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How Construction Contracts and Arbitration Will Change in India in 2026, Practical Drafting, Dispute‑avoidance and Enforcement Steps

By Global Law Experts
– posted 3 hours ago

Construction arbitration in India is entering its most consequential year in a decade. The central government’s release of draft Rules for all four Labour Codes in early 2026 reshapes contractor liabilities, workforce obligations and the economics of every live and future construction project. At the same time, the arbitration landscape continues to mature, the Supreme Court’s party‑autonomy jurisprudence now firmly allows Indian parties to choose a foreign arbitral seat, while the Construction Industry Arbitration Council (CIAC) offers a sector‑specific institutional route that is gaining traction. This guide delivers the practical drafting templates, dispute‑avoidance checklists and step‑by‑step enforcement protocols that in‑house counsel, project owners, EPC contractors and construction law firms need to act on these changes now.

Executive Summary and Practical Takeaways

The regulatory shifts of 2025–2026 demand immediate action across five dimensions of every construction contract. Teams that delay risk embedding latent liabilities that surface as costly arbitration claims months or years down the line.

  • Re‑draft labour indemnities. The Labour Codes introduce unified obligations for works committees, wage reporting and contractor/subcontractor classification. Every construction contract executed from 2026 onward must contain a Labour Codes compliance indemnity clause that allocates risk between the principal employer and each tier of contractor.
  • Update arbitration clauses. Arbitration clause drafting must now account for the Section 29A timeline, institutional options (CIAC, SIAC or ICC) and the Supreme Court’s confirmation that two Indian parties can validly select a foreign seat. A poorly worded clause is the single most common source of pre‑hearing delay.
  • Build dispute avoidance into operations. Enhanced record‑keeping, daily jobsite logs, extension‑of‑time (EOT) protocols and payment cascade mechanics are low‑cost measures that dramatically reduce the probability, and quantum, of construction arbitration claims.
  • Prepare for enforcement. Whether a domestic or foreign‑seated award is anticipated, the contract must set the stage for efficient enforcement. Understand Part I versus Part II of the Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996, and plan award‑enforcement strategy from day one.

The sections that follow provide annotated clause templates, comparison tables and step‑by‑step procedural checklists for each of these actions.

What Changed in 2025–2026 and Why It Matters for Construction Projects

India’s four Labour Codes, the Code on Wages 2019, the Industrial Relations Code 2020, the Code on Social Security 2020 and the Occupational Safety, Health and Working Conditions Code 2020, were enacted by Parliament but awaited central and state Rules before they could take effect. In early 2026, the Ministry of Labour and Employment released consolidated draft Rules for public consultation, signalling that operational enforcement is imminent. Practitioner analyses published by SCC Online and KPMG highlight three areas of acute exposure for the construction sector: workforce representation, wage and benefit administration, and contractor classification.

Timeline of Legislative Changes and Their Contract Impact

The table below maps each obligation area to the old regulatory position and the immediate contract drafting action required under the 2026 regime.

Obligation area Old regime (pre‑2026) New Labour Codes / 2026 impact and immediate contract action
Worker representation and works committees Patchwork of statutes; inconsistent coverage across states Central draft Rules require establishment of works committees with wider worker representation. Action: Add a contract clause requiring the contractor to form and coordinate a works committee; include an indemnity for failure to comply.
Wage and payment reporting Variable standards; delayed cascade to subcontractors New rules on minimum wage increments, digital wage reporting and recordkeeping. Action: Insert a payment‑cascade clause with audit rights and a gross‑up mechanism for noncompliance.
Contractor classification and benefits Confusion over contractor/subcontractor employment relationships Codes clarify principal employer obligations and flow‑down requirements. Action: Define the employment relationship expressly in each subcontract; include misclassification indemnities.
Inspection and enforcement powers Multiple agencies with overlapping jurisdictions Streamlined inspection regime with tighter remediation deadlines. Action: Update notice, access and remediation timelines in contracts; require a cooperation clause and allocate inspection costs.

The labour codes 2026 India framework will likely require owners and contractors to revisit every template subcontract, EPC agreement and joint venture arrangement currently in use. Industry observers expect that projects which fail to embed these compliance mechanisms contractually will face a higher incidence of workforce disputes escalating into formal arbitration proceedings.

Construction Arbitration in India, Legal Framework and Key Judicial Trends (2021–2026)

The Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996, as amended, remains the governing statute. Part I governs domestic arbitration and awards, while Part II deals with enforcement of foreign awards under the New York Convention. Section 29A imposes a statutory timeline: a tribunal must render its award within twelve months from the date that pleadings are completed, subject to a six‑month extension by consent and further extensions only with leave of the court.

Arbitration Institutions, CIAC, SIAC and ICC

Construction disputes present unique challenges, technical evidence, multi‑party claims, long project timelines, that make institutional arbitration the preferred route. Three institutions dominate the landscape for construction contracts India:

  • CIAC (Construction Industry Arbitration Council). India’s only sector‑specific arbitration institution. CIAC maintains a panel of arbitrators with construction expertise, publishes its own Rules and administers proceedings from multiple Indian cities. Its fee scales are materially lower than international institutions, making it attractive for mid‑value domestic disputes.
  • SIAC (Singapore International Arbitration Centre). Frequently chosen as the institution for India‑seated or Singapore‑seated construction arbitrations involving international contractors or foreign‑funded projects. SIAC’s Emergency Arbitrator provisions are well tested.
  • ICC (International Chamber of Commerce). Preferred for high‑value EPC and BOT contracts where international enforceability is paramount. ICC’s Terms of Reference stage adds procedural rigour but also time and cost.

The cost drivers in construction arbitration include tribunal fees (typically ad valorem, based on the sum in dispute), administrative charges, expert fees for delay analysis and quantum, and hearing‑room costs. Parties should budget for these items at the contract‑drafting stage and allocate responsibility for advance deposits clearly in the arbitration clause.

Key Case Law, PASL Wind and Party Autonomy

The Supreme Court’s decision in PASL Wind Solutions Pvt. Ltd. v. GE Power Conversion India Pvt. Ltd. (2021) is the controlling authority on seat selection. The court confirmed that two Indian parties can validly designate a foreign seat of arbitration, and that the resulting award is enforceable in India under Part II of the Act as a “foreign award.” This landmark ruling expanded the options available in arbitration clause drafting for construction contracts India and opened a viable pathway for parties seeking neutral venues, procedural efficiency or insulation from domestic court intervention.

For an overview of how India’s arbitration framework compares with other jurisdictions, see 2025: Top Countries for International Arbitration.

Practical Drafting, Clause Templates and Annotated Arbitration Clause for 2026

Effective arbitration clause drafting is the single highest‑leverage action a construction lawyer can take. A well‑drafted clause prevents jurisdictional challenges, manages costs and sets the procedural framework for an efficient hearing. The five templates below address the most common scenarios encountered in construction contracts India in 2026.

Template A, Model Domestic‑Seated Arbitration Clause

“Any dispute arising out of or in connection with this Contract, including any question regarding its existence, validity or termination, shall be referred to and finally resolved by arbitration administered by the Construction Industry Arbitration Council (CIAC) in accordance with its Rules for the time being in force. The tribunal shall consist of [one / three] arbitrator(s). The seat of arbitration shall be [City], India. The language of the arbitration shall be English. The governing law of this Contract shall be the laws of India.”

Annotations: Always name the institution and its rules explicitly. Specifying the “seat”, not merely the “venue”, determines the curial law. One arbitrator is appropriate for claims below ₹10 crore; three arbitrators are advisable above that threshold or where technical complexity warrants it. For a comprehensive glossary of construction law terminology, refer to our dedicated resource.

Template B, Foreign‑Seated Clause for Indian Parties

“…shall be referred to and finally resolved by arbitration under the Rules of the Singapore International Arbitration Centre (SIAC). The seat of arbitration shall be Singapore. The governing law of this Contract shall be the laws of India. The award shall be final and binding and enforceable in India as a foreign award under Part II of the Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996.”

Risk notes: A foreign seat removes the award from Section 34 challenge proceedings in Indian courts but routes enforcement through Part II. Following PASL Wind, this structure is valid even between two Indian parties. Industry observers expect this option to become increasingly popular in high‑value EPC contracts where parties seek to limit court intervention.

Template C, Multi‑Tier Dispute Escalation Clause

Multi‑tier clauses reduce arbitration caseloads by filtering disputes through progressive resolution stages:

  1. Negotiation (14 days). Project directors exchange written positions and attempt resolution at site level.
  2. Mediation (30 days). An independent mediator, preferably with construction sector experience, conducts a structured mediation.
  3. Expert determination (for technical disputes only). A jointly appointed technical expert renders a binding or advisory determination on defined technical issues (e.g., defects, delay causation).
  4. Arbitration. If unresolved, the dispute proceeds to arbitration under Template A or B above.

Drafting caution: Each tier must have a defined time limit and a “deemed exhaustion” mechanism so that a party’s failure to engage does not block access to arbitration. Indian courts have held that a mandatory pre‑arbitral step is a condition precedent to invoking arbitration, omitting the time limit creates an inadvertent bar.

Template D, Force Majeure Clause (Labour Codes and Supply‑Chain Aware)

“Force Majeure shall include, without limitation: (a) epidemic, pandemic or quarantine restrictions; (b) legislative or regulatory change (including the enactment or amendment of any Labour Code, subordinate legislation or statutory rules) that materially increases the cost or time required to perform the Works; (c) unavailability of labour, materials or equipment arising from causes beyond the reasonable control of the affected party…”

This force majeure construction India template explicitly addresses statutory change, a critical addition in 2026. It pairs with an extension‑of‑time (EOT) and cost‑compensation mechanism that should be cross‑referenced in the contract’s time and payment schedules.

Template E, Labour Indemnity Clause Tied to Labour Codes Compliance

“The Contractor warrants that it shall at all times comply with the Code on Wages 2019, the Industrial Relations Code 2020, the Code on Social Security 2020, the Occupational Safety, Health and Working Conditions Code 2020, and all Rules and notifications issued thereunder. The Contractor shall indemnify and hold harmless the Owner against any liability, penalty, claim or cost arising from the Contractor’s failure to comply with any such Code or Rule, including but not limited to claims by workers, regulatory fines and remediation costs.”

How to negotiate this clause: Contractors should resist unlimited indemnities and negotiate a cap linked to the contract value or the value of the affected works. Owners should insist on periodic compliance certificates and audit rights as a condition of milestone payments. Both parties benefit from a clear allocation of responsibility for works committee formation and wage reporting.

Dispute Avoidance, Operational and Workforce Steps to Reduce Construction Arbitration Risk

Prevention is cheaper than cure. The following operational controls, when embedded into project governance from day one, materially reduce the probability and quantum of disputes that progress to construction arbitration.

Record‑Keeping and Delay Protocols

  • Daily jobsite logs. Mandate contemporaneous daily records of weather, workforce numbers, equipment deployment, materials deliveries and any instruction or variation received. These logs are the single most persuasive evidence category in delay and disruption claims.
  • Extension of time (EOT) protocols. Require written notice of any delay event within a defined period (typically 7–14 days). Specify that failure to give timely notice results in forfeiture of the EOT claim, but ensure the notice window is realistic given site conditions.
  • Photographic and drone evidence. Periodic aerial surveys, time‑stamped photographs and BIM model updates create an objective record that is difficult to dispute in arbitration.

Payment Cascade and Subcontractor Flow‑Downs

The labour codes 2026 India draft Rules tighten wage payment obligations down the contracting chain. Contracts should include:

  • Payment cascade clause. Require the main contractor to demonstrate that subcontractor and worker payments have been made before the next owner payment is released.
  • Flow‑down clause. Mirror the Labour Codes indemnity and compliance obligations in every subcontract and supply agreement. The principal employer remains liable for defaults down the chain, contractual flow‑downs create a right of recourse.
  • Compliance audit rights. Give the owner the right to audit the contractor’s payroll records, social security contributions and works committee minutes at any time during the project and for a defined period after completion.

Labour Codes Compliance Checklist for Contractors

  1. Register all workers under the Social Security Code and ensure timely contributions.
  2. Constitute a works committee in accordance with the Industrial Relations Code draft Rules.
  3. Maintain digital wage registers and issue electronic pay slips.
  4. Classify every worker correctly, distinguish employees from independent contractors.
  5. Cooperate with inspections and maintain an inspection‑readiness file on site.
  6. Report any statutory non‑compliance to the owner within 48 hours.

Contractor liabilities India are expanding, and the practical effect will be that disputes previously framed as simple payment claims will increasingly include regulatory compliance counterclaims. Proactive dispute avoidance construction measures are therefore essential.

Arbitration Strategy, Emergency Relief and Enforcement, Domestic and Foreign‑Seated Awards

Once a dispute has crystallised, the strategic decisions made before and during the arbitration determine whether the resulting award is worth the paper it is written on. This section provides a step‑by‑step protocol for construction arbitration in India, from pre‑arbitral preparation through to the final enforcement of the award.

Pre‑Arbitral Strategy

  • Document preservation. Issue a litigation hold notice immediately. Identify and secure all project correspondence, site diaries, payment records, variation orders and design documents.
  • Expert appointment. Engage a delay analyst and a quantum expert early. In construction arbitration, expert evidence on critical path delay and cost overrun quantum often determines the outcome.
  • Interim relief (Section 9). If urgent protection is needed, for example, to prevent demolition of contested works or dissipation of assets, apply to the court under Section 9 of the Act before or during the arbitration. The court may grant interim measures of protection including injunctions and attachment of property.

When to Pick a Foreign Seat, Decision Matrix

Factor Domestic seat favoured Foreign seat favoured
Parties Both Indian, no cross‑border element International contractor or funder involved; or two Indian parties seeking procedural neutrality (per PASL Wind)
Value Below ₹50 crore Above ₹50 crore or where enforcement in multiple jurisdictions is anticipated
Court intervention risk Acceptable, parties trust Indian courts to limit intervention High, party wants to avoid Section 34 challenge proceedings
Enforcement Part I, domestic award enforced as decree Part II, foreign award enforced under the New York Convention; limited grounds for refusal
Cost Lower (CIAC fees; Indian counsel rates) Higher (institutional fees; international counsel; travel)

Enforcement Checklist, Six Steps to Enforce an Arbitration Award in India

Whether the objective is to enforce a domestic award under Part I or a foreign award under Part II, the following steps provide a reliable procedural roadmap to enforce arbitration award India:

  1. Obtain a certified copy of the award. For foreign awards, obtain authentication from the country of origin and, where required, an apostille or consular attestation.
  2. Verify reciprocity. For Part II enforcement, confirm that the seat country is a signatory to the New York Convention and is notified in the Official Gazette as a reciprocating territory.
  3. File a petition for enforcement. Domestic awards: file an execution petition in the court having jurisdiction under Section 36. Foreign awards: file an application under Sections 47–49 in the High Court with original jurisdiction.
  4. Attach evidence of the arbitration agreement and the award. Produce the original or certified copies of both, together with translations if in a language other than English or the court’s language.
  5. Anticipate resistance. Respondents typically raise challenges on grounds of public policy (Section 34 or Section 48), procedural irregularity or lack of proper notice. Prepare responsive affidavits in advance.
  6. Seek interim protection during enforcement proceedings. If there is a risk of asset dissipation, apply for attachment or injunctive relief simultaneously with the enforcement petition.

Foreign‑seated awards between Indian parties are enforceable following PASL Wind, subject to the narrow grounds of refusal under Part II. Early indications suggest that Indian courts are applying these grounds restrictively, consistent with India’s pro‑enforcement stance under the New York Convention.

Comparison Table and Contract Redraft Checklist

The following checklist consolidates the ten priority actions for in‑house counsel and contractors undertaking a contract audit in light of the 2026 changes to construction arbitration India practice.

Ten‑Point Contract Redraft Checklist

  1. Insert or update the arbitration clause using Template A or B above, specify seat, institution, number of arbitrators and governing law.
  2. Add a multi‑tier dispute escalation mechanism (Template C) with defined time limits at each stage.
  3. Draft a Labour Codes compliance indemnity (Template E) and negotiate a cap.
  4. Update the force majeure clause to include statutory change and labour shortages (Template D).
  5. Insert a payment cascade clause linking owner payments to evidence of subcontractor and worker payments.
  6. Add flow‑down provisions mirroring Labour Codes obligations in all subcontracts.
  7. Include audit rights over contractor payroll, social security records and works committee minutes.
  8. Require daily jobsite logs and photographic records as contract obligations, not optional best practice.
  9. Define EOT notice periods and ensure they are realistic and enforceable.
  10. Review FIDIC or standard‑form contracts in use and supplement with India‑specific arbitration and Labour Codes riders.

For definitions of technical terms used above, consult our construction law glossary.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Rishi Agrawala at Agarwal Law Associates, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. The Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996, Department of Legal Affairs, Government of India
  2. IndiaCode, Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996
  3. PASL Wind Solutions v. GE Power Conversion India, New York Convention Repository
  4. Construction Industry Arbitration Council (CIAC), Official Site
  5. SCC Online, Draft Rules for the Four Labour Codes Explained (January 2026)
  6. KPMG, Flash Alert: Government Issues Draft Rules on Four Labour Codes (2026)

FAQs

How will the new Labour Codes affect construction contracts in India?
The four Labour Codes consolidate and replace over two dozen legacy labour statutes. For construction contracts, the key impacts are: mandatory works committees, tighter wage reporting and payment obligations down the contractor chain, clearer principal employer liability, and streamlined inspection powers. Every construction contract should now include a Labour Codes compliance indemnity, payment cascade clause and audit rights.
Arbitration is the preferred route for most private‑sector construction disputes because it offers technical arbitrators, confidentiality and (via the New York Convention) cross‑border enforceability. Exceptions exist: disputes under the Real Estate (Regulation and Development) Act (RERA) must go to the RERA authority, MSME payment disputes have a statutory adjudication route, and certain highways law disputes have designated forums. Parties should carve these out expressly in the arbitration clause.
Yes. Following the Supreme Court’s decision in PASL Wind Solutions v. GE Power Conversion India (2021), even awards arising from arbitrations between two Indian parties seated abroad are enforceable in India under Part II of the Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996. Enforcement follows the six‑step procedure set out in the enforcement section above.
At minimum: the seat of arbitration, the governing law, the administering institution and its rules, the number of arbitrators, the language of proceedings, an emergency arbitrator provision, consolidation rights (for multi‑contract projects), expert determination for technical issues, and a costs‑allocation mechanism. Templates A through C above provide ready‑to‑use wording.
A well‑drafted force majeure clause should expressly list statutory and regulatory change, including enactment of Labour Codes or subordinate rules, as a qualifying event. It should also cover labour shortages, material supply disruptions and pandemic‑related restrictions. Each force majeure event should trigger a defined EOT and cost‑compensation mechanism. Template D above provides sample wording that addresses these scenarios.
Under Section 29A of the Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996, the tribunal must render its award within twelve months from the completion of pleadings, extendable by six months with the parties’ consent. Further extensions require court approval. In practice, complex construction arbitrations, particularly those involving delay analysis and quantum evidence, may take longer, but the statutory deadline creates meaningful pressure for efficient case management.
FIDIC standard‑form contracts are widely used in India for internationally funded infrastructure projects. The default FIDIC dispute resolution clause refers disputes to a Dispute Adjudication Board (DAB) before arbitration. Indian parties using FIDIC should supplement the standard clause with an India‑specific rider specifying the arbitration institution, seat and governing law, and should ensure the DAB provisions are enforceable under Indian law. For international projects, a Singapore or London seat under SIAC or ICC rules is common; for domestic projects, a CIAC‑administered arbitration seated in India is often more practical and cost‑effective.

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How Construction Contracts and Arbitration Will Change in India in 2026, Practical Drafting, Dispute‑avoidance and Enforcement Steps

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