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how to set aside an arbitral award in Morocco

How to Set Aside an Arbitral Award in Morocco (2026): Step‑by‑step Procedure

By Global Law Experts
– posted 1 hour ago

Understanding how to set aside an arbitral award in Morocco is critical for any party that believes an award was rendered in breach of fundamental procedural or jurisdictional safeguards. Morocco’s arbitration framework, now consolidated under Law n° 95‑17 on arbitration and conventional mediation, as amended and republished in Bulletin Officiel BO_7480, provides a tightly structured annulment procedure heard exclusively by the competent Court of Appeal. This guide sets out the complete set aside procedure Morocco 2026 practitioners need to follow: eligibility grounds, step‑by‑step filing instructions, mandatory documents, deadlines, and estimated costs. It reflects the procedural changes introduced by BO_7480 and is current as of May 2026.

Overview of the Set‑Aside Process and Who It Applies To

A “set‑aside” (recours en annulation) is the primary judicial remedy available to a party seeking to have a Moroccan arbitral award declared null and void. It is distinct from enforcement refusal: while an enforcement refusal occurs when a court declines to grant exequatur (the order that makes an award enforceable), a set‑aside application is an affirmative action initiated by the losing party to have the award annulled on limited statutory grounds. The two remedies may run in parallel, a party may oppose enforcement while simultaneously filing for annulment, but they are procedurally separate.

The set‑aside procedure applies to both domestic and international arbitral awards rendered in Morocco. For awards rendered abroad, the appropriate challenge is typically enforcement refusal under the 1958 New York Convention and Moroccan implementing legislation, not a domestic set‑aside action. Only a party to the arbitration (or, in limited circumstances, a party directly affected by the award) has standing to file. The competent court is the Court of Appeal in whose jurisdiction the award was rendered, or, for international arbitration, the Court of Appeal of Rabat unless the parties have agreed otherwise.

Critically, a set‑aside application does not amount to a merits appeal. Moroccan courts do not re‑examine the factual findings or legal conclusions of the tribunal. They review only whether specific procedural or jurisdictional defects occurred. For parties seeking to enforce an arbitral award in Morocco, understanding this distinction is essential when deciding whether to challenge or accept the award.

Eligibility and Prerequisites: Grounds to Set Aside an Arbitral Award in Morocco

The grounds to set aside an arbitral award in Morocco are exhaustively listed in the statute. A court will only annul an award if the applicant establishes one or more of the following grounds. The list below reflects the grounds applicable to domestic arbitration under Law n° 95‑17; for international arbitration, the same grounds apply with certain exclusions noted below.

Statutory Grounds for Annulment

Ground Explanation and Evidentiary Examples
Absence or invalidity of the arbitration agreement The agreement to arbitrate was void, expired, or never validly formed (e.g., unsigned clause, incapable party, subject matter not arbitrable under Moroccan law).
Irregular composition of the arbitral tribunal The tribunal was constituted in breach of the parties’ agreement or mandatory statutory rules (e.g., even number of arbitrators, failure to disclose conflicts of interest).
Tribunal exceeded its mandate The award addresses issues beyond the scope of the arbitration agreement or the terms of reference (ultra petita).
Violation of due process A party was not given a proper opportunity to present its case, including failure to serve documents, denial of hearing rights, or procedural irregularity affecting the right of defence.
Failure to state reasons The award does not contain the reasons on which it is based, where the applicable rules required a reasoned award. (Applicable to domestic arbitration; generally not a ground for international awards.)
Award contrary to the rules of law applied by the tribunal The tribunal misapplied or failed to apply the substantive law chosen by the parties. (Applicable to domestic arbitration only; excluded for international awards.)
Contravention of public policy The award, or the process leading to it, violates Moroccan public policy (ordre public). This is also a ground the Court of Appeal may raise ex officio, meaning the court can annul an award on public‑policy grounds even if neither party raises the argument.

Standing is limited to parties to the arbitration proceedings. Before filing, counsel should verify whether any intra‑arbitral correction or interpretation remedy (e.g., a request for correction of errors under the applicable arbitration rules) has been exhausted, as some courts expect this as a prerequisite.

Step‑by‑Step Procedure: How to Set Aside an Arbitral Award in Morocco

The set aside procedure Morocco 2026 follows a defined sequence of steps. Each step below identifies who acts, what documents are involved, and the typical duration. The summary timeline table appears immediately after the numbered steps.

Step 1, Confirm the date of notification and compute the filing deadline

The filing clock begins on the date the award is formally notified to the applicant party. Under Law n° 95‑17 (Article 61), the application to set aside a domestic arbitral award must be filed within 15 days from the date of notification of the award. Notification is typically effected by a process server (huissier de justice) or by any method stipulated in the arbitration agreement. Counsel should immediately obtain and preserve proof of the notification date, a copy of the process server’s certificate or registered-mail receipt, as this document is essential to demonstrating that the application is timely.

Step 2, Instruct counsel and take pre‑filing preservation measures

Given the extremely short deadline, engage Moroccan counsel immediately upon receiving the award. Pre‑filing actions include: (a) instructing counsel and providing all arbitration case files, (b) commissioning certified French translations of any award, arbitration agreement, or supporting documents not already in Arabic or French, (c) obtaining legalized copies of the award and arbitration agreement (apostille or consular legalization for foreign documents), and (d) where enforcement is imminent, preparing an urgent application for a stay of enforcement (sursis à exécution) to be filed concurrently with or shortly after the set‑aside petition.

Step 3, Draft the set‑aside petition

The petition (requête en annulation) must be a structured legal submission identifying: the parties, the award challenged (date, arbitrators, seat), the specific statutory ground(s) invoked (mapped to the grounds in the table above), a statement of the facts and evidence supporting each ground, a list of annexed documents, and a clear statement of relief sought, typically annulment of the award in whole or in part, a costs order, and (if applicable) a request for a stay of enforcement. Counsel should number each exhibit sequentially and prepare a detailed index. Where the ground invoked is public‑policy violation, the petition should specify the precise norm of Moroccan public policy allegedly breached.

Step 4, File with the competent Court of Appeal

For domestic awards, the petition is filed with the Court of Appeal in whose jurisdiction the award was rendered. For international awards rendered in Morocco, the Court of Appeal of Rabat has jurisdiction unless the parties agreed on a different seat court. Filing is done at the court’s registry (greffe). The applicant submits the original petition plus the required number of copies (typically one copy per opposing party, plus one for the court file). Registry fees must be paid upon filing. Service on the respondent is arranged through the court’s own service mechanism or by a process server instructed by the applicant, depending on local registry practice.

Step 5, Court proceedings: written submissions, hearings, and interlocutory orders

After service, the respondent is given a period to file its written response. The court may schedule one or more hearings. Moroccan set‑aside proceedings are typically decided on the papers and oral submissions; witness evidence is uncommon. The court may issue interlocutory orders, including orders to stay enforcement of the award pending the annulment decision. The court to challenge arbitration Morocco will review only the specific statutory grounds raised (and may also examine public‑policy compliance ex officio). It will not re‑examine the merits of the underlying dispute.

Step 6, Decision and post‑decision options

The Court of Appeal issues its judgment either annulling the award (in whole or in part) or dismissing the application. If the award is set aside, the court may, where appropriate, rule on the merits of the dispute within the scope of the arbitral tribunal’s original mandate, effectively replacing the annulled award with a court judgment. If the application is dismissed, the award stands and may proceed to enforcement via exequatur. The losing party in the set‑aside proceedings may file a cassation appeal (pourvoi en cassation) before the Cour de Cassation, subject to the applicable deadlines for cassation.

Timeline and Step Summary Table

Step Who Does It Typical Duration
Confirm notification date and compute deadline Applicant / Counsel Day 0 (immediately upon notification)
Instruct counsel, translate and legalize documents Applicant / Counsel / Sworn translator 1–5 days (urgent)
Draft the set‑aside petition and annexes Counsel 3–10 days (must be completed within the 15‑day filing window)
File petition at the Court of Appeal registry and pay fees Counsel / Court registry Day 15 at the latest (statutory deadline)
Service on respondent and exchange of written submissions Court / Process server / Parties 1–3 months (estimate; varies by court)
Hearings and interlocutory orders (if any) Court of Appeal 2–6 months from filing (estimate)
Judgment on annulment Court of Appeal 6–12 months from filing (estimate; complex cases may take longer)
Cassation appeal (if pursued) Losing party / Cour de Cassation 30 days to file; 12–24 months for decision (estimate)

All durations marked “estimate” reflect typical court practice and may vary depending on the Court of Appeal, case complexity, and the court’s caseload. Statutory deadlines (15 days for filing; 30 days for cassation appeal) are fixed.

Required Documents and Information to Set Aside an Arbitral Award

Assembling the correct documents needed to annul an arbitral award before the Moroccan courts requires careful attention to format, translation, and authentication. The table below lists each required document, together with practical notes on issuer, format, and common pitfalls.

Document Notes
Set‑aside petition (requête en annulation) Original signed by counsel, plus copies (one per respondent + one court copy). Must be in Arabic or French. State each ground with supporting facts.
Certified copy of the arbitral award Full text including signature page and any dissenting opinions. If in a foreign language, a certified French or Arabic translation is required.
Arbitration agreement (or clause) Original or certified copy. If contained in a contract, include the relevant pages plus signature page. Translate if not in Arabic or French.
Proof of notification of the award Process server’s certificate (procès‑verbal de signification) or registered‑mail receipt showing date of delivery.
Power of attorney Authorizing Moroccan counsel to act on behalf of the applicant. Legalized if issued abroad (apostille or consular authentication).
Supporting evidence and exhibits Numbered sequentially with an index. Include correspondence, hearing transcripts, procedural orders, and any document supporting the stated ground(s).
Proof of payment of registry fees Receipt from the court registry (greffe). Fees must be paid upon filing.
Application for stay of enforcement (if needed) Separate or combined with the main petition. Include grounds for urgency and evidence of irreparable harm.
Certified translations All documents not originally in Arabic or French must be translated by a sworn translator (traducteur assermenté) accredited by a Moroccan court.

Practical tip: organise all annexes in a single bound dossier with a cover page and numbered tabs. Courts expect a professional and orderly file. Failure to include a complete, authenticated copy of the award or proof of notification is a common basis for procedural objections by respondents.

Timeline to Challenge an Arbitration Award in Morocco: Key Deadlines

The timeline to challenge an arbitration award in Morocco is governed by strict statutory deadlines. Missing even one day renders the application inadmissible, there is no discretionary extension.

Primary deadline: The set‑aside application must be filed within 15 days from the date of notification of the arbitral award (Article 61, Law n° 95‑17). This applies to domestic arbitration. For international awards rendered in Morocco, the same 15‑day period applies under Law n° 95‑17.

How to calculate the deadline, worked example: If the award is notified to the applicant on 1 April 2026, the last day to file the set‑aside petition at the Court of Appeal registry is 16 April 2026. If that date falls on a weekend or public holiday, the deadline extends to the next working day under general Moroccan procedural rules.

Milestone Deadline or Typical Duration
Notification of award to applicant Day 0 (trigger date)
Deadline to file set‑aside petition 15 days from notification (statutory; no extension)
Obtain certified translations of foreign‑language award 2–7 days (urgent sworn translation recommended)
Respondent’s written response Typically 15–30 days after service (court‑directed)
Court hearings 2–6 months from filing (estimate)
Court of Appeal judgment 6–12 months from filing (estimate)
Cassation appeal deadline 30 days from notification of Court of Appeal judgment

Industry observers note that actual court processing times vary significantly across Moroccan Courts of Appeal. Cases before the Casablanca or Rabat courts may be processed somewhat faster due to greater familiarity with arbitration matters, while courts in smaller jurisdictions may take longer.

Costs to Set Aside an Arbitral Award: Fees and Tax Considerations

The costs to set aside an award in Morocco include court filing fees, translation expenses, counsel fees, and, in some cases, expert or witness costs. The table below provides estimated ranges. All amounts should be confirmed with local counsel before filing, as court fee schedules may be updated periodically.

Item Estimated Amount (MAD) Notes
Court registry filing fee 500–2,000 MAD Varies by court and value in dispute. Payable upon filing. Confirm exact schedule with the registry.
Sworn translation 1,000–10,000 MAD Depends on document volume and language. Urgent translation incurs higher fees.
Document legalization / apostille 500–3,000 MAD Per document. Consular legalization for non‑Hague Convention countries costs more.
Process server (huissier) fees 500–2,000 MAD For service of the petition and award notification verification.
Local counsel fees 50,000–500,000+ MAD Depends on complexity, amount in dispute, and counsel seniority. Typically billed as a fixed fee or hourly rate.
International counsel co‑ordination Variable If international counsel instructs Moroccan local counsel, co‑ordination fees are additional.
VAT on legal fees 20% Moroccan VAT applies to legal services at the standard rate. Confirm current rate with counsel.

Cost allocation on judgment: if the set‑aside application succeeds, the court may order the respondent to bear the applicant’s costs. If the application is dismissed, the applicant typically bears its own costs and may be ordered to contribute to the respondent’s costs. Security for costs is not a standard feature of Moroccan set‑aside proceedings, but the court may exercise general powers to order provisional measures where appropriate.

What Changes in 2026 (BO_7480): Practical Impact on the Set Aside Procedure Morocco 2026

The publication of Bulletin Officiel BO_7480 consolidates and updates Morocco’s arbitration framework under Law n° 95‑17. The changes most relevant to set‑aside practice are summarised below. Counsel should consult the full official text of BO_7480 (available in French on the Secrétariat Général du Gouvernement website) for definitive statutory language.

  • Competent court clarification. BO_7480 confirms that the Court of Appeal with jurisdiction over the seat of arbitration hears set‑aside applications. For international arbitration without a designated Moroccan seat court, the Court of Appeal of Rabat retains default jurisdiction.
  • Ex officio annulment powers. The Court of Appeal may set aside an award on its own motion if it finds the award contravenes Moroccan public policy or concerns a subject matter that is not arbitrable. This ex officio power was present in earlier texts but is reinforced under BO_7480.
  • Public‑policy review standard. Early indications suggest that BO_7480 maintains a restrictive interpretation of public policy, consistent with international best practice. Courts are expected to apply a narrow international public‑policy test for international awards, rather than a broad domestic public‑policy standard.
  • Interaction with institutional rules. Where the arbitration was conducted under institutional rules (e.g., ICC, CIMAR), BO_7480 does not override the institutional rules on correction or interpretation of awards. Counsel should exhaust institutional remedies before filing a court application.
  • Filing deadline unchanged. The 15‑day deadline to file set‑aside from notification of the award (Article 61, Law n° 95‑17) remains in force under BO_7480.

The likely practical effect of BO_7480 is to bring Morocco’s set‑aside framework into closer alignment with the UNCITRAL Model Law, reinforcing limited judicial review and strengthening the finality of arbitral awards. Practitioners accustomed to the pre‑2026 regime should note the reinforced ex officio powers and adapt their pleading strategy to address potential public‑policy arguments pre‑emptively.

Common Pitfalls When Challenging an Arbitral Award in Morocco

  • Missing the 15‑day filing deadline. The most common and most fatal error. The deadline is not extendable. Mitigation: instruct Moroccan counsel on the same day the award is received and begin drafting immediately.
  • Failing to translate or legalize documents. Awards and agreements in foreign languages submitted without certified French or Arabic translations will be rejected. Mitigation: engage a sworn translator on day one; begin legalization of foreign documents in parallel.
  • Arguing the merits instead of statutory grounds. Moroccan courts cannot re‑examine the merits. Petitions that read as appeals on the facts will fail. Mitigation: structure every argument around the specific statutory ground and the procedural or jurisdictional defect alleged.
  • Relying on international standards without local statutory mapping. General references to “due process” or “natural justice” without pinpointing the applicable Moroccan statutory provision weaken the application. Mitigation: map each argument to the corresponding article of Law n° 95‑17.
  • Neglecting to request a stay of enforcement. If the other party is simultaneously seeking exequatur, the award may be enforced before the set‑aside is decided. Mitigation: file a stay application (sursis à exécution) with the set‑aside petition.
  • Incomplete service on the respondent. Defective service can delay proceedings or invite procedural challenges. Mitigation: confirm service requirements with the court registry and retain a process server with experience in commercial matters.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Azzedine Kettani at Kettani Law Firm, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Bulletin Officiel, BO_7480 (Secrétariat Général du Gouvernement du Maroc)
  2. CMS Expert Guide, International Arbitration in Morocco
  3. LexisNexis, Enforcing International Arbitral Awards in Morocco
  4. International Bar Association (IBA), Morocco Arbitration Guide
  5. Delos Dispute Resolution, Morocco Country Chapter (GAP 2nd Edition)
  6. Aceris Law, The Arbitration and Mediation Act of the Kingdom of Morocco
  7. Benzakour Law Firm (CBL Law), Dispute Resolution in Morocco

FAQs

What are the grounds to set aside an arbitral award in Morocco?
The grounds are exhaustively listed in Law n° 95‑17 and include: absence or invalidity of the arbitration agreement, irregular tribunal composition, the tribunal exceeding its mandate, violation of due process, failure to state reasons (domestic awards), misapplication of law (domestic awards), and contravention of public policy. See the full grounds table in the eligibility section above.
You have 15 days from the date of notification of the arbitral award. This deadline is strict and cannot be extended. Compute the deadline carefully and instruct counsel immediately.
For domestic awards, file with the Court of Appeal in whose jurisdiction the award was rendered. For international awards rendered in Morocco, the default court is the Court of Appeal of Rabat unless the parties agreed otherwise. See Step 4 in the procedure section for filing details.
At minimum: the petition itself, a certified copy of the award, the arbitration agreement, proof of notification, a power of attorney for counsel, supporting evidence with an index, and proof of payment of registry fees. All documents not in Arabic or French must be accompanied by certified translations. Refer to the required documents table above for the complete checklist.
Yes. Any party to the arbitration, regardless of nationality, has standing to file. Foreign applicants must provide a legalized power of attorney and ensure all foreign‑language documents are translated by a Moroccan sworn translator. There is no requirement for a foreign applicant to post security for costs as a condition of filing.
No. A set‑aside (recours en annulation) is an affirmative application to annul the award. Enforcement refusal occurs when a court declines to grant exequatur. They are separate proceedings, although both rely on similar grounds. A party may pursue both simultaneously.
Yes. Under Law n° 95‑17, the Court of Appeal may set aside an award ex officio if it finds the award is contrary to Moroccan public policy or concerns a non‑arbitrable subject matter. This power is reinforced under BO_7480.
The application will be declared inadmissible. There is no provision for late filing, force majeure extensions, or judicial discretion to extend the deadline. The award will stand and may proceed to enforcement.

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How to Set Aside an Arbitral Award in Morocco (2026): Step‑by‑step Procedure

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