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The debate over arbitration vs litigation in India has shifted decisively in 2026, driven by the Commercial Courts (Amendment) Act, 2026, the MoRTH circular dated 12 January 2026 restricting arbitration in certain infrastructure disputes, and parallel amendments to the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code. For general counsel, project developers and dispute resolution partners, the old assumption that arbitration is always preferable now requires fresh scrutiny. This guide delivers a practitioner-first decision framework, complete with checklists, comparison tables, sample clauses and sector playbooks, to help legal teams make the right forum choice under the new regulatory landscape.
If you need to advise a client on forum selection today, apply these seven decision points in sequence:
Bottom line: Arbitration in India remains the default for cross-border, confidential or specialist disputes. Court litigation has gained ground for domestic infrastructure disputes above the sectoral thresholds and for matters where appellate review is strategically desirable.
Apply this ten-node decision flow to every new dispute or contract-drafting exercise. At each node, the recommended action follows an “if X, then Y” structure designed for rapid triage.
The Commercial Courts (Amendment) Act, 2026, published in the Official Gazette by the Department of Justice, introduces several changes that directly affect the arbitration vs court calculus. The amendment tightens case-management timelines for Commercial Courts, mandating structured pre-trial conferences and compressing the outer time limit for disposal of commercial suits. It also revises the conditions under which appellate courts may grant stays on decrees pending appeal, making unconditional stays harder to obtain and requiring deposit of a portion of the decretal amount.
For arbitration practitioners, the most significant change is the amendment’s clarification of the interplay between Section 34 set-aside proceedings (under the Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996) and Commercial Court jurisdiction. The 2026 Amendment confirms that set-aside applications for arbitral awards above the specified value will be heard exclusively by Commercial Courts, and that these courts must apply the same expedited case-management rules to Section 34 petitions.
The MoRTH circular dated 12 January 2026 has generated substantial concern among infrastructure concessionaires and highway contractors. The circular directs that for disputes arising under NHAI and MoRTH contracts, including BOT (Build-Operate-Transfer), HAM (Hybrid Annuity Model) and certain EPC (Engineering, Procurement and Construction) agreements, claims exceeding INR 10 crore should be resolved through dispute resolution boards and, where necessary, court adjudication rather than binding arbitration.
Industry observers expect the practical effect to be significant but not absolute. The circular applies to contracts executed or amended after its operative date and does not retroactively nullify pre-existing arbitration clauses in concluded concession agreements. Parties with institutional arbitration clauses seated outside India may have additional contractual arguments to preserve their chosen forum. Nevertheless, for new NHAI tenders and contracts issued after January 2026, the shift away from arbitration for high-value claims is clear and must be factored into bid-stage dispute-resolution planning.
Two additional legislative developments affect the arbitration vs litigation analysis in 2026. The Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (Amendment) Act, 2026, published in the Gazette on 6 April 2026, clarifies the treatment of arbitral claims within CIRP proceedings and adjusts the moratorium provisions under Section 14 to address long-standing ambiguity about whether arbitration proceedings can continue against a corporate debtor. The amendment also introduces streamlined mechanisms for admission of arbitral awards as proved claims before the NCLT.
| Date | Instrument | Practical Effect |
|---|---|---|
| 12 January 2026 | MoRTH Circular | Directs disputes ≥ INR 10 crore under NHAI/MoRTH contracts to dispute resolution boards and courts rather than binding arbitration |
| Q1 2026 | Commercial Courts (Amendment) Act, 2026 | Compressed case-management timelines; harder unconditional stays on appeal; expedited Section 34 hearing mandates in Commercial Courts |
| 6 April 2026 | IBC (Amendment) Act, 2026 | Clarifies moratorium impact on arbitration; streamlines admission of arbitral awards as claims in CIRP |
This section delivers the deep-dive comparison that counsel need when advising clients on forum selection. Each dimension is assessed through the lens of the 2026 changes, with practitioner notes highlighting where the balance has shifted.
Arbitration under institutional rules (MCIA, SIAC, ICC) typically resolves within 6 to 24 months, with expedited-procedure options capable of delivering awards in as few as 6 to 9 months for claims below specified thresholds. Ad hoc arbitrations in India tend to run longer, often 18 to 36 months, owing to appointment delays and procedural disputes.
Court litigation before Commercial Courts has historically taken 9 to 48 months or more. The Commercial Courts Amendment 2026 compresses outer timelines by mandating structured case-management conferences and imposing consequences for non-compliance with hearing schedules. Early indications suggest that well-managed Commercial Courts in major jurisdictions (Delhi, Mumbai, Bengaluru) are now resolving simpler commercial suits within 12 to 18 months, closing the gap with arbitration for domestic disputes.
Arbitration costs are variable. Institutional arbitration in India (MCIA) involves registration fees, administrative charges and arbitrator fees that are calibrated to claim value. International arbitrations under ICC or SIAC rules incur higher administrative overheads, particularly for multi-party disputes. The advantage of predictability remains: institutional fee schedules are published and budgetable.
Court litigation carries lower filing fees but higher aggregate costs over time. Multiplicity of hearings, adjournments and interlocutory applications inflate counsel fees and management time. The 2026 Amendment’s tighter case-management rules may reduce wasted hearing days, but the cost savings remain to be proven in practice.
Domestic enforcement of arbitral awards follows Section 36 of the Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996. Once the period for filing a Section 34 set-aside petition expires (or the petition is dismissed), the award is enforceable as a decree. The 2026 Amendment’s requirement that Commercial Courts apply expedited timelines to Section 34 hearings should, in principle, reduce the enforcement delay.
For cross-border enforcement, arbitration remains decisively superior. India is a signatory to the New York Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards, 1958. Foreign arbitral awards can be enforced under Sections 44 to 48 of the Act, and Indian awards rendered in Convention-signatory seats are enforceable in over 170 jurisdictions. Court decrees, by contrast, require reciprocal enforcement arrangements that are far more limited in scope.
Arbitral awards are subject to challenge only on narrow grounds under Section 34, including fraud, public policy violations and patent illegality (for domestic awards). The scope for appellate intervention is deliberately restricted, preserving finality.
Court litigation offers a structured appellate route through the Commercial Appellate Division of the High Court. The 2026 Amendment adjusts stay conditions, making it harder for losing parties to obtain unconditional stays pending appeal without depositing a portion of the decretal sum. This change benefits decree-holders but also means that parties who value the ability to seek appellate correction of legal errors may still prefer court proceedings.
Arbitration proceedings are private. Hearings, submissions and awards are not part of the public record, making arbitration the clear choice for disputes involving trade secrets, proprietary financial models or sensitive commercial relationships.
Court proceedings are conducted in open court and generate publicly accessible records. While the Commercial Courts Act permits certain confidentiality applications, the default position is transparency. Discovery in court is more expansive, with formal interrogatories and production orders available, useful where one party suspects the other is withholding documents.
Parties to arbitration can select arbitrators with specific domain expertise, construction engineers, maritime specialists, technology lawyers or financial experts. This is particularly valuable in complex infrastructure, EPC and IP disputes. Institutional arbitration in India through the MCIA offers curated panels of specialists, and international institutions (SIAC, ICC) provide access to global experts.
Commercial Court judges, while experienced in commercial law, are generalists managing diverse dockets. They do not possess the technical specialisation that a hand-picked arbitral tribunal can offer.
Arbitration provides interim relief through two channels: emergency arbitrator provisions under institutional rules (available within days of appointment) and court-ordered interim measures under Sections 9 and 17 of the Arbitration Act. Section 9 applications can be filed before or during arbitration, and courts have shown increasing willingness to grant urgent attachments, anti-dissipation orders and injunctions in aid of arbitral proceedings.
Commercial Courts offer direct interim relief, temporary injunctions, attachment before judgment and Mareva-style freezing orders, with potentially faster first-hearing dates under the 2026 case-management rules. For performance guarantee invocation disputes, where hours matter, direct court applications remain the practitioner’s weapon of choice.
Disputes over performance guarantee invocation represent a distinct category where the arbitration vs court choice carries acute practical consequences. When an employer threatens to invoke a bank guarantee, the contractor needs immediate injunctive relief. Courts have consistently held that bank guarantees are independent contracts and that injunctions restraining invocation are granted only in cases of fraud or irretrievable injustice.
In practice, filing a Section 9 application in the Commercial Court, or an emergency arbitrator application under institutional rules, must be done within 24 to 48 hours of notice. The 2026 landscape favours a dual-track approach: file an emergency arbitrator application under MCIA or SIAC rules for speed, while simultaneously preserving the right to approach the court under Section 9 if the emergency arbitrator cannot be constituted fast enough.
| Feature | Arbitration (Typical, 2026) | Court Litigation (Commercial Courts, 2026) |
|---|---|---|
| Typical timeline | 6–24 months (institutional); expedited rules can compress to 6–9 months for smaller claims | 9–48+ months; post-amendment case-management is compressing timelines in major cities to 12–18 months for simpler suits |
| Appeal routes | Very limited, set-aside under Section 34 on narrow grounds only (public policy, fraud, patent illegality) | Structured appellate route through Commercial Appellate Division of the High Court; 2026 Amendment restricts unconditional stays |
| Interim relief | Emergency arbitrator (institutional rules) + Section 9/17 court applications; dual-track available | Direct court orders: temporary injunctions, attachment before judgment, summary judgment applications under enhanced case-management |
| Cross-border enforcement | Strong, New York Convention enforcement in 170+ jurisdictions; India a signatory | Domestic enforceability strong; cross-border enforcement limited to reciprocal arrangements |
| Confidentiality | Private proceedings; award and submissions not public record | Open-court hearings; public record by default |
| Discovery | Party-driven; limited tribunal-ordered disclosure | Formal discovery rules; broader production orders and interrogatories |
| Cost range | Variable; institutional fees are published and predictable; international arbitration can be expensive | Lower filing fees; aggregate costs often higher due to multiplicity of hearings and duration |
| Public-law review risk | Low, arbitral tribunals do not exercise writ jurisdiction | Available, Article 226 remedies and judicial review accessible through court forum |
Despite the MoRTH circular and enhanced Commercial Courts, arbitration remains the optimal choice for cross-border transactions, joint ventures with foreign partners, technology-transfer agreements and any contract where confidentiality is commercially essential. Draft arbitration clauses with express carveouts that preserve the right to seek court-ordered interim relief under Section 9 and include emergency arbitrator provisions. For contracts potentially affected by sectoral circulars, include a fallback clause specifying that if arbitration is held inapplicable by operation of law or government directive, the parties consent to exclusive jurisdiction of the Commercial Court at the agreed seat.
Institutional arbitration through the MCIA, SIAC or ICC offers administered proceedings with fixed fee schedules, established appointment procedures and emergency arbitrator mechanisms. Ad hoc arbitration, while flexible, suffers from appointment delays and procedural uncertainty. After 2026, the case for institutional arbitration in India is stronger than ever: MCIA’s updated rules provide for expedited proceedings, a curated panel of specialist arbitrators and emergency relief within days of filing. For cross-border enforcement, ICC and SIAC provide globally recognised institutional imprimatur.
“Any dispute, controversy or claim arising out of or relating to this Agreement shall be finally resolved by arbitration administered by the Mumbai Centre for International Arbitration (MCIA) in accordance with the MCIA Rules in force at the date of commencement of arbitration. The seat of arbitration shall be Mumbai. The language of arbitration shall be English. The tribunal shall consist of a sole arbitrator appointed in accordance with the MCIA Rules. Notwithstanding the foregoing, either party may apply to the competent Commercial Court under Section 9 of the Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996, for interim or conservatory measures.”
“The parties agree that all disputes shall first be referred to the Dispute Resolution Board constituted in accordance with Clause [X] of the Concession Agreement. Any dispute not resolved by the DRB within [90] days, or any dispute for which the DRB’s recommendation is not accepted, shall be referred to arbitration under the MCIA Rules, subject to applicable law and government directives. In the event that arbitration is rendered inapplicable by operation of any government circular, directive or amendment to the Concession Agreement, the parties consent to the exclusive jurisdiction of the Commercial Court at [City], and all timelines and procedures under the Commercial Courts Act, 2015 (as amended) shall apply.”
“Nothing in this arbitration agreement shall preclude either party from seeking emergency interim relief under the Emergency Arbitrator Provisions of the [MCIA/SIAC/ICC] Rules, or from applying to any court of competent jurisdiction under Section 9 of the Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996, for urgent injunctive or conservatory relief, including applications to restrain invocation of performance guarantees. Any such application shall not constitute a waiver of the arbitration agreement.”
Domestic arbitral awards become enforceable as decrees under Section 36 of the Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996, once the time for filing a set-aside petition under Section 34 expires, or the petition is disposed of. The Commercial Courts Amendment 2026 mandates that Section 34 petitions above the specified value are heard by Commercial Courts under expedited timelines, which should reduce the gap between award and enforcement.
Foreign awards governed by the New York Convention, 1958, are enforceable under Sections 44 to 48 of the Act. India’s enforcement record has improved substantially over the past decade, with courts adopting a pro-enforcement approach. For parties with cross-border exposure, arbitration remains the only forum that delivers internationally portable outcomes.
Performance guarantee invocation disputes require the fastest possible injunctive relief. The established legal position, that bank guarantees are autonomous instruments invocable on demand unless fraud or special equity is established, means that courts set a high bar for restraining invocation. Practitioners should maintain standing Section 9 filings ready for execution, with pre-drafted affidavits addressing the fraud/irretrievable injustice threshold. Where the contract includes an MCIA or SIAC clause with emergency arbitrator provisions, the emergency arbitrator can be appointed within 24 hours and may issue interim orders restraining encashment pending constitution of the full tribunal. Consider the interaction with non-obstante and force majeure clause arguments where the invocation is triggered by events beyond the contractor’s control.
The IBC (Amendment) Act, 2026, published in the Gazette on 6 April 2026, addresses the long-standing tension between insolvency and arbitration proceedings. Key changes relevant to the forum-selection decision include clarification that the Section 14 moratorium halts the commencement or continuation of arbitration proceedings against the corporate debtor during CIRP, aligning statutory text with Supreme Court precedent. However, the amendment introduces a mechanism for admission of subsisting arbitral awards as proved claims before the NCLT, streamlining the process for creditors who hold awards rendered before the insolvency commencement date.
For lenders, concessionaires and trade creditors, the practical checklist is straightforward:
The 2026 reforms have fundamentally rebalanced the arbitration vs litigation in India equation. Neither forum is universally superior; the right choice depends on the sector, claim value, enforcement geography and urgency of interim relief. Three immediate actions are recommended for every in-house legal team and external dispute partner:
The regulatory landscape will continue to evolve. Counsel who invest now in clause remediation, institutional arbitration relationships and cross-forum preparedness will be best positioned to protect their clients’ interests under the new Indian dispute resolution framework.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Ameya Gokhale at Shardul Amarchand Mangaldas & Co, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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