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enforce arbitral awards indonesia

How to Enforce International Arbitral Awards in Indonesia, a Practical Guide for Counsel & Investors

By Global Law Experts
– posted 1 hour ago

To enforce arbitral awards in Indonesia, counsel must register the award with the Central Jakarta District Court (Pengadilan Negeri Jakarta Pusat) and navigate a statutory framework shaped by Law No. 30 of 1999, the New York Convention, and a tightened definition of “international arbitral award” introduced by the Constitutional Court in January 2025. Common grounds for refusal include public-order objections, due-process violations, and excess of jurisdiction, and the typical registration-to-execution timeline runs three to nine months when uncontested. This guide provides the step-by-step enforcement playbook, annulment-risk analysis, and interim-relief strategies that general counsel, external practitioners, and corporate investors need to protect their awards in the 2025–2026 regulatory environment.

Enforce Arbitral Awards in Indonesia or Seek Annulment?, The Executive Decision

The threshold question for every award-holder is whether to pursue enforcement immediately or wait and evaluate annulment risk. The decision turns on three variables: where the respondent’s enforceable assets sit, how vulnerable the award is under Articles 66–70 of Law No. 30/1999, and whether the respondent has signalled credible set-aside grounds.

Recommended decision logic:

  • Enforce immediately if the respondent holds substantial assets in Indonesia, annulment risk is low (clean procedural record, no jurisdictional overreach), and preservation measures can be obtained before the respondent dissipates assets.
  • Pause and assess if the award is potentially vulnerable, for example, the arbitration agreement is ambiguous, the tribunal arguably exceeded its mandate, or the award touches on subject matter that Indonesian courts may classify as contrary to public order.
  • Run parallel tracks if both enforcement and annulment proceedings are likely. File registration promptly while preparing a robust defence to any annulment application.

Regardless of the chosen path, counsel should immediately undertake asset-tracing due diligence, consider pre-registration freezing orders where available, and secure certified copies of all award documentation from the administering institution.

Quick Overview, Legal Framework and Jurisdictional Basics for Enforcement in Indonesia

Indonesia’s arbitration regime rests on Law No. 30 of 1999 on Arbitration and Alternative Dispute Resolution. Articles 65 through 71 form the core statutory machinery for recognising, enforcing, and annulling international arbitral awards. Indonesia is also a signatory to the 1958 New York Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards, which provides reciprocal enforcement obligations with fellow contracting states.

What Counts as an “International Arbitral Award”?

Under Article 1(9) of Law No. 30/1999, an international arbitral award is one rendered by an arbitral institution or ad hoc arbitrator outside the jurisdiction of Indonesia. Following the Constitutional Court’s decision of 3 January 2025, the definition has been interpreted more strictly: the Court declared relevant provisions constitutional while clarifying that the place of arbitration, not the nationality of the parties or the governing law, is the decisive criterion. Industry observers expect this stricter interpretive lens to increase scrutiny at the registration stage, particularly for awards with mixed-jurisdiction features.

Article 66 sets out cumulative conditions that must be satisfied before an international award can be enforced in Indonesia, including that the award must relate to a commercial dispute under Indonesian law, must not violate public order, and must originate from a state bound by a bilateral or multilateral treaty with Indonesia.

Event / Rule Practical Effect for Enforcement What Counsel Should Do
Law No. 30/1999 (Articles 65–71) Sets domestic recognition, enforcement, and annulment grounds Use Article references in pleadings; cite statutory text when filing registration
3 January 2025 Constitutional Court decision Clarified stricter definition of “international award” and jurisdictional limits Verify award meets Constitutional Court criteria before filing; prepare jurisdictional evidence
BANI 2025 emergency arbitration practice changes Created frictions for domestic emergency orders versus seat-tribunal orders If emergency relief is sought, file local preservation orders in Indonesia promptly

Enforcement proceedings are centralised at the Central Jakarta District Court (Pengadilan Negeri Jakarta Pusat), which serves as the sole competent court for first-instance registration of international awards. This jurisdictional requirement applies regardless of where the respondent is domiciled within Indonesia.

Step-by-Step Workflow to Enforce a Foreign Arbitral Award in Indonesia

The practical playbook below walks counsel through the registration-to-execution sequence. Estimated timelines are drawn from practitioner experience; actual durations vary by case complexity and whether the respondent resists.

Documents Required

  • Original or certified copy of the arbitral award. Obtain this directly from the administering institution (e.g., SIAC, ICC) or, for UNCITRAL ad hoc awards, from the tribunal secretary.
  • Original or certified copy of the arbitration agreement (clause in the contract or standalone submission agreement).
  • Certified Indonesian-language translation of both the award and the arbitration agreement, prepared by a sworn translator (penerjemah tersumpah).
  • Consularisation or apostille. If the seat country is a party to the Apostille Convention, apostille the award. Otherwise, consularise through the Indonesian embassy or consulate in the seat country.
  • Statement from the Indonesian diplomatic representative in the seat country confirming that Indonesia and the seat country are both bound by a bilateral or multilateral treaty on recognition and enforcement.

Filing Checklist

  1. Collect and authenticate the award, obtain certified copies, apostille or consularise, and commission sworn translations. Estimated time: 2–6 weeks.
  2. Prepare the registration petition, draft the application (permohonan pendaftaran) addressed to the Clerk of the Central Jakarta District Court, attaching all required documents and a brief statement confirming that the conditions of Article 66 are met.
  3. File at the Central Jakarta District Court, submit the petition and supporting documents to the court registry. Pay the applicable court fee (the amount is set by the Supreme Court and adjusted periodically). Estimated time for registration acknowledgement: 1–2 weeks.
  4. Obtain the exequatur, the Chief Justice of the Central Jakarta District Court issues an enforcement order (exequatur) if the conditions under Articles 66 and 67 are satisfied. Estimated time if uncontested: 30–60 days.
  5. Serve the enforcement order on the respondent, formal service through the court bailiff (juru sita). The respondent may be given a period to comply voluntarily.
  6. Execute, if voluntary compliance does not follow, apply for execution measures including attachment of assets, garnishee orders on bank accounts, seizure of moveable property, or auction of immoveable property. Execution phase: 1–4 months depending on complexity.

Sample Chronology Template

Step Action Estimated Duration
1 Collect, translate, apostille/consularise award 2–6 weeks
2 Draft and file registration petition 1–2 weeks
3 Court reviews registration; issues exequatur 30–60 days
4 Serve enforcement order on respondent 1–2 weeks
5 Voluntary compliance period 8–14 days (court-directed)
6 Apply for and execute attachment/garnishee/auction 1–4 months
Total (uncontested) Approximately 3–7 months

Where the respondent contests the registration or files an annulment application, the timeline can extend to nine months or longer at first instance, and considerably more through appeals.

Interim Measures and Emergency Relief, Pre- and Post-Registration

Preserving the respondent’s assets is often the most time-critical step in the enforcement of UNCITRAL or SIAC awards. If assets are at risk of dissipation before the exequatur issues, counsel should consider interim relief both from the seat tribunal and from Indonesian courts.

When to Seek Interim Relief

  • Pre-registration: Where there is a demonstrable risk of asset dissipation, suspicious transfers, corporate restructurings, or announced liquidations, apply to the Indonesian courts for a provisional attachment order (sita jaminan) at the earliest opportunity, even before filing the registration petition.
  • Post-registration: Once the registration petition is filed, apply for conservatory seizures to prevent the respondent from moving assets during the exequatur review.

BANI Emergency Arbitration and Practical Friction

BANI’s updated emergency arbitration procedures, introduced in 2025, have created practical friction for parties seeking to rely on emergency arbitrator orders issued outside Indonesia. Indonesian courts do not automatically recognise emergency orders from foreign-seated tribunals as enforceable interim measures. The likely practical effect is that counsel must treat such orders as persuasive but not self-executing, and file separate local applications for equivalent relief in the Indonesian courts.

To maximise the chance of obtaining BANI emergency arbitration enforcement or equivalent local orders, practitioners should:

  • Draft urgency affidavits setting out the risk of irreparable harm and asset dissipation, supported by documentary evidence (bank statements, corporate filings, transfer records).
  • File the local application concurrently with any seat-tribunal request, so that the Indonesian court has an independent basis on which to act.
  • Reference the foreign emergency order, if one exists, as supporting evidence of urgency, but frame the Indonesian application on its own merits under local procedural rules.

Annulment of Arbitral Awards in Indonesia, Grounds, Likelihood, and Defence Strategy

Every enforcement counsel must anticipate and prepare for a respondent’s annulment application. Understanding the available grounds, their likelihood of success, and the procedural counter-moves is essential to protect the award.

Statutory Grounds Under Articles 70 and 71

Article 70 of Law No. 30/1999 provides three principal bases on which a domestic arbitral award may be annulled:

  • Falsification of documents (pemalsuan surat), the award relied on forged or falsified documentary evidence.
  • Concealment of decisive documents (penyembunyian dokumen), one party deliberately hid documents that would have materially affected the outcome.
  • Fraud or deceit (tipu muslihat), the award was procured through fraudulent conduct by one of the parties.

For international awards, refusal of enforcement is governed primarily by Article 66, which mirrors several of the New York Convention’s Article V grounds. The Central Jakarta District Court and, on appeal, the Supreme Court (Mahkamah Agung) may refuse enforcement where:

  • The arbitration agreement is invalid under the law governing it.
  • The respondent was not given proper notice of the appointment of the arbitrator or of the arbitral proceedings, or was otherwise unable to present its case (due-process violation).
  • The award deals with disputes beyond the scope of the arbitration agreement or the tribunal exceeded its mandate.
  • The composition of the tribunal or the arbitral procedure was not in accordance with the parties’ agreement or the law of the seat.
  • The award conflicts with Indonesian public order (ketertiban umum).

The 2025 Constitutional Court Signal and Mahkamah Agung Practice

The Constitutional Court’s 3 January 2025 decision reinforced that the provisions of Law No. 30/1999 governing international arbitral awards are constitutional but should be interpreted in light of the seat-based definition. Early indications suggest this will embolden respondents to challenge awards that have tenuous connections to a foreign seat or where procedural steps occurred partly in Indonesia. Practitioners should proactively assemble jurisdictional evidence, institutional correspondence, hearing transcripts, and seat-tribunal confirmations, to pre-empt such challenges.

Defence Checklist for Enforcement Counsel

  • Audit the award for procedural vulnerabilities, review hearing transcripts, notice records, and tribunal communications to confirm full compliance with due-process requirements.
  • Prepare a public-order rebuttal, compile evidence that the award’s subject matter is squarely commercial and does not touch on areas Indonesia considers ketertiban umum (e.g., sovereign regulatory authority, criminal sanctions).
  • Pre-draft counter-arguments, have responsive pleadings ready before the respondent files. Typical counter-arguments include: (a) the alleged grounds are not supported by evidence meeting the criminal-law standard historically required for Article 70 claims; (b) the respondent had full opportunity to present its case; (c) the tribunal acted within its mandate.
  • Consider interlocutory tactics, if the respondent seeks a stay of execution pending annulment, argue that enforcement should proceed in parallel unless the annulment application discloses prima facie meritorious grounds.

Can an Annulled Award Be Enforced?

If an Indonesian court has set aside the award domestically, enforcement within Indonesia is no longer possible. However, award-holders with assets in other jurisdictions may still pursue enforcement abroad, several national courts have enforced awards set aside at the seat, depending on their interpretation of the New York Convention. This cross-jurisdictional possibility should be factored into the overall enforcement strategy from the outset.

Special Considerations, SIAC, UNCITRAL, Investor-State, and BUMN Enforcement

SIAC Award Enforcement in Indonesia

SIAC-administered awards represent a significant share of international awards sought to be enforced in Indonesia, reflecting regional arbitration patterns. For SIAC award enforcement in Indonesia, counsel should note that SIAC provides certified copies and institutional confirmations in formats familiar to Indonesian courts. Request the SIAC Registrar’s certificate confirming the award is final and binding under the SIAC Rules, as this can expedite the exequatur review.

Enforcement of UNCITRAL Awards in Indonesia

Ad hoc awards under the UNCITRAL Arbitration Rules require additional documentation care because there is no administering institution to issue certified copies. Counsel should ensure that the presiding arbitrator or tribunal secretary provides a notarised certificate of authenticity alongside the original signed award. The enforcement of UNCITRAL award in Indonesia follows the same Article 66–67 pathway, but courts may scrutinise authentication more closely.

Enforcing Investor-State (ISDS) Awards in Indonesia

Investor-state award enforcement in Indonesia raises distinct considerations. ICSID awards benefit from an autonomous enforcement regime under the ICSID Convention, to which Indonesia is a party, member states are obligated to recognise and enforce ICSID awards as if they were final judgments of their own courts. Non-ICSID investor-state awards (e.g., under UNCITRAL rules pursuant to a bilateral investment treaty) follow the standard New York Convention pathway described above but may encounter additional state-immunity arguments.

Counsel pursuing ISDS enforcement should:

  • Confirm the applicable treaty basis and whether it provides for a waiver of sovereign immunity from execution.
  • Identify commercial assets of the state or its instrumentalities, as immunity from execution generally does not extend to assets used for commercial purposes.
  • Engage local counsel experienced in public-law arguments before Indonesian courts.

Enforce an International Award Against BUMN, Practical Checklist

Enforcing an award against a Badan Usaha Milik Negara (BUMN, or state-owned enterprise) is possible but requires careful navigation of the boundary between commercial and sovereign activity. The key steps to enforce an international award against a BUMN include:

  • Characterise the underlying transaction. Demonstrate that the BUMN entered into the contract in its commercial, not governmental, capacity (iure gestionis versus iure imperii).
  • Identify executable assets. BUMN assets held for commercial use (bank accounts, trade receivables, commercial real estate) are generally executable. Assets designated for public service may attract immunity arguments.
  • Apply for targeted attachment. Draft attachment applications that specify commercial assets and include evidence of their commercial character.
  • Anticipate government intervention. In practice, government stakeholders may intervene to negotiate settlement once attachment applications are filed. Factor negotiation strategy into the enforcement plan from the outset.

Practical Annexes, Filing Checklist, Model Chronology, and Templates

Complete Filing Checklist for Registration of an International Arbitral Award

  • Original or certified copy of the arbitral award (apostilled or consularised)
  • Original or certified copy of the arbitration agreement
  • Certified sworn Indonesian translation of both documents
  • Diplomatic confirmation letter (bilateral/multilateral treaty confirmation)
  • Registration petition (permohonan pendaftaran) addressed to the Chief Justice of the Central Jakarta District Court
  • Power of attorney for Indonesian counsel (surat kuasa khusus)
  • Corporate authorisation documents (board resolution or equivalent) of the petitioner
  • Proof of payment of court fees
  • Supporting brief establishing compliance with Article 66 conditions

Sample Draft Prayer for Relief, Registration Petition

The following is a simplified model and should be adapted to the specific facts of each case:

“The Petitioner respectfully requests that this Honourable Court:

  1. Accept and register the international arbitral award dated [date], rendered by [tribunal/institution] in [seat city], in Case No. [reference];
  2. Issue an exequatur authorising the enforcement of the said award within the territory of the Republic of Indonesia;
  3. Order the Respondent to comply with the terms of the award, including payment of [amount] together with interest as determined by the tribunal;
  4. Grant such further or other relief as this Honourable Court deems just and appropriate.”

Red Flags and Pre-Referral Due Diligence

Before committing resources to enforcement, counsel should screen for the following risk indicators:

  • Ambiguous seat of arbitration. If the seat is contested or the award does not clearly state the seat, the 2025 Constitutional Court ruling may complicate registration.
  • Non-commercial subject matter. Awards touching on regulatory disputes, tax obligations, or government concessions may face public-order challenges.
  • Respondent in liquidation or restructuring. Check corporate registry filings to ensure the respondent entity remains active and solvent.
  • Historical non-compliance. Review whether the respondent has a pattern of resisting enforcement, this informs both strategy and urgency of interim relief.
  • Parallel proceedings. Determine whether annulment proceedings are pending at the seat or in another jurisdiction, as this may affect the Indonesian court’s willingness to proceed.

Conclusion, Next Steps to Enforce Arbitral Awards in Indonesia

Successfully enforcing an international arbitral award in Indonesia requires early strategic decisions, meticulous documentation, and a thorough understanding of the evolving regulatory landscape shaped by the 2025 Constitutional Court decision and ongoing Mahkamah Agung practice. Counsel who act promptly, securing certified award copies, filing preservation measures, and preparing for annulment challenges, stand the best chance of converting an award into executed recovery. The framework is workable, but it rewards preparation and penalises delay.

For practitioners and investors seeking to enforce arbitral awards in Indonesia or defend against annulment applications, engaging experienced Indonesian enforcement counsel at the earliest stage is critical. The lawyer directory provides access to vetted international litigation and arbitration practitioners across Indonesia’s major commercial centres.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact John Lumbantobing at Rifdaan Novarazka & Prabowo, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Constitutional Court of Indonesia, Decision on International Arbitration Award Provisions (3 January 2025)
  2. Singapore International Arbitration Centre (SIAC)
  3. Global Legal Insights, Indonesia International Arbitration Chapter (2026)
  4. ICLG, Investor-State Arbitration: Indonesia
  5. Assegaf Hamzah & Partners, Constitutional Court Clarifies Foreign Arbitral Award Definition
  6. DSAP Law Firm, Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards in Indonesia: Barriers and Legal Solutions (2026)
  7. Wolters Kluwer Arbitration Blog, Indonesian Constitutional Court Sets a Stricter Definition of International Arbitral Awards
  8. SIAC, Awards and Decisions Resources

FAQs

How do I enforce a foreign (SIAC/UNCITRAL) arbitral award in Indonesia?
Register the award at the Central Jakarta District Court (Pengadilan Negeri Jakarta Pusat) with certified sworn translations, apostilled or consularised copies of the award and arbitration agreement, and a diplomatic confirmation letter. Once registration is accepted and the exequatur is issued, proceed to service and execution. Pursue preservation measures in parallel if asset dissipation is a risk.
Under Article 66 of Law No. 30/1999 and the New York Convention, grounds include an invalid arbitration agreement, due-process violations, the tribunal exceeding its mandate, improper tribunal composition, and conflict with Indonesian public order. Domestic annulment under Article 70 additionally covers document falsification, concealment of decisive documents, and fraud.
Uncontested registration and enforcement typically take three to seven months from initial filing to execution. Contested proceedings at first instance can extend to nine months or more. Annulment applications may take twelve months or longer, particularly if appealed to the Supreme Court.
Yes, enforcement against a BUMN is possible where the entity acted in a commercial capacity. Counsel must identify commercial assets, characterise the underlying transaction as iure gestionis, and apply for targeted attachment of non-sovereign assets. Government intervention or negotiated settlement often follows once attachment applications are filed.
In most cases, yes, provided assets are located in Indonesia and the annulment grounds appear weak. File registration promptly and run enforcement and annulment-defence strategies in parallel. Assess the merits of the annulment grounds, the speed-to-execution, and cost before committing.
If an Indonesian court sets aside the award domestically, it cannot be enforced within Indonesia. However, enforcement may still be pursued in other jurisdictions depending on their interpretation of the New York Convention. Some national courts have enforced awards that were annulled at the seat.
Counsel can apply to Indonesian courts for provisional attachment orders (sita jaminan), asset-freezing injunctions, and expedited seizure applications. Emergency orders from foreign-seated tribunals are not automatically enforceable in Indonesia but may be cited as supporting evidence of urgency in local applications.
ICSID awards benefit from an autonomous enforcement regime, Indonesia, as an ICSID Convention member, must recognise them as final domestic judgments. Non-ICSID investor-state awards follow the standard New York Convention pathway but may face sovereign-immunity arguments. Counsel should identify the treaty basis, confirm any immunity waiver, and target commercial-use assets for execution.
The Central Jakarta District Court is the sole competent court for first-instance registration of international arbitral awards in Indonesia. All petitions for recognition and enforcement must be filed at this court, regardless of where the respondent is domiciled within the country. The Chief Justice of this court issues the exequatur authorising enforcement.
The decision clarified that the definition of “international arbitral award” under Law No. 30/1999 is constitutional but must be interpreted based on the place of arbitration. Early indications suggest this stricter seat-based test will increase judicial scrutiny at the registration stage, particularly for awards with mixed-jurisdiction features. Counsel should assemble robust jurisdictional evidence before filing.

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How to Enforce International Arbitral Awards in Indonesia, a Practical Guide for Counsel & Investors

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