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Singapore’s Civil Justice Reforms 2026 have reshaped the landscape for commercial litigation lawyers in Singapore, introducing three changes that every in‑house counsel and CFO must now factor into dispute strategy: the formal recognition of third‑party funding for prescribed disputes, the abolition of the torts of maintenance and champerty, and a revised cost‑shifting framework that gives judges broader discretion over who bears litigation expenses. For claimants weighing whether to pursue a commercial claim, and for respondents budgeting their defence, these reforms alter the economics of every case.
This guide provides a practical, decision‑oriented walkthrough of each reform, complete with checklists, worked examples and tactical considerations for the Singapore International Commercial Court (SICC), so that corporate stakeholders can make informed funding and settlement decisions in the new regime.
Can you use third‑party funding? Yes, if your dispute falls within the prescribed categories and you engage a qualifying funder. Has maintenance and champerty risk disappeared? Largely, though contractual and ethical safeguards remain. Will cost‑shifting hit harder? Potentially, judges now have wider discretion, making early budgeting and settlement modelling essential.
Here is what each scenario looks like under the 2026 rules:
The Civil Justice Reforms 2026 represent the most significant overhaul of Singapore’s litigation framework in over a decade. Building on the incremental liberalisation that began with the Civil Law (Amendment) Act 2017, which first permitted third‑party funding for international arbitration and prescribed proceedings, the 2026 reforms extend, formalise and broaden the funding regime while eliminating legacy doctrinal barriers that had constrained litigation finance.
Three headline changes matter most for commercial litigants and their advisers:
The prescribed‑dispute framework is central to the funding reforms. Not every commercial claim qualifies. The categories are defined by subsidiary legislation and, as of the 2026 amendments, typically cover:
In‑house teams should verify at the outset whether their specific dispute falls within the prescribed list, as funding a non‑prescribed proceeding may still raise regulatory concerns even after the abolition of champerty.
The Ministry of Law retains oversight of the third‑party funding framework. Funders must be professional funders meeting specified criteria, typically, a minimum paid‑up capital or assets‑under‑management threshold. The courts exercise supervisory jurisdiction over funding arrangements through disclosure requirements and their inherent power to manage proceedings, including the power to make adverse cost orders against funders who fail to comply with disclosure obligations.
| Reform Element | What Changed Under the Civil Justice Reforms 2026 | Practical Impact for Litigants and Funders |
|---|---|---|
| Third‑party funding | Formal recognition and expanded prescription of funding for qualifying dispute types, with regulatory requirements for funders and funding agreements | Funders operate with clearer legal certainty; parties must check eligibility and ensure funding‑contract compliance with prescribed‑form requirements |
| Maintenance & champerty | Abolished as torts and removed as a basis for voiding agreements | Funding agreements are far less likely to be struck down on maintenance or champerty grounds; the focus shifts to contractual terms, disclosure obligations and professional‑conduct rules |
| Cost‑shifting | Revised principles with broader judicial discretion, new presumptions, and the possibility of non‑party cost orders against funders | Increased importance of pre‑filing cost budgeting, earlier and more rigorous settlement calculus, and potential cost exposure for funders who do not manage disclosure obligations |
Third‑party litigation funding, sometimes referred to as litigation finance, is an arrangement where a commercial funder who is not a party to the dispute agrees to finance some or all of a claimant’s legal costs in exchange for a share of any damages or settlement recovered. The funder typically receives either a multiple of its investment or a percentage of the recovery, and bears the downside risk: if the claim fails, the funder loses its investment and the funded party owes nothing back.
Under the 2026 framework, litigation funding in Singapore is available through several models:
Qualifying funders include dedicated litigation‑finance houses, specialist boutique funds, and institutional investors with litigation‑finance arms. Insurers offering ATE products are a distinct but complementary category.
Funding agreements are complex commercial contracts. In‑house counsel should pay close attention to:
A qualifying funder must satisfy the prescribed capital and governance requirements. The funded party’s lawyers must disclose the existence and identity of the funder to the court and, in most circumstances, to the opposing party. Non‑disclosure can result in cost sanctions or other adverse orders. Early engagement with litigation counsel to structure the funding arrangement, and manage disclosure timing, is essential.
For centuries, the doctrines of maintenance and champerty served as common‑law checks on third‑party involvement in litigation. Maintenance prohibited a stranger from supporting another’s lawsuit without lawful justification. Champerty, a subspecies of maintenance, prohibited financing litigation in return for a share of the proceeds. Both were actionable as torts and, historically, as criminal offences.
Singapore had already carved out exceptions to these doctrines through the 2017 amendments, but the exceptions were narrow and created a patchwork regime. The Civil Justice Reforms 2026 resolve this by abolishing maintenance and champerty entirely as torts and as grounds for invalidating otherwise lawful agreements. The likely practical effect is that funding arrangements can no longer be challenged solely on the basis that they constitute maintenance or champerty, a significant reduction in legal risk for both funders and funded parties.
However, abolition does not create a regulatory vacuum. Several safeguards remain:
To ensure enforceability of a funding agreement in the post‑abolition landscape, in‑house counsel should confirm:
The cost‑shifting rules under the Civil Justice Reforms 2026 represent a recalibration of how litigation expenses are allocated. Under the traditional “loser pays” principle, the unsuccessful party was generally ordered to pay the successful party’s reasonable costs. The 2026 reforms retain this baseline principle but introduce new factors and broader judicial discretion that make outcomes less predictable, and early budgeting more important.
Key changes that commercial litigation lawyers in Singapore must advise on include:
The following is an illustrative example only and does not constitute legal advice. Actual cost outcomes depend on the specific facts, the court’s assessment and applicable rules.
| Scenario (Claim Value S$2 million) | Estimated Recoverable Costs, Prior Framework | Estimated Recoverable Costs, 2026 Rules |
|---|---|---|
| Successful claimant (straightforward claim, cooperated on ADR) | S$180,000–S$250,000 (scale‑based) | S$200,000–S$300,000 (broader discretion, proportionality applied) |
| Successful claimant (complex claim, refused mediation) | S$180,000–S$250,000 (same scale) | S$120,000–S$200,000 (reduced due to unreasonable refusal of ADR) |
| Unsuccessful claimant (funded, funder complied with disclosure) | Adverse order against claimant only | Adverse order against claimant; funder exposure limited if disclosure complied with |
| Unsuccessful claimant (funded, funder non‑compliant on disclosure) | Adverse order against claimant only | Non‑party cost order against funder becomes a realistic risk |
Given the broader judicial discretion under the 2026 cost‑shifting rules, after‑the‑event insurance has become a more important component of litigation finance planning. ATE policies can cap a party’s exposure to adverse cost orders, typically covering the opponent’s legal costs if the funded claim fails. Early indications suggest that ATE premiums for Singapore commercial disputes are rising modestly as funders and insurers adjust to the new discretionary framework. In‑house teams should obtain ATE quotes as part of the funding due‑diligence process, not as an afterthought.
The Singapore International Commercial Court continues to evolve as a venue of choice for cross‑border commercial disputes. The SICC procedure updates implemented alongside the Civil Justice Reforms 2026 introduce several changes that directly affect funded cases and the tactical decisions of commercial litigation lawyers in Singapore.
The SICC’s procedural framework already offered features attractive to international litigants, including more flexible rules of evidence, the ability to engage foreign lawyers, and streamlined case management. The 2026 updates build on this foundation with specific attention to funding disclosure, interim relief and enforcement.
The 2026 procedural updates clarify the SICC’s powers to grant interim relief in funded proceedings, including:
The SICC practice directions require funded parties to disclose the existence of a funding arrangement and the identity of the funder. This disclosure must typically be made at the earliest opportunity, in practice, at or before the first case‑management conference.
A tension exists between disclosure obligations and funder confidentiality. The terms of the funding agreement itself, including the funder’s return structure and termination rights, are generally not required to be disclosed to the opposing party, although the court may order disclosure of specific terms if they are relevant to a procedural application (such as security for costs or a non‑party cost order). Counsel should negotiate clear confidentiality carve‑outs in the funding agreement and be prepared to manage disclosure on a staged basis in coordination with the court’s directions.
Not every commercial dispute warrants third‑party funding. The decision should be driven by a structured assessment of the claim’s legal merits, commercial value, and the organisation’s risk appetite. The following dispute finance checklist provides a step‑by‑step framework for evaluating whether to pursue funding under Singapore’s 2026 regime.
Before approaching any funder, in‑house teams should complete a preliminary self‑assessment:
| Item | What to Check | Red Flag |
|---|---|---|
| Regulatory status | Does the funder meet prescribed capital‑adequacy requirements? | Funder is newly established with no verifiable track record or capital base |
| Track record | How many Singapore or SICC cases has the funder supported? What is their reported success rate? | No prior experience in Singapore’s legal system or prescribed proceedings |
| Conflicts of interest | Does the funder have any relationship with the opposing party or its advisers? | Any undisclosed connection to the respondent or its group companies |
| Adverse‑cost cover | Does the funder provide an indemnity for adverse cost orders, or is separate ATE required? | Funder refuses to address adverse‑cost exposure and discourages ATE insurance |
| Control expectations | What decision‑making rights does the funder seek? Settlement approval, strategy input, counsel selection? | Funder insists on unilateral settlement authority or veto over counsel selection |
| Termination terms | Under what circumstances can the funder withdraw? What are the financial consequences? | Broad discretionary withdrawal rights with no obligation to fund costs already incurred |
Once a funder is selected, the negotiation phase is critical. Key leverage points for funded parties include:
After the funding agreement is executed:
| Model Input | Typical Value | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Minimum claim value for single‑case funding | S$5 million–S$10 million | Below this threshold, portfolio funding or ATE‑only models may be more appropriate |
| Funder’s return (multiple model) | 2×–4× the funded amount | Higher multiples for riskier or longer‑duration cases |
| Funder’s return (percentage model) | 20%–40% of recovery | Often combined with a minimum‑return floor |
| Due‑diligence period | 4–12 weeks | Depends on case complexity and availability of documents |
| ATE premium (approximate) | 15%–40% of insured amount | Deferred and contingent premiums are common; premium may be payable only on success |
All figures are indicative market ranges and do not constitute financial or legal advice. Actual terms vary by funder, case profile and market conditions.
Scenario. A minority shareholder in a Singapore‑incorporated company alleges oppression and seeks a buyout order valued at approximately S$15 million. The shareholder’s personal resources are insufficient to fund a multi‑year High Court action.
Scenario. A European manufacturer brings a breach‑of‑contract claim in the SICC against a Southeast Asian distributor. The claim is valued at S$25 million. The manufacturer seeks funding to avoid tying up working capital.
The Civil Justice Reforms 2026 have created a more sophisticated, and more demanding, environment for commercial dispute resolution in Singapore. Third‑party funding is now a mainstream tool, maintenance and champerty no longer stand as doctrinal barriers, and cost‑shifting rules require earlier and more rigorous financial planning. For any organisation involved in or contemplating a significant commercial dispute, the following steps are recommended:
For assistance identifying experienced commercial litigation lawyers in Singapore, consult the Global Law Experts directory to connect with practitioners who specialise in funded disputes, SICC procedure and the 2026 reforms.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Jerrie Tan Qiu Lin at Eugene Thuraisingam LLP, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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