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Commercial contracts across the United Kingdom routinely include mediation clauses, yet many in-house counsel and contracts managers remain uncertain whether those clauses actually bind the parties. The question of whether mediation clauses are enforceable has taken on fresh urgency since the Court of Appeal’s landmark decision in Churchill v Merthyr Tydfil County Borough Council [2023] EWCA Civ 1416, which significantly expanded the courts’ willingness to require alternative dispute resolution (ADR) and to impose costs sanctions on parties who refuse it without good reason.
Combined with evolving pre-action protocol requirements and the Civil Justice Council’s policy push toward earlier ADR engagement, the enforceability of mediation clauses is no longer a theoretical question, it is a live compliance risk that affects litigation strategy, contract drafting and cost exposure in every sector.
Yes, mediation clauses are enforceable in England and Wales, provided they are drafted with sufficient certainty and expressed as a condition precedent to litigation or arbitration. Courts will uphold a clause that identifies a clear process, sets workable time limits, and provides a mechanism for appointing a mediator. Vague or purely aspirational wording, by contrast, is unlikely to be enforced.
The practical takeaway for contracts teams is straightforward: use conditions-precedent language, specify the mediation process with precision, include deadlines, and address mediator selection. Following Churchill, unreasonable refusal to engage with a contractual mediation clause exposes a party to adverse costs orders, stays of proceedings, or both. The Practice Direction on Pre-Action Conduct and Protocols reinforces this expectation by requiring parties to consider ADR before issuing proceedings.
A mediation clause is a contractual provision requiring or encouraging the parties to attempt mediation before escalating a dispute to court or arbitration. Not all mediation clauses carry the same legal weight. Whether a mediation clause is binding depends largely on its drafting. Clauses fall into four broad categories:
The enforceability spectrum runs from weakest (aspirational) to strongest (condition precedent and escalation). When drafting, the objective should be to land firmly in the condition-precedent category.
Two Court of Appeal decisions frame the current law on whether mediation clauses are enforceable and on the consequences of ignoring ADR obligations. Understanding both is essential for anyone drafting or relying on dispute resolution provisions.
Halsey was for two decades the leading authority on the relationship between mediation and court proceedings. The Court of Appeal held that to compel an unwilling party to mediate would be an unjustifiable restriction on the right of access to court, and that the proper role for courts was to encourage, not mandate, ADR. Where a party unreasonably refused to mediate, however, the court could reflect that refusal in its costs order. Halsey established a set of factors for assessing whether a refusal was unreasonable, including the nature of the dispute, the merits of the case, and whether other settlement methods had been attempted.
Churchill marked a significant departure from the Halsey approach. The Court of Appeal held that courts do have the power to order parties to engage in ADR, including mediation, and that doing so does not necessarily violate a party’s right of access to court under Article 6 of the European Convention on Human Rights. The key qualification is proportionality: the order must not impair the substance of the claimant’s right to proceed to trial.
In practical terms, Churchill means that courts can now stay proceedings and direct the parties to mediate before allowing a case to continue. Where a party refuses ADR without serious justification, the court has broad discretion to impose adverse costs orders or other case management sanctions. Industry observers expect this decision to embed mediation more firmly into commercial dispute resolution, making well-drafted mediation clauses even more important as courts increasingly look to the parties’ contractual commitments when deciding how to exercise these powers.
The procedural framework reinforces the enforceability of mediation clauses and penalises parties who ignore pre-action protocol mediation requirements. The Practice Direction on Pre-Action Conduct and Protocols sets the baseline: before commencing proceedings, parties should exchange sufficient information, consider ADR, and make genuine attempts to resolve the dispute. Failure to comply can result in costs sanctions, including orders that the non-compliant party pay the other side’s costs on an indemnity basis or face a stay of proceedings.
The Civil Justice Council’s Review of Pre-Action Protocols, published in August 2023, recommended strengthening and standardising pre-action ADR expectations across all civil claims. Early indications suggest that subsequent changes to the CPR are reinforcing this direction, with greater emphasis on parties demonstrating that they have genuinely engaged with ADR before seeking judicial intervention.
For in-house counsel, the pre-action checklist should include the following steps:
If a party refuses mediation, will it go against them in court? After Churchill, the answer is increasingly yes. Courts now have explicit authority to stay proceedings and direct ADR, and unreasonable refusal to comply risks adverse costs consequences. Even a successful party may find its costs recovery reduced where the court concludes that mediation would likely have resolved the dispute earlier and more cheaply.
Courts assess the enforceability of mediation clauses against a set of practical criteria. A clause is likely enforceable where it includes the following five elements:
A clause that includes all five elements will almost certainly be treated as an enforceable condition precedent. Conversely, a clause that says only “the parties agree to try to resolve disputes amicably before going to court” is too vague to enforce.
The following is a model clause drafted to satisfy the enforceability tests described above:
“Before commencing any court proceedings or arbitration in respect of any dispute arising out of or in connection with this agreement, the parties shall first attempt to resolve the dispute by mediation administered by CEDR in accordance with CEDR’s current model mediation procedure. A party wishing to refer a dispute to mediation shall give written notice to the other party. The mediation shall commence within 28 days of such notice. If the dispute is not resolved within 56 days of the notice, or if either party fails to participate in the mediation, either party may then commence proceedings.”
For comparison, an aspirational clause might read: “The parties will endeavour to resolve disputes through mediation where appropriate.” This creates no enforceable obligation.
A recommended ADR clause sits in the middle ground: “In the event of a dispute, the parties agree to consider mediation before issuing proceedings and to exchange proposals for a mediator within 14 days of a written request.” This is stronger than an aspirational clause, but weaker than a full condition precedent because it merely requires consideration, not completion.
What happens if you breach a mediation agreement or ignore a contractual mediation clause? Several remedies are available to the innocent party:
To enforce a mediation clause, the applicant typically makes an application supported by a witness statement exhibiting the contract, the mediation clause, evidence of the request to mediate, and evidence that the other party refused or failed to engage.
The following checklist is designed for contracts teams drafting or reviewing mediation clauses in commercial agreements:
When a counterparty resists including a condition-precedent mediation clause, the negotiation response should focus on commercial benefits: mediation is typically faster and cheaper than litigation, preserves business relationships, and keeps disputes confidential. Industry observers expect post-Churchill case management to increasingly penalise parties who bypass ADR, making a robust mediation clause a form of litigation risk management.
| Party Behaviour | Likely Court Response (Case Management) | Typical Cost Outcome |
|---|---|---|
| Engages in mediation in good faith (offers, attends, participates with authority) | Courts note compliance; unlikely to order sanctions; positive case management treatment | No adverse costs for participating; possible costs recovery for reasonable conduct |
| Refuses mediation without serious reason | Court may order ADR, stay proceedings, or make adverse case management directions (post-Churchill) | Increased risk of adverse costs order or limited costs recovery, even if ultimately successful on the merits |
| Delays mediation or fails to follow contractual clause steps | Court may treat pre-action protocol non-compliance as grounds for adjusting the case timetable or costs | Costs sanctions or reduced costs recovered on central issues |
The question of whether mediation clauses are enforceable in the UK now has a clear answer: they are, when properly drafted. The combined effect of Churchill v Merthyr Tydfil, the Practice Direction on Pre-Action Conduct and Protocols, and the Civil Justice Council’s policy direction means that well-crafted mediation clauses carry real contractual and procedural force. Poorly drafted clauses, on the other hand, remain toothless.
For contracts managers and general counsel, the priority is to audit existing dispute resolution clauses against the five-element enforceability test set out above and to replace aspirational wording with condition-precedent language. The mediation UK 2026 changes in practice direction and court expectation make this review more urgent than ever.
To find a mediation lawyer in the United Kingdom, consult the Global Law Experts directory for experienced mediators and ADR counsel who can review your clauses, advise on pre-action compliance, and represent your interests in mediation proceedings.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Michel Kallipetis at Independent Mediators Limited, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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