolution.
Creditors should demand documented notifications and copies of all administrator reports, verify kurator compliance with MK Decision 74, ensure their service addresses are current, prepare evidence packages early (within 14 days of PKPU filing), and consider whether PKPU’s enhanced transparency now makes it preferable to a direct bankruptcy petition.
Indonesia has not adopted the UNCITRAL Model Law, and there is no automatic recognition mechanism for foreign insolvency proceedings. Foreign trustees must seek case-by-case recognition through Indonesian courts, coordinate with local counsel, and file authenticated and translated foreign court orders. The 2026 changes do not alter this framework but strengthen the procedural infrastructure foreign creditors must navigate.
Counterparties should preserve all contracts and security documents, suspend unilateral set-offs or netting without LPS/OJK confirmation, register claims with LPS when the claims submission process is announced, obtain local counsel advice on collateral enforcement rights, and monitor LPS JDIH and OJK publications for implementation guidance.
MK Decision 74 strengthens the constitutional basis for kurator transparency duties. Failure to provide required report copies can be raised with the supervising judge, who has authority to direct compliance, impose sanctions on the kurator, or entertain challenges to the kurator’s conduct. Creditors should document any non-compliance through formal written requests and retain proof of non-receipt.
Creditors should maintain certified mail receipts, courier tracking records, email delivery and read-receipt logs, and contemporaneous affidavits documenting non-receipt. Where service addresses are outside Indonesia, use internationally trackable courier services and preserve all tracking documentation. This evidence is essential for challenging kurator non-compliance before the supervising judge.

Find the right Legal Expert for your business

The premier guide to leading legal professionals throughout the world

Specialism
Country
Practice Area
LAWYERS RECOGNIZED
0
EVALUATIONS OF LAWYERS BY THEIR PEERS
0 m+
PRACTICE AREAS
0
COUNTRIES AROUND THE WORLD
0
Join
who are already getting the benefits
0

Sign up for the latest legal briefings and news within Global Law Experts’ community, as well as a whole host of features, editorial and conference updates direct to your email inbox.

Naturally you can unsubscribe at any time.

Newsletter Sign Up
About Us

Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.

Global Law Experts App

Now Available on the App & Google Play Stores.

Social Posts
[wp_social_ninja id="50714" platform="instagram"]
[codicts-social-feeds platform="instagram" url="https://www.instagram.com/globallawexperts/" template="carousel" results_limit="10" header="false" column_count="1"]

See More:

Contact Us

Stay Informed

Join Mailing List
About Us

Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.

Social Posts
[wp_social_ninja id="50714" platform="instagram"]
[codicts-social-feeds platform="instagram" url="https://www.instagram.com/globallawexperts/" template="carousel" results_limit="10" header="false" column_count="1"]

See More:

Global Law Experts App

Now Available on the App & Google Play Stores.

Contact Us

Stay Informed

Join Mailing List

GLE

Lawyer Profile Page - Lead Capture
GLE-Logo-White
Lawyer Profile Page - Lead Capture

Insolvency Lawyers Indonesia 2026: MK Decision 74/PUU‑XXIV, PKPU & Bank Takeover Rules

Send welcome message

Custom Message