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Last updated: June 16, 2026
Whether an arbitration agreement is required to be stamped is one of the most consequential procedural questions in Indian commercial dispute resolution, and a wave of Supreme Court decisions between 2023 and 2026 has fundamentally reshaped the answer.
The question does not lend itself to a simple yes or no: enforceability turns on whether stamp duty is prescribed by the applicable state Stamp Act, whether the underlying contract (or a standalone arbitration agreement) has in fact been stamped, and how the court treats deficiencies at each stage of the arbitral lifecycle, from the appointment of an arbitrator under Section 11 of the Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996, through interim relief under Sections 9 and 17, to eventual enforcement of the award under Section 36. This guide consolidates the statutory framework, landmark rulings, state-level variations, and a practitioner checklist so that in-house counsel, arbitration practitioners, and compliance officers can take immediate, confident action.
Short answer: An arbitration agreement that is part of an instrument chargeable to stamp duty under the Indian Stamp Act, 1899 (or its state equivalent) must be properly stamped before a court will treat that instrument as admissible in evidence. However, the absence of stamping does not render the arbitration agreement itself void, it creates a procedural bar to admissibility that can be cured through impounding and payment of the requisite duty and penalty.
This distinction sits at the heart of every stamping dispute. Section 35 of the Indian Stamp Act provides that an instrument not duly stamped “shall not be admitted in evidence for any purpose” and “shall not be acted upon” by any public officer or court. Crucially, the Stamp Act does not say the instrument, or any arbitration clause embedded in it, is void ab initio. The agreement retains its contractual validity; what it loses, until cured, is its evidentiary utility. This principle has been repeatedly affirmed by the Supreme Court and underpins the practical remediation pathways discussed below.
Practitioners must distinguish between three situations where stamp duty on arbitration agreement in India may arise:
Short answer: The Supreme Court’s jurisprudence has swung between treating unstamped agreements as completely unenforceable and recognising them as valid but merely inadmissible. The 7-judge Constitution Bench ruling of December 2023 (2023 INSC 1066) settled much of the debate, and a subsequent 2026 judgment (INSC 384, 17 April 2026) has clarified the interplay between stamping requirements and procedural applications under Sections 11 and 17 of the Arbitration Act.
| Judgment | Date | Key holding |
|---|---|---|
| Garware Wall Ropes Ltd. v. Coastal Marine Constructions & Engineering Ltd. | 2019 | Held that an arbitration agreement in an unstamped contract is not enforceable in law, and courts should refuse to appoint an arbitrator under Section 11 when the underlying agreement is not duly stamped. |
| N.N. Global Mercantile Pvt. Ltd. v. Indo Unique Flame Ltd. (5-judge referral / 7-judge Constitution Bench), 2023 INSC 1066 | 13 December 2023 | Overruled Garware in part. Held that non-stamping renders an instrument inadmissible in evidence under the Stamp Act but does not render the arbitration agreement void or unenforceable. The agreement remains valid; courts and tribunals must, however, impound the instrument and direct payment of stamp duty before acting on it. |
| Supreme Court of India, INSC 384 | 17 April 2026 | Confirmed the distinction between validity and admissibility. Clarified that a court entertaining a Section 11 application must direct impounding and payment of stamp duty rather than dismissing the application outright. Also addressed the Section 17 interim-relief question, holding that an arbitral tribunal may proceed with interim measures while impounding is being cured, provided the arbitration clause is otherwise unimpeachable. |
Before the 2023 Constitution Bench decision, the practical position under Garware was severe: courts routinely refused Section 11 appointments when presented with an unstamped arbitration agreement, effectively derailing the arbitration before it began. The 2023 ruling reversed that posture. An unstamped arbitration agreement no longer lacks legal existence, it is merely inadmissible in evidence until the Stamp Act deficiency is cured through impounding and payment.
Industry observers expect the 2026 INSC 384 ruling to have an even wider practical impact because it directly addressed the two procedural stages most affected by stamping disputes, arbitrator appointment and interim relief. By directing courts to facilitate impounding rather than refuse applications, and by permitting tribunals to grant interim measures while stamping is cured, the judgment significantly reduces the tactical advantage previously available to respondents who exploited stamping deficiencies as a delay mechanism.
Short answer: Courts can no longer dismiss a Section 11 application solely because the underlying instrument is unstamped. The court must instead direct impounding and, once the duty and penalty are paid, proceed with the appointment of arbitrator under Section 11.
Under the Garware regime, a party opposing arbitration could simply point to insufficient stamping and persuade the court to refuse appointment. This created a paradox: the party seeking arbitration could not cure the stamping deficiency without the court’s cooperation (because courts are among the authorities required to impound unstamped instruments), yet the court would decline to engage with the application at all. The result was a procedural dead end.
Following the Constitution Bench ruling and the 2026 clarification, the practical workflow for a Section 11 application involving an unstamped arbitration agreement is now well defined:
This sequence ensures that arbitration agreement validity in India is preserved even when stamping formalities have been overlooked at the contracting stage. The likely practical effect will be a substantial reduction in Section 11 dismissals attributable to stamping, and a corresponding acceleration of the arbitrator-appointment timeline.
Short answer: Parties can seek interim relief under Section 9 from a court and under Section 17 from the arbitral tribunal even when the underlying agreement is unstamped, provided impounding and payment of duty are pursued in parallel.
Section 9 of the Arbitration Act empowers courts to grant interim measures of protection before or during arbitral proceedings. Because Section 9 applications are typically filed urgently, for example, to restrain dissipation of assets, the question of whether the court can act on an unstamped agreement is commercially critical. Following the 2023 and 2026 rulings, the settled position is that the court should impound the instrument and direct payment of duty, but should not refuse interim protection solely because of a stamping defect. Sections 9 and 17 of the Arbitration Act are designed to protect parties from irreparable harm pending final resolution, and that protective purpose would be defeated if stamping technicalities paralysed emergency relief.
Section 17 grants the arbitral tribunal powers equivalent to those of a court under Section 9, including the ability to order preservation of evidence, injunctions against asset disposal, and interim payments. The 2026 INSC 384 ruling addressed this directly: the tribunal may proceed to grant interim measures under Section 17 while the impounding and stamping process is underway, so long as the existence of the arbitration clause is not itself in dispute.
Many institutional rules (ICC, SIAC, LCIA India) provide for emergency arbitration, the appointment of an emergency arbitrator to grant urgent relief before the full tribunal is constituted. Indian law does not explicitly recognise emergency arbitration, and the enforceability of emergency orders remains debated. Early indications suggest, however, that where parties have agreed to institutional rules incorporating emergency arbitration, courts treat emergency orders favourably under Section 9 when asked to enforce or ratify them. The stamping analysis follows the same framework: the emergency arbitrator may act provided the underlying arbitration clause is otherwise valid, and any stamping deficiency is being cured in parallel.
Short answer: An unstamped arbitration agreement is inadmissible in evidence until impounded and cured. For enforcement purposes, the time limit to challenge an arbitration award under Section 34 is three months from receipt (with a possible 30-day condonable extension), and any stamping deficiency must be rectified before or at the time of filing enforcement proceedings under Section 36.
When a court or other authority encounters an unstamped instrument, Section 33 of the Stamp Act requires impounding. The instrument is then forwarded to the Collector, who assesses the deficit duty and penalty. Under Section 42, once the duty and penalty are paid, the instrument is treated as duly stamped. Practitioners should note that delays in impounding can have cascading consequences: if the instrument is not cured before a Section 34 limitation period expires, the challenging party risks losing its right to set aside the award entirely.
Section 34 of the Arbitration Act permits a party to apply to set aside an arbitral award within three months of receiving it, with a further 30 days available for condonation of delay. If the underlying agreement was unstamped, the respondent in a Section 34 challenge may argue the arbitration was conducted on the basis of an inadmissible instrument. The practical remedy is to cure the deficiency promptly: the winning party should ensure the underlying contract and, where required, the award itself are properly stamped before filing for enforcement, neutralising any Section 34 objection.
An arbitral award becomes enforceable as a decree of the court under Section 36 once the time for filing a Section 34 application has expired (or the Section 34 application has been dismissed). Several state Stamp Acts treat arbitral awards as chargeable instruments. If the award is not stamped, execution may be refused or stayed. The straightforward solution: pay the applicable stamp duty on the award before filing for execution. A small administrative step, but one that, if overlooked, can delay enforcement by months.
Short answer: Stamp duty on arbitration agreements and arbitral awards varies by state. Not all states separately charge duty on a standalone arbitration agreement, but many require the underlying contract to be stamped and impose separate duty on arbitral awards.
| State | Stamp duty on arbitration agreement | Stamp duty on arbitral award (notes) |
|---|---|---|
| Maharashtra | Chargeable as part of the underlying agreement; standalone arbitration agreements attract residual article duty | Arbitral awards chargeable; rate depends on the amount in dispute, consult the Maharashtra Stamp Act schedule |
| Delhi | Generally follows the Indian Stamp Act, 1899; no separate head for standalone arbitration agreements | Awards may be chargeable under residual provisions |
| Gujarat | Underlying contract must be stamped; arbitration clause not separately chargeable | Arbitral awards chargeable, ad valorem duty applies with state-specific rates |
| Karnataka | Similar to central Stamp Act, duty on the underlying instrument | Awards treated as chargeable instruments under the Karnataka Stamp Act schedule |
| Tamil Nadu | Underlying contract stamp duty applies; standalone arbitration agreement not separately listed | Arbitral awards chargeable under state schedule |
This table provides indicative guidance only. Stamp duty rates change periodically through state government notifications, and practitioners should verify current rates against the applicable state Stamp Act or official gazette before filing.
Short answer: Follow this ten-step checklist to ensure that an unstamped arbitration agreement does not derail your dispute resolution strategy.
“The undersigned respectfully brings to the notice of this Hon’ble Court / the Collector of Stamps that the instrument dated [date], executed between [Party A] and [Party B], containing an arbitration clause at Clause [X], appears to be insufficiently stamped / not stamped as required under the [State] Stamp Act. The applicant requests that this instrument be impounded under Section 33 of the Indian Stamp Act, 1899, and that the deficit duty and applicable penalty be assessed and directed to be paid, so that the instrument may be treated as duly stamped under Section 42.”
| Situation | Immediate effect | Practical remedy |
|---|---|---|
| Arbitration clause in unstamped main agreement (impoundable) | Clause valid but instrument inadmissible as evidence until cured | Impound + pay deficit duty/penalty; file Section 11 with affidavit and alternate proof of clause |
| Standalone arbitration agreement executed separately but unstamped | Risk of inadmissibility; applicable stamp duty varies by state | Stamp separately or seek court direction to impound; present alternate evidence of agreement |
| Arbitral award not stamped for execution | Execution under Section 36 may be stayed or challenged | Pay requisite stamp duty under the applicable state schedule and produce receipt before filing for execution |
The question of whether an arbitration agreement is required to be stamped in India now has a clear, if nuanced, answer: the agreement remains valid regardless of stamping, but it cannot be admitted in evidence or acted upon by courts and tribunals until any stamping deficiency is cured. The Supreme Court’s decisions from 2023 through 2026 have dismantled the earlier practice of dismissing Section 11 applications outright, replacing it with a facilitative impounding-and-payment mechanism that keeps arbitration on track.
Practitioners who verify stamping at the contracting stage, maintain the ability to cure deficiencies quickly, and understand the state-specific stamp duty landscape will find that the stamping question, once a potent tactical weapon for recalcitrant respondents, no longer poses a serious obstacle to effective dispute resolution. For specialist guidance on arbitrator appointments, interim relief, or enforcement strategy, the international commercial law resources and the lawyer directory at Global Law Experts provide direct access to qualified professionals.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Justice Deepak Verma at Chambers of Hon’ble Mr. Justice Deepak Verma, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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