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how do you set aside an arbitral award in singapore

How Do You Set Aside an Arbitral Award in Singapore (2026): Three‑month Deadline, Key Grounds Under S.24 IAA & S.48 AA

By Global Law Experts
– posted 3 hours ago

Last reviewed: June 27, 2026

If you have received an unfavourable arbitral award in a Singapore‑seated arbitration, the window to challenge it is narrow and strictly enforced. Understanding how do you set aside an arbitral award in Singapore is critical because the statutory deadline is just three months from the date of receipt of the award, and recent Court of Appeal decisions have confirmed that this time limit admits virtually no exceptions. The applicable legislation depends on whether the arbitration is international (section 24 of the International Arbitration Act, which incorporates the UNCITRAL Model Law) or domestic (section 48 of the Arbitration Act 2001).

This guide sets out the precise procedural steps, the exhaustive statutory grounds, timeline mechanics, evidence strategy, and drafting tips that practitioners need to mount, or defend against, a setting aside application in Singapore in 2026.

Urgent, if you only have 48–72 hours:

  • Confirm the seat of arbitration and the governing statute (IAA or AA).
  • Calculate the exact three‑month expiry date from receipt of the award.
  • Preserve all tribunal correspondence, hearing transcripts, and procedural orders immediately.
  • Consider whether urgent interim relief (Mareva injunction, stay of enforcement) is needed before filing.
  • Instruct counsel to prepare the originating application, supporting affidavit, and chronology without delay.

Quick Checklist and Timeline for Setting Aside an Arbitration Award

Before drafting a single paragraph of pleading, practitioners should work through a structured sequence. The table below maps each critical event to its statutory basis and the immediate action required.

Event Statute / Rule Action Required
Award received by party s.24 IAA / s.48 AA; Model Law Art.34(3) Log the date precisely, it triggers the three‑month clock.
Request for correction / interpretation / additional award submitted to tribunal SIAC Rules (Rule 33); Model Law Art.33 Note date of request, clock may restart from tribunal’s disposal date.
Tribunal disposes of correction / interpretation request Model Law Art.34(3) Three‑month period now runs from this later date.
Three‑month deadline approaches s.24(3) IAA / s.48(2) AA File originating application in the General Division of the High Court before expiry.
Opposing party seeks to enforce the award s.19 IAA / s.46 AA; New York Convention Art.V Assess whether to apply for a stay of enforcement or order for security pending the set‑aside hearing.

Bottom line: The checklist above should be completed within 48 hours of receiving an adverse award. Every day lost compresses the time available to build the evidential record that Singapore courts demand.

Which Statute Applies When You Set Aside an Arbitral Award in Singapore: s.24 IAA vs s.48 AA

The first question in any set‑aside application is jurisdictional: which statute governs? Singapore operates a dual‑track regime. International arbitrations seated in Singapore fall under the International Arbitration Act (IAA), which gives the UNCITRAL Model Law on International Commercial Arbitration the force of law. Domestic arbitrations are governed by the Arbitration Act 2001 (AA). The characterisation matters because, although the grounds for setting aside arbitration awards overlap substantially, the statutory texts differ in phrasing and the courts have, at times, applied them with different emphasis.

An arbitration is “international” under the IAA if, broadly, at least one party has its place of business outside Singapore at the time of the arbitration agreement, or the subject matter relates to more than one country. If in doubt, section 5(2) IAA provides the detailed criteria. Parties may also opt in or out of the IAA by agreement in certain circumstances.

Comparison Table: IAA s.24, AA s.48, and Model Law Art.34

Statute / Rule Key Provision Practical Implication
International Arbitration Act (IAA), s.24 / Model Law Art.34 Set‑aside grounds for international awards (incorporates Model Law); strict three‑month time limit under Art.34(3). Applies where Singapore is the seat and the arbitration is international; court applies Model Law tests; no general discretion to extend time.
Arbitration Act 2001 (AA), s.48 Set‑aside grounds for domestic awards; equivalent grounds; three‑month rule in s.48(2). Applies to domestic‑seat awards made under the AA; broadly similar tests but different statutory text and some procedural nuances.
Rules of Court 2021 (ROC) / Practice Directions Procedure for originating application and filing requirements for arbitration proceedings. Governs how to file and serve set‑aside applications, affidavits, and urgent interim relief applications.

Practitioners should confirm the correct regime at the outset. Filing under the wrong statute can cause delay and, in the worst case, result in an application being struck out after the three‑month window has closed.

Grounds to Set Aside an Arbitral Award Under Singapore Law

The grounds on which a court can set aside an arbitration award are exhaustive, they are set out in the statute, and a court will not invent new ones. Understanding what are the grounds to appeal an arbitration award (more accurately, to challenge its validity) requires a careful reading of s.24 IAA, the Model Law Art.34(2), and s.48 AA. The following sub‑sections address each recognised ground in turn.

Excess of Jurisdiction or Ultra Vires

A party may apply for setting aside where the tribunal decided matters beyond the scope of the submission to arbitration, or where the arbitration agreement itself was invalid. Under Model Law Art.34(2)(a)(iii), an award may be set aside if it “deals with a dispute not contemplated by or not falling within the terms of the submission to arbitration, or contains decisions on matters beyond the scope of the submission.” The equivalent is found in s.48(1)(a)(iv) AA.

Evidence to adduce: The arbitration agreement (and any subsequent amendments), the parties’ statements of case, the tribunal’s procedural orders defining the issues, and the award itself, to demonstrate that the tribunal ruled on a claim or issue that was never submitted.

Sample affidavit paragraph: “The Respondent’s counterclaim for tortious interference was never pleaded in the Notice of Arbitration, was not included in the Terms of Reference signed by the parties on [date], and was raised for the first time in the Respondent’s closing submissions. The Tribunal’s decision to award damages on this counterclaim exceeded the scope of the submission to arbitration.”

Breach of Natural Justice

This is the most frequently litigated ground in Singapore. Section 24(b) IAA provides that an award may be set aside if “a breach of the rules of natural justice occurred in connection with the making of the award by which the rights of any party have been prejudiced.” The test is well established: the applicant must show (a) which rule of natural justice was breached, (b) how it was breached, (c) in what way the breach was connected to the making of the award, and (d) how the breach prejudiced the applicant’s rights.

Singapore courts have consistently held that a failure to consider a party’s arguments can amount to a breach of natural justice, but mere disagreement with the tribunal’s reasoning does not. Industry observers expect the Court of Appeal’s recent emphasis on this distinction to continue shaping applications through 2026 and beyond.

Evidence to adduce: Hearing transcripts, written submissions (to show the argument was raised), the award (to show the argument was not addressed), and any procedural correspondence showing requests for the tribunal to address specific issues.

Sample affidavit paragraph: “The Applicant’s expert report on quantum, served on [date] and admitted into evidence without objection, addressed the recoverability of consequential losses in detail. The Award contains no analysis of, or reference to, this expert evidence. The Tribunal’s failure to consider this evidence constitutes a breach of natural justice that prejudiced the Applicant, as the quantum awarded was determined without reference to a material part of the Applicant’s case.”

Public Policy

An award may be set aside if it is contrary to the public policy of Singapore (Model Law Art.34(2)(b)(ii); s.48(1)(b)(ii) AA). Singapore courts have interpreted “public policy” narrowly: the award must shock the conscience, be clearly injurious to the public good, or wholly offensive to the ordinary reasonable and fully informed member of the public. This is a high threshold, and routine contractual disputes rarely satisfy it.

Fraud or Corruption

Where the award was induced or affected by fraud or corruption, a set‑aside is available under s.24(a) IAA. The standard of proof is the ordinary civil standard (balance of probabilities), though courts have acknowledged the inherent improbability of such allegations and expect cogent evidence. The practical challenge is that fraud may only come to light after the three‑month deadline, a point discussed in the timing section below.

Serious Irregularity in Tribunal Composition or Procedure

Grounds also exist where (a) a party was under some incapacity, (b) the arbitration agreement was not valid, (c) proper notice of the appointment of an arbitrator or of the proceedings was not given, or (d) the composition of the tribunal or the arbitral procedure was not in accordance with the agreement of the parties (Model Law Art.34(2)(a); s.48(1)(a) AA). These grounds require the applicant to demonstrate a connection between the irregularity and the outcome, a mere procedural slip that caused no prejudice will not suffice.

Bottom line: Singapore’s grounds for setting aside arbitration awards are narrow by design. The policy of minimal curial intervention means that the court will not revisit the merits of the dispute. The applicant must fit squarely within one of the statutory gateways and demonstrate real prejudice.

Timing Mechanics and the Strict Three‑Month Rule

The three‑month deadline is the single most important procedural constraint for anyone considering how to overturn an arbitration award in Singapore. Under the IAA (via Model Law Art.34(3)), an application to set aside may not be made after three months have elapsed from the date on which the applicant received the award, or, if a request for correction, interpretation, or an additional award has been made under Model Law Art.33, from the date on which that request was disposed of by the tribunal. The same rule is mirrored in s.48(2) AA for domestic awards.

The prevailing judicial position is that this time limit is strict and cannot be extended by the court. A practitioner analysis by Drew & Napier has highlighted that the Singapore courts have declined to exercise any residual discretion to extend this period, even where fraud is alleged to have been discovered after the deadline passed. Academic reviews, including the SIDRA / SMU Review of the International Arbitration Act, have recommended that the legislature consider introducing a limited judicial discretion to extend time in exceptional circumstances, such as late discovery of fraud, but no such amendment has been enacted as of June 2026.

Computing the Three‑Month Period, Practical Steps

  • Identify the trigger date. This is the date the applicant (not their counsel, unless counsel is authorised to receive) actually received the award.
  • Check for correction / interpretation requests. If any party filed a request under Model Law Art.33 or the applicable institutional rules (e.g., SIAC Rules, Rule 33), the clock restarts from the date the tribunal disposes of that request.
  • Calendar the deadline immediately. Count three calendar months forward. If the last day falls on a weekend or public holiday, consult the Rules of Court on computation of time.
  • File early. Given the absolute nature of the limit, best practice is to file the originating application at least two weeks before the deadline, allowing time for any administrative issues with the court registry.

Clock started, what next? If you have just received the award and are considering a challenge, begin assembling the evidence file immediately. Do not wait for a full legal analysis before preserving documents, tribunal transcripts, email correspondence, expert reports, and procedural orders should be collected and secured within days, not weeks.

Procedure: How to Bring a Set‑Aside Application

Understanding how do you set aside an arbitral award in Singapore also requires mastery of the procedural mechanics. The application is made to the General Division of the High Court by way of an originating application under the Rules of Court 2021 (ROC 2021). The key procedural steps are as follows:

  1. Prepare the originating application. The application must clearly state the relief sought (an order setting aside the award, in whole or in part, and costs) and identify the statutory grounds relied upon (s.24 IAA or s.48 AA, with specific sub‑paragraphs cited).
  2. Draft the supporting affidavit(s). At least one affidavit must be filed by a person with direct knowledge of the facts. It should exhibit: the arbitration agreement, the award, all relevant correspondence and procedural orders, hearing transcripts (where relevant), and any expert evidence. Each ground of challenge should be addressed with specific factual allegations and cross‑references to exhibits.
  3. Prepare a chronology and case summary. Courts expect a concise chronology of the arbitral proceedings and a summary of the grounds relied upon. This is both a practice direction requirement and a tactical advantage, a clear narrative helps the judge orient to the dispute quickly.
  4. File and serve. The originating application, affidavit(s), and supporting documents must be filed with the court registry (via eLitigation) and served on the opposing party within the prescribed timelines.
  5. Consider urgent or ex parte applications. If assets are at risk of dissipation or enforcement proceedings have already commenced, an urgent inter partes (or, exceptionally, ex parte) application for a stay of enforcement or Mareva injunction may be required simultaneously. See the section on interim relief below.

Sample procedural timeline:

  • Day 1–7: Receive award, instruct counsel, begin evidence preservation.
  • Day 7–30: Legal analysis of grounds, draft originating application and supporting affidavit.
  • Day 30–60: Finalise affidavit exhibits, obtain witness statements, settle chronology.
  • Day 60–75: File originating application and serve on respondent (two weeks before the 90‑day deadline).
  • Day 75–90: Buffer period for any registry queries, urgent interim relief applications, and service confirmation.

Interplay With Enforcement, Interim Relief, and Security

Filing a set‑aside application does not automatically stay enforcement of the award. The winning party may pursue enforcement concurrently, including seeking leave to enforce under s.19 IAA or applying for registration of a foreign award under the New York Convention. This creates an urgent practical question: how to preserve assets and prevent irreversible prejudice while the set‑aside is heard.

The principal remedies available are:

  • Stay of enforcement. The court may order a stay of enforcement pending determination of the set‑aside application, but this is discretionary and courts are cautious. The applicant typically needs to demonstrate a genuine and arguable challenge, a risk of irreversible prejudice, and willingness to provide security.
  • Mareva (freezing) injunction. Where there is a real risk that the opposing party will dissipate assets to frustrate any subsequent recovery, the court may grant a freezing order. The threshold is high: the applicant must show a good arguable case on the merits of the set‑aside, a real risk of dissipation, and that the balance of convenience favours the injunction.
  • Security for costs / security pending outcome. Courts may order that the award sum (or part of it) be paid into court or held in escrow as a condition of granting a stay. This protects the award creditor while allowing the challenge to proceed.

For a detailed treatment of interim relief in Singapore arbitration, including specimen orders and drafting considerations, see the linked guide.

Evidence Strategy and Drafting Tips for Setting Aside Arbitration Awards

Success in a set‑aside application depends overwhelmingly on the quality and specificity of the evidence. Singapore courts expect contemporaneous documentary evidence, not reconstructed narratives. The following principles should guide preparation:

  • Build the record from Day 1 of the arbitration. If the arbitration is ongoing and procedural concerns arise (e.g., the tribunal refuses to admit evidence, limits cross‑examination, or fails to address submissions), record your objections in writing at the time. A contemporaneous protest letter to the tribunal is far more persuasive than an affidavit drafted months later.
  • Exhibit the full tribunal record. Courts will scrutinise the hearing transcripts, procedural orders, and written submissions to determine whether a breach of natural justice actually occurred. Selective exhibition undermines credibility.
  • Address prejudice explicitly. It is not enough to show that the tribunal erred procedurally. The affidavit must explain, with specificity, how the error prejudiced the applicant’s rights, for example, by demonstrating that the excluded evidence would have been material to a finding on liability or quantum.
  • Standard of proof. For most grounds, the standard is the balance of probabilities. For fraud or corruption, the same standard applies in law, but courts expect cogent, specific evidence commensurate with the seriousness of the allegation.
  • Expert evidence. Where the challenge involves technical issues (e.g., the tribunal misapplied a valuation methodology or ignored an industry‑standard engineering assessment), independent expert evidence in support of the set‑aside application strengthens the case materially.

Practical Outcomes: Success Rates and the Appellate Pathway

Practitioners should advise clients candidly: Singapore courts uphold a strong policy of minimal curial intervention in arbitral awards. The overwhelming majority of set‑aside applications fail. When an application does succeed, the court will typically set aside the award (in whole or in part) and may remit the matter to the same or a newly constituted tribunal for reconsideration.

An appeal from the General Division of the High Court’s decision on a set‑aside application lies to the Court of Appeal, but leave to appeal may be required depending on the nature of the issues raised. Costs consequences are significant: an unsuccessful applicant will ordinarily pay the respondent’s costs of the set‑aside proceedings on the standard basis, and reputational damage in the arbitration community, particularly in sectors like banking, finance, and maritime, can be lasting.

When can a court set aside an arbitration award and remit it? Industry observers expect remission to become the preferred remedy where the procedural defect can be cured by the tribunal (e.g., by considering evidence that was wrongly excluded), rather than a full re‑hearing. This approach preserves the efficiency benefits of arbitration while correcting genuine injustice.

Worked Example and Sample Drafting Snippets

Hypothetical: A Singapore‑incorporated shipowner (the Applicant) and a Hong Kong‑incorporated charterer (the Respondent) arbitrated a charterparty dispute under SIAC Rules, seated in Singapore. The tribunal issued its final award on 1 March 2026, dismissing the Applicant’s claim for hire arrears. The Applicant received the award on 3 March 2026.

The Applicant believes the tribunal failed to consider its expert evidence on market rates and decided a counterclaim for demurrage that was never pleaded. The three‑month deadline expires on 3 June 2026.

Sample skeleton paragraph, jurisdictional excess:

“The Respondent’s counterclaim for demurrage was not included in the Notice of Arbitration dated [date], was not raised in the Respondent’s Statement of Defence and Counterclaim, and was first mentioned in oral closing submissions on [date]. The Applicant objected to its introduction (see Exhibit PG‑12, transcript at p.47, lines 3–18). Despite this objection, the Tribunal awarded USD [X] in demurrage. This decision falls outside the scope of the submission to arbitration within the meaning of Art.34(2)(a)(iii) of the Model Law.”

Sample skeleton paragraph, breach of natural justice:

“The Applicant’s expert, [name], provided a detailed report on prevailing market charter rates (Exhibit PG‑8), which was admitted into evidence without objection. The Award at paragraphs [X]–[Y] determines the quantum of hire arrears without any reference to, or analysis of, this expert evidence. The Tribunal’s failure to consider this material constitutes a breach of the rules of natural justice under s.24(b) IAA, which prejudiced the Applicant by resulting in an award of hire that did not reflect the market evidence before the Tribunal.”

Conclusion: Protecting Your Rights Within the Three‑Month Window

Understanding how do you set aside an arbitral award in Singapore comes down to three imperatives: act fast, choose the right statutory ground, and build an airtight evidential record. The three‑month deadline is absolute, the grounds are exhaustive, and the standard of judicial review is deliberately narrow. Practitioners who identify a viable challenge should begin evidence preservation and legal analysis within days, not weeks, of receiving an adverse award.

For those assessing whether a challenge is worthwhile, a candid cost‑benefit analysis should account for the low statistical success rate, the costs exposure, and the appellate pathway. Where the facts support a genuine set‑aside ground, particularly breach of natural justice or jurisdictional excess, Singapore’s courts remain willing to intervene, but only on the strength of specific, contemporaneous evidence.

Singapore remains one of the world’s leading seats for international arbitration, and its set‑aside framework is a cornerstone of that reputation. Consult the Global Law Experts lawyer directory to connect with a qualified arbitration practitioner in Singapore.

Need Legal Advice?

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.

Sources

  1. Arbitration Act 2001 (AA), Singapore Statutes Online (AGC / SSO)
  2. eLitigation, Singapore Court Judgments
  3. Drew & Napier LLP, Strict Time Limit for Applications to Set Aside Arbitration Awards
  4. SIDRA / SMU Review of the Singapore International Arbitration Act (2024)
  5. Herbert Smith Freehills Kramer, Setting Aside Awards: New Guidance from the Singapore Court
  6. Pinsent Masons / Out-Law, Singapore Judgment Provides Guidance on Setting Aside Arbitral Awards
  7. SIAC Rules (Official)
  8. Singapore Law Watch, International and Domestic Arbitration in Singapore

FAQs

How do you set aside an arbitral award in Singapore?
File an originating application in the General Division of the High Court, supported by affidavit evidence, within three months of receipt of the award (or disposal of any correction/interpretation request). The application must plead specific statutory grounds under s.24 IAA (for international awards) or s.48 AA (for domestic awards).
The clock runs from the later of (a) the date the applicant received the award, or (b) the date on which the tribunal disposed of any request for correction, interpretation, or an additional award under Model Law Art.33.
The principal grounds are: the tribunal exceeded its jurisdiction; a breach of natural justice occurred that prejudiced a party; the award conflicts with Singapore public policy; the award was induced by fraud or corruption; or there was a serious irregularity in the composition of the tribunal or the arbitral procedure.
A set‑aside application does not automatically stay enforcement. You may apply for a stay of enforcement, a Mareva injunction, or an order for security, but the court will assess whether there is a genuine challenge, a risk of irreversible prejudice, and whether the balance of convenience favours a stay.
Success rates are low. Singapore courts maintain a strong policy of minimal curial intervention and will not revisit the merits of the dispute. Applications succeed only where the applicant demonstrates a clear statutory ground supported by specific, contemporaneous evidence of prejudice.
The prevailing position is that the three‑month time limit is strict and cannot be extended by the court, even in cases involving late discovery of fraud. Academic reviews, including the SIDRA/SMU Review of the International Arbitration Act, have recommended introducing a limited judicial discretion to extend time in exceptional cases, but no such legislative amendment has been enacted as of June 2026.
Correction and interpretation are requests made to the tribunal itself (under Model Law Art.33 or the applicable institutional rules) to fix clerical errors or clarify ambiguous passages. Setting aside is a court challenge to the award’s validity on statutory grounds. Making a correction or interpretation request may delay the start of the three‑month clock for a set‑aside application.
Singapore courts do not modify awards on the merits. If a set‑aside application succeeds, the court will either set the award aside (in whole or in part) or remit the matter to the tribunal for reconsideration. The court does not substitute its own decision for that of the tribunal.

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How Do You Set Aside an Arbitral Award in Singapore (2026): Three‑month Deadline, Key Grounds Under S.24 IAA & S.48 AA

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