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The way businesses resolve contract disputes in China changed fundamentally on 1 March 2026, when sweeping amendments to the Arbitration Law of the People’s Republic of China took effect. These reforms, the first comprehensive overhaul since the original 1994 statute, reshape how arbitration clauses are drafted, elevate the significance of seat selection, introduce limited ad hoc arbitration, and tighten governance requirements for arbitration institutions. For in-house counsel, contract managers and commercial lawyers, the practical question is no longer whether the law has changed but what to redraft, which forum to select, and how enforcement risk shifts under the new regime.
This guide delivers clause-level drafting examples, a structured arbitration-versus-court decision checklist, and a step-by-step arbitration enforcement workflow aligned with the 2026 amendments.
Understanding the reform sequence helps contracts teams pinpoint which version of the law governs existing clauses and when transitional provisions apply.
| Date | Event | Practical Impact |
|---|---|---|
| September 2025 | Amended Arbitration Law officially promulgated by the Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress | Legislative text finalised; parties begin reviewing existing arbitration clauses against new requirements |
| 1 January 2026 | Publication of the amended law text confirmed and circulated in English translation | International practitioners gain access to unofficial English text; early guidance published on key drafting implications |
| 1 March 2026 | Amendments take effect | All new arbitration agreements and proceedings commenced on or after this date are governed by the amended regime; seat now carries greater weight in determining the default governing law of the arbitration |
| Q2 2026 (expected) | Supreme People’s Court (SPC) judicial interpretation and local court practice guidance anticipated | Industry observers expect procedural guidance that will clarify court review standards and enforcement timelines; contracts teams should monitor and reconcile clause drafting accordingly |
The amended PRC Arbitration Law introduces several structural shifts that directly affect how contract disputes are initiated, managed and enforced. The following changes carry the greatest practical weight for commercial contracts:
Before the amendments, many commercial contracts with Chinese counterparties treated seat selection as a secondary consideration, often defaulting to the city of the chosen arbitration institution. Under the 2026 regime, the seat now operates as a determinative factor for the procedural law governing the arbitration. The likely practical effect is that parties who previously relied on boilerplate language must now make an affirmative choice: specify both the seat and the substantive governing law explicitly, or accept that the seat’s procedural law will fill any gap. For cross-border contract disputes, this change is especially significant where one party is in mainland China and the other prefers an offshore seat such as Hong Kong, Singapore or London.
Arbitration clause drafting in China after 1 March 2026 must reflect several mandatory and strongly recommended elements. A clause that was valid and enforceable under the old law may still technically function, but failing to update it creates avoidable risk, particularly around seat, institution designation and governing law.
The following table summarises what every arbitration clause must now address and what remains optional but advisable:
| Element | Do | Don’t |
|---|---|---|
| Arbitration institution | Name the institution precisely (e.g., “China International Economic and Trade Arbitration Commission (CIETAC), Beijing”) | Use vague references such as “an arbitration body in China”, this risks the clause being found invalid |
| Seat of arbitration | State the seat explicitly (e.g., “The seat of arbitration shall be Beijing, PRC”) | Omit seat designation, under the amended law, the seat determines default procedural law |
| Governing law of the contract | Specify the substantive law separately from the procedural law (e.g., “This contract shall be governed by the laws of the PRC”) | Conflate substantive governing law with procedural/arbitration law |
| Language of proceedings | Designate the language (Chinese, English, or both) to avoid procedural delay | Leave language unspecified in cross-border contracts |
| Number of arbitrators | Specify one or three arbitrators to match dispute value and complexity | Leave silent, institutional default rules may not match commercial expectations |
| Scope of arbitrable disputes | Use broad language: “Any dispute arising out of or in connection with this contract” | Limit scope narrowly, may exclude related tort or statutory claims and create parallel proceedings |
Below are three model arbitration clause variants updated for the amended PRC Arbitration Law. Each addresses different commercial scenarios commonly encountered in contract disputes involving Chinese parties.
Variant 1, Domestic PRC Seat (Beijing/Shanghai/Tianjin)
“Any dispute arising out of or in connection with this Contract, including any question regarding its existence, validity or termination, shall be referred to and finally resolved by arbitration administered by [CIETAC / Beijing Arbitration Commission] in accordance with its arbitration rules in force at the date of the arbitration notice. The seat of arbitration shall be [Beijing / Shanghai / Tianjin], People’s Republic of China. The tribunal shall consist of [one / three] arbitrator(s). The language of the arbitration shall be [Chinese / English]. The substantive law governing this Contract shall be the law of the People’s Republic of China.”
Drafting note: This clause is suitable for purely domestic transactions or inbound investment contracts where both parties accept PRC procedural oversight. Specifying the seat expressly ensures the amended law’s default governing-law rule operates as intended. Always name the institution, under the EU SME Centre’s guidance, an arbitration clause that does not identify a specific institution risks being found invalid under Chinese law.
Variant 2, International Seat (Hong Kong / Singapore / London)
“Any dispute arising out of or in connection with this Contract shall be referred to and finally resolved by arbitration under the [HKIAC Administered Arbitration Rules / SIAC Rules / LCIA Rules] in force at the date of the arbitration notice. The seat of arbitration shall be [Hong Kong SAR / Singapore / London]. The tribunal shall consist of three arbitrators. The language of the arbitration shall be English. The substantive law governing this Contract shall be the law of [the PRC / England and Wales / Singapore, as applicable].
The parties agree that any award rendered may be enforced in any court of competent jurisdiction, including the courts of the People’s Republic of China, in accordance with the New York Convention.
Drafting note: Where one party is a foreign investor concerned about neutrality, selecting an international seat with a well-established institutional framework provides a familiar procedural environment. The enforcement reference to the New York Convention is important: China is a signatory, and foreign awards are enforceable in PRC courts subject to the convention’s limited grounds for refusal. Under the amended law, parties should also consider including a service-of-process mechanism for the Chinese counterparty to prevent delays at the enforcement stage.
Variant 3, Hybrid Clause (Court for Certain Disputes + Arbitration with Escalation)
“(a) The parties shall attempt in good faith to resolve any dispute arising out of or in connection with this Contract through negotiation within thirty (30) days of written notice of the dispute. (b) If the dispute is not resolved by negotiation, it shall be referred to and finally resolved by arbitration administered by [CIETAC] under its rules in force at the date of filing. The seat shall be Beijing, PRC. The tribunal shall consist of three arbitrators. (c) Notwithstanding the foregoing, either party may apply to the competent People’s Court for injunctive relief, asset preservation or other emergency measures as permitted under the Arbitration Law of the PRC and the Civil Procedure Law of the PRC.”
Drafting note: Hybrid clauses are increasingly common in construction, energy and long-term supply contracts where parties want the confidentiality and flexibility of arbitration but need the coercive powers of PRC courts for interim relief. Under the amended regime, courts retain exclusive authority to grant enforceable interim measures, so the carve-out in sub-clause (c) is not merely a preference, it reflects the statutory allocation of powers.
The enforcement of domestic arbitral awards continues to flow through the Intermediate People’s Courts. Under the amended law, the grounds on which a court may refuse to enforce a domestic award have been refined and more tightly defined, which industry observers expect will reduce the frequency of successful challenges. The core enforcement process remains as follows:
China has been a party to the New York Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards since 1987, subject to reciprocity and commerciality reservations. The amended Arbitration Law does not alter the convention framework, but the refined domestic enforcement procedures and the amended competence-competence provisions may have a positive indirect effect on the court’s approach to foreign awards. The likely practical effect is that PRC courts will continue to require the formal reporting-up mechanism, whereby lower courts must report to the SPC before refusing to recognise a foreign award, but with greater procedural consistency.
For cross-border contract disputes, the practical friction points remain largely unchanged:
The revised statute maintains the standard grounds for refusing enforcement (invalid agreement, lack of notice, award beyond the scope of submission, improperly constituted tribunal, award not yet binding or set aside at the seat), but the statutory language has been clarified to reduce interpretive ambiguity. Court interaction with arbitration continues, but the amended regime signals a policy direction toward supporting finality and limiting the scope for re-examining the merits of contract disputes at the enforcement stage.
Choosing between arbitration and litigation in PRC courts is not a binary decision, it requires weighing multiple factors specific to the contract, the counterparty and the anticipated enforcement landscape. The following table provides a structured comparison:
| Factor | Arbitration | Court Litigation |
|---|---|---|
| Dispute value | Suited to medium-to-high value commercial disputes; institution fees scale with amount in dispute | Court fees are generally lower for filing; may be more cost-effective for lower-value claims |
| Confidentiality | Proceedings are private; award is not published | Court proceedings are generally public, with limited exceptions |
| Speed | Typically 6–12 months for institutional arbitration; parties can agree on expedited procedures | First instance typically 6–18 months; appeals can extend total timeline to 2+ years |
| Finality | Award is final and binding; no appeal on the merits (set-aside limited to procedural grounds) | Judgment subject to appeal as of right; retrial possible in limited circumstances |
| Enforcement | Domestic awards enforced via Intermediate People’s Court; foreign awards via New York Convention | PRC court judgments enforceable domestically; limited international enforcement (bilateral treaties only) |
| Emergency / interim relief | Must apply to PRC courts for enforceable interim measures; some institutions offer emergency arbitrator procedures | Courts have direct coercive powers for preservation orders and injunctions |
| Choice of decision-maker | Parties select arbitrators with relevant expertise (e.g., construction, energy, IP) | Judge assigned by the court; parties have no input |
| Cross-border enforceability | Strong, New York Convention provides enforcement in 170+ jurisdictions | Weak, PRC court judgments enforceable abroad only where bilateral treaties exist |
A common question is whether arbitration is more costly than court. The answer depends on the dispute. Arbitration institution fees and arbitrator remuneration can be significant for high-value claims, but the overall cost of arbitration is often lower than protracted litigation when appeal timelines and re-trial risks are factored in. For cross-border contract disputes, the international enforceability of arbitral awards frequently makes arbitration the more economical route when enforcement across jurisdictions is required.
Example 1, Construction contract with a Chinese state-owned enterprise (SOE): A foreign EPC contractor disputes milestone payments under a construction contract governed by PRC law. Arbitration at CIETAC with a Beijing seat is typically preferable: it provides access to arbitrators with construction expertise, confidentiality protects commercial relationships, and the final award avoids the appeal cycle. The hybrid clause (Variant 3 above) allows the contractor to apply to a PRC court for asset preservation before the tribunal is constituted.
Example 2, Cross-border supply contract: A European manufacturer and a Shenzhen-based distributor dispute product-specification obligations. The manufacturer prefers an HKIAC arbitration with a Hong Kong seat for neutrality and international enforceability. The award, once rendered, can be enforced in mainland China under the Arrangement Concerning Mutual Enforcement of Arbitral Awards Between the Mainland and the Hong Kong SAR.
One of the most frequently asked questions about emergency arbitration in the PRC context is whether arbitral tribunals can now grant enforceable interim relief. The answer remains nuanced: the amended Arbitration Law retains the position that enforceable interim relief, including asset preservation, evidence preservation and conduct orders, is exclusively granted by the People’s Courts. Some leading institutions such as CIETAC and the Beijing Arbitration Commission (BAC) offer emergency arbitrator procedures under their own institutional rules, but any resulting orders require court endorsement to become enforceable.
The practical emergency relief workflow for contract disputes is therefore as follows:
Sample emergency arbitration clause add-on: “The parties agree that either party may apply for emergency relief under the Emergency Arbitrator Procedures of [CIETAC / BAC / HKIAC] and that either party retains the right to apply to any competent People’s Court for interim measures, including asset preservation and evidence preservation, before or after the filing of the arbitration.”
When a contract dispute arises under the amended PRC Arbitration Law, the following eight-step playbook provides a structured response from first notice through to final enforcement:
| Step | Action | Responsible | Estimated Timeline |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Preserve evidence and issue a dispute notice under the contract | In-house counsel / contract manager | Immediately upon dispute arising |
| 2 | Shortlist available remedies (negotiation, mediation, arbitration, court) | Legal team / external counsel | Days 1–7 |
| 3 | Decide forum: confirm arbitration clause validity, seat, institution, and applicable rules | External counsel | Days 1–14 |
| 4 | Apply for emergency / interim relief (court preservation + emergency arbitrator if available) | External counsel / litigation team | Days 1–14 (court must rule within 48 hours for preservation) |
| 5 | File arbitration request (or court action if litigation chosen) and pay institution fees | External counsel | Within 30 days of preservation order (if pre-arbitration preservation was obtained) |
| 6 | Evidence preservation, document production, witness preparation and interim enforcement steps | Legal team / external counsel | Months 2–6 |
| 7 | Obtain final award or court judgment | Tribunal / court | Months 6–12 (arbitration) / 6–18 months (court first instance) |
| 8 | Recognition and enforcement proceedings: file at Intermediate People’s Court; asset execution | External counsel / enforcement team | Months 2–6 post-award (varies by court caseload and asset complexity) |
The enforcement stage is where preparation pays off. Parties that mapped counterparty assets at Step 1 and obtained preservation orders at Step 4 are significantly better positioned to convert an arbitral award into recovered funds. For foreign awards, the reporting-up mechanism to the SPC adds a layer of procedural protection, lower courts cannot unilaterally refuse to enforce a New York Convention award without SPC approval.
The amended PRC Arbitration Law effective 1 March 2026 requires contracts teams to take concrete, immediate action. The following checklist summarises the priority items:
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Jingzhan Wong at Tianjin Bozhuan Law Firm, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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