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cipaa amendments malaysia

How the CIPAA Amendments (in Force 1 January 2026) Change Adjudication and Holdback in Malaysia, a Practical Guide for Contractors and Subcontractors

By Global Law Experts
– posted 1 hour ago

The Construction Industry Payment and Adjudication (Amendment) Act 2024, gazetted as Act A1738, came into operation on 1 January 2026 and represents the most significant set of CIPAA amendments Malaysia has seen since the original Act took effect in 2014. For contractors, subcontractors and in-house legal teams managing construction payment disputes in Malaysia, the practical consequences are immediate: holdback release mechanics have been tightened, adjudication timelines recalibrated, and the enforcement pathway clarified. This guide translates each legislative change into operational steps, checklists, sample notice wording and an enforcement roadmap, so that every stakeholder can act with confidence under the amended regime.

Key Facts at a Glance, Top 5 Practical Changes

Before diving into the detail, here are the five changes that demand the most urgent attention from anyone involved in Malaysian construction projects:

  • Commencement date. Act A1738 came into operation on 1 January 2026. All construction contracts entered into from that date onward are subject to the amended CIPAA procedure.
  • Holdback release. Statutory clarifications now govern the timing and triggers for holdback (retention sum) release, reducing the discretion previously left to contractual terms alone.
  • Adjudication timelines. Tighter statutory windows apply to service of payment claims, responses and adjudication submissions, imposing stricter discipline on both claimants and respondents.
  • AIAC structural realignment. The Asian International Arbitration Centre’s role as the default adjudication authority has been updated to align with broader institutional reforms under the Arbitration (Amendment) Act 2024.
  • Enforcement clarity. The interplay between adjudication decisions, court enforcement and arbitration has been refined, giving successful claimants a more predictable path to recovery.

For a high-level legislative overview, see the CIPAA Amendments Malaysia 2026 summary. The remainder of this guide focuses on what to do, step by step.

1. Quick Checklist for Contractors and Subcontractors: 10 Immediate Steps

The CIPAA amendments in Malaysia require every party in the construction supply chain to act now. Use this numbered checklist as an internal audit starting point:

  1. Review all current contracts. Identify which agreements were entered into on or after 1 January 2026 and confirm they fall within the amended CIPAA scope.
  2. Update payment claim templates. Ensure your standard payment claim form references the correct statutory provisions under Act A1738 and complies with the new service requirements.
  3. Revise holdback clauses. Check that contractual retention (holdback) provisions align with the statutory release triggers now codified in the amended Act, remove any inconsistent terms.
  4. Prepare a template Notice of Adjudication. Draft a pro-forma notice that includes all mandatory particulars (see Section 4 below for sample wording).
  5. Prepare a template Adjudication Response. Have a standing response template ready so your team can react within the compressed statutory response window.
  6. Set up a document preservation protocol. Adjudication is paper-intensive and fast. Implement a standing instruction to preserve all correspondence, payment certificates, variation orders and site records from day one.
  7. Appoint a CIPAA point person. Designate one individual (in-house counsel or project director) who will coordinate adjudication notices and manage statutory deadlines.
  8. Brief your accounts team. The holdback release changes affect cash-flow forecasting. Ensure your finance team understands the new statutory release calendar and accounting entries required.
  9. Review AIAC adjudication rules. Familiarise yourself with any updated procedural rules or practice directions issued by AIAC following the amendment’s commencement.
  10. Seek specialist legal advice early. The first adjudication under amended rules will set practical precedents. Early legal input, before a dispute crystallises, is cheaper than remedial action afterwards.

2. Who Is Covered, Does CIPAA Apply to My Contract?

CIPAA applies to construction contracts as defined in the Act, and it is well established that the legislation operates prospectively, it does not apply retrospectively to contracts entered into before its commencement. The same principle carries through to Act A1738: the amended provisions govern contracts entered into on or after 1 January 2026.

Applicability Decision Tree

Use the following quick-reference test to determine whether your contract falls within the amended CIPAA regime:

  • Step 1, Contract date. Was the construction contract entered into on or after 1 January 2026? If yes, the amended Act applies. If the contract pre-dates 1 January 2026, the original CIPAA (Act 746) governs, unless transitional provisions apply.
  • Step 2, Construction work or consultancy. Does the agreement relate to construction work (including supply of materials, plant and equipment for construction) or construction consultancy services? CIPAA covers both.
  • Step 3, Exclusions. Certain categories remain excluded. Confirm the contract does not fall within an excluded class (such as contracts for construction work carried out outside Malaysia).
  • Step 4, Government contracts. CIPAA applies to government construction contracts. Do not assume public-sector projects are exempt.
  • Step 5, Sub-contracts and supply agreements. The Act extends down the supply chain. Domestic subcontracts and nominated subcontracts are both caught, provided they relate to construction work as defined.

If your contract satisfies Steps 1 and 2 and is not excluded under Step 3, the CIPAA procedure, including the amended adjudication timelines and holdback rules, applies.

3. Holdback Mechanics After the CIPAA Amendments, What Changed?

Holdback release in Malaysia has been one of the most contentious issues in construction payment disputes. Under the pre-amendment regime, the timing and conditions for releasing retention sums were largely governed by the terms of each individual contract, leading to inconsistent practices and frequent disputes. The CIPAA amendments introduce statutory guardrails that standardise key aspects of holdback release.

Comparison Table: Holdback Rules Before and After the Amendment

Issue CIPAA (Pre-Amendment) CIPAA (Post-Amendment, in Force 1 Jan 2026)
Holdback entitlement and release timing Governed primarily by contract terms (typically 10% retention released in two moieties, at practical completion and end of defects liability period). No statutory override of contractual release triggers. Statutory clarifications on release timing and triggers under Act A1738. Payees now benefit from codified protections that limit the payer’s discretion to withhold retention beyond defined milestones. Parties cannot contract out of minimum release obligations.
Adjudication of holdback disputes Holdback disputes could be adjudicated but procedural rules were drawn from general CIPAA provisions. Ambiguity on whether retention sums constituted a separate “payment claim.” The amendment clarifies that disputes over holdback release are expressly within adjudication jurisdiction. A payee may initiate adjudication specifically for unpaid or overdue retention sums using the standard CIPAA procedure.
Accounting and notice requirements No statutory accounting or notice requirements for retention sums beyond general payment response obligations. Payers must account for retention sums and respond to holdback release claims within the statutory payment response window. Failure to issue a timely payment response to a holdback claim may result in the full claimed amount becoming due.

Practical Steps for Managing Holdback Release

  • Maintain a holdback ledger. Record every deduction, the contractual milestone it relates to, and the projected statutory release date. This ledger becomes your primary evidence in any adjudication.
  • Issue a formal Holdback Release Notice. When a release milestone is reached, serve written notice demanding release. Use the following sample wording as a starting point:

Sample Holdback Release Notice (short form):

“To: [Payer name and address]
Re: Contract [reference], Holdback Release Demand
We refer to the above contract and confirm that [practical completion / the defects liability period] was achieved on [date]. Pursuant to the Construction Industry Payment and Adjudication Act 2012 (as amended by Act A1738), the retention sum of RM [amount] is now due for release. We hereby demand payment of RM [amount] within [number] days of this notice. Failure to release the holdback within the statutory period may result in adjudication proceedings being commenced without further notice.
Dated: [date], [Payee name and signature]”

  • Track the response window. If no valid payment response is received within the statutory period, the holdback amount claimed becomes the basis for an adjudication application.

4. Starting Adjudication Under the Amended CIPAA, Step-by-Step Claimant Playbook

CIPAA adjudication in Malaysia is designed to be fast. Under the amended regime, the statutory timelines are tighter and the procedural requirements more exacting. The following step-by-step playbook guides claimants from initial payment dispute through to adjudication decision.

Step Timeline for Claimants

  1. Serve a payment claim. Issue a written payment claim to the payer. This is a prerequisite, adjudication cannot be commenced without a prior payment claim or in response to a non-payment or disputed payment response.
  2. Wait for the payment response window to expire. The payer has the statutory period to issue a payment response. If no response is received, or the response does not address the full amount, the claimant may proceed.
  3. Issue a Notice of Adjudication. Serve a written Notice of Adjudication on the respondent. The notice must include all mandatory particulars, the nature and description of the dispute, the amount claimed, and the relief sought.
  4. Nominate or agree on an adjudicator. Parties may agree on a named adjudicator. If no agreement is reached within the prescribed period, either party may apply to AIAC for an appointment.
  5. Submit the adjudication claim. Once the adjudicator is appointed, the claimant must submit the claim bundle (written submissions, supporting documents, witness statements if any) within the statutory submission window.
  6. Respondent’s reply. The respondent has a defined window to submit a response. Late submissions risk being excluded.
  7. Adjudicator’s decision. The adjudicator must deliver a decision within the statutory period from receipt of the response (or expiry of the response window). This decision is binding and immediately enforceable unless and until revised by arbitration or court proceedings.

Sample Notice of Adjudication (Short Form)

This template should be adapted to each project. It does not constitute legal advice.

“NOTICE OF ADJUDICATION To: [Respondent name and address] From: [Claimant name and address] Date: [date] Contract: [contract reference and date] Project: [project name and location] 1. Pursuant to the Construction Industry Payment and Adjudication Act 2012 (as amended by Act A1738), we hereby give notice of our intention to refer the following dispute to adjudication. 2. Nature of dispute: Non-payment / under-certification / failure to release holdback [select and describe]. 3. Amount claimed: RM [amount]. 4. Brief description: [2–3 sentences setting out the factual background and the basis for the claim]. 5. Relief sought: Payment of RM [amount] together with interest and costs of adjudication. 6.

Proposed adjudicator: [name, if agreed] / We propose to apply to AIAC for appointment of an adjudicator if no agreement is reached within [number] days.

Preparing Your Bundle, Practical Tips

  • Organise documents chronologically: contract, variation orders, payment certificates, correspondence, payment claims and responses.
  • Include a clear schedule of amounts claimed with supporting calculations.
  • If claiming holdback release, attach the holdback ledger and release notice.
  • Keep the bundle concise. Adjudicators work to tight deadlines and value clarity over volume.

5. Responding to an Adjudication Notice, Defence Playbook

Receiving a Notice of Adjudication triggers an urgent chain of actions. The compressed timelines under the CIPAA amendments in Malaysia mean that delay, even of a few days, can be fatal to a respondent’s position. Industry observers expect that the tighter windows will disproportionately affect respondents who do not have standing templates and pre-assembled evidence bundles ready to deploy.

Immediate Actions Upon Receipt

  1. Log the date of receipt. The statutory response clock starts on service. Record the date and method of delivery immediately.
  2. Preserve all documents. Issue an internal document hold notice. Gather the contract, payment certificates, site diaries, variation records and all correspondence relating to the disputed amount.
  3. Assess the claim. Within 48 hours, perform a preliminary review: is the amount claimed correct? Are there set-offs, counterclaims or defences available?
  4. Engage legal counsel. If you do not already have construction dispute lawyers on standby, appoint them immediately. The response period is short.
  5. Prepare and serve the Adjudication Response. The response must address every head of claim, attach supporting evidence, and be served within the statutory period.

Sample Adjudication Response (Short Form)

“ADJUDICATION RESPONSE
To: [Claimant name] / Copy to: [Adjudicator name]
From: [Respondent name and address]
Date: [date]
Reference: Adjudication No. [reference]

1. We refer to the Notice of Adjudication dated [date] and the Adjudication Claim received on [date].
2. We dispute the claimed amount of RM [amount] on the following grounds: [set out each ground, e.g., work not completed, defects, overpayment, set-off, back-charges].
3. Our position is that the amount properly due is RM [amount] and we attach supporting documents at Annexures A–[X].
4. We reserve all rights to refer the dispute to arbitration or litigation in due course.

Signed: [Respondent authorised representative]”

Procedural Traps to Avoid

  • Late filing. A response served after the statutory deadline may be excluded entirely. The adjudicator is not obliged to grant extensions.
  • New evidence at the hearing. Introduce all evidence with your written response. Attempting to introduce critical documents at a later stage risks objection and exclusion.
  • Ignoring the notice. Failing to respond does not prevent the adjudicator from making a decision. Default decisions are routinely entered and are enforceable.

6. Adjudicator Appointment and the AIAC Interface

AIAC adjudication remains central to the CIPAA procedure. After the amendments, AIAC continues to serve as the default appointing authority where parties cannot agree on an adjudicator. The institutional reforms introduced alongside Act A1738 refine how AIAC administers adjudication appointments and manages case files.

  • Agreement on adjudicator. Parties should attempt to agree on a named adjudicator within the statutory period after service of the Notice of Adjudication. Many standard-form contracts name a panel or provide a shortlisting mechanism.
  • Application to AIAC. If agreement cannot be reached, either party applies to AIAC, which will appoint an adjudicator from its registered panel. The application should include a copy of the Notice of Adjudication and the contract.
  • Confidentiality. Adjudication proceedings remain confidential. Parties, the adjudicator and AIAC are bound by confidentiality obligations unless disclosure is required by law or for enforcement purposes.
  • Fees. AIAC publishes a fee schedule for adjudicator appointments. Parties should budget for adjudicator fees (which are typically shared equally unless the adjudicator directs otherwise) and their own legal costs.

7. Enforcing an Adjudication Decision, Practical Enforcement Roadmap

An adjudication decision under CIPAA is binding and immediately enforceable. The CIPAA amendments in Malaysia have refined the enforcement pathway, giving successful claimants greater clarity on court procedures and the interaction between adjudication enforcement and arbitration. For parties dealing with a recalcitrant payer, the following roadmap sets out the typical enforcement sequence.

Enforcement Timeline

Action Who Does It Typical Timeline
Adjudicator delivers decision Adjudicator Within statutory period from close of submissions
Losing party fails to comply (non-payment) Respondent (by inaction) Compliance period specified in the decision (commonly 14 days)
Winning party files enforcement application at High Court Claimant’s solicitors Immediately after compliance deadline passes
Court hearing (summary enforcement) High Court Typically 4–8 weeks from filing, depending on court calendar
Judgment and execution Court / bailiff Immediately upon judgment; execution proceedings as required

Key Enforcement Considerations

  • Stay applications. The losing party may apply to stay enforcement pending arbitration or court proceedings to finally determine the dispute. Malaysian courts have generally taken a robust approach, stays are not granted lightly, and the applicant must demonstrate a genuine dispute and potential injustice. Early indications suggest that the clarified enforcement provisions under Act A1738 will reinforce this position.
  • Interaction with arbitration. An adjudication decision is interim in nature. Either party may refer the underlying dispute to arbitration for final determination. However, the adjudication decision remains enforceable unless and until it is revised or set aside by an arbitral tribunal or court.
  • Winding-up petitions. In extreme cases, a successful claimant may use an unpaid adjudication decision as the basis for a statutory demand and, if unsatisfied, a winding-up petition. This route carries reputational and procedural risks and should be used judiciously.
  • Costs. Enforcement costs (solicitor fees, court filing fees, execution costs) are typically recoverable from the losing party, though the quantum may be subject to court taxation.

Enforcement Checklist

  1. Confirm the adjudication decision is in writing, signed, and dated.
  2. Verify the compliance deadline has passed without payment.
  3. Instruct solicitors to prepare the enforcement application (originating summons supported by affidavit).
  4. Exhibit the adjudication decision, the contract, and proof of non-compliance.
  5. Serve the enforcement application on the losing party.
  6. Attend court hearing; resist any stay application with evidence of prejudice.
  7. Upon judgment, proceed to execution (garnishee, seizure and sale, or other remedies as appropriate).

8. Common Scenarios and Worked Examples

The following three scenarios illustrate how the amended CIPAA procedure operates in practice. Each is drawn from patterns commonly encountered in Malaysian construction payment disputes.

Scenario A, Subcontractor Unpaid: Instant Adjudication and Holdback Release

A mechanical subcontractor completes installation work on a commercial tower. The main contractor withholds RM 1.2 million in progress payments and refuses to release the first moiety of holdback (RM 400,000) despite practical completion being certified. Under the amended CIPAA, the subcontractor serves a payment claim, waits for the response window to expire without a valid payment response, then issues a Notice of Adjudication for RM 1.6 million (including holdback). The adjudicator delivers a decision within the statutory timeframe ordering payment in full. The main contractor pays within the compliance period.

Tactical takeaway: The statutory holdback release provisions eliminate the payer’s ability to delay release indefinitely. Combining a progress payment claim with a holdback release claim in a single adjudication maximises recovery efficiency.

Scenario B, Payer Disputes Quality: Defending an Adjudication

A developer receives a RM 3 million adjudication claim from its main contractor. The developer contends that RM 800,000 of the claimed work is defective and back-charges of RM 500,000 are outstanding. The developer’s legal team files a detailed Adjudication Response within the statutory window, attaching an independent inspection report and back-charge documentation. The adjudicator awards RM 1.7 million after deducting the proven defects and back-charges.

Tactical takeaway: Respondents must present all defences and evidence in the initial response. Document preservation and ready access to inspection records are critical, there is no second chance to file material that was available but not submitted on time.

Scenario C, Enforcement After Non-Payment

A piling subcontractor obtains an adjudication decision for RM 2.1 million. The main contractor ignores the decision and does not pay within the compliance period. The subcontractor’s solicitors file an enforcement application at the High Court, supported by an affidavit exhibiting the decision and evidence of non-compliance. The main contractor applies for a stay pending arbitration, but the court refuses the stay on the basis that the applicant has not demonstrated a genuine dispute sufficient to override the adjudication regime’s policy of “pay now, argue later.” Judgment is entered and the subcontractor proceeds to garnishee the main contractor’s bank accounts.

Tactical takeaway: Courts continue to respect the “pay now, argue later” philosophy underpinning CIPAA. Enforcement applications are relatively straightforward, but preparation (clean affidavit, complete exhibits, anticipation of stay arguments) is essential to avoid procedural delays.

9. Risk Management: Contract Clauses to Add or Update Now

The CIPAA amendments in Malaysia should prompt every employer, contractor and subcontractor to review their standard-form contracts. The following clauses deserve particular attention:

  • Payment timeline clause. Ensure the contractual payment cycle (claim, certification, payment) aligns with or is shorter than the statutory default. If the contract is silent, the statutory timelines in the amended Act will fill the gap, and they may not suit your commercial preferences.
  • Holdback (retention) clause. Update holdback provisions to mirror the statutory release triggers. Any clause that purports to delay holdback release beyond the statutory maximum may be unenforceable. Consider reducing contractual retention percentages to minimise cash-flow disputes.
  • Adjudication notice clause. Specify the address for service of adjudication notices (physical and email). A notice served on the wrong address may still be valid if it complies with the statutory service rules, but specifying a correct address avoids delay and procedural arguments.
  • Evidence preservation clause. Insert a mutual obligation to preserve all project records (payment certificates, variation orders, site diaries, correspondence) for a minimum of six years after practical completion. This protects both parties in any future adjudication or arbitration.
  • Adjudicator nomination clause. Consider naming a panel of potential adjudicators or specifying AIAC as the appointing authority. This avoids disputes over appointment and reduces the time between Notice of Adjudication and commencement of proceedings.
  • Arbitration/final dispute resolution clause. Confirm that the contract’s arbitration clause complements (rather than conflicts with) the CIPAA adjudication mechanism. The adjudication decision is interim; the arbitration clause governs final resolution.

A thorough contract review, ideally conducted with specialist construction dispute lawyers in Malaysia, is the most cost-effective risk management step available.

Conclusion, Act Now Under the Amended CIPAA Regime

The CIPAA amendments in Malaysia mark a decisive shift toward faster, more transparent resolution of construction payment disputes. For contractors and subcontractors, the message is clear: update your contracts, prepare your templates, brief your project and finance teams, and be ready to commence or defend adjudication at short notice. The holdback release reforms remove a major source of cash-flow friction, while the tightened adjudication timelines and clarified enforcement pathway make CIPAA an even more potent tool for recovering unpaid sums.

Proactive preparation, a well-drafted contract, a standing document preservation protocol and pre-assembled adjudication templates, is the difference between swift recovery and costly delay. The likely practical effect of these reforms will be a significant increase in adjudication activity throughout 2026, and parties who are prepared will hold a decisive advantage.

For tailored advice on how the amended CIPAA applies to your specific project or portfolio, consult a specialist construction disputes lawyer with experience in Malaysian adjudication proceedings.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Ng Chia How at Chia Koay & Teng, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Construction Industry Payment and Adjudication (Amendment) Act 2024, Official Text (AIAC PDF)
  2. AIAC, Announcement on the Arbitration (Amendment) Bill 2024 and the CIPAA (Amendment) Bill 2024
  3. Global Law Experts, CIPAA Amendments Malaysia 2026 Overview
  4. Zul Rafique & Partners, Act A1738 Commencement Announcement
  5. <a href="https://insight

FAQs

What is CIPAA and does it apply to my contract?
CIPAA is the Construction Industry Payment and Adjudication Act 2012, Malaysia’s statutory framework for resolving construction payment disputes through rapid adjudication. It applies to construction contracts (including consultancy agreements) for construction work carried out in Malaysia. If your contract was entered into on or after 1 January 2026, the amended CIPAA (Act A1738) applies. Government contracts are included; contracts for work outside Malaysia are excluded.
The Construction Industry Payment and Adjudication (Amendment) Act 2024 (Act A1738) came into operation on 1 January 2026.
First, serve a written payment claim on the payer. If the payment response is inadequate or not received within the statutory period, serve a Notice of Adjudication on the respondent setting out the nature of the dispute, the amount claimed and the relief sought. Nominate or agree on an adjudicator (or apply to AIAC for appointment). Then submit your claim bundle within the statutory submission window. The adjudicator will deliver a binding decision within the prescribed period.
A losing party may apply to the court for a stay of enforcement, typically pending arbitration or litigation to finally resolve the dispute. However, Malaysian courts have consistently applied a high threshold for granting stays, reflecting the “pay now, argue later” policy underlying CIPAA. The applicant must demonstrate a genuine triable issue and that enforcement would cause irreparable injustice. In practice, stay applications are refused more often than they are granted.
The amendment introduces statutory guardrails on holdback (retention sum) release. Payers can no longer rely solely on contractual discretion to delay release beyond defined milestones such as practical completion and expiry of the defects liability period. Payees can initiate adjudication specifically for overdue retention sums. Parties should serve a formal Holdback Release Notice when the statutory trigger is met and track the payer’s response within the prescribed window.
If the losing party fails to comply with an adjudication decision within the compliance period, the winning party may apply to the High Court for enforcement. The court treats the adjudication decision as binding and will ordinarily enter judgment unless the losing party demonstrates valid grounds for challenge. From filing to judgment, the process typically takes four to eight weeks. Execution remedies include garnishee orders and seizure and sale of assets.
Yes. Any standard-form contract used for projects entered into from 1 January 2026 should be reviewed and updated. Key areas include payment timelines, holdback clauses, notice addresses, evidence preservation obligations and adjudicator nomination provisions. Clauses that conflict with the statutory minimums introduced by Act A1738 risk being unenforceable or overridden by the Act’s mandatory provisions.

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How the CIPAA Amendments (in Force 1 January 2026) Change Adjudication and Holdback in Malaysia, a Practical Guide for Contractors and Subcontractors

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