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Commercial Litigation Indonesia 2026: Arbitrability and Enforcing Foreign Arbitral Awards

By Global Law Experts
– posted 1 hour ago

Commercial litigation Indonesia has entered a pivotal phase in 2026, shaped by Mahkamah Agung policy statements on harmonising private commercial dispute resolution, a January 2025 Constitutional Court ruling that tightened the statutory definition of “international arbitral award,” and evolving judicial practice around Article 5(1) of Law No. 30 of 1999 (the Arbitration Law). For general counsel, in-house teams and litigation partners structuring cross-border contracts with an Indonesian nexus, these developments demand a fresh assessment of arbitrability, clause drafting and enforcement strategy. This guide distils the current legal framework, provides step-by-step enforcement procedures and offers a practical decision matrix for choosing between arbitration and court litigation.

Key takeaways at a glance:

  • Enforceability. Foreign arbitral awards remain enforceable in Indonesia under the New York Convention, but practitioners must navigate a stricter definitional framework following the Constitutional Court’s 2025 ruling and subsequent Mahkamah Agung guidance.
  • Core risk. Public-policy and arbitrability objections are the most frequently invoked grounds for resisting enforcement; clause drafting that anticipates these challenges is essential.
  • Recommended next step. Audit existing arbitration clauses in Indonesia-facing contracts against the 2026 landscape before any dispute crystallises.

Executive Summary, Quick Decision Checklist for GCs

Before diving into the statutory detail, use the checklist below to triage your current dispute-resolution exposure in Indonesia.

Question If YES If NO
Does the contract contain an arbitration clause? Proceed to arbitrability analysis (Section 3 below). Default jurisdiction is Indonesian courts, consider amending the clause.
Is the dispute “commercial” within Article 5(1)? Arbitration is available; confirm clause wording. Arbitration may be challenged, obtain local counsel opinion.
Was the award rendered outside Indonesia? Follow the foreign-award enforcement route via Central Jakarta District Court. Domestic award, register directly at the relevant District Court.
Does the contract specify a seat in a New York Convention state? Enforcement framework is clearer; proceed with confidence. Enforcement risk elevated, consider restructuring the clause.
Have you factored in the 2025 Constitutional Court ruling? Ensure the award meets the narrower definition of “international arbitral award.” Immediate review needed to assess enforcement exposure.

Action steps:

  • Map every Indonesia-facing contract to determine whether the dispute-resolution clause passes the 2026 arbitrability and enforcement tests.
  • Prepare an enforcement file (original award, certified translation, proof of service) before a dispute arises.
  • Engage Indonesian litigation counsel early to anticipate public-policy or jurisdiction objections.

What Disputes Are Arbitrable in Indonesia in 2026?

A dispute is arbitrable in Indonesia if it falls within the scope of Article 5(1) of the Arbitration Law and the parties have agreed to arbitrate. Understanding how Indonesian courts interpret these requirements is foundational to any commercial litigation Indonesia strategy.

Article 5(1) in Plain English

Article 5(1) of Law No. 30 of 1999 provides that disputes may be resolved through arbitration only where the subject matter is of a commercial nature and the parties possess the authority to enter into a settlement agreement over the rights at stake. Article 5(2) further stipulates that disputes which, under prevailing law, cannot be settled by way of compromise (dading) are not arbitrable.

In practice, the statute draws a boundary: matters governed by public law, criminal offences, administrative-law disputes, family-law matters and certain land-title questions, fall outside arbitrability. Commercial contracts, joint-venture disagreements, supply-chain disputes and shareholder conflicts almost always satisfy the Article 5(1) test, provided the clause is validly drafted.

2026 Clarifications and Mahkamah Agung Harmonisation

The Mahkamah Agung (Supreme Court) has signalled a harmonisation policy aimed at reducing inconsistent lower-court treatment of arbitration clauses. Industry observers expect these policy statements to produce greater judicial deference to valid arbitration agreements, particularly in purely commercial disputes. The practical effect is twofold: courts are increasingly likely to decline jurisdiction where a valid arbitration clause exists, and respondents will find it harder to re-litigate arbitrability at the enforcement stage.

Additionally, the Constitutional Court’s January 2025 ruling tightened the statutory language around what constitutes an “international arbitral award,” removing an ambiguous reference that had previously allowed broader interpretations. The likely practical effect will be that awards must satisfy a stricter territorial criterion, they need to have been rendered outside Indonesia’s territory, rather than merely involving parties of different nationalities.

Practical Examples: Arbitrable vs Non-Arbitrable Disputes

  • Arbitrable. A breach-of-contract claim between an Indonesian subsidiary and its foreign joint-venture partner under a shareholders’ agreement containing an ICC arbitration clause seated in Singapore.
  • Arbitrable. A supply-chain payment dispute between two commercial entities governed by Indonesian civil law, referred to BANI (Badan Arbitrase Nasional Indonesia) arbitration.
  • Non-arbitrable. A challenge to a government mining-licence revocation, which falls under administrative law and must be pursued before the State Administrative Court (Pengadilan Tata Usaha Negara).
  • Non-arbitrable. A criminal fraud complaint arising from the same commercial transaction, criminal matters cannot be arbitrated regardless of clause language.

How Article 5(1) and Recent Court Guidance Change the Commercial Litigation Indonesia Landscape

The interaction between the Arbitration Law’s text, the Constitutional Court’s 2025 ruling and the Mahkamah Agung’s harmonisation guidance creates a more structured, though still evolving, framework for commercial litigation Indonesia practitioners to navigate.

Timeline of Key Legislative and Case Developments

Date Change / Ruling Practical Impact for Counsel
1999 Law No. 30/1999 (Indonesian Arbitration Law) enacted Established the baseline for domestic arbitration, alternative dispute resolution and enforcement of foreign awards; Article 5(1) defines arbitrability scope.
2015–2024 PERMA regulations and evolving court practice on foreign awards Operational guidance on judicial handling of foreign awards; interpretation remained inconsistent across district courts.
January 2025 Constitutional Court ruling clarifying definition of “international arbitral award” Removed ambiguous language from Article 1(9); narrower territorial definition became the standard, awards must be rendered outside Indonesia to qualify as “international.”
2026 Mahkamah Agung harmonisation policy statements on arbitrability and enforcement procedure Courts directed toward uniform treatment of arbitration clauses and enforcement applications; early indications suggest greater deference to valid arbitration agreements.

How to Read Article 5(1) in Your Contracts

When reviewing existing arbitration clauses, counsel should confirm three elements against the current interpretation of Article 5(1):

  • Commercial nature. The underlying obligation must be commercial. Include an express recital in the contract confirming the commercial character of the transaction.
  • Compromise authority. Both parties must have the legal capacity to enter into a settlement over the disputed rights, corporate authorisation documents should be current and attached.
  • No statutory bar. Verify that no specific Indonesian statute removes the dispute category from arbitrability (e.g., consumer protection matters in certain contexts, bankruptcy proceedings under the specific Bankruptcy Law).

Practitioner risk note: Where a contract straddles commercial and regulatory elements, for example, an infrastructure concession with government-approval conditions, the arbitrability of certain claims may be contested. In such cases, bifurcation of disputes (arbitrable commercial claims vs non-arbitrable regulatory claims) should be addressed expressly in the clause.

Drafting Arbitration Clauses for Enforceability in Indonesia

A well-drafted arbitration clause is the single most important protection against enforcement failure. The following guidance reflects the 2026 landscape for commercial litigation Indonesia.

Mandatory and Recommended Clause Provisions

  • Clear reference to arbitration. Indonesian courts have historically declined to enforce clauses that are ambiguous about whether arbitration is binding. Use “shall be finally resolved by arbitration” rather than “may be submitted to arbitration.”
  • Seat vs venue. Specify the juridical seat (which determines the procedural law governing the arbitration) separately from the hearing venue. A seat in a New York Convention state is essential for enforcement in Indonesia.
  • Governing law. State the substantive law governing the contract and, separately, the law governing the arbitration agreement if different.
  • Institutional rules. Name a recognised institution (ICC, SIAC, LCIA, BANI or BANI International) and the applicable version of its rules.
  • Language and number of arbitrators. Specify the language of proceedings and whether a sole arbitrator or a three-member tribunal will be used.
  • Interim measures. Expressly permit application to Indonesian courts for interim relief without waiving the arbitration agreement, the Arbitration Law permits this under certain conditions.

Sample Clause Templates

Template 1, Short-form (single arbitrator, SIAC):

“Any dispute arising out of or in connection with this Agreement, including any question regarding its existence, validity or termination, shall be referred to and finally resolved by arbitration seated in Singapore and administered by the Singapore International Arbitration Centre in accordance with its Rules for the time being in force. The tribunal shall consist of a sole arbitrator. The language of the arbitration shall be English.”

Template 2, Balanced (three-member tribunal, ICC):

“All disputes arising out of or in connection with this Agreement shall be finally settled under the Rules of Arbitration of the International Chamber of Commerce by three arbitrators appointed in accordance with those Rules. The seat of arbitration shall be Singapore. The language of the arbitration shall be English. The substantive law governing this Agreement shall be the laws of the Republic of Indonesia. Nothing in this clause shall prevent either party from seeking interim or conservatory measures from any court of competent jurisdiction.”

Template 3, Investor-friendly (with escalation):

“The Parties shall first attempt to resolve any dispute through good-faith negotiation for a period of thirty (30) days. If the dispute is not resolved, it shall be referred to and finally resolved by arbitration administered by the LCIA in accordance with its Rules. The seat of arbitration shall be London. The tribunal shall consist of three arbitrators. The language of the arbitration shall be English. This Agreement shall be governed by the laws of England and Wales. The Parties expressly agree that this arbitration agreement is governed by the laws of England and Wales.”

Enforcing Foreign Arbitral Awards in Indonesia, Step by Step

Indonesia acceded to the Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards (the New York Convention) via Presidential Decree No. 34 of 1981. The Arbitration Law provides the domestic procedural framework. Below is the step-by-step process to enforce a foreign arbitral award in Indonesia after the 2026 developments.

Pre-Enforcement Checklist

Before filing, assemble the following documents:

  • Authenticated original or certified copy of the arbitral award.
  • Authenticated original or certified copy of the arbitration agreement (or the contract containing the arbitration clause).
  • Certified Indonesian-language translation (Bahasa Indonesia) of the award, sworn by an official translator.
  • Certified Indonesian-language translation of the arbitration agreement.
  • Evidence that the award is final and binding under the law of the seat (a certificate from the arbitral institution is standard practice).
  • Proof that the parties received proper notice of the arbitral proceedings.
  • Legalisation or apostille of foreign-issued documents as required (Indonesia’s apostille practice should be confirmed with local counsel, as requirements vary by issuing jurisdiction).

Filing at the Central Jakarta District Court

Under the Arbitration Law, applications for recognition and enforcement (exequatur) of foreign arbitral awards must be filed with the Central Jakarta District Court (Pengadilan Negeri Jakarta Pusat). The application is then submitted to the presiding judge, who reviews the documentation and determines whether the award meets the statutory requirements for enforcement.

The key statutory conditions for enforcement under the Arbitration Law include:

  • The award was rendered by an arbitrator or arbitral tribunal in a country that is party to a bilateral or multilateral treaty on recognition and enforcement with Indonesia (in practice, New York Convention states).
  • The award falls within the scope of “commercial” under Indonesian law.
  • The award does not violate Indonesian public policy (ketertiban umum).

If the Central Jakarta District Court grants the exequatur, enforcement proceeds under the standard execution rules for civil judgments.

Grounds for Refusal and Common Defence Strategies

Indonesian courts may refuse enforcement on grounds mirroring Article V of the New York Convention:

  • Incapacity of a party or invalid arbitration agreement. The respondent argues the agreement was not valid under the governing law.
  • Lack of proper notice. The respondent claims it was not given adequate notice of the appointment of the arbitrator or the proceedings.
  • Award exceeds scope of the arbitration agreement. The tribunal decided matters not submitted to or contemplated by the arbitration clause.
  • Procedural irregularity. The composition of the tribunal or the procedure did not accord with the agreement of the parties or the law of the seat.
  • Award not yet binding or set aside. The award has been suspended or annulled by a competent authority in the seat jurisdiction.
  • Public policy. The award conflicts with Indonesian public policy, this is the most frequently invoked and strategically significant ground.

Mitigation tactics: Ensure the arbitration clause is clear, the seat is in a Convention state, all procedural requirements are followed meticulously during the arbitration, and the award does not require the Indonesian party to do something that would manifestly violate local law.

Practical Timeline and Costs

Stage Estimated Duration Key Cost Drivers
Document preparation and certified translation 2–6 weeks Translation fees; legalisation/apostille costs
Filing at Central Jakarta District Court 1–2 weeks Court filing fees (nominal); Indonesian counsel retainer
Court review and exequatur decision 30–90 days (variable) Counsel fees for hearings and submissions
Execution (if exequatur granted) Additional 30–120 days Execution costs; asset-tracing if needed
Total estimated range 3–9 months Variable; dependent on respondent’s opposition strategy

Recognition vs Set-Aside: Litigation Risks and Tactical Responses

Understanding the difference between recognition and set-aside is critical for anyone involved in commercial litigation Indonesia proceedings.

Procedural Differences

Recognition and enforcement is the process of obtaining an exequatur from the Central Jakarta District Court to give a foreign award the force of an Indonesian court judgment. Set-aside, by contrast, is a challenge brought at the seat of arbitration seeking annulment of the award. Indonesian courts have historically held that the Arbitration Law only empowers courts to set aside domestic awards rendered within Indonesia. Foreign awards cannot be set aside by Indonesian courts, though enforcement can be refused.

When to Seek Interim Measures

If the award debtor is likely to dissipate assets during the enforcement process, the award creditor should consider applying for interim relief (sita jaminan or conservatory seizure) from an Indonesian court. The Arbitration Law does not expressly prohibit court-ordered provisional measures in aid of arbitration, and Indonesian courts have on occasion granted such relief. Timing is critical, interim applications should be prepared simultaneously with the exequatur filing.

Mitigating Public Policy and Jurisdiction Challenges

The public-policy ground remains the primary risk in enforcement proceedings. To mitigate this risk:

  • Ensure the award does not require actions that are clearly illegal under Indonesian law (e.g., transferring assets in violation of capital-controls regulations).
  • Frame the relief granted in the award in terms that align with Indonesian legal concepts where possible.
  • Prepare a detailed submission explaining why the award is consistent with Indonesian public policy, supported by expert opinion if necessary.
  • Monitor evolving court decisions on public-policy objections to anticipate new arguments that respondents may raise.

Arbitration vs Court Litigation in Indonesia, Cost, Timeline, Enforceability Comparison

Choosing between arbitration and court litigation in Indonesia is a strategic decision that should be informed by cost, timeline, confidentiality needs and, critically, cross-border enforceability. The comparison table below summarises the key considerations.

Factor Court Litigation (Indonesia) Domestic Arbitration (BANI) International Arbitration (Seat Outside Indonesia)
Typical duration (first instance) 6–24 months 6–12 months 12–24 months
Appeal layers High Court → Supreme Court (Kasasi) → Peninjauan Kembali (extraordinary review) Limited annulment grounds only Set-aside at seat; no merits appeal
Confidentiality Proceedings generally public Confidential Confidential
Cross-border enforceability Limited, foreign court judgments are generally not enforceable in Indonesia and vice versa Enforceable domestically; limited international enforcement Enforceable in 170+ New York Convention states
Cost range (indicative) Lower filing fees; potentially high due to multiple appeals Moderate institutional and arbitrator fees Higher institutional fees; potentially lower overall if enforcement is straightforward
Best suited for Purely domestic disputes; matters requiring public-law remedies Mid-value domestic commercial disputes; parties wanting faster resolution Cross-border transactions; high-value disputes; need for international enforceability

Recommendation: For contracts involving a foreign party and Indonesian assets or counterparties, international arbitration seated in a Convention state (Singapore, Hong Kong or London are common choices) offers the strongest enforcement position. For purely domestic disputes where both parties are Indonesian entities, BANI arbitration typically provides a faster and more confidential path than court litigation.

Practical Takeaways and Recommended Clause Checklist for Contracts Involving Indonesia

Before executing any new agreement or renewing an existing contract with an Indonesian counterparty, verify the following items against the 2026 commercial litigation Indonesia framework:

  • Arbitration clause specificity. The clause must unambiguously refer disputes to binding arbitration and name a recognised institution and set of rules.
  • Seat in a New York Convention state. Choose a seat that maximises enforceability.
  • Language clarity. Specify English or another neutral language to avoid translation disputes during enforcement.
  • Governing-law separation. State both the substantive governing law and the law of the arbitration agreement.
  • Commercial-nature recital. Include a contractual recital confirming the commercial character of the agreement to pre-empt arbitrability challenges under Article 5(1).
  • Interim-relief carve-out. Expressly preserve the right to seek interim measures from courts without waiving the arbitration agreement.
  • Post-award enforcement planning. Identify the likely location of the respondent’s assets and confirm the enforceability pathway in that jurisdiction.
  • Periodic clause audit. Review all arbitration clauses at least annually to ensure alignment with evolving Mahkamah Agung guidance and Constitutional Court jurisprudence.

Conclusion

Commercial litigation Indonesia in 2026 is defined by a more structured, but still nuanced, legal environment. The Constitutional Court’s 2025 clarification on the definition of international arbitral awards, combined with the Mahkamah Agung’s harmonisation guidance, means that practitioners can no longer rely on older assumptions about arbitrability or enforcement outcomes. A well-drafted arbitration clause, meticulous compliance with procedural requirements during the arbitration itself, and thorough preparation for the exequatur process at the Central Jakarta District Court are the three pillars of a sound strategy. For general counsel managing Indonesia-facing commercial disputes, the time to audit existing contracts and align enforcement planning with the 2026 framework is now.

To connect with an experienced Indonesian commercial disputes practitioner, find an Indonesian commercial disputes lawyer through the Global Law Experts directory.

Need Legal Advice?

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.

Sources

  1. Indonesian Arbitration Law (Law No. 30 of 1999), Official Text
  2. Assegaf Hamzah & Partners, Constitutional Court Clarification on Foreign Arbitral Awards (January 2025)
  3. UNCITRAL, New York Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards
  4. Global Legal Insights, International Arbitration Laws & Regulations 2026: Indonesia
  5. ICLG, International Arbitration: Indonesia
  6. Leks&Co Lawyers, International Arbitration Indonesia

FAQs

What disputes are arbitrable in Indonesia in 2026?
Under Article 5(1) of Law No. 30/1999, disputes of a commercial nature where the parties can lawfully compromise are arbitrable. Examples include breach-of-contract, joint-venture and shareholder disputes. Public-law, criminal and certain family-law matters remain non-arbitrable.
File an exequatur application at the Central Jakarta District Court with the original award, arbitration agreement, certified Indonesian translations and proof the award is final. The court verifies the award meets New York Convention requirements and does not violate Indonesian public policy.
The legislative text of Article 5(1) has not been formally amended. However, the January 2025 Constitutional Court ruling narrowed the definition of “international arbitral award,” and the Mahkamah Agung’s 2026 harmonisation guidance affects how courts interpret arbitrability and process enforcement applications.
Yes. Courts may refuse enforcement on grounds including public-policy violation, lack of proper notice, invalid arbitration agreement, the award exceeding its scope, procedural irregularity, or the award having been set aside at the seat. Public policy is the most commonly invoked basis.
The Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards (New York Convention, 1958). Indonesia acceded to the Convention via Presidential Decree No. 34 of 1981, applying a reciprocity and commerciality reservation.
Arbitration is preferable when cross-border enforceability is needed, confidentiality is important, the dispute is high-value, or the parties want to avoid Indonesia’s multi-layered court appeal system. Court litigation is appropriate for purely domestic disputes requiring public-law remedies.
Required documents include the authenticated original or certified copy of the award, the arbitration agreement, certified Indonesian-language translations of both, proof of finality, evidence of proper notice, and legalised or apostilled originals where applicable.
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Commercial Litigation Indonesia 2026: Arbitrability and Enforcing Foreign Arbitral Awards

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