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how to commence arbitration in Uganda 2026

How to Commence Arbitration in Uganda (2026): Step-by-step Guide

By Global Law Experts
– posted 1 hour ago

Last updated: 4 July 2026

Understanding how to commence arbitration in Uganda 2026 is essential for any party facing a commercial, construction or contractual dispute where an arbitration clause governs the resolution process. Under the Arbitration and Conciliation Act (Cap. 4), arbitration proceedings are formally triggered when the respondent receives the claimant’s written request for arbitration, a deceptively simple rule that conceals several procedural steps parties must complete correctly to avoid delays, jurisdictional challenges or outright dismissal. Recent amendments and rule changes effective through 2025–2026 have introduced expedited procedural tracks, formalised virtual hearing protocols and refined the scope of arbitrable employment disputes, making the current process materially different from what practitioners followed even two years ago.

This guide walks through the complete procedure, from eligibility checks and notice drafting to appointing arbitrators, managing costs and enforcing the final award, so that corporate counsel, in-house legal teams, contractors and SMEs can act with confidence.

Overview of the Arbitration Process and Who It Applies To

Arbitration in Uganda is a private, binding dispute-resolution mechanism available to parties who have agreed, usually in a contract clause, to refer their disputes to one or more arbitrators rather than to the courts. The process applies broadly to commercial, construction, investment, supply and service-related disputes. It is also used in certain employment contexts, although recent Industrial Court guidance has narrowed its application for specific categories of statutory employment claims.

The process begins when a claimant sends a written notice to arbitrate (also called a request for arbitration) to the opposing party. Under section 21 of the Arbitration and Conciliation Act, arbitral proceedings are deemed to commence on the date the respondent receives that request. From that point, strict procedural steps govern how the tribunal is constituted, how evidence is exchanged, and how the final award is issued and enforced.

Any party bound by a valid arbitration agreement may invoke arbitration. Conversely, a party that commences court proceedings in breach of an arbitration clause risks having those proceedings stayed by the court while the dispute is referred to arbitration. The key steps to start arbitration, verifying the clause, drafting the notice, appointing arbitrators, exchanging pleadings and proceeding to hearing, are examined in detail below. Parties should also note the 2026-specific procedural changes discussed later in this guide, which affect expedited tracks, electronic service and virtual hearings.

Eligibility and Arbitration Requirements in Uganda

Before issuing a notice to arbitrate, a claimant must confirm that the dispute is eligible for arbitration and that all contractual prerequisites have been met. Failing to satisfy these threshold requirements is among the most common reasons for early procedural challenges and wasted costs.

Does My Dispute Qualify?

A dispute qualifies for arbitration in Uganda if the following conditions are met:

  • Valid arbitration agreement. There must be a written agreement between the parties to refer disputes to arbitration. Under section 11 of the Arbitration and Conciliation Act, an arbitration agreement may be a clause within a contract or a separate standalone agreement. It must be in writing, though exchange of letters, emails or other recorded communications can satisfy this requirement.
  • Arbitrable subject-matter. The dispute must involve a matter capable of settlement by arbitration under Ugandan law. Most commercial and contractual claims are arbitrable. Certain statutory claims, for example, matters of criminal law or specific regulatory proceedings, are not.
  • Pre-conditions exhausted. Many contracts require parties to attempt negotiation, mediation or conciliation before commencing arbitration. The claimant must demonstrate good-faith compliance with any such tiered dispute-resolution clause.
  • No conflicting court proceedings. If one party has already commenced court proceedings on the same dispute, the other party may apply for a stay of those proceedings in favour of arbitration, provided the arbitration agreement is valid and the application is made before submitting to the court’s jurisdiction.

When Court Proceedings Bar Arbitration

A court may decline to refer a dispute to arbitration if it finds the arbitration agreement is null, void, inoperative or incapable of being performed. Additionally, a party that participates substantively in court proceedings without objecting may be taken to have waived its right to arbitrate. The practical rule: raise the arbitration clause at the earliest opportunity, before filing any substantive defence in court. Recent 2026 Industrial Court guidance has also clarified that certain employment disputes governed by mandatory statutory schemes may not be referable to private arbitration, parties with employment-related claims should verify this threshold before proceeding.

Steps to Start Arbitration in Uganda: The Complete Procedure

The following numbered steps map the entire arbitration procedure from initial preparation through to enforcement of the final award. Each step identifies who is responsible and what must be done.

Step 1: Conduct Pre-Notice Checks

Before drafting any notice, the claimant (and its counsel) should carry out the following preparatory checks:

  1. Review the arbitration clause in the underlying contract. Identify the agreed seat of arbitration, applicable rules (institutional or ad hoc), the number of arbitrators, the appointing mechanism and any contractual time bars.
  2. Assess limitation periods. Under the Limitation Act (Cap. 80), most contractual claims in Uganda are subject to a six-year limitation period. However, the contract itself may impose shorter notice or claim periods, missing these is fatal.
  3. Gather and preserve evidence. Secure documentary evidence, correspondence and witness availability before giving the opponent formal notice.
  4. Consider interim relief needs. If assets are at risk of dissipation, or if urgent preservation orders are required, plan an application for interim measures either to the tribunal (once constituted) or concurrently to the Ugandan courts.
  5. Confirm jurisdictional issues. If the contract involves a foreign party, check whether any bilateral investment treaty, the New York Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards, or specific institutional rules apply.

These pre-notice checks are critical. A failure to identify a contractual conciliation requirement, for example, can result in the tribunal dismissing the claim for prematurity.

Step 2: Draft and Serve the Notice to Arbitrate

The notice to arbitrate (also referred to as a request for arbitration) is the formal document that commences proceedings. Under section 21 of the Arbitration and Conciliation Act, arbitral proceedings are deemed to commence on the date the respondent receives the claimant’s request for arbitration. The date of receipt, not the date of posting or sending, is therefore the controlling date.

A properly drafted notice should include:

  • Full identification of the parties, legal names, registered addresses and contact details.
  • Citation of the arbitration clause, clause number, contract title and date.
  • Summary of the dispute, a concise statement of the facts giving rise to the claim.
  • Relief sought, the specific remedy or compensation claimed, including the amount in dispute where quantifiable.
  • Proposed seat and applicable rules, if the contract is silent, the claimant should propose a seat (typically Kampala) and nominate applicable rules (e.g., UNCITRAL Arbitration Rules or an institutional rule set).
  • Number and identity of proposed arbitrators, if the clause specifies three arbitrators, the claimant should nominate its party-appointed arbitrator and invite the respondent to appoint theirs within a stated period.
  • Supporting documents, attach or reference key exhibits (the contract, correspondence, invoices).
  • Signature and date.

Serve the notice by tracked courier and simultaneously by email to ensure proof of receipt. Retain the courier tracking record and any email delivery receipt, these establish the commencement date. A downloadable notice to arbitrate template and checklist is available as a companion resource for parties preparing their first filing.

Step 3: Appointment of the Tribunal, Appointing Arbitrators

Once the notice is served, the next step is constituting the arbitral tribunal. The method depends on what the arbitration clause prescribes:

  • Clause specifies the method. Follow it exactly. If the clause names an institution (e.g., CIArb Uganda Chapter, the International Chamber of Commerce or another body), apply to that institution under its rules.
  • Clause is silent on appointment. The default statutory procedure under sections 11 and 12 of the Arbitration and Conciliation Act applies. Where three arbitrators are to be appointed, each party appoints one arbitrator and the two party-appointed arbitrators then select the third (who typically chairs the tribunal). Where the parties cannot agree on a sole arbitrator or the two party-appointed arbitrators cannot agree on a third, either party may apply to the High Court for the appointment to be made.
  • Party fails to appoint. If the respondent fails to nominate its arbitrator within the time specified in the notice (or within a reasonable period, typically 30 days), the claimant may apply to the court or the designated nominating authority for the appointment.

Practical considerations when appointing arbitrators include:

  • Confirm the proposed arbitrator’s independence and impartiality, any undisclosed conflict can be grounds for a later challenge.
  • Verify availability, arbitrators with heavy caseloads may delay the timetable.
  • Agree fee terms with the tribunal early. Arbitrator fees are usually shared equally between the parties on an interim basis, subject to reallocation in the final award. Initial tribunal deposits are addressed in the costs section below.

Step 4: Respondent’s Reply, Defence and Preliminary Objections

After receipt of the notice to arbitrate, the respondent is expected to file a reply within the timeframe stipulated by the applicable rules or as directed by the tribunal. Typical response periods range from 14 to 28 days, though institutional rules may allow extensions.

The respondent’s reply should address:

  • Any jurisdictional or competence objections (e.g., challenging the validity of the arbitration agreement, the arbitrability of the dispute, or the claimant’s compliance with pre-arbitration conditions). These objections should be raised at the earliest opportunity, delays in raising jurisdictional challenges can result in waiver.
  • A substantive statement of defence addressing the claimant’s factual and legal assertions.
  • Any counterclaims the respondent wishes to advance.

Where jurisdictional objections are raised, the tribunal may bifurcate proceedings, deciding jurisdiction as a preliminary issue before proceeding to the merits. Bifurcation can save significant costs if a jurisdictional challenge succeeds, but it adds time if it fails. Counsel should weigh the strategic implications carefully.

Step 5: Tribunal Constitution, Preliminary Conference and Timetable

Once all arbitrators have been appointed and have confirmed acceptance, the tribunal is formally constituted. The tribunal will typically convene a preliminary procedural conference within 7 to 21 days of constitution. This conference sets the procedural timetable for the remainder of the proceedings, covering:

  • The schedule for written submissions, document disclosure and witness statements.
  • Whether the hearing will be conducted in person, by virtual means (video conferencing) or in a hybrid format. The 2026 procedural rules have formalised protocols for virtual hearings in arbitration in Uganda, making this a standard agenda item.
  • Expert evidence, whether expert reports are needed, and the timetable for their exchange.
  • Provisional or interim measures already in place or anticipated.
  • Estimated hearing dates and duration.

Parties should arrive at the preliminary conference with a proposed timetable and a clear position on hearing format. Agreeing these points early avoids later disputes and keeps the arbitration timeline in Uganda on track.

Step 6: Interim Measures and Interim Relief in Uganda

Interim measures may be sought at any point after arbitration commences, and in urgent cases, even before the tribunal is constituted. Both the arbitral tribunal and the Ugandan courts have concurrent power to grant interim relief, including:

  • Injunctions to preserve the status quo or prevent the disposal of assets.
  • Orders for the preservation of evidence.
  • Security for costs.

Where rules permit, some institutional frameworks allow for the appointment of an emergency arbitrator to decide urgent applications before the full tribunal is in place. Applicants should be prepared to provide security or a bond as a condition of relief. Court-ordered interim measures carry their own filing fees, addressed in the costs section.

Step 7: Hearing, Award and Enforcement

The hearing is the stage at which parties present oral submissions, examine witnesses and make closing arguments. Under the 2026 procedural framework, hearings may be conducted entirely by video conference where the parties and tribunal agree, or where institutional rules so provide. Key hearing considerations include:

  • Documentary evidence is typically submitted in advance; oral hearings focus on witness testimony and legal argument.
  • The tribunal may issue procedural orders during the hearing (e.g., limiting examination time or admitting late evidence).
  • After closing submissions, the tribunal deliberates and issues its award, typically within 1 to 8 weeks for straightforward matters, though complex commercial disputes may take longer.

Awards may be final or partial (addressing liability before quantum, for instance). Once the award is final, the successful party may enforce it through the Ugandan courts. Uganda is a signatory to the New York Convention, which means foreign arbitral awards are recognisable and enforceable in Uganda, and Ugandan awards can be enforced in other Convention states. A party seeking to set aside an award must demonstrate grounds such as incapacity, invalidity of the arbitration agreement, lack of due process, excess of jurisdiction or conflict with public policy.

For further practical guidance on hearings, see the related article on preparation for and conduct of arbitration hearings.

Documents Needed for Arbitration: Required Checklist

Assembling the correct documents at each stage prevents procedural delays and strengthens a party’s position. The table below lists the core documents needed for arbitration in Uganda, with notes on who issues each document and the expected format.

Document Notes (who issues it, format, validity)
Notice / Request for Arbitration Issued by the claimant. Signed original (hard copy) and PDF. Must include citation of the arbitration clause, summary of facts, relief sought and supporting exhibits.
Contract (full) with arbitration clause Certified copy of the executed agreement. Critical for confirming the seat, applicable rules, appointing mechanism and number of arbitrators.
Evidence of service (proof of receipt) Courier tracking records, signed acknowledgement of receipt, email delivery receipts. The date of receipt establishes the commencement date under section 21 of the Act.
Statement of claim / particulars Issued by the claimant after tribunal constitution (or concurrently with the notice if rules require). Concise statement of facts, legal basis, relief sought, quantum and supporting documents.
Statement of defence / jurisdictional objection Issued by the respondent. Must address all claims, include any counterclaims, and raise jurisdictional objections at the earliest opportunity.
Power of attorney / authority to sign Each representative’s written authority to act and bind the party. For corporate parties: board resolution or directors’ authority.
Identity and company documents Copies of national IDs (individuals), certificate of incorporation, memorandum and articles, directors’ register (companies). For due diligence and tribunal verification.
List of witnesses and expert biographies CVs of proposed witnesses and experts. Include declarations of independence for experts and brief summaries of expected testimony.
Payment / fee receipts (filing and tribunal deposits) Receipts for institution filing fees (if applicable) and tribunal deposit payments. Retain originals and copies.
Translations and notarisations Certified translations for any documents not in English. Notarised copies where required by the applicable rules or the tribunal’s procedural directions.

Parties should prepare multiple copies of each document (hard copy and electronic) and maintain a master index. The tribunal’s preliminary procedural directions will typically specify the number of copies and the format (paper, electronic or both) in which submissions must be filed.

Arbitration Timeline in Uganda: Key Deadlines

Timing is governed by a combination of statutory provisions, contractual clauses and tribunal directions. The most important statutory provision is section 21 of the Arbitration and Conciliation Act, which provides that arbitral proceedings commence on the date the respondent receives the claimant’s request for arbitration. All subsequent deadlines flow from this trigger date.

Event Trigger / who calculates Reference Typical window
Arbitration deemed to commence Date respondent receives request/notice Arbitration & Conciliation Act, s.21 Day 0 (receipt date)
Respondent to appoint arbitrator From receipt of notice Contract clause or institutional rules 14–30 days typical
Statement of Defence filed After notice or per tribunal timetable Institutional rules / tribunal directions 14–28 days (or per timetable)
Application for interim measures Any time before award Tribunal or court power (statute/rules) Immediate, preserve assets as early as possible
Evidence exchange / witness statements Per tribunal timetable Tribunal directions 4–12 weeks (varies by complexity)
Hearing (oral or virtual) Per tribunal timetable Tribunal directions 1–5 days (small disputes); several weeks (large cases)
Award issued After close of hearing and submissions Tribunal direction / rules 1–8 weeks typical; complex matters longer
Enforcement application in court After award is final Arbitration Act + New York Convention Weeks to months (court backlog varies)

Parties should note that many of these windows are indicative and may be extended or shortened by the tribunal or the applicable institutional rules. On an expedited track, now formally recognised in the 2026 procedural framework, the timetable from notice to award can be significantly compressed, with preliminary conferences scheduled within days and awards rendered within a few weeks of hearing. It is prudent for claimants to identify any urgent asset-preservation needs early and apply for interim relief in parallel with service of the notice, rather than waiting for the tribunal to be constituted.

Arbitration Costs in Uganda: Fees and Tax Considerations

The cost of arbitration varies significantly depending on the value and complexity of the dispute, the number of arbitrators, whether an institution administers the proceedings and the length of hearings. The table below provides indicative ranges. All figures should be verified with the chosen institution or counsel, as fee schedules are updated periodically.

Item Typical amount / estimate Notes
Institution filing / admin fee Variable; nil for ad hoc arbitrations Institutional rules set the filing fee; ad hoc proceedings typically have no administration fee.
Tribunal deposits (arbitrator fees) USD 1,000 – USD 20,000+ per arbitrator Range depends on arbitrator seniority, dispute value and day-rates. Parties usually share deposits equally on an interim basis.
Counsel fees (per party) USD 1,000–5,000 (small claims); USD 20,000–200,000+ (complex commercial) Billing models vary (hourly, capped, lump sum). Include travel and hearing-venue hosting costs.
Expert fees USD 500 – USD 10,000+ Specialised experts (e.g., quantum, construction delay) may charge considerably more. Covers report preparation and hearing attendance.
Court fees (appointment / enforcement) Modest UGX-denominated filing fees Applicable when applying to court for arbitrator appointment or enforcement of the award.
Translation / notarisation / service costs Per-page or per-document rates Required for foreign-language documents or where notarisation is directed by the tribunal.
Interim relief security / bonds Variable, set by court or tribunal May be required as a condition for granting injunctive or preservation relief.
Taxes Withholding tax on foreign professional fees may apply Verify with tax counsel. Uganda Revenue Authority rules may require withholding on payments to non-resident arbitrators or experts.

Arbitration costs in Uganda are generally recoverable by the successful party, subject to the tribunal’s discretion. The tribunal’s award will typically address costs allocation, including arbitrator fees, institutional charges and a reasonable contribution to legal costs. Parties engaged in international commercial disputes should also factor in currency-conversion costs and any cross-border tax obligations.

What Changes in 2026: How to Commence Arbitration Under the Updated Rules

The procedural landscape for arbitration in Uganda has shifted materially through a series of amendments and rule updates introduced between 2024 and 2026. Practitioners commencing arbitration in 2026 must account for the following developments:

  • Expedited arbitration tracks. Amended rules now provide a formal expedited procedure for lower-value or less complex disputes. Under the expedited track, timelines for pleadings exchange, evidence and hearing are compressed, and a sole arbitrator is typically appointed to decide the matter. The likely practical effect is that smaller commercial claims can move from notice to award in a matter of weeks rather than months.
  • Virtual hearing protocols. Formalised guidance on conducting arbitral hearings by video conference is now embedded in the procedural rules. This covers technology requirements, recording arrangements, witness examination protocols and cybersecurity safeguards. Parties must address hearing format at the preliminary conference, the default is no longer exclusively in-person.
  • Electronic service of notices. Early indications suggest that electronic service of the notice to arbitrate (by email with read receipt or through an institutional e-filing platform) is increasingly accepted as valid service, provided proof of receipt can be demonstrated. Parties should still supplement electronic service with hard-copy delivery by tracked courier to eliminate any ambiguity about the commencement date.
  • Employment arbitration, narrowed scope. Industrial Court guidance issued in 2026 has clarified the boundaries of arbitrability for employment disputes. Industry observers expect this to mean that claims arising under mandatory statutory employment schemes (such as certain categories of unfair dismissal governed by specific labour legislation) may not be referable to private arbitration, even where the employment contract contains an arbitration clause. Parties with employment-related disputes should seek specific counsel advice before commencing arbitration.
  • Institutional appointment panels and ADR integration. The continued rollout of ADR centres and institutional nominee lists in Uganda provides parties with a broader pool of qualified arbitrators and a more streamlined appointment process, reducing the frequency of court applications for default appointments.

Practitioners should review their existing arbitration clauses and, where appropriate, update model clauses in future contracts to incorporate references to the 2026 rules, expedited procedures and virtual hearing options.

Common Pitfalls When Commencing Arbitration in Uganda and How to Avoid Them

  • Serving the notice without proof of receipt. The commencement date depends on when the respondent receives the notice. If you cannot prove receipt, you cannot prove commencement. Always use tracked courier with signed acknowledgement and send a simultaneous email with delivery-receipt confirmation.
  • Missing limitation periods or contractual time bars. Statutory limitation and contractual notice periods are strict. Check both before filing, a claim commenced one day late may be time-barred and irrecoverable.
  • Failing to follow the agreed appointment method. If the arbitration clause specifies a particular appointing authority or procedure, deviating from it can lead to a successful challenge against the tribunal’s composition. Adhere to the clause wording precisely.
  • Ignoring the need for interim relief. Assets can be dissipated, evidence destroyed or contractual positions altered while the tribunal is being constituted. Apply for interim measures early, to the courts if the tribunal is not yet in place, and include urgency grounds in the application.
  • Not agreeing hearing logistics at the preliminary conference. Disputes over whether hearings will be virtual, in-person or hybrid can derail the timetable. Raise this at the first procedural conference. Confirm the technology platform, recording arrangements and fallback procedures in advance.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Belinda Lutaya Nakiganda at Birungyi, Barata & Associates, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Arbitration and Conciliation Act (Uganda), Uganda Legal Information Institute (ULII)
  2. Arbitration and Conciliation Act (updated annotated copy), ULII
  3. Uganda Law Society, Arbitration Training and Guidance (2026)
  4. Introduction to Arbitration (Jolly Kibalama), Praxis Uganda
  5. Conciliation and Arbitration Procedural Rules, Ministry of Agriculture, Uganda
  6. Arbitration Regime Overview (Academic Paper), Cavendish University Uganda

FAQs

How do I start the arbitration process in Uganda?
You start by reviewing the arbitration clause in your contract, conducting pre-notice checks (limitation, evidence, interim relief needs), drafting a written notice to arbitrate and serving it on the respondent by tracked courier and email. Proceedings formally commence when the respondent receives the notice, as provided by section 21 of the Arbitration and Conciliation Act.
Under section 21 of the Arbitration and Conciliation Act, arbitral proceedings are deemed to commence on the date the respondent receives the claimant’s request for arbitration. The date of receipt, not the date of sending, is the controlling date. Retain delivery tracking records and signed acknowledgements as proof.
Costs vary widely depending on the dispute value, the number of arbitrators, whether an institution administers the case and the complexity of the issues. Indicative ranges include tribunal deposits of USD 1,000 to USD 20,000+ per arbitrator and counsel fees from USD 1,000 for small claims to USD 200,000+ for complex commercial disputes. See the costs table above for a full breakdown and verify current fees with your chosen institution or counsel.
A standard arbitration typically takes between 3 and 12 months from notice to award, depending on complexity, the number of issues, hearing duration and the tribunal’s availability. The 2026 expedited track can reduce this to a matter of weeks for smaller, less complex disputes. See the arbitration timeline table above for stage-by-stage indicative windows.
Generally, yes, if the employment contract contains a valid arbitration clause. However, 2026 Industrial Court guidance has clarified that certain employment claims arising under mandatory statutory schemes may not be referable to private arbitration. Parties should verify whether their specific employment dispute falls within these exceptions before commencing proceedings.
There is no strict legal requirement to be represented by counsel, but professional representation is strongly recommended. Experienced arbitration counsel can draft an effective notice to arbitrate, navigate the appointment process, manage procedural deadlines and present the case persuasively at hearing. The cost of early legal advice is typically far outweighed by the risks of procedural missteps.

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How to Commence Arbitration in Uganda (2026): Step-by-step Guide

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