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how to deal with a breach of contract in indonesia

How to Deal with a Breach of Contract in Indonesia (2026): Notice of Default, Mediation, Small Claims, Specific Performance

By Global Law Experts
– posted 1 day ago

Understanding how to deal with a breach of contract in Indonesia has become an urgent priority for businesses operating across the archipelago, particularly since the Strait of Hormuz supply disruptions that began in March 2026. When PT Chandra Asri publicly declared force majeure over those disruptions, counterparties across its supply chain faced immediate questions about notice obligations, mitigation duties, and creditor remedies under Indonesian law. Whether the breach you face involves an unpaid invoice, a failure to deliver goods, or a counterparty invoking force majeure, Indonesian contract law provides a structured, but often unfamiliar, set of tools for enforcement and recovery.

This guide delivers the step-by-step playbook that in-house counsel, finance directors, and SME owners need in 2026: from issuing a notice of default (somasi) through choosing between mediation and litigation, to navigating the small-claims court and securing specific performance or damages.

Quick Action Plan: How to Deal with a Breach of Contract in Indonesia (0–14 Days)

When a breach is discovered, the first two weeks are critical. The following ten-step checklist sets out the immediate actions required under Indonesian law to preserve rights and build a recoverable position.

  1. Locate and secure the signed contract, including all annexes, amendments, side letters, and any applicable general terms and conditions.
  2. Identify the breached obligation, pinpoint the exact clause, deadline, or performance standard that has not been met.
  3. Preserve all documentary evidence, emails, invoices, delivery notes, WhatsApp messages, payment records, and shipping confirmations. Issue a litigation hold to prevent deletion.
  4. Check for force majeure, hardship, or exclusion clauses, determine whether the counterparty may have a contractual defence and note any notice windows.
  5. Review dispute resolution and governing law clauses, confirm whether the contract mandates arbitration, mediation, or specifies a particular court.
  6. Calculate the loss, document actual damages, lost profits, additional costs incurred, and any contractual penalties or liquidated damages.
  7. Issue a somasi (notice of default), under Article 1238 of the Indonesian Civil Code (KUHPerdata), a formal written notice is required to place the breaching party in default and trigger the right to claim damages under Article 1243.
  8. Set a reasonable cure period, typically 7–14 days for performance failures, or 14 days for payment demands.
  9. Mitigate your losses, take commercially reasonable steps to reduce the impact of the breach (source alternative supply, renegotiate downstream commitments).
  10. Engage local counsel, assess whether negotiation, mediation, small-claims filing, or full litigation is the right path. Seek advice from an Indonesia-based lawyer experienced in commercial disputes.

Step 1, Confirm the Breach and Preserve Evidence

Before any legal action, you must confirm that a breach (wanprestasi) has actually occurred and that you can prove it. Indonesian courts require the claimant to establish that a valid contract existed, that the other party failed to perform, and that loss resulted from the failure. Rushing to court without solid evidence is one of the most common, and most costly, mistakes in Indonesian commercial litigation.

Document Checklist

Gather and organise the following materials as soon as a breach is suspected:

  • The contract itself. Include all signed pages, exhibits, and any subsequent amendments. If the agreement was concluded electronically, preserve the digital trail including metadata.
  • Correspondence. Collect emails, letters, WhatsApp or LINE messages, meeting minutes, and any verbal agreements confirmed in writing.
  • Performance records. Delivery notes, inspection certificates, progress reports, shipping bills of lading, and warehouse receipts.
  • Financial records. Purchase orders, invoices (paid and unpaid), bank transfer confirmations, debit notes, and credit notes.
  • Force majeure notices. If the counterparty has invoked force majeure, as several Indonesian companies did following the Hormuz disruptions, preserve the notice, the date of receipt, and any supporting evidence the counterparty provided.

Immediate Preservation: Forensic and Litigation Hold

Issue an internal litigation-hold notice to relevant departments (finance, operations, procurement, IT) directing them to suspend routine deletion of emails, chat logs, and system backups. If there is a risk that the counterparty may destroy evidence, consider applying for a conservatory or provisional measure through the courts. Digital evidence, including timestamped screenshots, server logs, and blockchain-verified documents, is increasingly accepted by Indonesian district courts, provided authenticity can be demonstrated.

Step 2, Notice of Default (Somasi) in Indonesia: When, How, and Sample Wording

The somasi is the foundation of any breach-of-contract claim in Indonesia. Under Article 1238 of the KUHPerdata, a debtor is placed in default (in verzuim) when they have been given a formal written warning, when the contract itself sets a fixed deadline that has passed, or when the nature of the obligation makes default automatic. Article 1243 then provides that only after default has been established may the injured party demand compensation for costs, damages, and interest (biaya, rugi, dan bunga). Failing to send a proper somasi before filing suit can result in the claim being dismissed.

What to Include in a Somasi

  • Full identity of both parties (name, registered address, company registration number).
  • Reference to the contract (date, number, subject matter).
  • Statement of the breach, which obligation was not performed, when it was due, and the current status.
  • Deadline to cure, specify a reasonable period (7–14 days for performance; 14 days for payment).
  • Consequences of non-compliance, state clearly that legal proceedings will follow if the breach is not remedied within the deadline.
  • Claim for damages, include the amount demanded (principal, interest, additional costs) or a description of the performance required.

Template A, Demand for Payment (Unpaid Invoice Indonesia)

Note: This is a model form for general guidance only. It should be reviewed by an Indonesian-licensed lawyer before use.

“To: [Counterparty name and address]. Re: Notice of Default, Agreement No. [__] dated [__]. We refer to the above agreement under which you are obligated to pay [amount] by [due date]. As of today, payment remains outstanding. Pursuant to Articles 1238 and 1243 of the KUHPerdata, we hereby formally place you in default and demand that you settle the full amount of Rp[__], together with interest at [__]% per annum, within fourteen (14) calendar days of receipt of this letter. Should you fail to comply, we shall pursue all available legal remedies, including but not limited to filing a civil claim before the competent District Court, without further notice.”

Template B, Demand to Cure Performance

“To: [Counterparty name and address]. Re: Notice of Default, Agreement No. [__] dated [__]. Under the above agreement, you were required to [describe obligation, e.g., deliver goods / complete works] by [due date]. As of today, you have failed to perform this obligation. We hereby place you in default pursuant to Article 1238 of the KUHPerdata and require that you cure this breach within [7/14] calendar days of receipt of this letter. Failure to comply will entitle us to claim full compensation under Article 1243, including damages, costs, and lost profits, and to pursue legal proceedings.”

Service Methods and Proof of Delivery

Serve the somasi via registered mail, courier with signed receipt, or notarial deed (akta notaris). Retain proof of delivery, the signed receipt or notarial confirmation serves as critical evidence that default has been properly established. Industry observers note that many practitioners also send a courtesy copy by email to the counterparty’s legal department, though the physical delivery remains the legally dispositive proof.

When to Mediate vs Litigate: Decision Matrix for Breach of Contract in Indonesia

Once the somasi period expires without cure, businesses must decide their dispute resolution path. Mediation in Indonesia is not merely optional, under Supreme Court Regulation (PERMA) No. 1/2016, courts require parties to attempt mediation before a civil trial can proceed. Yet the strategic choice between mediation, full litigation, and arbitration should be made earlier, ideally while drafting the somasi.

Issue Mediation Litigation (District / Commercial Court) Arbitration (BANI / ICC)
Speed Fast, weeks to a few months Slower, 6–12 months at first instance; 1–3 years with appeals Moderate, typically 6–18 months
Confidentiality Private, proceedings and outcome not disclosed Public record, hearings and judgments accessible Private, proceedings confidential
Cost Lower, mediator fees plus counsel Higher, court fees, longer counsel engagement, execution costs Highest, institutional fees, arbitrator fees, counsel
Outcome control High, parties craft their own settlement Low, judge decides Low, tribunal decides
Enforceability Settlement enforceable by court if recorded as akta perdamaian Judgment enforceable through execution procedures Award enforceable under Law No. 30/1999; foreign awards via exequatur
Best suited for Ongoing relationships; moderate-value disputes; confidential matters Clear-cut breaches; need for injunctive relief; public precedent Cross-border disputes; complex technical matters; high-value claims

Practical Triggers: When Each Path Makes Sense

  • Choose mediation when the business relationship is ongoing, when the dispute value does not justify full litigation costs, when confidentiality matters, or when both parties have a genuine interest in a negotiated resolution.
  • Choose litigation when the counterparty is unresponsive or acting in bad faith, when you need an injunction or asset preservation order, when the breach is straightforward and damages are clearly quantifiable, or when you need a court judgment for enforcement purposes.
  • Choose arbitration when the contract contains an arbitration clause, when the dispute is cross-border or involves significant technical complexity, or when the parties wish to avoid the Indonesian court system while still obtaining an enforceable award.

Early indications from Indonesian practitioners suggest that court-mandated mediation succeeds in resolving a meaningful share of contract disputes before trial, particularly when both parties face commercial incentives to settle. However, where the breaching party is deliberately evasive or judgment-proof, litigation followed by aggressive execution may be the only realistic recovery path.

Small-Claims Court in Indonesia (Gugatan Sederhana): The 2026 Update

For breach-of-contract claims up to Rp500,000,000, the small-claims court (Gugatan Sederhana) offers the fastest formal litigation route in Indonesia. Originally established by PERMA No. 2/2015 with a cap of Rp200,000,000, the procedure was substantially amended by PERMA No. 4/2019, which raised the maximum claim value to Rp500,000,000 and set a mandatory resolution timeline of 25 working days from the first hearing.

Eligibility and Exclusions

  • Eligible claims: Breach of contract (wanprestasi) and unlawful acts (perbuatan melawan hukum) where the claim value does not exceed Rp500,000,000.
  • Parties: Both claimant and defendant must reside or be domiciled in the same jurisdiction (the same District Court area). For legal entities, the registered address determines jurisdiction.
  • Exclusions: Disputes involving land rights, disputes heard by specialised courts (e.g., Commercial Court, Industrial Relations Court), and cases where the defendant’s whereabouts are unknown are not eligible for the small-claims procedure.

Step-by-Step Small-Claims Procedure

  1. Filing: Submit a simplified claim petition (gugatan sederhana) to the competent District Court, together with supporting evidence and proof of the somasi.
  2. Preliminary examination: A single judge reviews whether the claim meets the eligibility requirements.
  3. Mediation attempt: The judge facilitates mediation between the parties, if settlement is reached, it is recorded as an akta perdamaian and is enforceable.
  4. Hearing: If mediation fails, the judge proceeds to hear the case. Evidence is presented, witnesses may be examined, and both parties make submissions.
  5. Decision: The judge issues a decision within the 25-working-day timeline.
  6. Remedies: The losing party may file a verzet (objection), but only in limited circumstances. There is no appeal to a higher court, which makes the process significantly faster than ordinary civil litigation.

Small-Claims Timeline Table

Stage Typical Duration
Filing and registration Day 1
Preliminary examination Days 2–3
Court-mandated mediation Days 4–10
Hearing (evidence and submissions) Days 11–20
Judgment Day 25 (maximum)
Verzet (if applicable) 7 days after notification of judgment

The small-claims procedure represents a significant practical improvement for businesses dealing with breach of contract in Indonesia, particularly for unpaid-invoice recovery where the claim falls within the Rp500,000,000 cap. Court fees are substantially lower than ordinary civil proceedings, and the absence of an appeal mechanism means that recovery, or at least legal certainty, is achieved within weeks rather than months or years.

Commercial Court (Pengadilan Niaga) and Ordinary Civil Suit: Jurisdiction and Remedies

Not every breach-of-contract claim belongs in the small-claims court or general District Court. Indonesia’s Commercial Court (Pengadilan Niaga) is a specialised court that handles specific categories of commercial matters. It sits in five cities across the archipelago and has jurisdiction over bankruptcy and suspension of debt payment obligations (PKPU), intellectual property disputes (patents, trademarks, copyrights, industrial designs), and certain other commercial matters assigned to it by law.

For standard breach-of-contract claims that exceed the Rp500,000,000 small-claims cap, the ordinary civil division of the District Court (Pengadilan Negeri) remains the default venue. At the first-instance level, proceedings typically take six to twelve months, consisting of a mandatory mediation phase followed by the exchange of written submissions (gugatan, jawaban, replik, duplik), evidence hearing, and judgment. Appeals to the High Court and cassation to the Supreme Court (Mahkamah Agung) can extend the total process to two to three years.

The likely practical effect of this structure is that businesses with high-value, clear-cut claims should prepare for a longer litigation timeline and factor appeal risk into their recovery strategy. For claims where urgency is paramount, interim measures such as sita jaminan (conservatory seizure) can be applied for at the outset of proceedings to secure assets pending judgment.

Specific Performance vs Damages: What to Expect in Indonesian Courts

When pursuing a breach-of-contract claim in Indonesia, claimants must decide whether to seek specific performance (pemenuhan prestasi) or compensation for damages (ganti rugi). Under the KUHPerdata, specifically Article 1243, the injured party is entitled to claim costs, damages, and interest once the debtor has been placed in default through a somasi. The claimant may alternatively, or additionally, seek an order compelling the breaching party to perform the original contractual obligation.

When Courts Order Specific Performance in Indonesia

Indonesian courts can order specific performance, but the remedy is discretionary. Industry observers expect courts to be more inclined to order performance where the subject matter is unique (a specific parcel of land, bespoke goods, or a one-of-a-kind service) and where monetary damages would be inadequate compensation. In practice, courts often default to awarding damages because enforcement of performance orders against an unwilling party is procedurally challenging.

Damages: What Can Be Recovered

Remedy Typical Outcome When Awarded
Actual damages (kerugian nyata) Reimbursement of documented losses Always, claimant must prove quantum with evidence
Lost profits (keuntungan yang diharapkan) Forward-looking compensation for profits that would have been earned When claimant can show a direct causal link and reasonable certainty
Interest (bunga) Statutory or contractual interest from date of default From the date established in the somasi
Liquidated damages (denda kontraktual) Pre-agreed penalty or fixed-sum compensation When the contract contains an enforceable penalty clause, courts may adjust if amount is disproportionate
Specific performance Court order compelling performance of the obligation When performance remains possible and damages are inadequate

Indonesian courts do not award punitive damages. The focus is on compensatory recovery, putting the injured party in the position it would have occupied had the contract been performed. Claimants should prepare detailed financial evidence (audited accounts, invoices, expert reports) to support their quantum claim, as courts require concrete proof rather than speculative loss calculations.

Force Majeure in Indonesia 2026: Drafting and Reactive Steps

The force majeure events of early 2026 illustrate why every commercial contract in Indonesia must include a carefully drafted force majeure clause, and why parties must know how to respond when one is invoked. When PT Chandra Asri declared force majeure in March 2026 following the Strait of Hormuz supply disruptions, its counterparties faced an immediate decision: accept the notice and negotiate interim arrangements, challenge the validity of the declaration, or pursue contract termination and damages.

How to Respond When a Counterparty Invokes Force Majeure

  • Review the clause carefully. Does the contractual definition of force majeure cover the specific event? Are there enumerated categories, or is it a general catch-all?
  • Check notice requirements. Did the counterparty provide notice within the contractual window? Was it in writing? Does it include supporting evidence?
  • Assess the causal link. The event must have directly prevented or materially impeded performance, commercial inconvenience or increased costs alone are typically insufficient under Indonesian law.
  • Verify mitigation efforts. The party invoking force majeure has an obligation to mitigate. If they failed to take reasonable steps to reduce the impact, their defence may be weakened.
  • Consider your options. Depending on the contract and the circumstances, you may negotiate a temporary suspension, seek partial performance, renegotiate terms, or, if the force majeure claim is invalid, proceed with breach-of-contract remedies including a somasi and litigation.

Drafting Tips for Future Contracts

To reduce exposure in future agreements, ensure that force majeure clauses specify: a clear list of covered events (with or without a catch-all), mandatory notice periods, documentation requirements, mitigation obligations, consequences of prolonged force majeure (including termination triggers), and the allocation of costs during any suspension period. The March 2026 events underscore that vague or boilerplate force majeure clauses create significant uncertainty for both parties.

Costs, Timelines, and Realistic Recovery Expectations

Understanding the realistic cost and time investment is essential when deciding how to deal with a breach of contract in Indonesia. The following practitioner estimates provide a general framework, actual costs vary by case complexity, location, and counsel.

  • Small-claims court: Court filing fees are minimal (typically under Rp1,000,000). The 25-working-day timeline offers the fastest formal resolution. Legal counsel fees are lower due to the streamlined procedure.
  • Ordinary District Court (first instance): Filing fees range from Rp500,000 to several million rupiah depending on the court and claim value. Proceedings typically last 6–12 months. Budget for legal counsel fees across multiple hearings.
  • Appeals (High Court and Supreme Court): Add 6–18 months per appellate stage. Appeal fees and additional counsel costs apply.
  • Mediation: If conducted outside court, mediator fees range from Rp5,000,000 to Rp50,000,000 per session depending on the mediator and dispute complexity. Court-mandated mediation (within the litigation process) typically incurs no separate mediator fee.
  • Arbitration (BANI): Institutional fees and arbitrator honoraria are calculated based on the claim value. For mid-sized commercial disputes, total arbitration costs (institution, arbitrators, counsel) can be significant but are often lower than multi-year litigation including appeals.

For a personalised cost and timeline assessment tailored to a specific breach-of-contract matter, businesses should consult a qualified commercial disputes practitioner with Indonesian experience.

Templates and Annexes

The following ready-to-use templates support the key procedural steps outlined in this guide. Each should be reviewed by an Indonesian-licensed lawyer before use in a live dispute.

Template 1, Notice of Default (Somasi), Payment Demand

[Sender’s letterhead]

Date: [__]

To: [Full name and registered address of counterparty]

Subject: Somasi, Notice of Default under Agreement No. [__] dated [__]

Dear [Name/Position],

We refer to Agreement No. [__] dated [__] (“the Agreement”) between [Sender] and [Counterparty]. Under Article [__] of the Agreement, you are obligated to pay the sum of Rp[__] by [due date]. As of the date of this letter, this payment remains outstanding.

Pursuant to Articles 1238 and 1243 of the Indonesian Civil Code (KUHPerdata), we hereby formally place you in default and demand payment of the full outstanding amount, together with interest at [__]% per annum calculated from [due date], within fourteen (14) calendar days of your receipt of this letter.

Should you fail to comply within the above period, we shall pursue all available legal remedies, including filing a civil claim before the competent District Court, without further notice to you.

[Signature, name, position]

Template 2, Small-Claims Petition Checklist

Before filing a Gugatan Sederhana, confirm the following:

  • Claim value: Does not exceed Rp500,000,000 (per PERMA No. 4/2019).
  • Jurisdiction: Both parties reside or are domiciled in the same District Court area.
  • Exclusions: The dispute does not involve land rights and is not within the jurisdiction of a specialised court.
  • Somasi: A notice of default has been sent and the cure period has expired without remedy.
  • Evidence pack: Contract, somasi (with proof of delivery), invoices, delivery notes, correspondence, and damage calculations are assembled and copied.
  • Petition format: The petition clearly identifies the parties, summarises the facts, states the legal basis (Articles 1238 and 1243 KUHPerdata), specifies the relief sought, and lists all supporting evidence.
  • Court fees: Filing fees have been calculated and are ready for payment at registration.

Template 3, Sample Mediation Clause for Future Contracts

“Any dispute arising out of or in connection with this Agreement shall first be submitted to mediation in accordance with the mediation rules of [specify institution, e.g., the Indonesian Mediation Centre / Pusat Mediasi Nasional]. If the dispute is not resolved within [30/60] calendar days after the appointment of the mediator, either party may refer the dispute to the [District Court of (city) / BANI Arbitration] for final resolution.”

Conclusion: A Practical Roadmap for Breach of Contract in Indonesia

Successfully navigating a breach of contract in Indonesia requires a disciplined, step-by-step approach: confirm the breach, preserve evidence, issue a proper somasi, and make an informed choice between mediation, small-claims court, ordinary litigation, or arbitration. The tools available under Indonesian law, from the streamlined Gugatan Sederhana for claims up to Rp500,000,000 to specific performance and damages under Article 1243 of the KUHPerdata, are well-established, but using them effectively demands local expertise and careful preparation. The force majeure events of March–May 2026 have made it clearer than ever that proactive contract management and swift enforcement action are essential for protecting commercial interests in Indonesia.

For tailored guidance on how to deal with a breach of contract in Indonesia, connect with an experienced Indonesia-based legal adviser through the Global Law Experts commercial disputes directory.

Need Legal Advice?

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.

Sources

  1. Mahkamah Agung, PERMA No. 4/2019 (Official JDIH PDF)
  2. Mahkamah Agung, Direktori Putusan / PERMA Metadata
  3. ILS Law Firm, KUHPerdata Article 1243 Commentary
  4. IDNFinancials, Chandra Asri Declares Force Majeure (March 2026)
  5. CACJ, Commercial Court (Pengadilan Niaga) Description

FAQs

How do I enforce a contract in Indonesia?
Contract enforcement in Indonesia begins with issuing a formal notice of default (somasi) under Article 1238 of the KUHPerdata, giving the breaching party a reasonable period to cure the breach or pay outstanding amounts. If the somasi goes unanswered, you may pursue remedies through mediation, the small-claims court (for claims up to Rp500,000,000), the ordinary District Court, or arbitration, depending on the contract terms and dispute value. Article 1243 of the KUHPerdata entitles the injured party to claim costs, damages, and interest once default is established.
A somasi is a formal written notice placing the breaching party in default. Under Article 1238 of the KUHPerdata, it is a prerequisite for claiming damages under Article 1243. You should send a somasi as soon as the contractual deadline has passed without performance or payment. Typical practice is to allow 7–14 days for performance cures and 14 days for payment demands. The somasi should be sent by registered mail or notarial deed to ensure proof of delivery.
PERMA No. 4/2019 amended the original PERMA No. 2/2015 and raised the small-claims (Gugatan Sederhana) maximum claim value to Rp500,000,000. The procedure must be completed within 25 working days from the first hearing. The decision is final, the losing party may file a verzet (objection) in limited circumstances, but there is no appeal to a higher court.
Mediation is generally preferable when: the business relationship is ongoing and worth preserving; the dispute value does not justify full litigation costs; confidentiality is important; or both parties have a genuine interest in reaching a negotiated solution. Litigation is more appropriate when the counterparty is acting in bad faith, when you need injunctive relief or asset preservation, or when a binding court judgment is needed for enforcement purposes.
Yes. Indonesian courts have the power to order specific performance (pemenuhan prestasi) under the KUHPerdata. However, this remedy is discretionary and typically granted only when the subject matter is unique and damages would be inadequate, for example, in disputes involving specific land or bespoke goods. In practice, courts frequently award monetary damages rather than performance orders, because enforcement of performance against an unwilling party presents practical challenges.
Start by reviewing the force majeure clause in your contract to verify whether the declared event is covered and whether the counterparty complied with notice and documentation requirements. Assess the causal link between the event and the failure to perform, and check whether the counterparty took reasonable mitigation steps. If the declaration is invalid or unsupported, proceed with standard breach-of-contract remedies, issue a somasi, demand cure or damages, and consider litigation if the counterparty does not comply.
Enforcement timelines vary significantly. In the small-claims court, a decision can be obtained within 25 working days. In ordinary District Court proceedings, first-instance judgment typically takes 6–12 months. If the losing party appeals, add 6–18 months per appellate stage. Execution of a final judgment (eksekusi) requires a separate application to the court and can take additional weeks to months depending on the debtor’s compliance and the type of assets being seized.
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How to Deal with a Breach of Contract in Indonesia (2026): Notice of Default, Mediation, Small Claims, Specific Performance

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