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Understanding how to challenge arbitral jurisdiction in Indonesia is a critical skill for any party drawn into arbitration proceedings it considers improperly constituted. Law No. 30 of 1999 on Arbitration and Alternative Dispute Resolution (the “Arbitration Law”) governs both domestic and international arbitration in Indonesia, yet it does not expressly codify a kompetenz-kompetenz doctrine in the same manner as the UNCITRAL Model Law. This creates a distinctive procedural landscape in which respondents must decide, quickly, whether to raise a jurisdiction objection before the tribunal, before an Indonesian court, or both. The 2025–2026 period has sharpened these tactical choices, with institutional developments at BANI and updated ICC guidance altering the practical timing of preliminary rulings on jurisdiction.
A jurisdiction objection in Indonesia can follow two parallel tracks: one before the arbitral tribunal itself, and one before the Indonesian courts. The choice between these tracks, and their sequencing, determines the speed, cost, and enforceability of the outcome.
Track 1: Objection before the tribunal. Under most institutional rules (including those of BANI and the ICC), a respondent may raise a preliminary objection contesting the tribunal’s jurisdiction. The tribunal then decides its own competence, typically as a preliminary question or, where the facts are intertwined with the merits, at a later stage. This is the faster route and preserves the arbitral process.
Track 2: Application to an Indonesian court. Under the Arbitration Law, Indonesian district courts have historically been willing to rule on whether a valid arbitration agreement exists, and therefore whether the court or the tribunal has jurisdiction. Article 3 of the Arbitration Law provides that the district court is not competent to adjudicate disputes between parties bound by an arbitration agreement. Conversely, under Article 11, courts must decline jurisdiction if a valid arbitration agreement is raised as a defence. In practice, however, Indonesian courts have on occasion accepted jurisdiction to determine the threshold question of whether the arbitration clause itself is valid, creating a strategic opening for respondents.
The jurisdiction challenge procedure applies to domestic arbitrations administered by BANI, institutional arbitrations under ICC or other rules seated in Indonesia, and, in limited circumstances, foreign-seated arbitrations where ancillary relief or enforcement touches Indonesian courts. Both Indonesian and foreign parties may raise objections, provided they comply with standing, service, and language requirements.
Indonesian law and institutional rules recognise several grounds on which a party may challenge an arbitral tribunal’s jurisdiction:
Any party to the dispute, whether Indonesian or foreign, may apply to the competent district court. For domestic arbitrations, the district court at the respondent’s domicile generally has jurisdiction. For international arbitrations seated in Indonesia, the Central Jakarta District Court is the competent court for recognition and enforcement matters, and industry observers expect it to be the forum for most court-based jurisdiction challenges as well. Foreign companies must comply with additional requirements including notarised powers of attorney and sworn Indonesian-language translations of all documents.
The following numbered steps represent the jurisdiction challenge procedure Indonesia practitioners should follow. The sequence assumes a respondent has received a notice of arbitration and believes the tribunal lacks jurisdiction.
Within days of receiving a notice of arbitration, respondent’s counsel should complete four critical tasks:
This initial assessment phase typically takes 1–7 days from receipt of the notice.
The written jurisdictional objection is the respondent’s primary defensive instrument. It should contain:
Under BANI Rules, the objection is normally filed with the statement of defence. Under ICC Rules, it must be included in the Answer within 30 days of receipt of the Request for Arbitration. The tribunal will typically address the objection at the first procedural conference or case management conference, which takes place 14–90 days after filing.
This is the pivotal tactical decision in the jurisdiction challenge procedure. A respondent must weigh the tribunal vs court tracks carefully. Three court-based options exist:
The key tactical triggers for going to court include: a manifestly non-existent or forged arbitration agreement, urgent interim measures that the tribunal cannot yet grant (because it has not yet been constituted), asset dissipation risk, and situations where the dispute is arguably non-arbitrable under Indonesian law. Industry observers expect courts to be more willing to engage with jurisdiction questions in cases involving domestic parties and BANI-administered arbitrations than in purely international ICC proceedings.
The consequences of court intervention are significant. If the court accepts jurisdiction and rules that the arbitration agreement is invalid, the arbitration terminates. However, if the court declines jurisdiction and refers the matter to arbitration, the respondent’s position before the tribunal may be weakened. Court proceedings also introduce delay: a first-instance ruling typically takes 1–6 months, with appeals extending the timeline considerably.
Whether before the tribunal or the court, the evidentiary standard for jurisdiction objections focuses on the existence and validity of the arbitration agreement. Key evidence includes:
Many tribunals treat jurisdictional objections as preliminary questions and will bifurcate the proceedings, deciding jurisdiction first, then the merits only if jurisdiction is established. This approach saves costs but adds a procedural stage. Where jurisdiction and merits are closely intertwined, the tribunal may instead join the jurisdictional question to the merits phase.
If the tribunal declines jurisdiction, the claimant may pursue remedies in court or abandon the claim. If the tribunal upholds jurisdiction, the proceedings move to the merits, and the respondent may seek to set aside the eventual award on jurisdictional grounds under Article 70 of the Arbitration Law. A court determination that the arbitration agreement is invalid will normally terminate the arbitral proceedings entirely.
| Step | Who does it | Typical duration |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Preserve rights and pre-objection assessment | Respondent’s counsel | 1–7 days from receipt of notice |
| 2. Serve written jurisdictional objection to tribunal | Respondent (through counsel) | 7–30 days (per institutional rules; often with statement of defence) |
| 3. Tribunal preliminary decision or bifurcation order | Arbitral tribunal | 14–90 days after objection filed |
| 4. Apply to Indonesian court (if needed) | Party seeking court intervention | Court filing + preliminary hearing: 2–12 weeks |
| 5. Court decision on jurisdiction / stay / referral | Indonesian District Court | 1–6 months (first instance); longer if appealed |
| 6. Post-decision steps (enforcement, set-aside, or merits continuation) | Prevailing / losing party | 3–12+ months depending on enforcement and appeals |
The following table sets out the documents typically required when raising a jurisdictional objection before an arbitral tribunal or an Indonesian court. Counsel should assemble these documents within the first week of receiving the notice of arbitration.
| Document | Notes |
|---|---|
| Arbitration agreement / clause (original + translation) | From the parties’ contract; certified copy required; if in a foreign language, provide a sworn Indonesian translation. |
| Notice of arbitration / claimant’s filing | Issued by the claimant; include date/time stamp and proof of service. |
| Statement of defence / jurisdictional objection | Prepared by respondent’s counsel; include legal grounds, factual narrative, and annexed exhibits. |
| Power of Attorney / authorisation letter | Issued by the corporate principal; notarised and, for foreign entities, apostilled or legalised. |
| Board resolution / corporate minutes | Required if challenging the counterparty’s capacity to enter into the arbitration agreement; certified copy from company secretary. |
| Evidence of non-arbitrability | Government permits, licences, or statutory provisions demonstrating the dispute falls outside arbitrable subject matter. |
| Witness statements / declarations | Sworn affidavits; signed and dated; addressing formation of the contract or the arbitration clause. |
| Expert report on seat / choice of law | Independent expert’s signed report with CV; relevant where governing law of the arbitration agreement is disputed. |
| Proof of service / delivery receipts | Postal, courier, or electronic service receipts confirming delivery of the objection. |
| Sworn translations | Certified by a sworn translator (penerjemah tersumpah); required for all foreign-language documents submitted to Indonesian courts or tribunals requiring Bahasa Indonesia. |
Timing is everything in a jurisdiction challenge. The Arbitration Law sets general procedural timelines that frame the window for action. Under Article 48, arbitration hearings must be completed within 180 days from the constitution of the tribunal, with the possibility of extension by agreement. This compressed timeline means that jurisdictional objections raised late in the process risk being subsumed into the merits or treated as waived.
| Deadline | Source | Consequence of missing it |
|---|---|---|
| Jurisdictional objection: file with statement of defence (BANI) or Answer (ICC, 30 days) | BANI Rules; ICC Rules, Article 6(3) | Risk of deemed waiver; tribunal may proceed on the merits without considering the objection. |
| Tribunal hearing completion: 180 days from constitution | Arbitration Law, Article 48 | Tribunal must issue award within this period (or extended period); late objections compress available hearing time. |
| Court filing for stay / jurisdictional declaration: no statutory deadline, but urgency matters | Arbitration Law, Articles 3 and 11; HIR, Article 134 | Delay weakens the application; courts may view late filings as an abuse of process. |
| Set-aside application: within 30 days of award registration | Arbitration Law, Article 71 | Failure to file within this window forecloses the right to challenge the award on jurisdictional grounds. |
The financial exposure of a jurisdiction challenge varies significantly depending on the forum, the administering institution, and the complexity of the dispute. The table below provides indicative cost ranges. All figures should be confirmed against current institutional fee schedules before budgeting.
| Item | Indicative amount | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| BANI registration / administrative fees | IDR 3–30 million | Scaled by claim value; verify against current BANI fee schedule. |
| ICC case fees and advances | USD 5,000–50,000+ | Depends on amount in dispute; ICC publishes a cost calculator. |
| Tribunal advances (arbitrators’ fees) | USD 20,000–200,000+ | Varies by tribunal composition (sole arbitrator vs three-member panel) and case complexity. |
| Counsel fees (Indonesia / international) | IDR 50 million – IDR 2+ billion | Wide range; preliminary jurisdictional objections typically at the lower end; full defence at the higher end. |
| District Court filing fee | IDR 500,000 – IDR 5 million (indicative) | Court fees are modest relative to arbitration costs. |
| Expert reports and translation | Variable | Sworn translation, expert witness fees, and notarisation costs should be budgeted separately. |
| Security for costs (if ordered) | Variable | Courts or tribunals may order security; amount depends on the claim value and perceived flight risk. |
Legal fees in Indonesia are subject to value-added tax (VAT) at the prevailing rate. Counsel should factor this into budgeting, particularly for cross-border engagements where tax treatment may differ between the Indonesian and foreign law firm components of the team.
The 2025–2026 period has brought several institutional and practice developments that directly affect the timing and strategy of a BANI jurisdiction challenge and broader jurisdictional disputes in Indonesia:
These developments mean that counsel should engage arbitration specialists as early as possible and should not assume that the tribunal will defer jurisdictional questions to later stages of the proceedings.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Mahareksha S. Dillon at SSEK Law Firm, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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