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When Will Singapore Courts Refuse a Stay in Favour of Arbitration? a Practical 2026 Guide

By Global Law Experts
– posted 56 minutes ago

Singapore is one of the world’s most arbitration-friendly jurisdictions, yet its courts will not rubber-stamp every stay application, and understanding exactly when a court will refuse a stay in favour of arbitration is the single most important tactical decision a general counsel or external adviser must make before filing. The question of a stay of proceedings in Singapore sits at the intersection of two statutory regimes, the Arbitration Act 2001 (AA) and the International Arbitration Act (IAA), each of which imposes a distinct test and yields different practical outcomes under the Rules of Court 2026.

This guide provides a step-by-step framework for counsel deciding whether to seek or oppose a stay arbitration Singapore application, maps the grounds on which courts have refused stays, and sets out a concrete action plan for preserving your client’s position if the application fails. Whether you are drafting your first stay application or advising a board on enforcement risk, the checklist-driven approach below is designed to move directly from legal analysis to boardroom-ready recommendations.

Executive Summary: Quick Answer for General Counsel

Singapore courts start from a strong statutory presumption in favour of granting a stay where a valid arbitration agreement exists. Under both the AA and the IAA, the court must grant a stay unless one of a narrow set of exceptions applies. In practice, however, stays are refused more often than many businesses expect, particularly where the arbitration clause is defective, where the dispute involves non-arbitrable subject matter, or where third-party complications make arbitration impractical.

Here is the headline framework every GC should have in mind:

  • Statutory default. The court must stay proceedings if there is a valid arbitration agreement covering the dispute, but the burden on the applicant is to show a prima facie agreement exists.
  • Refusal grounds are narrow but real. Courts will refuse a stay arbitration Singapore application where the clause is null and void, inoperative, or incapable of being performed, and where issues of arbitrability, third-party joinder, or abuse of process arise.
  • Immediate action is critical. If the stay is refused, counsel must be ready to commence arbitration, apply for interim relief, and manage enforcement risk within 72 hours. Delay can be fatal to preserving your client’s position.

The Legal Framework: Statute and Rules of Court 2026

Domestic Regime: Arbitration Act 2001, the Statutory Stay

Section 6 of the Arbitration Act 2001 (AA) is the gateway provision for domestic arbitration stay applications. It provides that where a party to an arbitration agreement commences court proceedings against another party to that agreement, and the dispute falls within the scope of the agreement, the court shall grant a stay of those proceedings unless it is satisfied that the arbitration agreement is “null and void, inoperative, or incapable of being performed.” The language mirrors Article 8 of the UNCITRAL Model Law and has been consistently interpreted by Singapore courts as imposing a mandatory obligation, not a discretion, once the threshold conditions are met.

The applicant’s burden at this stage is relatively light. The court applies a prima facie standard: the party seeking the stay need only show that a valid arbitration agreement exists and that the dispute arguably falls within its scope. It is not the court’s role to decide the merits of the underlying dispute or to assess whether the arbitration clause is the most efficient forum. This low threshold reflects Singapore’s strong pro-arbitration policy, but it is not absolute, and the exceptions carved out by statute and case law are where the real tactical battles occur.

Practitioners should also note that the AA applies to purely domestic arbitrations. Where parties have not opted into the IAA, the court retains a residual discretion under the AA to refuse a stay in limited circumstances beyond the three statutory grounds, a distinction that can be significant in multi-party disputes.

International Regime: International Arbitration Act and SIAC Interplay

For international arbitrations, section 6 of the International Arbitration Act (IAA), read with Article 8 of the Model Law as given force of law by the IAA, imposes an even stricter obligation. The court shall refer the parties to arbitration unless the agreement is null and void, inoperative, or incapable of being performed. Unlike the domestic regime, the IAA leaves no residual discretion: if the agreement passes the threshold test, the stay must be granted.

This distinction matters in practice. Parties opposing a stay under the IAA have a narrower set of arguments available to them, and the court stay test under this regime has been described as “virtually mandatory.” The interplay with SIAC rules is also significant: where parties have agreed to SIAC arbitration, the SIAC Rules provide for emergency arbitrator procedures and expedited appointment of tribunals, which can run in parallel with court stay applications. Understanding when the IAA applies, generally, when the arbitration agreement is international in character, or where the parties have opted into the IAA, is the first step in any stay analysis.

What Courts Look for: Grounds on Which a Stay May Be Refused

While the statutory test appears straightforward, Singapore courts have developed a detailed body of case law identifying the circumstances in which they will refuse a stay. The following grounds represent the core toolkit for any party resisting a stay arbitration Singapore application, and the corresponding tactical responses for the party seeking to uphold one.

Arbitrability and Public Policy

Certain categories of dispute are simply not arbitrable under Singapore law. Insolvency proceedings (such as winding-up petitions), disputes involving statutory rights that cannot be waived by agreement, and certain regulatory or criminal matters fall outside the scope of what an arbitral tribunal can decide. Where the subject matter of the court proceedings is non-arbitrable, the court will refuse the stay.

  • What to show (opposing stay): That the claim engages a non-arbitrable statutory right or falls within exclusive court jurisdiction.
  • Tactical response (seeking stay): Demonstrate that the arbitrable portions of the dispute can be severed and stayed, while non-arbitrable claims proceed in court.

Nullity, Inoperability, or Incapacity of the Arbitration Clause

This is the express statutory exception under both the AA and the IAA. A court will refuse a stay where the arbitration agreement is void (for example, due to fraud, misrepresentation, or illegality), inoperative (because it has been waived, abandoned, or superseded), or incapable of being performed (for instance, where the designated arbitral institution no longer exists or the clause is pathologically defective).

  • What to show (opposing stay): Clear evidence that the clause is defective on its face or that the parties have by their conduct abandoned the right to arbitrate.
  • Tactical response (seeking stay): Argue that ambiguity in the clause should be resolved in favour of arbitration, consistent with Singapore’s pro-arbitration policy. Where questions about whether an arbitration agreement must be stamped arise, address the stamping issue promptly to avoid the clause being treated as inoperative.

Abuse of Process and Forum Shopping

Courts have refused stays where the application is brought in bad faith, for example, where a party invokes the arbitration clause solely to delay proceedings, or where a party has taken substantive steps in the litigation that are inconsistent with an intention to arbitrate. The concept of a “step in the proceedings” is critical: once the applicant files a defence on the merits (as opposed to a defence challenging jurisdiction), the right to seek a stay may be lost.

  • What to show (opposing stay): Evidence that the applicant took a substantive step, such as filing a counterclaim or participating in discovery, before applying for the stay.
  • Tactical response (seeking stay): File the stay application at the earliest possible stage. Any delay or engagement with the merits risks being treated as a waiver.

Urgent Interim Relief and Enforcement Risk

Where a party requires urgent court-ordered relief, such as a freezing injunction, a preservation order, or an anti-suit injunction, that cannot practically be obtained from an arbitral tribunal (for example, because no tribunal has yet been constituted), the court may decline to stay those specific proceedings. This does not necessarily mean the entire action continues; the court may grant interim relief while staying the substantive dispute.

  • What to show (opposing stay): Genuine urgency and the impracticability of obtaining equivalent relief from the tribunal in time.
  • Tactical response (seeking stay): Point to the availability of emergency arbitrator procedures under the SIAC Rules, which can be activated within hours and may render court intervention unnecessary.

Third-Party and Joinder Complications

Commercial disputes frequently involve parties who are not signatories to the arbitration agreement. Where claims against non-parties are so closely intertwined with the arbitrable dispute that staying part of the proceedings would create a risk of inconsistent findings, courts have considered this as a factor, though under the IAA this alone is generally insufficient to refuse a stay.

  • What to show (opposing stay): That proceeding in two fora simultaneously would create a real risk of inconsistent outcomes and would be unjust.
  • Tactical response (seeking stay): Propose a case-management stay of the non-arbitrable claims pending the outcome of the arbitration, to manage the risk of inconsistency without overriding the arbitration agreement.

Partial Subject-Matter Disputes and Risk of Injustice

In some cases, only part of the dispute falls within the arbitration clause. Where staying the arbitrable portion would leave a residual claim that is practically unmanageable, or where the overlap is so extensive that bifurcation would cause disproportionate cost and delay, courts have weighed these factors against granting a stay, particularly under the AA’s residual discretion.

  • What to show (opposing stay): Practical evidence of the cost and delay that bifurcation would cause, and the risk that justice would be defeated.
  • Tactical response (seeking stay): Argue that the pro-arbitration policy requires the court to give effect to the parties’ bargain, and that case management tools can mitigate the risk of parallel proceedings.

Rules of Court 2026: Key Procedural Changes That Matter for Stay Applications

The Rules of Court 2026 build on the framework introduced by the 2021 rewrite and introduce several procedural refinements that directly affect how stay applications are filed, heard, and managed. For practitioners advising on a stay application Singapore filing, these changes have immediate tactical implications.

Industry observers expect the cumulative effect of these changes to be a faster, more structured stay hearing process, but also one that demands earlier preparation and tighter compliance with timelines. The table below summarises the key amendments:

Rule / Amendment Effective Date Practical Effect
Expanded case-management powers for interlocutory applications 1 April 2026 Courts can direct a case-management stay of non-arbitrable claims while the arbitrable claims proceed to arbitration, reducing the risk of inconsistent outcomes without refusing the stay outright.
Stricter timelines for interlocutory applications (including stays) 1 April 2026 Stay applications must now be filed and served within a tighter window after entry of appearance. Late applications face a higher threshold to demonstrate good reasons for delay.
Mandatory single-application framework for jurisdictional challenges 1 April 2026 All jurisdictional arguments, including stay applications, forum non conveniens, and challenges to service, must be consolidated in a single application, preventing sequential challenges.
Enhanced digital filing and document management 1 April 2026 All supporting documents, affidavits, and skeleton arguments for stay applications must be filed via the Integrated Electronic Litigation System (eLitigation), with stricter format and bundling requirements.

The likely practical effect of the single-application framework is significant: parties can no longer “test the waters” by filing a stay application first and then, if unsuccessful, raising forum non conveniens as a fallback. All jurisdictional challenges must be raised together, which means counsel must make a definitive strategic decision before filing. This front-loads the work, but also reduces the litigation drag that sequential applications used to cause.

How to Apply for a Stay: Applicant Checklist and Timeline

Required Documents and Evidence

A well-prepared stay application in Singapore requires the following core documents:

  1. Summons, the formal application for a stay of proceedings, referencing the applicable statutory provision (s.6 AA or s.6 IAA / Article 8 Model Law).
  2. Supporting affidavit, exhibiting the arbitration agreement, relevant contractual provisions, and evidence establishing the scope of the agreement.
  3. Skeleton arguments, addressing the prima facie existence of the agreement, the scope of the dispute, and (where applicable) rebutting any claim that the agreement is null, void, inoperative, or incapable of performance.
  4. Bundle of authorities, key case law and statutory extracts.
  5. Draft order, setting out the precise terms of the stay sought (including any conditional orders, such as costs undertakings or directions for the commencement of arbitration within a specified period).

Typical Orders Sought

The standard order is a stay of all court proceedings pending the final determination of the arbitration. In practice, counsel frequently seek additional or alternative orders:

  • A conditional stay requiring the applicant to commence arbitration within a specified period (commonly 30 days).
  • Liberty to apply to lift the stay if arbitration is not commenced or is unreasonably delayed.
  • Preservation of the right to apply for interim relief from the court notwithstanding the stay.
  • A case-management stay of related non-arbitrable claims.

Practical Timeline from Filing to Hearing

Stage Typical Timing Key Action
Day 0 Filing of summons File summons, supporting affidavit, and skeleton arguments via eLitigation. Serve on all parties.
Day 7–10 Respondent’s reply affidavit Respondent files opposing affidavit and skeleton arguments. Review immediately for new arguments.
Day 14–21 Applicant’s reply (if permitted) File reply affidavit addressing any new points raised. Finalise bundle of authorities.
Day 21–35 Hearing before Registrar or Judge Attend hearing. Be prepared for the court to give directions or impose conditions on the stay.

Under the Rules of Court 2026, the consolidated single-application framework means that if you intend to raise forum non conveniens or any other jurisdictional challenge alongside the stay, these must all be included in the Day 0 filing. Missing this window may preclude raising those arguments later.

If the Stay Is Refused: Immediate Tactical Options and Preservation

A refused stay is not the end of the road, but it demands immediate, coordinated action. The first 72 hours after a refusal are critical. Here is what counsel should do, and in what order.

Start Arbitration Immediately

Even if the court has declined to stay proceedings, commencing arbitration preserves the client’s rights under the arbitration agreement and creates a parallel track. Under the SIAC Rules, a Request for Arbitration can be filed within hours. If urgency is extreme, the emergency arbitrator procedure allows the appointment of an emergency arbitrator who can issue interim orders before the full tribunal is constituted. For a detailed breakdown of how these procedures work, see the SIAC rules practical guide.

Apply for Interim Relief

Depending on the nature of the dispute, counsel should consider applying for interim relief, either from the court (which retains jurisdiction to grant injunctions and preservation orders even where arbitration is pending) or from the arbitral tribunal once constituted. The IAA expressly preserves the court’s power to grant interim measures in support of arbitration, so a refused stay does not extinguish this avenue.

Key options include freezing injunctions (to prevent dissipation of assets), preservation orders (to protect evidence), and anti-suit injunctions (to restrain proceedings in other jurisdictions that breach the arbitration agreement).

Enforcement Risk Management

If the dispute involves cross-border assets or a counterparty with assets in multiple jurisdictions, enforcement arbitration Singapore strategy must be considered immediately. Identify the jurisdictions where enforcement may be needed and assess whether protective measures (such as registration of a lis pendens or provisional attachment) should be taken in those jurisdictions while the arbitration proceeds.

Appeal and Interlocutory Options

A refusal to grant a stay is generally appealable, but counsel must assess whether an appeal is tactically worthwhile given the cost, delay, and the strength of the grounds. Under the Rules of Court 2026, the timeline for filing a notice of appeal from an interlocutory order is tight. Where the refusal was based on a finding that the arbitration agreement is null and void, an appeal may be strong; where it was based on third-party complications or case-management discretion, the prospects are less certain.

72-hour decision flowchart:

  1. Receive order refusing stay → immediately instruct arbitration counsel to prepare and file Request for Arbitration.
  2. Within 24 hours → assess need for emergency arbitrator and/or court-based interim relief.
  3. Within 48 hours → identify enforcement jurisdictions and instruct local counsel on protective measures.
  4. Within 72 hours → decide whether to appeal the refusal; if yes, file notice of appeal within the prescribed timeline.
  5. Concurrently → reassess settlement position in light of parallel proceedings.

Tactical Comparison: Arbitration vs Litigation in Singapore

For businesses deciding between arbitration and court litigation in Singapore, or assessing whether to resist a stay, the following comparison captures the key practical differences:

Issue Arbitration Court Litigation
Cost Higher upfront (tribunal fees, institutional fees), but limited discovery and no appeal often reduce total cost Lower initial filing fees, but discovery, interlocutory applications, and appeals can escalate total cost substantially
Speed Typically 12–18 months for a full SIAC arbitration; expedited procedures available for smaller claims Variable, simple matters may resolve faster, but complex commercial disputes can take 2–4 years through trial and appeal
Interim relief Emergency arbitrator available within hours; court can also grant interim relief in support of arbitration Full suite of court injunctions, freezing orders, and preservation orders available immediately
Confidentiality Proceedings and award are generally confidential under SIAC Rules Court proceedings are public unless a sealing order is obtained
Enforceability Award enforceable in 170+ New York Convention jurisdictions Judgment enforceable primarily under bilateral treaties or the Reciprocal Enforcement of Commonwealth Judgments Act
Joinder of third parties Limited, generally requires consent or contractual basis for joinder Broad powers to join non-parties and consolidate related actions

The right choice depends on the client’s priorities. Where confidentiality and cross-border enforceability are paramount, arbitration is typically preferred. Where the dispute involves multiple non-signatory parties or requires urgent court-specific remedies, litigation may be the more pragmatic route. Understanding this calculus is essential to any decision on whether to seek, support, or oppose a stay of proceedings in Singapore.

Leading Singapore Authorities and Illustrative Cases

The following table summarises key Singapore decisions that have shaped the court stay test and remain essential reading for practitioners preparing stay applications or opposition:

Case Year Key Takeaway
Tjong Very Sumito v Antig Investments Pte Ltd 2009 Court of Appeal confirmed the mandatory nature of the stay under the IAA and the low prima facie threshold for the existence of an arbitration agreement.
Tomolugen Holdings Ltd v Silica Investors Ltd 2016 Court of Appeal addressed multi-party disputes where only some claims are arbitrable, endorsing a case-management stay of non-arbitrable claims pending arbitration.
Wilson Taylor Asia Pacific Pte Ltd v Dyna-Jet Pte Ltd 2017 Court of Appeal held that the court’s role at the stay stage is limited and should not extend to a full examination of the merits of the dispute.
Maybank Kim Eng Securities Pte Ltd v Lim Keng Yong 2016 High Court considered the “step in the proceedings” threshold and clarified when participation in litigation amounts to a waiver of the right to seek a stay.
CSY v CSZ 2022 Court of Appeal examined the scope of court discretion under the AA in the context of overlapping proceedings, confirming limited circumstances where a court may refuse or impose conditions on a stay.
Dyna-Jet Pte Ltd v Wilson Taylor Asia Pacific Pte Ltd 2017 Clarified interaction between stay applications and summary judgment, a party cannot use a stay to shield against an otherwise clear-cut claim.

These authorities are published on eLitigation and should be included in the bundle of authorities for any stay hearing. For a broader discussion of how arbitration hearings are conducted, readers may find it useful to review the fundamentals alongside these precedents.

Practical Templates and Downloads

To support practitioners preparing or opposing a stay application, the following resources are available:

  • Stay application checklist (PDF), a comprehensive list of documents, evidence, and steps required to file a stay application in Singapore under the AA or IAA.
  • Skeleton argument headings template, a model structure for skeleton arguments supporting or opposing a stay, aligned with current court expectations.
  • 72-hour “if stay refused” survival checklist, a step-by-step action plan for the critical period immediately following a refusal, covering arbitration commencement, interim relief, enforcement protection, and appeal assessment.

Conclusion: Protecting Your Position on a Stay Arbitration Singapore Application

The decision to seek, support, or oppose a stay in favour of arbitration in Singapore is one of the most consequential tactical calls in commercial dispute resolution. Singapore’s statutory framework strongly favours arbitration, but the exceptions are real, the procedural requirements under the Rules of Court 2026 are demanding, and the consequences of getting it wrong can include parallel proceedings, enforcement difficulties, and substantial wasted costs. Whether you are a GC managing cross-border risk or external counsel preparing a stay application Singapore filing, the key is early preparation, a clear understanding of the legal tests, and a concrete plan for the 72 hours after any adverse ruling.

For businesses navigating these decisions, specialist commercial disputes counsel in Singapore can make the difference between a cleanly resolved dispute and protracted multi-forum litigation.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Shem Khoo at Focus Law Asia, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Singapore Statutes Online, Arbitration Act (Cap. 10)
  2. Singapore Statutes Online, International Arbitration Act
  3. Singapore Courts / eLitigation, Published Judgments
  4. Singapore International Arbitration Centre (SIAC), Rules and Practice Notes
  5. Singapore Academy of Law, SAL Practitioner / Journals (Academy Publishing)
  6. Singapore Law Watch, Arbitration Overview

FAQs

Can Singapore courts stay proceedings in favour of arbitration?
Yes. Under both the Arbitration Act 2001 and the International Arbitration Act, Singapore courts must grant a stay of proceedings where a valid arbitration agreement exists and the dispute falls within its scope, unless the agreement is null and void, inoperative, or incapable of being performed. The obligation is mandatory once the threshold conditions are satisfied.
The most frequently cited grounds are: the arbitration agreement is null, void, or inoperative; the subject matter is not arbitrable (e.g., insolvency proceedings); the applicant has taken a “step in the proceedings” amounting to waiver; third-party joinder complications make arbitration impractical; or the application is an abuse of process designed to cause delay.
Act within 72 hours. Commence arbitration immediately to preserve rights under the agreement. Apply for interim relief (emergency arbitrator or court injunctions) if assets or evidence are at risk. Assess enforcement exposure in relevant jurisdictions. Evaluate the merits and timeline of an appeal against the refusal order.
The Rules of Court 2026 introduce stricter filing timelines, a mandatory single-application framework that requires all jurisdictional challenges to be raised together, expanded case-management stay powers, and enhanced digital filing requirements. Early indications suggest these changes will make the stay hearing process faster but will demand more thorough preparation before filing.
Not necessarily. A refusal to stay court proceedings does not automatically invalidate the arbitration agreement or prevent an arbitral tribunal from issuing an enforceable award. However, parallel proceedings create risks of inconsistent outcomes. Counsel should take protective measures, such as commencing arbitration, seeking declaratory relief from the tribunal, and registering protective notices in enforcement jurisdictions, to preserve the enforceability of any eventual award.
This is a distinct concept. An arbitral tribunal may stay its own proceedings in certain circumstances (for example, pending the outcome of related court proceedings or a challenge to its jurisdiction). A court may also order a stay of arbitration in very limited circumstances. This is different from the court staying its own proceedings in favour of arbitration, which is the focus of this guide.
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When Will Singapore Courts Refuse a Stay in Favour of Arbitration? a Practical 2026 Guide

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