Our Expert in Uganda
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Last reviewed: 24 May 2026
Setting aside an arbitral award in Uganda is a narrowly defined remedy governed by Section 34 of the Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 2000. Any party seeking to challenge an award must file an application at the High Court within a strict one‑month window, demonstrating at least one of the limited statutory grounds, from jurisdictional defects to conflict with public policy. With the ULII consolidation of Section 34 published as at 23 December 2024 and the Commercial Court issuing practical guidance on time extensions and arbitrator liens in late 2025, practitioners operating in Uganda need a current, step‑by‑step understanding of how this process works in 2026.
This guide maps every stage, from calculating your deadline to defending (or resisting) a set‑aside application.
Yes, but only in tightly circumscribed situations. Under Section 34 of the Arbitration and Conciliation Act (the “ACA”), a party may apply to the High Court to have a domestic arbitral award set aside. The application must be brought within one month of the date on which the applicant received the award, or, where a request for correction or interpretation under Section 33 was made, within one month of the tribunal’s disposal of that request.
The grounds are exhaustive. They cover procedural unfairness, jurisdictional overreach, invalidity of the arbitration agreement, incapacity, and conflict with public policy. A court reviewing the application does not re‑examine the merits of the dispute. This means an applicant cannot succeed merely by showing the arbitrator reached the “wrong” answer on the facts or the law, the challenge must fit squarely within one of the statutory grounds.
Because the window closes quickly and the threshold is high, parties who suspect an award may be vulnerable should begin preparing their case immediately upon receiving it. For respondents who wish to preserve the award, early action is equally critical to assembling the evidence that no statutory ground has been made out.
Two developments make this topic especially relevant for practitioners advising on arbitration disputes in Uganda during 2026. First, the Uganda Legal Information Institute (ULII) completed a consolidation of the Arbitration and Conciliation Act, incorporating all amendments as at 23 December 2024. This consolidated text now serves as the primary reference for Section 34 and has been cited in recent High Court filings, replacing earlier piecemeal versions that circulated among practitioners.
Second, the Commercial Court, which handles the majority of arbitration‑related applications in Kampala, issued guidance in late 2025 clarifying its approach to applications for extension of time under Section 34 and addressing the practical question of an arbitrator’s lien over an award pending payment of fees. Industry observers expect these clarifications to reduce satellite litigation over procedural technicalities and encourage more predictable timelines for both applicants and respondents. The likely practical effect will be that parties who can demonstrate excusable delay may receive a limited extension, while those who simply miss the deadline through inattention will find the Commercial Court unsympathetic.
Section 34 of the ACA is modelled on Article 34 of the UNCITRAL Model Law on International Commercial Arbitration, adapted for Uganda’s legal context. It is structured in three key subsections:
In practical terms, Section 34 tells parties three things. First, the only mechanism to challenge an award domestically is a set‑aside application, not an appeal, not judicial review. Second, the grounds are a closed list: if the complaint does not match one of the enumerated grounds, the application fails regardless of how unjust the outcome may appear. Third, the deadline is strict and short. One month is not a guideline, it is a statutory bar. Once it lapses, the right to apply for setting aside an arbitral award in Uganda is, in most circumstances, extinguished.
The ACA’s alignment with the UNCITRAL Model Law means that Ugandan courts frequently look to Model Law commentary and jurisprudence from other Model Law jurisdictions, including Kenya, Singapore, and India, when interpreting Section 34. This comparative dimension can be a powerful tool for practitioners crafting submissions.
Under Section 34(2)(a), the applicant bears the burden of proving one of several procedural defects. The most commonly invoked include:
An important qualification applies: if a party participated in the arbitration without objecting to a jurisdictional issue and only raises it after an unfavourable award, the court may treat the objection as waived. Courts in Uganda have taken a firm line on this point, reinforcing the principle that procedural challenges cannot be held in reserve as a tactical insurance policy.
Section 34(2)(b) allows the court to set aside an award on its own initiative if the subject matter of the dispute is not capable of settlement by arbitration under Ugandan law, or if the award is in conflict with the public policy of Uganda. This is the most debated ground, because “public policy” is inherently broad.
Ugandan courts have generally followed the narrow interpretation favoured in other Model Law jurisdictions: public policy means fundamental principles of justice, morality, or the legal order, not mere errors of law or fact. An award tainted by fraud, corruption, or a breach of natural justice may offend public policy. An award that simply miscalculates damages or misapplies a contractual term almost certainly does not.
| Ground | Statutory Basis (Section 34) | Practical Evidence Required |
|---|---|---|
| Incapacity of a party / invalid agreement | Section 34(2)(a)(i) | Medical evidence of incapacity; or proof that the arbitration agreement is void or voidable under applicable law |
| Improper notice / inability to present case | Section 34(2)(a)(ii) | Correspondence records, proof of incorrect address, tribunal procedural orders denying reasonable adjournments |
| Award beyond scope of submission | Section 34(2)(a)(iii) | Comparison of the terms of reference (or arbitration clause) against the award’s operative dispositions |
| Composition of tribunal / procedure not as agreed | Section 34(2)(a)(iv) | Arbitration agreement or institutional rules vs. actual tribunal composition or procedure followed |
| Subject matter not arbitrable | Section 34(2)(b)(i) | Legal analysis showing that the dispute category is excluded from arbitration under Ugandan law |
| Conflict with public policy | Section 34(2)(b)(ii) | Evidence of fraud, corruption, breach of natural justice, or violation of a fundamental legal principle |
Section 34(3) sets a one‑month time limit for bringing an application to set aside. The clock starts on the day the applicant receives the award. Where a party has made a request under Section 33 (correction, interpretation, or additional award), the one‑month period runs instead from the date on which the tribunal disposes of that request.
Calculating the deadline correctly is essential. Practitioners should note the following:
The Commercial Court’s late‑2025 guidance addressed the recurring question of whether the one‑month time limit is capable of extension. The position, consistent with earlier High Court decisions, is that extensions are exceptional and require the applicant to demonstrate good cause, typically circumstances beyond the applicant’s control, such as delayed delivery of the award by the arbitral tribunal or the exercise of an arbitrator’s lien (withholding the award pending payment of fees).
The arbitrator’s lien scenario has particular practical significance. Where a tribunal withholds the signed award because its fees remain unpaid, the applicant may not have “received” the award for purposes of Section 34(3). Early indications suggest the Commercial Court will scrutinise whether the applicant contributed to the delay (for example, by refusing to pay fees in bad faith) before granting relief.
| Timeline Event | Applicant’s Action | Deadline Impact |
|---|---|---|
| Day 0, Award received | Log date of receipt; preserve proof of service | One‑month clock begins |
| Days 1–7 | Instruct counsel; identify potential grounds; request tribunal file | No extension unless Section 33 request is made |
| Days 8–21 | Draft application and supporting affidavit; assemble exhibits | Deadline unchanged |
| Days 22–28 | Finalise application; arrange filing logistics at High Court registry | Allow buffer for registry delays |
| Day 30 (Deadline) | File application and serve on respondent | Statutory bar takes effect at midnight |
Applications under Section 34 are filed in the High Court of Uganda. In practice, most arbitration‑related applications in Kampala are handled by the Commercial Court division, which has developed specialised experience in these matters. The application is brought by way of a notice of motion supported by an affidavit setting out the factual and legal basis for the challenge.
A typical filing includes:
Where enforcement of the award is imminent, the applicant may simultaneously apply for interim relief, typically a stay of execution pending determination of the set‑aside application. Separately, Section 5 of the ACA provides for a stay of legal proceedings where a matter is subject to an arbitration agreement. Although Section 5 is primarily a pre‑award mechanism, practitioners sometimes invoke it in tandem with a Section 34 application to prevent parallel court proceedings from undermining the arbitration framework. Uganda’s broader legislative landscape, including recent employment law changes in 2026, reinforces the policy of channelling disputes through agreed mechanisms before resorting to litigation.
For the party that won the award, defending a set‑aside application centres on three pillars: finality, narrow scope, and factual rebuttal. The respondent should:
Ironically, even the respondent (the award holder) may need to consider stay applications, for example, where the applicant has obtained an interim injunction freezing execution. In such cases, the respondent should move promptly to have the injunction discharged, relying on the strength of the award and the weakness of the Section 34 grounds. A respondent’s defence checklist should include certified copies of all tribunal correspondence, hearing records, and evidence of the applicant’s full participation in proceedings.
The power to set aside an arbitral award belongs to the courts of the country in which the award was made, the “seat” of arbitration. If the seat is Uganda, Section 34 of the ACA applies. If the seat is elsewhere (London, Paris, Nairobi), annulment must be sought at the courts of that seat. A Ugandan court cannot set aside an award made in another jurisdiction.
Uganda is a party to the Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards (the New York Convention). This means that a foreign award can be enforced in Uganda under the Convention’s framework, and a Ugandan award can be enforced abroad. A key strategic question arises when a party wishes to challenge a foreign award: should they seek annulment at the seat, or resist enforcement in Uganda?
Institutional commentary presented at the Kampala International University conference on 10 March 2025 highlighted that a successful annulment at the seat may, but does not automatically, prevent enforcement in other New York Convention states. Some jurisdictions have enforced awards that were set aside at the seat, treating annulment as persuasive rather than conclusive. Practitioners must therefore coordinate any challenge strategy across multiple jurisdictions.
| Action / Item | Domestic Award (Seat in Uganda) | Foreign Award (Seat Outside Uganda) |
|---|---|---|
| Where set‑aside is brought | High Court of Uganda, Section 34 application | Courts at the seat of arbitration; in Uganda, resist enforcement under NYC grounds |
| Typical deadline | One month from receipt of award | Annulment deadline governed by law at the seat; enforcement objections raised when award holder applies in Uganda |
| Practical advice | Move promptly; preserve evidence; seek interim stay of execution | Consider enforcement vs challenge at seat; coordinate parallel proceedings across jurisdictions |
For deeper context on cross‑border commercial disputes, practitioners may find it useful to review the international commercial law guide, which explores enforcement frameworks across multiple jurisdictions.
The compressed timeline for setting aside an arbitral award in Uganda means that preparation cannot wait. Below is a day‑by‑day action plan for both applicants and respondents.
Parties with more complex disputes, for example, those involving intellectual property rights in Uganda, may need to consider additional procedural requirements, as illustrated by the framework for enforcing copyright in Uganda.
Setting aside an arbitral award in Uganda remains a demanding but essential remedy for parties confronted with procedurally defective or unlawful awards. The one‑month deadline under Section 34 of the Arbitration and Conciliation Act leaves no room for delay, and the statutory grounds demand precise evidence rather than general dissatisfaction with the outcome. With the Commercial Court actively refining its approach to time extensions and arbitrator liens, practitioners in 2026 must combine legal accuracy with tactical speed. For tailored guidance on challenging or defending an arbitral award, parties are encouraged to consult a qualified Uganda arbitration specialist.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Belinda Lutaya Nakiganda at Birungyi, Barata & Associates, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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