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Every arbitration clause in Malaysia drafted before 1 January 2026 now needs a second look. The Arbitration (Amendment) Act 2024 [Act A1737], which came into force on that date, fundamentally reshaped the landscape for third‑party funding, emergency arbitrator relief and award enforcement. At the same time, the Asian International Arbitration Centre (AIAC) published its new Arbitration Rules 2026 in October 2025, introducing expanded emergency arbitrator powers and an expedited procedure track. For in‑house counsel, contracts lawyers and international businesses negotiating a cross‑border arbitration clause in Malaysia, these twin reforms create both opportunity and risk, opportunity for parties who draft precisely, and risk for those relying on legacy boilerplate.
This guide provides the practical architecture for an enforceable arbitration clause Malaysia contracts now demand: the seven drafting variables every clause must address, annotated clause templates for common transaction types, a third‑party funding disclosure framework, emergency relief wording and a post‑award enforcement checklist. It is general guidance only and should not be treated as a substitute for advice from qualified Malaysian arbitration counsel.
The Arbitration (Amendment) Act 2024 represents the most significant reform to Malaysia’s arbitration framework since the original Arbitration Act 2005 was enacted. Paired with the AIAC Arbitration Rules 2026, these changes redefine what an enforceable arbitration clause in Malaysia must contain.
The Amendment Act introduced three headline reforms that directly affect arbitration clause drafting:
The AIAC Arbitration Rules 2026, published on 8 October 2025, complement the statutory reforms with updated institutional procedures:
| Date | Reform | Practical Effect |
|---|---|---|
| 11 December 2024 | Arbitration (Amendment) Act 2024 passed (Royal Assent) | Sets the statutory basis for TPF, emergency arbitrator recognition and enforcement reforms. |
| 8 October 2025 | AIAC Arbitration Rules 2026 published | New emergency arbitrator powers, expedited procedures and updated appointment processes take effect for AIAC‑administered cases. |
| 1 January 2026 | Arbitration (Amendment) Act 2024 came into force | TPF lawful and regulated; courts can enforce emergency orders; award enforcement streamlined, existing clauses must be reviewed. |
A well‑drafted arbitration clause in Malaysia resolves seven critical variables at the outset. Ambiguity on any single point creates enforcement risk or gives a recalcitrant counterparty grounds to delay proceedings.
The seat determines the procedural law governing the arbitration and the courts with supervisory jurisdiction. Industry observers consider Kuala Lumpur the natural default for Malaysia‑connected disputes, aligning the arbitration with the Arbitration Act 2005 (as amended). The venue, the physical location of hearings, may differ from the seat without affecting the applicable procedural law. Always specify both explicitly to avoid confusion:
“The seat of arbitration shall be Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. Hearings may be held at any location agreed by the parties or determined by the tribunal.”
Parties with a Malaysian seat will commonly choose between AIAC Arbitration Rules 2026, ICC Rules or ad hoc arbitration under UNCITRAL Rules. The AIAC Rules 2026 offer the closest integration with the Amendment Act’s emergency arbitrator and expedited procedure framework. ICC Rules remain attractive for high‑value cross‑border disputes with parties unfamiliar with AIAC. Ad hoc proceedings offer maximum flexibility but lack institutional administration.
Three arbitrators are standard for complex international disputes; sole arbitrators suit lower‑value or bilateral contracts. Under the AIAC Rules 2026, the default appointment process applies where parties have not agreed a mechanism. Best practice: specify the number, the appointment method and a fallback appointing authority (typically the Director of the AIAC).
The governing law of the contract (the substantive law applied to the merits) and the law of the seat (the procedural curial law) serve distinct functions. Malaysian law as the seat law subjects the arbitration to the Arbitration Act 2005 as amended. The substantive governing law may be any jurisdiction. Specify both clearly:
“This Agreement shall be governed by and construed in accordance with the laws of [jurisdiction]. The arbitration shall be seated in Kuala Lumpur and governed procedurally by the laws of Malaysia.”
Specify the language of proceedings (English is standard in Malaysian international arbitrations), any limits on document production and a confidentiality framework. Under the Arbitration Act 2005, arbitral proceedings are confidential by default for domestic arbitrations, but the position for international arbitrations benefits from express contractual reinforcement.
Post‑2026, emergency arbitrator clauses have statutory teeth in Malaysia. Where AIAC Rules 2026 apply, the emergency arbitrator provisions are automatically available unless expressly excluded. If parties want emergency relief but are using ICC or UNCITRAL rules, a carve‑in clause referencing AIAC emergency provisions or a standalone emergency appointment mechanism is recommended.
Third‑party funding in Malaysia is now lawful under the Amendment Act, removing the common‑law champerty barrier. However, the statutory framework imposes mandatory disclosure obligations that affect how arbitration clauses should be drafted.
Under the Amendment Act’s TPF provisions and the accompanying Code of Practice for Third Party Funding, a funded party must disclose the existence of a funding arrangement and the identity of the funder to the tribunal and the opposing party. The disclosure obligation is designed to enable the tribunal to assess conflicts of interest and manage procedural fairness. Arbitration clause drafting should anticipate these obligations.
Permissive TPF clause:
“Either party may obtain third‑party funding for the arbitration. A party that enters into a funding arrangement shall promptly disclose the existence of the arrangement and the identity of the funder to the tribunal and all other parties, in accordance with the Arbitration Act 2005 (as amended) and any applicable Code of Practice.”
Protective disclosure clause (for counterparties):
“Any party receiving third‑party funding shall disclose (a) the existence of the funding arrangement; (b) the identity of the funder; and (c) whether the funder has any interest in the outcome of the dispute or any relationship with the arbitrator(s). Failure to disclose shall entitle the tribunal to draw adverse inferences and award costs on an indemnity basis.”
Anti‑intervention wording:
“No third‑party funder shall have any right to participate in, control, or influence the conduct of the arbitration or any settlement negotiations.”
Disclosure of funding may expose otherwise privileged communications. Clauses should address whether funding documents are subject to confidentiality obligations and whether a successful party may seek security for costs from the funder. Early indications suggest that Malaysian practitioners are building explicit privilege carve‑outs into TPF‑aware arbitration clauses to preserve legal professional privilege over communications between funded parties and their counsel.
The recognition of emergency arbitrator orders by Malaysian courts under the Amendment Act is among the most practically significant reforms for parties drafting a cross‑border arbitration clause.
Short form (AIAC seat):
“The parties agree that the emergency arbitrator provisions under the AIAC Arbitration Rules 2026 shall apply. Any order or award made by an emergency arbitrator shall be binding and enforceable in accordance with the Arbitration Act 2005 (as amended).”
Comprehensive form (non‑AIAC rules with AIAC emergency relief carve‑in):
“Notwithstanding the parties’ agreement to [ICC/UNCITRAL] Rules, either party may apply to the Director of the AIAC for the appointment of an emergency arbitrator in accordance with the AIAC Arbitration Rules 2026 prior to the constitution of the tribunal. The emergency arbitrator shall have the power to order any interim measures deemed necessary, including preservation of assets, evidence or the status quo. Such orders shall be enforceable by any court of competent jurisdiction in Malaysia.”
The Amendment Act empowers Malaysian courts to recognise and enforce emergency arbitrator orders, providing a statutory enforcement mechanism that previously existed only in institutional rules without court backing. To maximise the enforceability of emergency orders, the arbitration clause should expressly state that emergency arbitrator decisions are binding and that the parties consent to court enforcement. The clause should also preserve the right to seek urgent interim relief directly from the Malaysian courts where the tribunal or emergency arbitrator cannot act with sufficient speed, the Arbitration Act 2005 already permits court‑ordered interim measures under specific circumstances, and the Amendment Act reinforces this parallel track.
Malaysia is a signatory to the New York Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards. The Amendment Act streamlines the domestic enforcement process, but parties must still take proactive steps to protect enforceability.
Under the amended enforcement framework, an arbitral award is recognised as binding in Malaysia without requiring a separate High Court registration application. Grounds for refusing recognition remain limited and mirror the New York Convention grounds: incapacity of a party, invalid arbitration agreement, improper notice, excess of tribunal jurisdiction, procedural irregularity at the seat, or a finding that the award is contrary to Malaysian public policy. Challenges are heard by the High Court, and the likely practical effect of the Amendment Act’s streamlining will be faster enforcement timelines and reduced tactical obstruction.
Include an express waiver of sovereign immunity (for state entity counterparties), a consent‑to‑enforcement clause and a costs‑of‑enforcement provision. Sample wording:
“The parties undertake to carry out any award rendered pursuant to this clause without delay. The award shall be final and binding. Each party irrevocably waives any right to challenge or resist enforcement of the award except on the limited grounds set out in the Arbitration Act 2005 (as amended) or the New York Convention.”
The following templates incorporate the post‑2026 reforms and are designed as starting points for negotiation. Each should be adapted to the specific transaction with qualified counsel.
“Any dispute arising out of or in connection with this Agreement, including any question regarding its existence, validity or termination, shall be referred to and finally resolved by arbitration administered by the Asian International Arbitration Centre (AIAC) under the AIAC Arbitration Rules 2026. The seat of arbitration shall be Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. The tribunal shall consist of a sole arbitrator. The language of the arbitration shall be English. The emergency arbitrator provisions shall apply. Either party may obtain third‑party funding subject to the disclosure obligations under the Arbitration Act 2005 (as amended).”
Annotation: Suitable for bilateral supply, distribution and international sales contracts. The sole arbitrator keeps costs proportionate. Express reference to TPF disclosure and emergency relief ensures compliance with post‑2026 requirements.
“Any dispute arising out of or in connection with this Agreement or any contract arising from it shall be referred to and finally resolved by arbitration administered by the AIAC under the AIAC Arbitration Rules 2026. The seat shall be Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. The tribunal shall consist of three (3) arbitrators, appointed in accordance with the AIAC Rules 2026. The AIAC shall have the power to consolidate two or more arbitrations arising under this Agreement or any related agreement between the same parties, or to join additional parties, where common questions of law or fact arise. The language shall be English. The emergency arbitrator provisions shall apply.
All proceedings and the award shall be confidential, save as required by law or for the purposes of enforcement.
Annotation: Designed for multi‑party construction, infrastructure and project finance contracts. Consolidation and joinder wording anticipates multi‑contract disputes. Three arbitrators suit the complexity and value typical of these transactions.
“All disputes shall be resolved by arbitration under the AIAC Arbitration Rules 2026, seated in Kuala Lumpur, before a sole arbitrator. No party may pursue claims on a class, collective or representative basis. Consolidation with any other arbitration shall require the written consent of the Seller. The Seller’s liability under any award shall not exceed the total contract price. This clause shall survive termination of the Agreement.”
Annotation: Protects the seller by preventing class‑style proceedings, requiring consent for consolidation and capping exposure. The survival clause ensures the arbitration agreement remains effective after contract termination.
Note: Downloadable .docx versions of these templates will be available via the resource library. Contact the editorial team for access.
Counterparties will commonly push back on several points when negotiating an arbitration clause in Malaysia. Understanding these pressure points accelerates negotiation:
The combined effect of the Arbitration (Amendment) Act 2024 and the AIAC Arbitration Rules 2026 is a materially different environment for arbitration clause drafting. Parties who update their clauses to address third‑party funding disclosure, emergency arbitrator relief, streamlined enforcement and the seven core drafting variables set out above will secure the most robust dispute resolution framework available. Those relying on pre‑2026 boilerplate risk unenforceable emergency orders, non‑compliant funding arrangements and avoidable procedural challenges. For any cross‑border transaction touching Malaysia, reviewing and updating the arbitration clause in Malaysia is no longer optional, it is an immediate commercial priority. To connect with an experienced arbitration practitioner, browse the Malaysia lawyer directory or explore the top jurisdictions for international arbitration.
This article provides general information only and does not constitute legal advice. Readers should consult qualified Malaysian arbitration counsel before acting on any matter discussed above. Last reviewed: 14 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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