Our Expert in Australia
No results available
This article provides general information about dispute resolution options. It is not legal advice and should not be relied on as a substitute for advice from a qualified legal practitioner in your jurisdiction.
Australian businesses trading with Chinese counterparties face a concrete choice when a commercial dispute arises or when drafting the ADR clause in a new contract: mediation vs arbitration. Choose mediation when preserving the commercial relationship and speed matter most; choose arbitration when you need a binding, determinative award that can be enforced across borders under the New York Convention. That choice has become more nuanced in 2026 because China’s revised Arbitration Law, promulgated on 12 September 2025, reshaped the institutional framework for arbitration, while municipal regulations in cities such as Shanghai have created new pathways for court confirmation and direct enforcement of mediated settlements.
At the same time, Australia’s International Arbitration Act 1974 continues to provide a robust, pro-enforcement regime for foreign arbitral awards. The decision between mediation vs arbitration in Australia and China now turns on five dimensions: enforceability, cost, timing, interim-relief needs and relationship preservation. This guide delivers a dimension-by-dimension comparison, a decision framework and a clear checklist for when to engage a dispute resolution lawyer.
Mediation is a structured, facilitative negotiation in which an independent mediator helps the parties identify issues, explore options and work toward a mutually acceptable resolution. As the Federal Court of Australia describes it, mediation assists the parties “to identify and assess options and negotiate an agreement to resolve their dispute.” The process is voluntary in outcome: the mediator does not impose a decision. A typical commercial mediation runs from a single day to a few weeks of intermittent sessions, though complex Australia–China matters may extend to two or three months when translation, time-zone coordination and cultural-bridging sessions are factored in.
Mediation is the natural first step when the parties have an ongoing commercial relationship they want to preserve, a joint-venture partner, a long-term supply-chain counterpart or a licensing co-venturer. It is also effective when the dispute is primarily about commercial terms (price adjustments, delivery schedules, quality thresholds) rather than legal rights. Chinese commercial culture has a deep affinity for mediation: it aligns with the traditional preference for amicable dispute resolution and is the most common form of ADR, other than arbitration, in the PRC. Many modern Australia–China contracts include “step clauses” requiring the parties to attempt negotiation and then mediation before activating arbitration, making mediation the process that typically comes first in a multi-tier ADR cascade.
Arbitration is a determinative process in which one or more arbitrators hear evidence, receive legal submissions and render a binding award. The process is more formal and structured than mediation, in many respects closer to court proceedings, but private. For Australia–China disputes, parties typically choose institutional arbitration under one of the major sets of rules: the ICC International Court of Arbitration, the Hong Kong International Arbitration Centre (HKIAC), the China International Economic and Trade Arbitration Commission (CIETAC), or the Singapore International Arbitration Centre (SIAC). Timelines vary by institution and complexity, but a typical international commercial arbitration runs between 12 and 18 months from filing to final award, with complex, high-quantum cases extending beyond two years.
Arbitration is the right choice when the parties need finality and international enforceability. Both Australia and China are signatories to the New York Convention, which means a foreign arbitral award rendered in a Convention state can be enforced in either country subject only to narrow grounds for refusal. This enforcement infrastructure makes arbitration the default mechanism for high-value Australia–China trade and investment disputes, including construction, mining joint ventures, technology licences and M&A earn-out disagreements. It is also preferred when the subject matter is technically complex and requires arbitrators with industry-specific expertise, or when the parties want procedural certainty with established evidentiary and discovery rules.
Even where an arbitration clause mandates the process, early indications from industry practice suggest that parties benefit from attempting mediation in parallel or beforehand. Most arbitration clauses do not prohibit mediation, and many include a step provision expressly requiring it.
| Dimension | Mediation | Arbitration |
|---|---|---|
| Nature of outcome | Non-binding agreement unless converted into a consent order or notarised instrument | Binding, determinative award enforceable under the New York Convention |
| Who decides | The parties themselves (mediator facilitates) | Arbitrator(s), after hearing evidence and submissions |
| Typical timing | Days to weeks; complex matters up to 2–3 months | 12–18+ months; complex matters 2+ years |
| Typical total cost | AU$3,000–AU$30,000 (small-to-mid commercial disputes) | AU$50,000–AU$500,000+ (depending on claim quantum and complexity) |
| Interim relief | Mediator cannot order relief, court application required | Tribunal and emergency arbitrator powers available; court orders in aid of arbitration also available |
| Confidentiality | High; admissions typically inadmissible in later proceedings | Private process; institutional rules may mandate confidentiality (varies by institution) |
| Enforceability in Australia | Settlement enforceable as a contract; consent orders enforceable as court orders | Awards enforced under the International Arbitration Act 1974 as if they were court judgments |
| Enforceability in China (2026) | Improving, court confirmation, notarisation and People’s Court payment-order pathways now available in certain municipalities; implementation varies by locality | Strong, foreign awards from Convention states are enforceable subject to narrow refusal grounds; China’s revised Arbitration Law (2025) further supports institutional framework |
| Cross-border enforcement mechanism | Must be converted (consent order, notarisation, court confirmation) for direct execution | New York Convention provides near-universal enforcement across 170+ signatory states |
| Flexibility of remedies | Unlimited, parties can agree to non-monetary, creative outcomes | Conventional legal remedies: damages, interest, costs orders, declaratory relief |
| Best for | Relationship preservation, speed, confidentiality, flexible remedies | Binding finality, complex/technical disputes, neutral forum, cross-border enforceability |
The centrepiece of the mediation vs arbitration Australia China decision is enforceability. Arbitral awards hold a decisive structural advantage here: the New York Convention, implemented in Australia through the International Arbitration Act 1974, means that a foreign award can be enforced in Australian courts with the same force as a domestic court judgment. In China, the same Convention framework applies, and the revised PRC Arbitration Law promulgated on 12 September 2025 has further strengthened the institutional architecture for both domestic and international arbitration.
Mediated settlements, by contrast, require additional steps to achieve comparable enforceability. In Australia, a mediated agreement can be reduced to a consent order and enforced as a court order, but this requires a court application. In China, the enforcement pathway for mediated settlements has improved materially through municipal regulations and pilot programs, including mechanisms for People’s Court confirmation and notarisation-based enforcement. However, implementation varies by locality, and parties should not assume uniform enforceability across all Chinese jurisdictions.
The practical takeaway: if enforcement in China is a realistic scenario, arbitration remains the safer default. If the parties have strong commercial reasons to mediate, and are willing to plan the settlement documentation carefully, mediation can deliver speed and cost advantages, provided the conversion-to-enforcement steps are built into the process from the outset.
Cost is often the first question in-house counsel ask. The difference between mediation and arbitration is an order of magnitude for mid-market disputes. The table below provides indicative ranges, exact figures depend on institutional fee schedules, claim quantum and the complexity of the matter.
| Cost component | Mediation (typical) | Arbitration (typical) |
|---|---|---|
| Neutral’s fees | AU$1,500–AU$6,000 per day (senior mediator) | AU$10,000–AU$200,000+ (tribunal fees based on claim quantum and institution) |
| Institutional admin fees | AU$0–AU$5,000 (ad hoc or party-arranged) | AU$5,000–AU$150,000 (varies by institution and claim size) |
| Counsel and expert fees | AU$5,000–AU$50,000 | AU$30,000–AU$500,000+ |
| Translation, notarisation, court confirmation (China) | AU$1,000–AU$30,000 | Similar translation and administration costs, plus execution costs in China if needed |
For Australia–China disputes where the claim is below AU$500,000 and the commercial relationship is ongoing, mediation offers a dramatically better cost profile. Once claims move into the multi-million-dollar range, the proportional cost of arbitration becomes more tolerable and the enforceability premium justifies the investment.
Mediation can deliver a resolution in a matter of days. Arbitration takes months at minimum and often exceeds a year. This timing gap matters most when a supply chain is at risk, contractual deadlines are approaching or goods are in transit. However, if urgent interim relief is needed, asset-freezing orders, injunctions to prevent dissipation of funds, mediation cannot help. A mediator has no power to make binding orders. In those circumstances, arbitration (including emergency arbitrator procedures) or direct court applications under the International Arbitration Act 1974 are necessary, regardless of whether mediation proceeds in parallel.
Mediation opens the door to remedies that no tribunal would order: revised supply terms, restructured joint-venture governance, phased payment plans tied to future performance or mutual confidentiality undertakings. If the dispute turns on bespoke commercial terms rather than a binary liability determination, mediate. If you need a costs order, an award of damages with interest, or a declaratory ruling on contractual interpretation, arbitrate. Industry observers expect that the flexibility of mediated outcomes is particularly valued in Australia–China relationships, where maintaining face and signalling continued goodwill often has commercial value that exceeds the quantum in dispute.
Arbitration award enforcement in Australia is governed by the International Arbitration Act 1974, which gives effect to the New York Convention. A foreign arbitral award from a Convention state, including China, may be enforced in Australian courts with the same effect as a court judgment, subject only to the limited refusal grounds set out in the Convention (public policy, incapacity, procedural irregularity and a handful of others). Australian courts have consistently interpreted these grounds narrowly, favouring enforcement.
Enforceability in China differs by process. For arbitral awards, China applies the New York Convention, and its revised Arbitration Law (promulgated 12 September 2025) has modernised the institutional framework to support both domestic and international arbitration. For mediation settlement enforceability in China, the landscape has improved but remains variable. Municipal regulations, for example, Shanghai’s local rules promoting multi-channel dispute resolution, now provide pathways for People’s Court confirmation and execution of mediated settlements. Notarisation of settlement agreements can also create a directly enforceable instrument under certain conditions. However, these pathways are not uniform across all Chinese provinces and municipalities, and parties should verify the applicable local procedures before relying on them.
For arbitration:
For mediation:
Three developments alter the mediation vs arbitration calculus for Australia–China disputes in 2026:
China’s revised Arbitration Law. The PRC’s new Arbitration Law was promulgated by the National People’s Congress on 12 September 2025. The revision expanded the total number of articles, modernised the institutional framework and introduced provisions that the likely practical effect will be to strengthen international arbitration conducted through Chinese institutions, including support for institutional branches outside mainland China. For Australian businesses, this means that CIETAC-administered arbitrations are now governed by a more internationally aligned statutory framework.
China’s mediation enforcement improvements. Municipal governments, Shanghai being the most prominent example, have introduced regulations strengthening the linkage between mediation outcomes and court enforcement. These measures create procedural mechanisms for direct payment orders and People’s Court confirmation of mediated settlements, narrowing the enforceability gap between mediated settlements and arbitral awards in those jurisdictions. Early indications suggest that similar local measures are being adopted in other commercially significant municipalities, though nationwide uniformity has not yet been achieved.
Australia’s pro-enforcement posture. Australia continues to apply the International Arbitration Act 1974 and the New York Convention framework, with courts interpreting refusal grounds narrowly to favour recognition and enforcement. The Australian Attorney-General’s Department maintains its policy support for international commercial arbitration as a pillar of private international law.
The tactical takeaway for 2026: the enforceability gap between arbitral awards and mediated settlements has narrowed in certain Chinese jurisdictions, but variability persists. Plan your enforcement route before choosing your ADR process, not after.
Choose mediation when:
Choose arbitration when:
| If your priority is… | Choose… |
|---|---|
| Speed, relationship preservation, confidentiality, flexible remedies | Mediation, and include a conversion/consent-order clause for enforceability |
| Binding finality, international enforceability, predictable legal process | Arbitration, select seat, governing law and plan the enforcement route |
| Both: relationship preservation now, but enforceable backstop if mediation fails | Med-arb step clause, mediate first with a contractual escalation to arbitration |
Not every mediation vs arbitration question requires external counsel, but five specific situations move the decision into professional-advice territory. Engage a dispute resolution lawyer in Australia when:
A qualified adviser should deliver three core outputs at the outset: (1) a tailored ADR clause or pre-action strategy memo, (2) an enforcement roadmap covering both Australian and Chinese jurisdiction, and (3) an interim-relief assessment identifying whether emergency measures are warranted.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Jim Harrowell at Hunt & Hunt Lawyers, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
posted 11 minutes ago
posted 55 minutes ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
posted 7 hours ago
posted 11 hours ago
posted 15 hours ago
posted 19 hours ago
posted 19 hours ago
No results available
Find the right Legal Expert for your business
Sign up for the latest legal briefings and news within Global Law Experts’ community, as well as a whole host of features, editorial and conference updates direct to your email inbox.
Naturally you can unsubscribe at any time.
Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.
Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.
Send welcome message