Our Expert in Uganda
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Last updated: May 10, 2026. This article is reviewed every 60 days to reflect new case law and procedural rules.
Uganda’s arbitration landscape has shifted decisively. The Arbitration and Conciliation (Amendment) Act 2024 narrowed the statutory grounds on which a party may challenge an arbitral award, reinforcing the finality that arbitration lawyers Uganda practitioners and their clients have long sought. Simultaneously, the Judicature (Court Annexed Mediation) Rules 2026 introduced mandatory mediation referrals in designated civil proceedings, creating new interaction points between court processes and existing arbitration clauses. Several 2024–2026 Commercial Court and Court of Appeal decisions have already tested the boundaries of the amended regime, confirming that appeals against set-aside rulings face significantly higher thresholds than before.
For in-house counsel, general counsel and construction or project directors operating in Uganda, the practical message is clear: review every existing arbitration clause, update enforcement and interim-relief strategies, and align dispute escalation provisions with the current statutory framework.
The Arbitration and Conciliation Act, Cap. 5, which has governed domestic and international commercial arbitration in Uganda since 2000, received its most significant overhaul through the Arbitration and Conciliation (Amendment) Act 2024. Understanding precisely what changed, and what remained untouched, is essential for every party drafting or enforcing arbitration agreements in Uganda today. For a broader analysis of the rule changes affecting arbitration in Uganda, see the Uganda arbitration rules 2026 analysis published on this site.
The amendments strengthen Uganda’s position as a viable seat for commercial arbitration in Uganda and across the East African region. By narrowing set-aside grounds and limiting appellate routes, the 2024 changes make awards rendered in Uganda more resistant to protracted challenge litigation. Parties selecting a Ugandan seat gain greater award finality, a factor increasingly weighed by international investors and lenders. For context on how Uganda compares globally, see the 2025 top countries for international arbitration assessment.
Conversely, parties that historically relied on broad-based court challenges to delay enforcement must now recalibrate their litigation strategy. Contracts signed before the 2024 amendments but with disputes arising afterward will generally be governed by the amended Act for procedural matters, making clause review an immediate priority.
The question most frequently raised by counsel operating in this jurisdiction is: what are the grounds for appealing an arbitral award in Uganda after the Arbitration and Conciliation (Amendment) Act 2024? The answer is that the 2024 amendments have significantly restricted the available grounds, and practitioners must approach any challenge application with precision.
Under Section 34(2) of the Arbitration and Conciliation Act (as amended), a party may apply to the High Court to set aside an arbitral award only on the following grounds:
Additionally, the court may set aside an award on its own initiative if it finds that:
Under Section 34(3) of the Act, an application for setting aside an arbitral award may not be made after three months have elapsed from the date on which the applicant received the award. Where a request for correction or interpretation of the award has been made under Section 33, the three-month period runs from the date the tribunal disposed of that request.
The procedural steps for filing a set-aside application are as follows:
Appeals against arbitral awards in Uganda no longer offer a broad merits review. Parties cannot re-argue the substance of the dispute through a set-aside application. The Court of Appeal has confirmed this restriction, holding that judicial intervention should be exercised sparingly and only within the confines of the statutory grounds.
The Uganda Court of Appeal has confirmed the restriction on appeals from High Court set-aside decisions, reinforcing that leave to appeal will only be granted where a genuine point of law of general public importance arises. Local practitioner analysis indicates that the Commercial Division has consistently declined to re-examine the merits of the underlying dispute when hearing set-aside applications, treating the statutory grounds as an exhaustive list. Early indications suggest that the 2024 amendments have reduced the volume of speculative set-aside applications, though parties continue to test the public policy ground in construction and infrastructure disputes.
Enforcement of arbitral awards in Uganda follows distinct pathways depending on whether the award is domestic or foreign. Both routes have been refined by the 2024 amendments and clarified by recent court practice. This section provides the step-by-step playbook that arbitration lawyers Uganda practitioners and in-house counsel need.
Under Section 35 of the Arbitration and Conciliation Act, a domestic arbitral award is recognised as binding and, upon application to the High Court, is enforceable in the same manner as a decree of the court. The practical steps are:
Uganda is a signatory to the New York Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards. Part III of the Arbitration and Conciliation Act governs the recognition and enforcement of foreign arbitral awards. The procedure is:
The defences available to a party resisting enforcement are narrow and mirror the set-aside grounds:
| Enforcement step | Typical deadline / timeline | Documents required |
|---|---|---|
| File application (domestic award) | No fixed limitation for enforcement, but act promptly; delay may attract equity arguments | Original or certified award; arbitration agreement; affidavit in support |
| Serve respondent | Within timelines prescribed by the Civil Procedure Rules | Sealed copies of the application; supporting affidavit |
| File application (foreign award, NYC) | No fixed Convention deadline, but national limitation rules may apply | Authenticated original award (or certified copy); original agreement (or certified copy); certified English translation (if applicable) |
| Court hearing and enforcement order | 2–6 months (varies by court schedule and whether defences are raised) | Reply affidavits addressing any defences; procedural record if procedural fairness challenged |
| Execution of enforcement order | Days to weeks once order issues | Execution application; warrant of attachment / garnishee order as applicable |
A critical question for parties holding an arbitral award is: can Ugandan courts grant interim relief after an arbitral award is issued? The answer is nuanced but practically important, particularly in construction and commercial disputes where assets may be dissipated during the enforcement period.
The Arbitration and Conciliation Act (as amended in 2024) preserves both the tribunal’s power to order interim measures and the court’s residual jurisdiction. The decision of where to apply depends on timing and circumstance:
Courts granting post-award interim relief expect:
For practical guidance on preparation for arbitration hearings, including interim measures strategy, see the linked resource.
Interim relief post-award in Uganda is available and increasingly utilised. The likely practical effect of the 2024 amendments is to make such relief more predictable, since the narrower set-aside grounds reduce the prospect of a respondent obtaining a stay by filing a speculative challenge.
The Judicature (Court Annexed Mediation) Rules 2026 introduced mandatory mediation referrals in specified categories of civil cases filed in or pending before the courts. For parties with existing arbitration clauses, the interaction between these rules and their contractual dispute resolution mechanisms requires careful attention.
The Rules empower courts to refer parties to mediation at any stage of proceedings, including enforcement proceedings arising from arbitral awards. However, the rules do not override a valid arbitration agreement. Where an arbitration clause exists and a party applies under Section 5 of the Arbitration and Conciliation Act for a stay of court proceedings in favour of arbitration, the court should grant the stay, the 2024 amendments reinforce this obligation.
The practical risk arises where enforcement or set-aside applications are filed in court and the judge, applying the 2026 Judicature Rules, refers the matter to court-annexed mediation. While mediation can produce efficient outcomes, it may also delay enforcement. Industry observers expect that courts will develop practice directions distinguishing between disputes suitable for mediation and enforcement applications that should proceed directly.
Drafting flags for counsel:
Businesses should also be aware of broader Ugandan regulatory developments, including employment law changes in 2026 and the 2026 tax changes, which may affect the commercial context in which disputes arise.
The 2024 amendments and 2026 procedural rules demand that counsel review and update dispute resolution clauses. The following drafting checklist and illustrative clause language are provided for guidance only and should not be treated as a substitute for tailored legal advice.
Drafting checklist:
For a deeper treatment of seat selection factors, see the 2025 top countries for international arbitration guide, which benchmarks Uganda against competing seats.
The following comparison table provides at-a-glance guidance for the three principal post-award procedures available under Ugandan law.
| Procedure | Typical timeline | Key practical risk / mitigation |
|---|---|---|
| Set-aside application (domestic award) | Must be filed within 3 months of receipt of the award; court hearing typically 2–4 months thereafter | Risk: Narrow statutory grounds post-ACA 2024 mean poorly founded applications are dismissed quickly. Mitigation: Focus on demonstrable procedural irregularity tied precisely to the statutory wording; avoid merits-based arguments. |
| Recognition and enforcement (foreign award, New York Convention) | 2–6 months from filing to enforcement order (varies with court scheduling and defences raised) | Risk: Public policy defence remains available but carries a high threshold. Mitigation: Ensure the award does not engage illegality or fundamental procedural unfairness under Ugandan law; prepare a comprehensive procedural record. |
| Post-award interim relief (court application) | Urgent, ex parte applications heard within days; inter partes hearings within 2–4 weeks | Risk: Jurisdiction and priority disputes where a set-aside application is also pending. Mitigation: Preserve assets early; include a robust interim measures clause in the contract; prepare strong affidavit evidence of dissipation risk. |
The combined effect of the Arbitration and Conciliation (Amendment) Act 2024, the Judicature (Court Annexed Mediation) Rules 2026, and recent appellate decisions is to strengthen award finality, streamline enforcement, and clarify interim relief options for parties arbitrating in Uganda. Counsel should take three immediate steps: audit existing arbitration clauses for alignment with the amended Act; update enforcement protocols to reflect the narrowed set-aside and defence grounds; and build interim relief contingencies into every post-award strategy.
For parties involved in ongoing disputes, the new regime favours well-prepared award creditors who move swiftly to enforce and, where necessary, seek interim relief. For parties considering Uganda as an arbitral seat, the 2024 reforms represent a material improvement in the enforceability and predictability of awards.
To connect with experienced arbitration lawyers Uganda practitioners, visit the Global Law Experts lawyer directory and filter by Uganda and Arbitration to identify specialists with relevant sector experience.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Belinda Lutaya Nakiganda at Birungyi, Barata & Associates, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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