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Last updated: 31 May 2026
Understanding how to commence international arbitration in Singapore is the first critical decision any claimant faces once negotiations have failed and a dispute must move to a formal resolution mechanism. Singapore is among the world’s most-used arbitration seats, underpinned by the International Arbitration Act 1994 (IAA) for international matters and the Arbitration Act for domestic disputes, with the Singapore International Arbitration Centre (SIAC) administering the majority of institutional cases. The SIAC Rules 2025, which took effect for arbitrations commenced on or after their effective date, introduced tighter Notice of Arbitration requirements, clarified emergency arbitrator procedures, and updated fee timing, changes every claimant must factor into the commencement process.
This guide sets out the complete procedure: eligibility checks, a six-step numbered workflow, a full documents checklist, a practical timeline, verified costs, and guidance on interim relief, giving general counsel, in-house teams, and SME claimants a single reference before they file.
International arbitration in Singapore is governed by a dual statutory framework. The International Arbitration Act 1994 (IAA) applies to arbitrations where the dispute is international in character, broadly, where the parties have their places of business in different states, the seat is outside a party’s state of business, or a substantial part of the obligations are to be performed abroad. The Arbitration Act governs purely domestic arbitrations. The distinction matters because the IAA gives effect to the UNCITRAL Model Law, limits court intervention, and provides a pro-enforcement regime aligned with the New York Convention.
Most institutional arbitrations seated in Singapore are administered under the SIAC Rules 2025, though parties are free to adopt other institutional rules (ICC, HKIAC, LCIA) or proceed ad hoc under the UNCITRAL Arbitration Rules. Where the arbitration agreement specifies SIAC, the SIAC Rules govern the commencement procedure, tribunal constitution, and case management, subject to the overarching provisions of the IAA.
Under the SIAC Rules 2025, an arbitration is deemed to “commence” on the date the completed Notice of Arbitration, together with the required filing fee, is received by the SIAC Registrar. This commencement date anchors every subsequent deadline, from respondent response periods to tribunal constitution timelines, and is the date from which limitation defences are typically assessed.
The foundation of any arbitration is a binding agreement to arbitrate. This may appear as a clause within a commercial contract, as a standalone arbitration agreement, or, in certain circumstances, as a referral by consent after a dispute has arisen. Before commencing, confirm:
The seat (or “juridical seat”) determines the procedural law of the arbitration, in Singapore, that means the IAA applies. Confirm the seat is Singapore by reviewing the arbitration clause. If the clause specifies SIAC but is silent on seat, SIAC will typically default to Singapore. If neither seat nor institution is stated, a jurisdictional dispute may arise; parties should seek legal advice before filing. Additionally, parties receiving third‑party funding should be aware that Singapore practice directions and SIAC guidance increasingly require early disclosure of the existence and identity of any funder, a point to address before the Notice is served.
The following six steps walk through the complete commencement process, from the internal decision to file through to the first procedural order after the tribunal is constituted. Each step identifies who is responsible and the practical time frame involved.
Who: Claimant / Counsel
Before any document is drafted, the claimant’s legal team should complete a structured pre-filing review:
This preparatory stage typically takes 1–7 days, depending on the complexity of the dispute and the urgency of the matter.
Who: Claimant / Counsel
The Notice of Arbitration is the formal document that triggers the arbitration. Under the SIAC Rules 2025, the Notice must contain the following mandatory elements:
Parties proceeding under other institutional rules (e.g., ICC or UNCITRAL) should verify the Notice requirements under those rules, as the mandatory contents differ in detail.
Sample Notice of Arbitration, checklist template:
| Item | Content to include |
|---|---|
| Claimant identity | Full legal name, registration number, registered address, counsel details |
| Respondent identity | Full legal name, registered address, known contact details |
| Contract reference | Date, title, and parties to the contract containing the arbitration agreement |
| Arbitration clause | Full text of the clause, or a copy of the agreement appended |
| Summary of dispute | Concise factual background (2–4 paragraphs) |
| Relief sought | Specific remedies: damages (quantified or estimated), declarations, injunctions, costs |
| Tribunal proposal | Sole arbitrator / three-member panel; claimant’s nominee (if applicable) |
| Seat / language | Singapore (unless otherwise agreed); English (unless otherwise agreed) |
| Emergency relief | If sought: separate application with supporting affidavit |
| Third‑party funding | Disclosure statement (if applicable) |
| Signature | Authorised signatory / counsel |
Who: Claimant / SIAC Registry
Submit the completed Notice of Arbitration to the SIAC Registry. Filing may be done electronically via the SIAC online filing portal, by email, or in hard copy. The submission must include:
The arbitration commences on the date the SIAC Registrar receives both a complete Notice and the registration fee. SIAC typically acknowledges receipt and issues a case reference number within 1–3 business days of a complete filing. An incomplete filing, for example, a Notice missing the registration fee or a required attachment, will not be registered until the deficiency is cured, and the commencement date will be deferred accordingly.
Who: Parties / SIAC Court / Appointing authority
Once the case is registered, the process of constituting the tribunal begins. Under the SIAC Rules 2025:
Tribunal constitution typically takes 14–42 days from commencement, though expedited appointment is available in urgent cases. The tribunal is constituted when all arbitrators have confirmed their appointment and disclosed any potential conflicts.
Who: Applicant / Emergency Arbitrator / Singapore Courts
Parties who need urgent relief before the tribunal is constituted have two principal routes:
Route A, Emergency Arbitrator (SIAC). Under the SIAC Rules 2025, an applicant may file an application for emergency interim relief concurrently with or shortly after the Notice of Arbitration. SIAC will appoint an emergency arbitrator, typically within one business day. The emergency arbitrator has the power to order any interim relief considered necessary, and must issue a decision or order within a compressed timeline, industry observers note that decisions are typically rendered within 24–72 hours, with same-day relief possible in extreme cases.
Route B, Singapore Courts. Alternatively, or in parallel, parties may apply to the Singapore High Court (or the Singapore International Commercial Court, SICC) for interim measures under section 12A of the IAA, which empowers the court to grant interim injunctions, preservation orders, and other relief in support of international arbitration. Court applications are appropriate where the emergency arbitrator route is unavailable (e.g., the respondent has not agreed to emergency arbitrator provisions), where enforcement against third parties is needed (emergency arbitrator orders bind only the parties), or where the matter involves anti-suit injunctions.
Key practical point: Emergency arbitrator orders issued under SIAC Rules are binding on the parties but are not directly enforceable as court orders. If enforcement through the Singapore courts is needed, a separate court application may be required. This interface between institutional and court relief is a critical tactical decision that should be assessed before filing.
Who: Tribunal / Parties
Once the tribunal is constituted, it will typically issue a first procedural order within 7–21 days. This order sets out the procedural timetable, including deadlines for the Statement of Claim, Statement of Defence, document production, witness statements, and hearing dates. Parties should also be prepared to address preliminary issues at this stage, including jurisdictional objections, applications for consolidation or joinder of additional parties, and any confidentiality or bifurcation requests.
Preparing the correct documents before filing prevents delays in registration and avoids the commencement date being pushed back. The following table sets out the documents needed for a SIAC filing and for the initial procedural stages.
| Document | Notes |
|---|---|
| Arbitration agreement / contract clause (signed) | PDF of the executed contract. Highlight the arbitration clause. If originals are unavailable, provide a certified copy with an explanation. |
| Notice of Arbitration | Signed PDF containing all mandatory elements under SIAC Rules 2025 (see Step 2 checklist above). Must include claimant contact details, relief sought, basis of claims, and proposed tribunal composition. |
| Proof of authority to commence | Board resolution or power of attorney issued by the claimant entity, signed and dated. Notarisation may be required for offshore parties or where the respondent is likely to challenge authority. |
| Claiming documents (supporting evidence) | PDF bundles of invoices, contracts, correspondence, and other evidence supporting the claims. Index all documents and provide certified English translations where originals are in another language. |
| Payment confirmation, SIAC registration fee | Bank receipt or SIAC payment confirmation showing that the registration fee has been paid in the correct amount and currency (SGD). |
| Application for emergency relief (if applicable) | Separate application accompanied by a supporting affidavit or declaration setting out the facts giving rise to urgency, the relief sought, and a draft order. Must be filed concurrently with or shortly after the Notice. |
| Identity documents for counsel / signatory | Passport copy or professional identification for the authorised signatory and lead counsel. Where third‑party funding is in place, include a disclosure statement identifying the funder as required by applicable SIAC guidance. |
Translations and authentication. Singapore arbitration practice requires that all documents submitted in a language other than the language of the arbitration (typically English) be accompanied by a certified English translation. Authentication or apostille requirements depend on the origin of the document and the applicable rules, parties should verify this with counsel before filing.
Practical tip: Prepare a master filing bundle, a single indexed PDF containing the Notice, arbitration agreement, authority documentation, and payment confirmation, to streamline the SIAC registration process and avoid piecemeal submissions that delay the commencement date.
The commencement date under the SIAC Rules 2025 is the date the SIAC Registrar receives both a complete Notice of Arbitration and the registration fee. This date anchors all subsequent deadlines and is the date from which any limitation defence is typically assessed. For ad hoc arbitrations (e.g., under UNCITRAL Rules), the commencement date is usually the date the Notice is received by the respondent, a critical distinction.
| Step / Trigger | Who Does It | Typical Duration |
|---|---|---|
| Prepare and serve Notice of Arbitration | Claimant / Counsel | 1–7 days from internal decision to proceed |
| File Notice + pay SIAC registration fee | Claimant | Same day as service (SIAC acknowledges within 1 business day) |
| SIAC case number and registration | SIAC Registry | 1–3 business days after complete filing |
| Emergency Arbitrator application decided | Emergency Arbitrator / SIAC | 24–72 hours (same-day relief possible in extreme cases) |
| Respondent’s Response to Notice | Respondent | 14 days from receipt of Notice (SIAC Rules 2025) |
| Tribunal constituted (party-nominated or SIAC-appointed) | Parties / SIAC Court | 14–42 days from commencement (expedited appointment available) |
| First procedural order / directions | Tribunal | 7–21 days after constitution |
| Statement of Claim / Statement of Defence exchange | Parties | 21–90 days (depending on complexity and tribunal directions) |
Counting rules. Under the SIAC Rules 2025, time periods are calculated in calendar days. Where a deadline falls on a public holiday or non-business day in Singapore, it is typically extended to the next business day. Parties should always confirm counting conventions in the applicable rules, as UNCITRAL and ICC rules may differ.
Missed deadlines. If a respondent fails to file a Response within the prescribed period, the arbitration proceeds; default does not prevent constitution or the making of an award. If a claimant misses a fee payment deadline, the Notice may not be registered, and the commencement date will be deferred, with potential limitation consequences. Parties who have missed a deadline should seek an extension from the tribunal (once constituted) or from the SIAC Registrar, depending on the stage of proceedings.
The costs of commencing an arbitration in Singapore comprise institutional fees, tribunal fees, and professional fees. The table below sets out the principal cost categories. All fee amounts should be verified against the current SIAC fee schedule before filing.
| Cost Item | Indicative Range | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| SIAC registration fee | Varies by claim quantum (see SIAC Rules 2025 fee schedule) | Payable on filing. Non-refundable. Verify the current amount on the SIAC website. Last checked: 31 May 2026. |
| Tribunal deposit / initial advance on costs | Set by SIAC based on claim value and tribunal composition | Typically split equally between the parties. Payable after tribunal constitution. Claimant may be required to pay the respondent’s share if the respondent defaults. |
| Emergency Arbitrator fee | Additional fee per SIAC emergency arbitrator provisions | Payable when filing the emergency application. Separate from registration fee. |
| Legal fees (counsel) | Varies widely, from tens of thousands to millions of SGD | Depends on claim complexity, number of parties, volume of evidence. Fee arrangements may include hourly, fixed fee, or (where permitted) partial contingency structures. |
| Translation and expert fees | SGD 5,000 – SGD 100,000+ | Case-specific. Certified translations, quantum experts, technical experts, and forensic specialists can add significantly to costs. |
| Court filing fees (if SICC / High Court invoked) | Fixed fees per Judiciary schedule | Applicable where court applications are made for interim relief or enforcement. Verify on judiciary.gov.sg. |
GST considerations. Legal services provided in Singapore are subject to Goods and Services Tax (GST) at the prevailing rate. Counsel and expert invoices will typically include GST. Cross-border fee arrangements (e.g., foreign counsel or experts engaged for a Singapore-seated arbitration) may have different GST treatment, parties should seek tax advice to manage the impact on overall costs.
Cost recovery. Under both the IAA and the SIAC Rules 2025, the tribunal has discretion to allocate the costs of the arbitration (including institutional fees, tribunal fees, and reasonable legal costs) between the parties in the final award. The general principle in Singapore-seated arbitrations is that costs follow the event, though this is subject to the tribunal’s broad discretion.
The SIAC Rules 2025 introduced several changes that directly affect how parties commence international arbitration in Singapore. Practitioners must account for these when preparing a Notice of Arbitration and planning early case strategy.
Tightened Notice of Arbitration requirements. The SIAC Rules 2025 formalised and expanded the mandatory contents of the Notice, including express requirements for an estimate of the monetary value of claims, disclosure of third‑party funding arrangements, and a more detailed statement of the relief sought. Incomplete Notices are more likely to be returned for correction, potentially delaying the commencement date.
Clarified emergency arbitrator provisions. The 2025 Rules refined the emergency arbitrator procedure, clarifying the types of relief available, the timeline for appointment and decision, and the relationship between emergency arbitrator orders and subsequent tribunal orders. Early indications suggest that SIAC’s emergency arbitrator mechanism is being used with increasing frequency, particularly in disputes involving asset dissipation and cross-border injunctive relief.
Fee timing and early case management. The SIAC Rules 2025 adjusted the timing and structure of fee deposits, with registration fees payable upfront and advances on costs determined earlier in the process. Early case management conferences, at which the tribunal sets the procedural timetable, are now more structured and typically convened within weeks of tribunal constitution.
IAA reform proposals (2025–2026). Industry observers note that the Singapore government has been consulting on potential amendments to the IAA, with discussion topics including expanded court powers to enforce emergency arbitrator orders, refinement of the third‑party funding disclosure regime, and possible alignment of certain IAA provisions with the latest UNCITRAL Model Law revisions. As of 31 May 2026, no amending legislation has been enacted, but practitioners should monitor the Singapore Attorney-General’s Chambers and Ministry of Law websites for updates.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Peter Gabriel at GABRIEL LAW CORPORATION, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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