Last updated: 16 May 2026
The commercial code Indonesia framework is undergoing its most significant re-examination in decades. Constitutional Court case 25/PUU‑XXIV/2026, a judicial review of key provisions of the Kitab Undang-undang Hukum Dagang (KUHD), Indonesia’s colonial-era Commercial Code, has triggered immediate uncertainty for businesses that rely on Indonesian contract enforcement, arbitration and insolvency mechanisms. The decision directly affects how courts interpret obligations under commercial agreements, when arbitral awards can be challenged, and how creditors and debtors interact during suspension-of-debt proceedings. For General Counsel, in-house legal teams and CFOs with Indonesian exposure, the practical consequences demand action now, not after implementing regulations crystallise.
The judicial review of the commercial code Indonesia framework did not rewrite the statute wholesale. Instead, the Constitutional Court issued a targeted decision that reframes how specific provisions interact with Indonesia’s broader civil and commercial litigation infrastructure. The practical effects, however, ripple far beyond the narrow statutory text.
Case 25/PUU‑XXIV/2026 was filed by commercial litigants challenging the constitutionality of Article 251 of the KUHD, arguing that its colonial-era drafting created interpretive inconsistencies with Indonesia’s 1945 Constitution and modern commercial practice. The hearing sessions were recorded and uploaded by the MKRI to its official channels. The petitioners contended that the provision, as historically interpreted, permitted outcomes that violated due-process guarantees and the principle of legal certainty (kepastian hukum) enshrined in Article 28D(1) of the Constitution.
The Constitutional Court’s analysis centred on Article 251 of the Commercial Code, which governs the voidability of certain insurance contracts and, by extension, the judicial interpretation of good-faith disclosure obligations in commercial agreements. The Court declared the article conditionally unconstitutional, meaning it remains valid law, but courts must now apply it subject to a revised interpretive framework that aligns with constitutional due-process requirements.
This conditional unconstitutionality ruling follows the pattern established in earlier MKRI decisions, where the Court stops short of striking down a provision but binds all courts to a specific reading. The practical consequence is immediate: any ongoing or future litigation involving Article 251, or analogous good-faith and disclosure obligations in the Commercial Code, must now comply with the Court’s mandated interpretation. Parties cannot rely on older judicial readings of the provision.
The decision also has indirect implications for how courts approach related provisions of the Indonesian Civil Code (KUHPerdata), particularly Articles 1243 and 1266, which govern breach-of-contract remedies and contract termination. Industry observers expect lower courts to gradually align their interpretation of these Civil Code provisions with the Constitutional Court’s emphasis on procedural fairness and evidentiary standards, though this alignment is not automatic and will depend on Supreme Court (Mahkamah Agung) guidance.
The commercial code reform introduced by the Constitutional Court’s conditional unconstitutionality ruling directly affects how breach-of-contract claims are litigated in Indonesian courts. For businesses with international commercial exposure to Indonesia, the changes require a re-evaluation of enforcement strategy.
Under the pre-review framework, Indonesian courts applied Article 1243 of the Civil Code (default/breach) and Article 1266 (termination) with considerable judicial discretion. The Constitutional Court’s decision in 25/PUU‑XXIV/2026, while technically addressed to Article 251 of the Commercial Code, signals a broader judicial shift toward requiring heightened evidentiary standards for claims involving good-faith obligations and disclosure duties. Courts hearing breach-of-contract disputes are now expected to scrutinise whether the claiming party has met a higher threshold of procedural fairness before granting remedies.
The likely practical effect for claimants is that breach actions will require more comprehensive documentary evidence at the outset, including contemporaneous records of performance, notice compliance and good-faith efforts to mitigate. Defendants, conversely, gain a stronger procedural foothold to challenge claims that rely on formalistic readings of contractual obligations without substantive evidence of prejudice.
Indonesian courts retain their existing toolkit of remedies, specific performance, compensatory damages, liquidated damages, contractual penalties and, in limited circumstances, injunctive relief. However, the post-review environment creates new procedural considerations for each category of remedy.
Asset-preservation measures, including sita jaminan (conservatory seizure), remain available under the procedural codes but are subject to the court’s enhanced assessment of proportionality. Early indications suggest that judges are more likely to require detailed evidence of dissipation risk before granting conservatory measures, consistent with the Constitutional Court’s emphasis on balancing competing rights.
| Remedy | Likely enforcement posture after review | Recommended short-term action |
|---|---|---|
| Specific performance | Available; courts may require stronger evidence of defendant’s ability to perform | Include detailed performance specifications and evidence-preservation clauses in contracts |
| Compensatory damages | Claimants must demonstrate actual loss with contemporaneous documentation | Implement real-time damage-tracking protocols; retain forensic accounting capacity |
| Liquidated damages | Enforceable if reasonable and proportionate; punitive elements may face greater scrutiny | Review liquidated-damages clauses for proportionality; remove penalty-like provisions |
| Conservatory seizure (sita jaminan) | Available but with higher evidentiary threshold for dissipation risk | Prepare dissipation-risk evidence packages in advance; engage local counsel early |
| Injunctive relief | Discretionary; courts may require undertakings or security from the applicant | Budget for security deposits; draft applications with detailed harm analysis |
The commercial code reform does not alter the fundamental jurisdiction of Indonesian district courts over contract disputes. However, the heightened procedural requirements make it more important than ever for parties to evaluate whether litigation in Indonesian courts, arbitration (domestic or international), or a hybrid dispute-resolution mechanism best serves their enforcement objectives. Parties with cross-border contracts should assess whether their existing forum-selection and governing-law clauses adequately address the post-review environment, particularly if the counterparty’s assets are concentrated in Indonesia.
One of the most pressing questions for multinational businesses operating in Indonesia is whether the judicial review of the commercial code Indonesia framework undermines the enforceability of arbitration agreements and arbitral awards. Law No. 30 of 1999 on Arbitration and Alternative Dispute Resolution, Indonesia’s primary arbitration statute, was not directly challenged in case 25/PUU‑XXIV/2026. However, the Constitutional Court’s decision creates indirect effects that demand careful attention.
Under Law No. 30/1999, domestic arbitral awards are binding and enforceable through the district courts. International arbitral awards, including those governed by the 1958 New York Convention, to which Indonesia is a party, must be registered with and enforced through the Central Jakarta District Court. The enforcement framework itself remains intact after the judicial review.
However, the Constitutional Court’s emphasis on procedural fairness and due-process standards in commercial disputes introduces a new layer of scrutiny. Courts reviewing arbitral-award enforcement applications may be more willing to examine whether the underlying arbitration procedure met the heightened fairness standards articulated in the decision. This does not amount to a review on the merits, which would violate fundamental arbitration principles, but it does create a marginally wider window for parties to challenge enforcement on procedural grounds.
For awards involving insurance-related or good-faith disclosure disputes, the categories most directly affected by the Article 251 ruling, the risk of enforcement challenge is appreciably higher. Parties should ensure that their arbitration proceedings include robust procedural records, including transcripts, evidence logs and compliance with institutional rules on due process.
The interaction between arbitration and bankruptcy in Indonesia has long been a source of uncertainty. Indonesian Commercial Courts, which have exclusive jurisdiction over bankruptcy and PKPU proceedings under Law No. 37/2004, have historically asserted the power to override arbitration clauses where a debtor files for, or is placed into, bankruptcy or suspension of debt payments. This position is grounded in the lex specialis doctrine: bankruptcy law, as a specialised statute, takes precedence over general contractual arrangements, including arbitration agreements.
The Supreme Court (Mahkamah Agung) has issued circulars, notably Circular No. 3/2023, providing guidance on how lower courts should handle the arbitration-bankruptcy intersection. These circulars do not have the force of binding legislation but carry significant practical weight in Indonesian judicial practice. The general direction of the circulars reinforces the Commercial Court’s jurisdiction over bankruptcy-related claims, even where the underlying contract contains an arbitration clause.
The 2026 commercial code reform does not resolve this tension. If anything, the Constitutional Court’s decision, by heightening procedural-fairness requirements across commercial disputes, gives Commercial Courts an additional basis to scrutinise arbitration agreements where one party alleges that the arbitration process did not meet constitutional standards. Practitioners should therefore treat the arbitration-bankruptcy conflict as a live risk that requires proactive management.
In light of the post-review landscape, arbitration clauses in Indonesia-facing contracts should be drafted or amended to address several specific risks. First, clauses should explicitly provide for emergency arbitrator procedures under the chosen institutional rules (e.g., SIAC, ICC, BANI), ensuring that interim relief can be obtained before a tribunal is constituted. Second, clauses should include carve-outs permitting parties to seek urgent conservatory or preservation measures from Indonesian courts without waiving the arbitration agreement. Third, parties should consider specifying a seat of arbitration outside Indonesia, typically Singapore or Hong Kong, while maintaining an enforcement mechanism linked to the New York Convention, to reduce the risk of Commercial Court interference.
Law No. 37 of 2004 on Bankruptcy and Suspension of Debt Payments (Penundaan Kewajiban Pembayaran Utang, or PKPU) remains the governing statute for insolvency proceedings in Indonesia. The judicial review commercial code decision does not amend Law No. 37/2004 directly. However, the Constitutional Court’s interpretive guidance, particularly on good-faith obligations and procedural fairness, will inevitably influence how Commercial Courts assess claims within the insolvency framework.
Under Law No. 37/2004, PKPU proceedings can be initiated by the debtor itself (voluntary PKPU) or by a creditor holding an undisputed claim. The filing triggers an automatic moratorium on debt enforcement, giving the debtor breathing room to propose a composition plan. The Commercial Court must hold a hearing within 20 days of filing, and the temporary PKPU period lasts a maximum of 45 days, extendable to 270 days for a permanent PKPU if creditors agree.
The post-review environment affects this process in two ways. First, debtors seeking voluntary PKPU will face greater scrutiny of their good-faith intentions, courts are expected to examine whether the filing is a genuine restructuring effort or a tactical manoeuvre to delay enforcement. Second, creditors opposing a PKPU filing can now invoke the Constitutional Court’s emphasis on procedural fairness to argue that the debtor’s conduct does not meet the constitutional standard for equitable treatment of creditors.
Secured creditors retain their preferential position under Indonesian insolvency law, but the practical exercise of security rights during a PKPU moratorium requires careful navigation. The automatic stay prevents enforcement of security interests during the moratorium period, unless the secured creditor obtains court permission to enforce against specific collateral.
In the post-review environment, creditors should consider several tactical adjustments. Set-off rights should be documented and exercised before a PKPU filing where possible, as the moratorium may complicate post-filing set-off claims. Acceleration clauses in loan agreements and bond indentures should be reviewed to ensure they are triggered by PKPU filing itself, not merely by a formal bankruptcy declaration, which occurs only if the composition plan fails. Creditors with cross-default provisions in multi-jurisdictional facilities should coordinate enforcement actions across jurisdictions to maximise recovery leverage.
Indonesian insolvency law follows the territorial principle: a bankruptcy declaration by an Indonesian Commercial Court applies only to assets located within Indonesia. This creates both opportunities and risks for cross-border creditors. Assets held by the debtor outside Indonesia are not automatically subject to the Indonesian insolvency estate, but recovering those assets requires separate proceedings in the relevant jurisdiction.
For businesses considering foreign investment in Indonesia, the territorial limitation means that asset-structuring decisions, where to hold collateral, where to bank, where to register intellectual property, directly affect insolvency-recovery outcomes. The commercial code reform reinforces the importance of pre-transaction structuring to ensure that enforcement routes remain viable even if the Indonesian counterparty enters insolvency.
| Event / Trigger | Statutory timeline or rule | Recommended immediate action |
|---|---|---|
| Constitutional Court decision published (case 25/PUU‑XXIV/2026) | Decision effective immediately upon pronouncement; binding on all courts | Review affected clauses; issue immediate notice to counterparties; preserve evidence of prior compliance |
| PKPU filing by debtor or creditor | Commercial Court hearing within 20 days of filing; temporary PKPU up to 45 days (Law No. 37/2004) | Assess set-off rights; accelerate secured claims; seek provisional injunctions; prepare creditor-committee strategy |
| Permanent PKPU granted | Maximum 270 days from temporary PKPU; composition plan must be approved by creditor majority | Negotiate composition terms; secure priority treatment for secured claims; monitor debtor compliance |
| Domestic arbitral award issued | Registration with district court within 30 days (Law No. 30/1999, Article 59) | Prepare enforcement package immediately; assess bankruptcy-intervention risk; secure freezing orders before registration |
| International arbitral award enforcement sought | Registration through Central Jakarta District Court; Supreme Court exequatur required | Engage local enforcement counsel; prepare New York Convention compliance documentation; monitor for parallel PKPU filings |
The commercial code Indonesia reform creates a window of uncertainty that rewards proactive preparation. The following prioritised actions are organised by urgency tier to help in-house teams and CFOs allocate resources efficiently.
The post-review environment does not alter the fundamental enforcement architecture in Indonesia, but it sharpens the practical differences between enforcing court judgments and enforcing arbitral awards.
Domestic court judgments are enforceable through the standard executie process, which requires the winning party to apply to the court that issued the judgment for an enforcement order. The process is bureaucratic and can be slow, typical timelines range from several months to over a year, depending on the court’s caseload and the complexity of the enforcement application.
Arbitral awards, by contrast, follow a separate enforcement track. Domestic awards must be registered with the district court within 30 days of issuance under Article 59 of Law No. 30/1999. International awards require registration through the Central Jakarta District Court and a Supreme Court exequatur. The New York Convention framework provides a recognised pathway, but enforcement remains subject to public-policy review, and the Constitutional Court’s decision may broaden the scope of what courts consider relevant to that review.
For businesses with cross-border exposure, enforcement strategy must account for the territorial principle in Indonesian insolvency law, the availability of reciprocal enforcement treaties (Indonesia has limited bilateral enforcement agreements for court judgments), and the practical speed of each enforcement route. Early indications suggest that the post-review environment favours parties who secure interim preservation measures, freezing orders, conservatory seizures, before the opposing party can initiate PKPU proceedings, as the automatic stay can otherwise frustrate enforcement efforts for the duration of the moratorium.
The following scenarios illustrate how the commercial code Indonesia judicial review affects real-world dispute strategies. Each scenario includes stepwise recommended actions.
A Singapore-based manufacturer holds a supply agreement with an Indonesian distributor. The contract contains an ICC arbitration clause seated in Singapore. The distributor files for voluntary PKPU before the supplier can commence arbitration for unpaid invoices totalling USD 4.2 million.
An Indonesian joint-venture partner refuses to perform under a shareholders’ agreement, citing the Constitutional Court’s revised interpretation of good-faith obligations as grounds for non-performance. The foreign partner seeks specific performance.
A multinational bank holds a secured loan facility with an Indonesian corporate borrower. Following the Constitutional Court decision, the borrower argues that the security documentation is subject to the revised good-faith standard and challenges the bank’s right to enforce. The borrower simultaneously begins transferring assets to related entities.
The 2026 judicial review of the commercial code Indonesia framework marks a turning point for commercial disputes, arbitration enforcement and insolvency practice across the Indonesian market. While the Constitutional Court’s decision in case 25/PUU‑XXIV/2026 is narrowly targeted at Article 251, its interpretive guidance on good-faith obligations, procedural fairness and evidentiary standards will reshape how courts approach the full spectrum of commercial litigation. For GCs, in-house teams and CFOs, the imperative is clear: audit existing contractual arrangements, stress-test arbitration and enforcement mechanisms, and build insolvency contingency plans that account for the revised judicial landscape.
Businesses that act decisively in the first 90 days will be best positioned to protect their enforcement rights and mitigate restructuring risk as the practical implications of the reform continue to crystallise.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Narendra Airlangga Tarigan at NARA Law, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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