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china arbitration law

China's Arbitration Law 2026, What Contracting Parties Must Do Now

By Global Law Experts
– posted 1 hour ago

Last updated: May 17, 2026

The amended China arbitration law, formally the revised Arbitration Law of the People’s Republic of China, took effect on 1 March 2026, marking the first substantive overhaul of the statute since its original enactment in 1994. For in-house counsel, contract managers and general counsel overseeing China-connected agreements, the amendments reshape how dispute clauses should be drafted, how interim relief can be obtained, and how arbitral awards are enforced on the mainland. This guide delivers the practical playbook: a decision checklist for existing contracts, ready-to-use clause templates, a step-by-step enforcement timeline, and sector-specific guidance for energy and infrastructure projects.

Whether you are negotiating a new joint venture or auditing a legacy supply agreement, the action items below will help you protect your position under the new regime.

Immediate Action Items, TL;DR

Before reading the full analysis, contracting parties should prioritise three steps right now:

  • Audit every contract with a China nexus. Identify agreements governed by PRC law, seated in mainland China, or involving assets or counterparties there. Flag any clause that is silent on seat, governing procedural law, or interim measures.
  • Preserve evidence and meet notice deadlines. The new PRC arbitration law does not reset limitation periods, but it changes the procedural toolkit available at each stage. Ensure document-preservation protocols and contractual notice obligations are current.
  • Engage PRC-qualified counsel now. The revised statute creates opportunities, tribunal-ordered interim measures, ad hoc arbitration for foreign-related disputes, foreign institutional arbitration in designated zones, that require local expertise to capture. Early advice prevents costly clause defects.

The sections that follow explain exactly what has changed, whether existing clauses need amending, and how to draft new ones that exploit every advantage the 2026 reforms offer.

Key Changes in the China Arbitration Law 2026

The amended PRC arbitration law introduces several structural reforms that directly affect how parties structure and resolve cross-border contract disputes in China. Industry observers consider these the most significant changes to PRC arbitration practice in three decades. The core revisions fall into six areas: codification of the arbitral seat, expanded tribunal competence (kompetenz-kompetenz), tribunal-ordered interim measures, recognition of ad hoc arbitration for foreign-related disputes, opening the market to foreign arbitration institutions, and modernised enforcement procedures.

Statutory Highlights

The table below compares the pre-2026 position with the new law and explains the practical impact for contracting parties:

Topic Old Law (Pre-2026) PRC Arbitration Law 2026, Practical Impact
Seat / place of arbitration No express statutory concept of “seat”; practice varied and courts sometimes conflated seat with hearing venue The law codifies the seat of arbitration, providing clarity on which jurisdiction’s procedural law governs the arbitration and where annulment applications are heard. Parties should now specify the seat city precisely in every arbitration clause.
Kompetenz-kompetenz Jurisdiction challenges were typically referred to the arbitration commission or the court; tribunal’s own-competence power was narrow Tribunals have enhanced authority to rule on their own jurisdiction, reducing the scope for dilatory court challenges. Early-stage jurisdictional objections will more often be resolved within the arbitration itself.
Interim measures Courts were the primary (and often exclusive) source of interim relief; tribunals had limited power to order preservation Tribunals can now order interim measures directly. Courts retain a supportive enforcement role. Parties can plan dual-track strategies, apply to the tribunal for speed, then seek court enforcement if compliance is lacking.
Ad hoc arbitration Domestic parties required to use institutional arbitration; ad hoc arbitration was not recognised Ad hoc arbitration is permitted for foreign-related disputes, giving parties flexibility to design bespoke proceedings without institutional administration. Clauses must be carefully drafted to avoid validity challenges.
Foreign arbitration institutions Foreign institutions operated on the mainland only through informal cooperation or observer status Foreign institutions may establish branches or representative offices in designated free-trade zones (FTZs). This opens new institutional options, for example, ICC or SIAC-administered arbitrations seated in a mainland FTZ.
Enforcement alignment Enforcement procedures existed but lacked explicit coordination with modern treaty obligations The revised law strengthens the framework for enforcement of arbitral awards in China, aligning domestic procedures more closely with the New York Convention pathway and streamlining court review of both domestic and foreign awards.

For a full English translation of the statute, the Aceris Law translation provides a reliable reference text. CIETAC has also published institutional guidance on how the reforms interact with its rules.

Do You Need to Change Existing Arbitration Clauses?

The short answer: existing arbitration clauses are not automatically invalidated by the 2026 amendments, but many will benefit from targeted updates, and some must be amended to avoid enforceability risk. The decision depends on three variables: the governing law of the contract, the seat specified (or not specified) in the clause, and whether the clause references procedures or institutional rules that have materially changed.

Use this decision checklist to determine whether amendment is needed:

  • Clause is silent on seat. Action: amend. The new law makes the seat a critical determinant of procedural law and annulment jurisdiction. A clause that does not specify a seat creates ambiguity that a counterparty can exploit.
  • Clause references a specific institution whose rules have been updated. Action: review and likely amend. CIETAC, BAC and SHIAC have all updated their rules to align with the 2026 law. If your clause locks in an outdated rule version, consider adding a “rules as amended” provision.
  • Clause excludes interim measures by the tribunal. Action: amend unless exclusion is deliberate. Under the old law, tribunal-ordered interim relief was largely unavailable. If your clause explicitly restricts interim measures to courts, you are forgoing a major procedural advantage.
  • Clause selects PRC courts for jurisdictional challenges. Action: review for conflict. The enhanced kompetenz-kompetenz framework may conflict with clauses that route all jurisdiction questions to courts. Ensure the clause does not create a procedural contradiction.
  • Clause provides for ad hoc arbitration in a domestic dispute. Action: amend, ad hoc is available only for foreign-related disputes. A domestic-only contract with an ad hoc clause remains unenforceable under the new law.
  • Clause specifies a foreign institution without a China nexus. Action: no change typically needed, but verify the institution’s FTZ registration status if you want interim-measure support from PRC courts.

When You Must Amend, Conflict Scenarios

Amendment is essential, not merely advisable, in two specific situations. First, where the contract selects PRC law as the governing law of the arbitration agreement but designates a court as the sole forum for interim relief. Under the revised China arbitration law, tribunal-ordered interim measures now sit alongside court-ordered relief, and a clause that purports to eliminate one track may face unpredictable judicial interpretation. Second, where an asymmetrical clause gives one party the right to litigate while the other must arbitrate. PRC courts have historically viewed such clauses with suspicion, and early indications suggest the 2026 amendments have not resolved that risk.

Practical Amendment Templates

For contracts that need updating, two amendment formats are commonly used:

  • Short-form side letter. A bilateral one-page letter that (a) reaffirms the existing arbitration agreement, (b) specifies the seat city, (c) updates the institutional rules reference to “as amended from time to time,” and (d) expressly preserves the tribunal’s power to order interim measures. This format is ideal when counterparty cooperation is available and no substantive clause changes are required.
  • Full clause replacement via contract amendment. A formal amendment replacing the entire dispute-resolution article. This is necessary when the original clause is pathological, for example, naming a non-existent institution or omitting the arbitration commitment entirely. The replacement clause should follow the drafting templates in the next section.

For guidance on validating existing clauses under PRC law, the EU SME Centre FAQ provides a useful starting checklist.

Drafting Arbitration Clauses for China and Cross-Border Contracts, Sample Templates

When drafting an arbitration clause for a new contract with a China nexus, the amended PRC arbitration law creates both expanded options and new drafting traps. Below are three model clauses, each designed for a different scenario. All three incorporate the key components that the 2026 reforms make essential: express seat designation, institutional rule versioning, interim-measures language, and emergency-arbitrator provisions.

Template A, China Domestic Institutional Arbitration (CIETAC)

Best for: Contracts between parties with substantial PRC operations, governed by PRC law, where enforcement will occur primarily in mainland China.

“Any dispute arising out of or in connection with this contract shall be submitted to the China International Economic and Trade Arbitration Commission (CIETAC) for arbitration in [Beijing / Shanghai / Shenzhen] in accordance with the CIETAC Arbitration Rules in effect at the time of filing. The seat of arbitration shall be [city]. The tribunal shall have the power to order interim measures. The language of arbitration shall be [Chinese / English]. The Emergency Arbitrator Provisions of the CIETAC Rules shall apply. The arbitral award shall be final and binding on both parties.”

Enforcement advantage: Domestic award, enforced directly by the Intermediate People’s Court at the respondent’s domicile or asset location without the need for New York Convention recognition.

Template B, Foreign-Seat Institutional Arbitration (Singapore / London)

Best for: Cross-border contract disputes involving a China party and a foreign party where the foreign party prefers a neutral seat with strong international enforcement credentials.

“Any dispute arising out of or in connection with this contract, including any question regarding its existence, validity or termination, shall be referred to and finally resolved by arbitration administered by [the Singapore International Arbitration Centre (SIAC) / the London Court of International Arbitration (LCIA)] under its rules in force at the date of commencement of arbitration. The seat of arbitration shall be [Singapore / London]. The tribunal shall consist of [one / three] arbitrator(s). The language of arbitration shall be English. The tribunal shall have the power to grant interim, conservatory or provisional measures of relief. The Emergency Arbitrator provisions of the [SIAC / LCIA] Rules shall apply.”

Enforcement note: Award is enforced in China as a foreign award under the New York Convention. This adds a recognition step but benefits from the 2026 law’s streamlined enforcement procedures.

Template C, Ad Hoc Arbitration for Foreign-Related Disputes

Best for: Sophisticated parties in foreign-related disputes who want full procedural control and do not require institutional administration. Only available where at least one party is foreign or the contract has a foreign element.

“Any dispute arising out of or in connection with this contract shall be resolved by ad hoc arbitration seated in [city, PRC]. The arbitration shall be conducted in accordance with the UNCITRAL Arbitration Rules (as revised in 2021). The appointing authority shall be [designate, e.g., the Secretary-General of the Permanent Court of Arbitration]. The tribunal shall consist of three arbitrators and shall have the power to order interim measures. The language of arbitration shall be [Chinese / English]. The award shall be final and binding.”

Risk note: Ad hoc arbitration in China is a new development under the 2026 law. Early indications suggest that courts will scrutinise ad hoc clauses carefully. The clause must clearly identify the arbitration rules, appointing authority, seat, and number of arbitrators to survive a validity challenge.

Clause Drafting Checklist

Every arbitration clause for China should address the following components. Missing any element risks a pathological clause that a counterparty or court may challenge:

Component Recommended Wording / Approach Risk If Omitted
Seat of arbitration Name the city explicitly (e.g., “Beijing” or “Singapore”) Ambiguity over procedural law and annulment jurisdiction
Governing law of the arbitration agreement Specify if different from the governing law of the contract Court may apply a different law, invalidating the clause
Institution and rules version “[Institution] Rules in effect at the time of filing” Outdated rules locked in; loss of 2026 procedural benefits
Emergency arbitrator / interim measures Expressly state that the tribunal may order interim measures and that emergency arbitrator provisions apply Tribunal may lack authority; forced to rely on court applications only
Number of arbitrators One or three; specify or provide a fallback rule Potential procedural deadlock at commencement
Language Chinese, English, or bilingual, specify clearly Disputes over translation costs and procedural delays
Consolidation Include if multi-contract or multi-party disputes are foreseeable Parallel proceedings and inconsistent awards
Confidentiality Add express confidentiality provision if not covered by chosen rules PRC law does not impose default confidentiality on arbitration

For additional context on structuring complex dispute-resolution provisions, see our guide to preparation for and conduct of arbitration hearings.

Interim Measures and Emergency Relief Under the China Arbitration Law

One of the most consequential changes in the revised PRC arbitration law is the empowerment of tribunals to order interim measures directly, a power previously reserved almost exclusively for People’s Courts. This reform gives parties pursuing interim measures in China arbitration two parallel tracks: apply to the arbitral tribunal, apply to the competent court, or pursue both simultaneously in carefully sequenced steps.

Tribunal-Ordered Interim Measures

Under the 2026 amendments, a constituted tribunal may order:

  • Asset preservation, freezing bank accounts, prohibiting transfer of property, or attaching goods.
  • Evidence preservation, ordering a party or third party to produce, preserve, or refrain from destroying documents, electronic data, or physical evidence.
  • Conduct preservation, ordering a party to take or refrain from specific actions pending the final award (similar to injunctive relief in common-law systems).

Critically, tribunal-ordered interim measures under the China arbitration law are not self-enforcing. If a party fails to comply, the requesting party must apply to the competent People’s Court for enforcement. This creates a practical two-step process: obtain the tribunal order, then seek court execution.

Court Enforcement of Interim Measures, Practical Considerations

PRC courts retain their pre-existing power to order preservation measures, and the Wolters Kluwer analysis notes that the court pathway remains essential when urgency requires action before the tribunal is constituted. The practical emergency playbook is as follows:

  1. Pre-arbitration emergency (before tribunal constituted): Apply directly to the competent Intermediate People’s Court for asset or evidence preservation. File the arbitration request within 30 days of the court order to avoid the preservation lapsing.
  2. Post-constitution (tribunal seated): Apply to the tribunal for interim measures. If the respondent does not comply voluntarily, file the tribunal’s order with the People’s Court for enforcement.
  3. Emergency arbitrator route (institutional): If the arbitration is administered by CIETAC, SIAC, ICC, or another institution with emergency-arbitrator provisions, apply for emergency relief before the full tribunal is constituted. The emergency arbitrator can issue an interim order within days. Court enforcement of the emergency arbitrator’s decision follows the same court-application process.
  4. Evidence preservation at any stage: Where evidence is at risk of destruction, particularly digital records or physical samples in manufacturing disputes, file a court preservation application immediately, regardless of the arbitration stage.

Industry observers expect that the dual-track system will be tested extensively in the first year of the new law, and that PRC courts’ willingness to enforce tribunal-ordered measures will set important precedents for cross-border contract disputes in China.

Enforcement of Arbitral Awards in China, Procedure and Timeline

The revised law strengthens and clarifies the framework for enforcement of arbitral awards in China, though the fundamental two-track structure remains. Domestic awards (rendered by PRC-seated tribunals under PRC arbitration institutions) follow one procedural path; foreign awards (rendered outside the PRC) follow the New York Convention recognition and enforcement route.

Domestic Awards

A prevailing party applies to the Intermediate People’s Court where the respondent is domiciled or where the respondent’s assets are located. The court examines procedural regularity, proper notice, tribunal constitution, scope of the arbitration agreement, and may refuse enforcement only on narrow statutory grounds (procedural defect, public policy, or absence of a valid arbitration agreement).

Foreign Awards Under the New York Convention

China has been a party to the New York Convention since 1987, subject to the reciprocity and commercial reservations. Under the 2026 amendments, the recognition and enforcement procedure has been aligned more closely with the Convention’s requirements, and the Debevoise analysis notes that the prior-reporting mechanism, requiring lower courts to report to the Supreme People’s Court before refusing enforcement, remains in place as an additional safeguard for award creditors.

Enforcement Timeline

Step Description Typical Duration
1. File application Submit enforcement application, original award, arbitration agreement, and certified translations to the Intermediate People’s Court 1–2 weeks (preparation)
2. Court acceptance Court reviews the filing for completeness and formally accepts the case 7–15 days
3. Respondent notice Court serves notice on the respondent and sets a deadline for objections 15–30 days
4. Court review Court examines grounds for refusal (procedural, jurisdictional, public policy); may hold a hearing 2–6 months (domestic); 4–12 months (foreign awards)
5. Ruling issued Court issues an enforcement ruling or refusal; refusal of foreign awards must be reported to the Supreme People’s Court Included in Step 4 timeline
6. Execution If enforcement is granted, court execution division seizes assets, garnishes accounts, or transfers property 1–6 months (depends on asset location and respondent cooperation)

Enforcement Preparation Checklist

Prepare these documents before filing an enforcement application:

  • Original or certified copy of the arbitral award, notarised and apostilled if rendered outside China.
  • Original arbitration agreement, or the relevant contract containing the arbitration clause.
  • Certified Chinese translation, of all documents not in Chinese, prepared by a PRC-accredited translation agency.
  • Proof of service, evidence that the respondent was properly notified of the arbitration proceedings.
  • Identity documents, corporate registration certificates, powers of attorney, and representative identification.
  • Asset information, bank account details, property records, or equity holdings of the respondent in China to facilitate court execution.

For parties involved in technology or IP-intensive contracts, our article on transferring technology in China covers related regulatory risks that may intersect with enforcement proceedings.

Seat Selection and Arbitration vs Litigation in China, Practical Comparison

Choosing between arbitration vs litigation in China, and, within arbitration, selecting a seat inside or outside the PRC, is one of the most consequential decisions in contract drafting. The table below provides a compact comparison:

Factor Arbitration Seat Inside China Arbitration Seat Outside China PRC Court Litigation
Enforceability in China Domestic award, direct enforcement Foreign award, New York Convention route (extra recognition step) Judgment, direct enforcement but limited international portability
Interim relief access Tribunal + PRC court (dual track under 2026 law) Tribunal under seat law; PRC court for preservation of China-located assets Full court powers but no tribunal flexibility
Confidentiality Available if agreed or under institutional rules Depends on seat law and institutional rules Generally public proceedings
Annulment / appeal risk PRC court annulment on narrow grounds Seat-country annulment law applies; PRC court reviews only at enforcement stage Full appeal hierarchy, can extend timeline significantly
Party autonomy High, choice of arbitrator, rules, language Highest, full procedural freedom at neutral seat Limited, PRC procedural law governs entirely

The likely practical effect for most foreign parties is that a China-seated arbitration under the 2026 law becomes a stronger option than it was previously, particularly where the respondent’s assets are predominantly in China and interim relief from PRC courts is essential.

Sectoral Considerations, Energy, Construction and Supply Chain

The amended China arbitration law has particular implications for sectors where cross-border contract disputes in China are most common and high-value.

Energy and pipeline projects. In oil storage, LNG terminal, and pipeline construction contracts, interim relief is often the decisive battleground. A party seeking to prevent asset removal or to compel continued supply pending an award can now apply to the tribunal for conduct-preservation orders. For contracts along Belt and Road Initiative routes, specifying a PRC seat with CIETAC administration gives access to both tribunal-ordered measures and PRC court enforcement, a combination previously unavailable.

Large infrastructure and EPC contracts. Multi-party, multi-contract disputes are endemic in infrastructure. The 2026 law’s recognition of consolidation mechanisms and the availability of emergency-arbitrator relief make institutional arbitration under updated CIETAC or BAC rules a more effective dispute-resolution choice than PRC court litigation, where consolidation rules are rigid. Drafting arbitration clauses for China-based EPC contracts should include express consolidation and joinder provisions referencing the institution’s current rules.

Conclusion, The China Arbitration Law 2026 in Practice

The 2026 amendments to the PRC arbitration law represent the most significant modernisation of China’s arbitration framework in over three decades. For contracting parties, the message is clear: review existing clauses against the decision checklist above, draft new clauses using the templates provided, and build interim-relief and enforcement strategies that exploit the dual-track system now available. Parties who act early will secure procedural advantages; those who delay risk clauses that fail to capture the full benefits of the new regime. To connect with qualified practitioners who can review your China-related contracts and arbitration strategy, visit the Global Law Experts lawyer directory.

This article provides general information and does not constitute legal advice. Parties should consult PRC-qualified legal counsel for advice specific to their contracts and circumstances.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Jingzhan Wong at Tianjin Bozhuan Law Firm, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Arbitration Law of the People’s Republic of China, English Translation (Aceris Law)
  2. CIETAC, Guidance on the Amended Arbitration Law
  3. Harvard Law / HIALSA, China Arbitration Law Reform: An Overview
  4. Fieldfisher, China’s 2026 Amendments to the Arbitration Law
  5. Debevoise & Plimpton, China Adopts First Substantive Amendments
  6. Wolters Kluwer, Reforming the PRC Arbitration Law: Implications for Foreign Parties
  7. Paul Hastings, Amended Law Expands Arbitration Options
  8. Global Arbitration Review, China Country Report
  9. EU SME Centre, Arbitration Clause Validity Under Chinese Law

FAQs

What are the key changes in China's new Arbitration Law (2026)?
The major changes include codification of the arbitral seat, expanded tribunal power to rule on jurisdiction (kompetenz-kompetenz), the authority for tribunals to order interim measures, recognition of ad hoc arbitration for foreign-related disputes, permission for foreign arbitration institutions to operate in designated free-trade zones, and streamlined enforcement procedures. The amendments took effect on 1 March 2026.
Existing clauses are not automatically invalid, but amendment is strongly advisable where a clause is silent on the seat, references outdated institutional rules, excludes tribunal-ordered interim measures, or provides for ad hoc arbitration in a purely domestic dispute. Use the decision checklist in this guide to assess whether amendment is needed.
Tribunals can now order asset preservation, evidence preservation, and conduct preservation (injunctive relief). Courts retain their own preservation powers and can enforce tribunal-ordered measures. Institutional emergency-arbitrator provisions (e.g., under CIETAC or SIAC rules) provide a rapid-relief mechanism before the full tribunal is constituted.
Apply to the competent Intermediate People’s Court with the original award, arbitration agreement, certified Chinese translations, and proof of service. The court conducts a limited review on procedural and public-policy grounds under the New York Convention framework. The process typically takes four to twelve months from filing to enforcement ruling.
Yes. Under the 2026 China arbitration law, tribunal-ordered interim measures are enforceable through the People’s Courts. The requesting party must file the tribunal’s order with the competent court and seek an execution order. Compliance is then backed by the court’s coercive powers, including asset seizure and account freezing.
The PRC Arbitration Law governs arbitrations seated in China regardless of the substantive governing law of the contract. If the arbitration is seated outside China, PRC law applies only when enforcement of the award is sought in Chinese courts. Parties should obtain PRC legal advice to determine the precise scope of application for their dispute.
Yes. Expressly incorporating emergency-arbitrator provisions, either through the chosen institution’s rules (CIETAC, SIAC, ICC) or through a bespoke clause, ensures access to rapid interim relief before the full tribunal is constituted. This is particularly important for disputes involving perishable goods, ongoing construction, or assets at risk of dissipation.
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China's Arbitration Law 2026, What Contracting Parties Must Do Now

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