Construction disputes in Indonesia present contractors, developers and project financiers with a critical threshold question: should you arbitrate, litigate or pursue emergency interim relief? The answer depends on a matrix of factors, the dispute clause in your contract, the urgency of asset preservation, the counterparty’s solvency position, and the type of remedy you need. Indonesia’s legal framework for construction dispute resolution has been shaped by Law No. 2 of 2017 on Construction Services, Law No. 30 of 1999 on Arbitration and Alternative Dispute Resolution, and the evolving jurisprudence of the Mahkamah Agung (Supreme Court).
This guide delivers a step-by-step decision playbook, with checklists, sample clauses, comparison tables and enforcement strategies, so that project stakeholders can act decisively within the first 24 to 90 days of a dispute.
The landscape for construction dispute resolution in Indonesia has shifted meaningfully since the Omnibus Law (Law No. 6 of 2023, amending the earlier Law No. 11 of 2020) restructured sectoral licensing and procurement rules. Under revised implementing regulations issued by the Ministry of Public Works and Public Housing (Kementerian PUPR), dispute-escalation tiers in government-procured projects now require documented good-faith negotiation and mediation steps before parties may proceed to arbitration or litigation. Failure to comply with these pre-conditions can be raised as a jurisdictional defence.
The Mahkamah Agung has continued to issue guidance reinforcing the finality of arbitral awards and limiting the grounds on which district courts may refuse to register and enforce domestic awards. Industry observers expect these developments to make construction arbitration in Indonesia a more reliable pathway, provided that contracts are drafted with precision and pre-arbitration steps are properly documented.
Who should read this guide: contractors (domestic and foreign JV partners), project owners and developers, project financiers and lenders with security interests, and in-house counsel managing Indonesian infrastructure or real-estate portfolios.
Before choosing a forum, every stakeholder should run through a structured decision tree. The right path depends on four variables: the contract’s dispute clause, the nature and quantum of the claim, the urgency of relief needed, and whether insolvency is on the horizon.
| Metric | Arbitration | Litigation (District Court) | Emergency Relief (EA / Court Injunction) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Typical timeline to final decision | 12–36 months | 18–48 months (with appeals) | Days to weeks for interim measures |
| Typical cost (ballpark) | Medium–High (institutional fees + counsel) | Medium–High (court fees + counsel + appeal costs) | Low–Medium (urgent counsel fees + security/bond) |
| Enforcement certainty | High, domestic award registered with District Court; foreign awards via New York Convention | Judgment enforceable but subject to appeal and cassation | Variable, court injunctions enforceable locally; EA orders may need tribunal confirmation |
| Confidentiality | Proceedings are private | Public record | Court filings are public; EA proceedings are private |
| Best suited for | Complex technical/quantum disputes; neutral seat desired; cross-border parties | Public-law nexus; non-arbitrable relief; no valid arbitration clause | Immediate asset preservation or prevention of irreparable harm |
Practitioner takeaway: Always begin with the contract. If a valid arbitration clause exists, the court must decline jurisdiction. But even with arbitration as your primary track, courts remain available, and sometimes essential, for urgent interim relief.
Under Law No. 30 of 1999, disputes arising from commercial relationships are arbitrable provided the parties have entered into a written arbitration agreement. Construction disputes, encompassing payment claims, delay damages, variation disputes, defects liability and professional negligence, fall squarely within the scope of arbitrable commercial matters. The law expressly excludes disputes that involve criminal matters or disputes that, by statute, cannot be settled by the parties themselves (such as certain administrative or regulatory decisions).
Law No. 2 of 2017 on Construction Services, together with its implementing regulations, recognises arbitration as one of the permissible mechanisms for resolving construction disputes. For government-procured projects, however, sector-specific procurement regulations issued by Kementerian PUPR may impose mandatory pre-arbitration steps, including negotiation, mediation, or conciliation, that must be exhausted before arbitration can commence.
A well-drafted arbitration clause is the single most important tactical decision parties make before a dispute arises. For FIDIC Indonesia disputes, the clause should be tailored to override or supplement the default Sub-Clause 20 (2017 edition) or Sub-Clause 20.6 (1999 edition) provisions. Key drafting considerations include:
Emergency arbitration provides a critical bridge when urgent preservation measures are needed before a tribunal is fully constituted. Under SIAC rules, an emergency arbitrator can be appointed within one business day of filing, and an order or award issued within 14 days. ICC rules similarly provide for emergency arbitrator procedures.
The practical challenge in Indonesia is enforcement. An emergency arbitrator’s order is not a court order, and Indonesian courts have not yet developed a consistent practice of directly enforcing such orders. Industry observers expect that emergency arbitrator orders will gain greater recognition as the Mahkamah Agung continues to harmonise private dispute resolution principles, but for now the safest approach is to seek parallel court-based interim relief where the assets or conduct to be restrained are located in Indonesia.
Domestic arbitral awards must be registered with the clerk of the relevant District Court within 30 days of issuance, as required by Law No. 30 of 1999. Once registered, the award is enforceable in the same manner as a court judgment. The District Court’s role at registration is limited, it does not review the merits of the award.
For foreign arbitral awards, Indonesia is a signatory to the New York Convention. Enforcement is sought through the District Court of Central Jakarta, with the Mahkamah Agung issuing the final exequatur. Grounds for refusal are limited to those enumerated in the Convention (public policy, lack of valid arbitration agreement, procedural irregularity, non-arbitrable subject matter, or award not yet binding).
Practitioner takeaway: Draft the arbitration clause with enforcement in mind from day one. Specify the institution, seat, emergency arbitrator availability and court-relief carve-out. Register domestic awards promptly to preserve enforcement rights.
Indonesian courts can grant several forms of interim relief relevant to construction disputes:
A common concern is whether seeking a construction injunction in Indonesia through the courts waives the arbitration agreement. The answer, under prevailing Indonesian law and consistent with international practice, is no, provided the arbitration clause includes a carve-out for interim court relief and the court application is framed as preservative rather than substantive. Law No. 30 of 1999 expressly permits parties to seek interim measures from a court before or during arbitral proceedings.
However, practitioners should be aware that Indonesian courts have occasionally interpreted an application for court relief as an implied submission to court jurisdiction. The risk can be mitigated by clearly stating in the court application that the request is for interim relief only, that the substantive dispute is subject to arbitration, and by citing the relevant arbitration clause.
Even with a valid arbitration clause, there are scenarios where court-based remedies are strategically superior:
Practitioner takeaway: Courts remain an essential tool even when arbitration is the primary track. Use conservatory seizure for asset preservation and frame every court application carefully to avoid inadvertently submitting the substantive dispute to court jurisdiction.
Under Law No. 37 of 2004, a debtor (including a contractor) that has two or more creditors and has failed to pay at least one mature debt may be placed into PKPU or declared bankrupt. PKPU construction claims are heard by the Commercial Court (Pengadilan Niaga), which must issue a decision on a PKPU petition within 20 days of filing. If granted, an interim PKPU lasts up to 45 days and can be extended to a maximum of 270 days.
If contractor insolvency in Indonesia appears imminent but a PKPU petition has not yet been filed, stakeholders face a tactical choice. Filing a creditor-initiated PKPU application can give the creditor greater control over the restructuring process and the appointment of the administrator. Alternatively, accelerating the arbitration (or seeking an emergency arbitrator order) to obtain a final or interim award before insolvency proceedings commence may preserve the creditor’s ability to enforce outside the PKPU moratorium.
Practitioner takeaway: Speed is everything. Draw on guarantees and issue termination notices before the PKPU moratorium takes effect. Coordinate insolvency and arbitration strategies, they are not mutually exclusive.
“Any party may apply for emergency interim relief in accordance with the Emergency Arbitrator Provisions of the [SIAC/ICC] Rules in force at the date of this Contract. An application for emergency relief shall not be deemed a waiver of the arbitration agreement, and the Emergency Arbitrator shall have the power to order any interim measures that the Arbitral Tribunal could order, including but not limited to injunctions, conservatory measures and orders for the preservation of evidence.”
“Nothing in this arbitration agreement shall prevent either party from seeking interim or conservatory measures, including injunctive relief, attachment or seizure orders, from any court of competent jurisdiction. Any such application shall not constitute a waiver of the right to arbitrate the substantive dispute.”
“Sub-Clause 21.6 [Arbitration] is amended to read: Any dispute not resolved by the DAAB or by amicable settlement shall be finally resolved by arbitration administered by BANI in Jakarta, Indonesia, in accordance with the BANI Rules for the time being in force. The arbitration shall be conducted in the English language by three arbitrators. The Emergency Arbitrator provisions of the BANI Rules [or substitute SIAC/ICC Rules] shall apply. Either party may seek interim measures from a court of competent jurisdiction without prejudice to this arbitration agreement.”
Practitioner takeaway: Sample clauses must be adapted to each project’s risk profile. Always confirm that the institutional rules referenced in the clause actually provide the emergency arbitrator and joinder mechanisms you need.
| Metric | Arbitration (BANI / SIAC / ICC) | Litigation (District Court through Supreme Court) | Emergency Relief (EA / Court Injunction) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Time to first hearing | 2–4 months (after tribunal constitution) | 1–3 months (after filing) | 1–14 days |
| Time to final decision | 12–36 months | 18–48 months (including appeals and cassation) | Days to weeks for interim order; final merits decided separately |
| Cost range (indicative) | IDR 500 million – IDR 5 billion+ (institutional fees, arbitrator fees, counsel, experts) | IDR 200 million – IDR 3 billion+ (court fees, counsel, expert witnesses, appeal costs) | IDR 50 million – IDR 500 million (urgent counsel fees, court filing, security bond) |
| Confidentiality | Private proceedings and award | Public hearings and judgment | Court filings public; EA proceedings private |
| Enforcement | Register award with District Court (30-day deadline); foreign awards via New York Convention | Judgment enforceable but subject to appeal, cassation, and judicial review (peninjauan kembali) | Court orders enforceable immediately; EA orders may require tribunal confirmation |
| Key risk | Enforcement delay if award challenged on narrow grounds | Lengthy appeals process; inconsistent lower-court decisions | Court may require substantial security bond; relief may be discharged if merits fail |
Practitioner takeaway: Emergency relief is the fastest pathway but addresses preservation, not final resolution. Arbitration offers confidentiality and enforceability advantages; litigation is unavoidable for non-arbitrable issues. Budget accordingly and plan for parallel tracks.
Construction disputes in Indonesia demand early, decisive action. Identify your dispute clause, assess urgency and counterparty solvency, and select the right forum, arbitration, litigation or emergency relief, within the first 72 hours. Draft arbitration clauses with enforcement in mind, secure interim relief before assets dissipate, and coordinate insolvency and dispute strategies in parallel. The stakes in Indonesian construction projects are too high for a reactive approach. To discuss your project’s dispute strategy with an experienced construction and arbitration practitioner, find a commercial disputes lawyer in Indonesia through the Global Law Experts directory.
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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