Our Expert in Japan
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Last reviewed: May 28, 2026
Third party funding Japan has moved from a niche financing option to a mainstream commercial tool in international arbitration seated in or connected to the country. Practitioner interest surged through 2025 and into 2026, driven by dedicated coverage in the Chambers Litigation Funding 2026 practice guide, a widely circulated client alert from a major international law firm, and multiple conference panels exploring Japan‑specific disclosure and ethics questions. This guide provides corporate counsel, in‑house teams and IP owners with the practical steps they need, from deciding whether to accept or oppose funded claims, through disclosure strategy and contract drafting, to enforcement before Japanese courts. Every section includes checklists, sample clauses or comparison tables designed for immediate use in live matters.
Third‑party funding is permitted in Japan arbitration. No statute or court rule expressly prohibits it, and no licensing regime governs funders operating in the jurisdiction. Industry observers expect the market to continue growing as Japanese corporates, IP owners and inbound investors recognise the strategic advantages of risk‑transfer and access to capital for high‑value disputes.
Before engaging a funder or responding to a funded claim, counsel should work through the following checklist:
Third‑party funding in arbitration occurs when an entity with no pre‑existing interest in a dispute finances one party’s legal costs in exchange for a share of any award or settlement. The funder assumes the financial risk: if the claim fails, the funded party typically owes nothing. This non‑recourse structure distinguishes TPF from conventional litigation lending or insurance products.
A third party funder in Japan, or any jurisdiction, structures returns through a waterfall: the funded party first recovers its principal claim, then the funder receives an agreed multiple of its investment or a percentage of proceeds, whichever is greater. The funding agreement will address control rights (who decides strategy and settlement), assignment of the claim, and what happens if the funded party becomes insolvent. According to the Woodsford Litigation Funding Japan guide, funder due diligence typically takes four to eight weeks and involves a merits assessment by the funder’s in‑house legal team or external counsel.
Japan has no specific statutory framework governing third‑party funding in arbitration as of May 28, 2026. Unlike Hong Kong and Singapore, which enacted dedicated legislative regimes in 2017 and 2017 respectively, Japan’s Arbitration Act and Code of Civil Procedure are silent on TPF. The Chambers Litigation Funding 2026 practice guide for Japan confirms this position, noting that no express prohibition exists under Japanese law and that the absence of historical champerty and maintenance doctrines removes a barrier present in some common‑law jurisdictions.
The practical effect is permissive: parties are free to enter funding arrangements, and arbitration funding Japan is neither regulated nor restricted. However, the absence of a statutory framework also means there are no safe harbours, prescribed disclosure duties or funder conduct standards embedded in domestic law. Practitioners must therefore look to institutional guidance and contractual protections.
There is no reported Japanese court decision that directly addresses the validity or enforceability of a third‑party funding agreement in the arbitration context. Academic analysis from Nagoya University confirms this silence, observing that Japanese courts have neither endorsed nor rejected TPF as contrary to public policy. The likely practical effect will be that courts assess funded awards on the same grounds as any other arbitral award under the Arbitration Act, procedural regularity, public policy and the scope of the arbitration agreement, without treating the existence of funding as an independent ground for challenge or refusal of enforcement.
The Japan Commercial Arbitration Association (JCAA) rules do not contain TPF‑specific provisions. In practice, tribunals seated in Japan look to the CIArb Guidelines on Third‑Party Funding and the IBA Guidelines on Conflicts of Interest in International Arbitration for procedural and ethical direction. These soft‑law instruments do not bind tribunals, but they are widely cited and increasingly treated as benchmarks for best practice in third‑party funding arbitration globally.
One of the most contested issues in third‑party funding arbitration is disclosure, specifically, what a funded party must tell the tribunal and the opposing party, and when. In Japan, no statute or institutional rule compels disclosure. Nevertheless, early and proportionate voluntary disclosure is increasingly regarded as the prudent course, and the CIArb Guidelines on Third‑Party Funding recommend it as best practice.
Voluntary disclosure serves two purposes: it pre‑empts tribunal orders and demonstrates good faith. Industry observers expect disclosure to become the default expectation for funded parties in Japan‑seated arbitrations within the next few years. Counsel should consider disclosing at the earliest practicable stage, ideally in the Request for Arbitration or the first procedural submission, if any of the following apply:
Even where a party has not volunteered information, tribunals may order disclosure of funding in Japan arbitrations when the funder’s identity is relevant to a conflicts check, when a security‑for‑costs application hinges on the claimant’s financial position, or when issues of privilege waiver arise from sharing case materials with the funder. The IBA Guidelines on Conflicts of Interest include third‑party funders within the scope of relationships that may trigger arbitrator disclosure obligations.
| Disclosure Trigger | What Tribunal / Rules Expect | Practical Approach for Party |
|---|---|---|
| Funder identity only | Some tribunals expect identity disclosure where relevant to conflicts, no universal rule | Disclose identity in redacted form; offer to disclose the full agreement to the tribunal in camera |
| Funding agreement terms | Rarely required by default; may be sought for security for costs or conflicts analysis | Provide a narrow, negotiated summary covering funding scope, control rights and settlement consent |
| Control / settlement rights | Must be disclosed if they create an arbitrator conflict (per IBA standards) | Contractually limit funder control; include a non‑control covenant and disclose if control exists |
The following templates are offered as starting points for counsel to adapt. They are not legal advice.
Variant A, Limited Disclosure (identity only):
“The Claimant hereby discloses, pursuant to its duty of good faith and in accordance with the CIArb Guidelines on Third‑Party Funding, that [Funder Name], a litigation funding entity incorporated in [Jurisdiction], has entered into a funding arrangement with the Claimant in respect of these proceedings. The Claimant confirms that the funder has no control over the conduct or settlement of the claim.”
Variant B, Full Disclosure (identity + summary terms):
“The Claimant discloses that it has entered into a litigation funding agreement with [Funder Name] dated [Date]. Under that agreement: (a) the funder has committed to fund the Claimant’s legal costs up to [Amount/Cap]; (b) the funder’s return is calculated as [percentage of proceeds / multiple of investment]; (c) the funder has no right to direct the Claimant’s litigation strategy or to approve or reject settlement offers without the Claimant’s independent consent; and (d) the agreement contains confidentiality provisions that restrict disclosure of commercially sensitive terms not set out above.”
The funding agreement is the backbone of any third‑party funding arrangement. In Japan, where no regulatory template exists, the contractual terms between funder and funded party must do the heavy lifting. Five categories of clauses deserve particular attention.
“The Funded Party shall disclose to the tribunal and opposing party the identity of the Funder and confirm whether the Funder holds any settlement consent or strategic control rights, within [14] days of executing this Agreement or the commencement of arbitral proceedings, whichever is later.”
“The Funder shall treat all Privileged Materials and Confidential Information received in connection with the Dispute as strictly confidential, shall not disclose such materials to any third party without the prior written consent of the Funded Party, and shall return or destroy all such materials within [30] days of termination of this Agreement.”
Counsel negotiating a funding agreement should scrutinise any clause that gives the funder a veto over settlement, the power to select or replace legal counsel, or direct access to privileged communications beyond what is necessary for the funder’s merits assessment. These provisions create material control red flags that may expose the funded party to tribunal challenges, disclosure orders and potential adverse inferences. A well‑drafted funder disclosure clause paired with a clear non‑control covenant mitigates these risks.
The ethical landscape of third‑party funding arbitration centres on three concerns: conflicts of interest involving arbitrators, counsel’s duty of candour to the tribunal, and the extent of funder influence over the proceedings.
The IBA Guidelines on Conflicts of Interest in International Arbitration treat third‑party funders as entities whose relationships with arbitrators must be assessed under the general standards for independence and impartiality. Where an arbitrator or their law firm has a business relationship with a funder, for example, as counsel in other funded matters, that relationship may fall within the Orange or Red List categories requiring disclosure or disqualification.
Counsel’s duty of candour requires honest dealing with the tribunal. Concealing a funding arrangement when disclosure is ordered, or misrepresenting the funder’s level of control, risks sanctions and adverse costs. The CIArb Guidelines on Third‑Party Funding recommend that counsel advise their client to disclose funding at the earliest opportunity, even where no institutional rule compels it.
Intellectual property disputes raise distinct issues for both funders and funded parties. Funding for IP arbitration in Japan has grown as patent holders, licensors and technology companies seek to monetise claims without diverting operating capital.
The central tension in IP‑funded disputes is between the funder’s need for information to assess merits and the party’s need to protect confidential technology. Trade secrets, source code and proprietary manufacturing processes may form the core of the claim, yet sharing them with a funder, even under contract, creates exposure. If the funder also finances claims by competitors, the risk is compounded.
Valuation adds a further layer of complexity. IP claims often involve future royalty streams, market share projections and technology lifecycle estimates that are inherently uncertain. Funders typically engage independent experts to assess quantum, and the cost of those experts must be factored into the funding budget.
Every third‑party funding arrangement redistributes risk among claimant, respondent and funder. Understanding how that redistribution works, and where gaps appear, is essential for all parties.
Security for costs is the most common tactical response by respondents facing funded claimants. The argument is straightforward: if the claimant is being funded because it lacks resources, the respondent may be left unable to recover adverse costs if the claim fails. Tribunals in Japan‑seated arbitrations have discretion to order security, and early indications suggest they will consider the existence of funding as one factor, but not an automatic trigger, in the analysis.
| Risk | Claimant | Respondent | Funder |
|---|---|---|---|
| Adverse costs exposure | Shifted to funder or ATE insurer if agreed | Standard exposure; may seek security | May accept via indemnity or ATE policy |
| Loss of control over strategy | Risk if non‑control covenant is weak | N/A, but may argue control to challenge | Mitigated by contractual consultation rights |
| Confidentiality breach | Exposure through funder due diligence | Risk if funder obtains sensitive materials | Contractual obligation; reputational risk |
| Funder withdrawal mid‑case | Left without funding; must self‑fund or settle | Potential costs order against withdrawing funder | Capital at risk; reputational damage |
Once a funded arbitration produces an award, the question shifts to enforcement. Japan’s Arbitration Act, modelled on the UNCITRAL Model Law, provides for recognition and enforcement of both domestic and foreign arbitral awards. The existence of third‑party funding is not listed among the grounds for refusing enforcement under the Act, and academic analysis from Nagoya University confirms that no Japanese court has refused to enforce an award on the basis that the successful party was funded.
Parties seeking interim relief from Japanese courts, including asset‑freezing orders and injunctions, should be prepared to address funding if the opposing party raises it. Industry observers expect courts to treat funding as relevant to the claimant’s financial position (and therefore to undertakings in damages) rather than as a ground for refusal. Confidentiality requests regarding funding terms are likely to be assessed on the same basis as any commercial confidentiality claim. The JCAA’s published materials do not address enforcement of funded awards specifically, reinforcing the position that standard enforcement rules apply without modification.
If a client asks about third‑party funding, or if you are responding to a funded claim, the following immediate actions provide a structured starting point:
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Takashi Mochizuki at Toranomon Chuo Law Firm, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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