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Last updated: 10 May 2026
China’s Regulations on Commercial Mediation, promulgated by the State Council on 31 December 2025 and effective from 1 May 2026, represent the first dedicated national-level framework governing commercial mediation in the People’s Republic of China. Comprising 33 articles, the Regulation introduces statutory enforceability pathways for mediated settlement agreements, establishes mediator and mediation-organisation duties, and codifies confidentiality protections, changes that directly affect the way commercial litigation lawyers China-wide advise on dispute-resolution strategy. Running in parallel, the amended PRC Arbitration Law came into force on 1 March 2026, reshaping the arbitration vs mediation China calculus for general counsel and transaction teams.
This guide provides the practical analysis, model ADR clauses and compliance checklists that in-house and external counsel need to respond to both instruments.
The combined effect of the Commercial Mediation Regulation 2026 and the amended Arbitration Law means that every contract with a China-nexus dispute-resolution clause should be reviewed and, in most cases, redrafted. Here is what decision-makers need to know immediately:
Three immediate action items for GCs:
The Regulation provides the first comprehensive, national-level legal basis for commercial mediation in China. It aims to regulate commercial mediation activities, resolve commercial disputes effectively and protect the legitimate rights and interests of parties involved. The judicial administrative department of the State Council, the Ministry of Justice, is designated as the lead supervisory authority, while local counterparts oversee day-to-day administration.
The State Council promulgated the Regulations on Commercial Mediation on 31 December 2025. The full text was published in the State Council Gazette (Issue No. 2, Serial No. 1901, dated 20 January 2026) and an English-language summary was released on english.gov.cn on 6 January 2026. The Regulation entered into force on 1 May 2026. Mediations initiated before 1 May 2026 but concluding after that date occupy a transitional grey area; early indications suggest that settlements signed on or after 1 May 2026 will be assessed under the new framework regardless of when the mediation commenced, though further judicial guidance is expected.
The Regulation applies to commercial disputes, that is, disputes arising from trade, investment, finance, real estate, intellectual property and other civil and commercial relationships between equal-status market participants. It covers both domestic and cross-border commercial mediation conducted in mainland China. Disputes involving administrative, labour or consumer-protection relationships, or matters governed by separate mediation regimes (such as the People’s Mediation Law), fall outside its direct scope.
Parties may be natural persons, legal persons or unincorporated organisations. Importantly, foreign-invested enterprises and wholly foreign-owned enterprises operating in mainland China are within scope, making the Regulation directly relevant to multinational deal teams.
Commercial mediation organisations are required to establish internal management systems covering business administration, conflict-of-interest screening, fee structures and mediator training. They must maintain and retain mediation records. The Regulation does not impose a mandatory licensing regime for mediators themselves, but it sets qualification and conduct standards, including integrity, professional knowledge and mediation skills, and requires organisations to maintain a publicly accessible roster of qualified mediators. Industry observers expect provincial justice departments to issue supplementary registration guidance over the coming months.
The Regulation fundamentally changes the enforceability landscape for enforceable mediation settlements China practitioners have long sought. Before May 2026, a mediated settlement agreement was, in most cases, only a contractual document, enforceable through a fresh breach-of-contract claim rather than through direct execution. The new framework provides two primary routes to convert a settlement into a directly enforceable instrument.
A mediated settlement agreement becomes enforceable once it is either:
Both routes require that the settlement be in writing, signed (or sealed) by the parties and the mediator, and clearly state the obligations of each party. Ambiguous or conditional obligations significantly reduce the likelihood of confirmation.
The judicial confirmation route typically involves the following steps:
If one party refuses to apply jointly, the other party cannot obtain judicial confirmation unilaterally under the current framework. In that scenario, the non-defaulting party must bring a separate contractual claim, underscoring the importance of drafting clauses that commit both parties to the confirmation step.
The Regulation also contemplates that mediated settlements may be enforced in coordination with administrative bodies, for example, where a mediation organisation affiliated with a trade association or industry chamber facilitates the settlement and the parties agree to performance monitoring. While this administrative route is not equivalent to court enforcement, it provides additional pressure on a recalcitrant party through regulatory and industry channels.
For emergency measures, such as asset preservation or injunctive relief, the Regulation does not itself create standalone interim relief powers. Parties seeking emergency measures must apply to a People’s Court under the Civil Procedure Law or, where applicable, invoke emergency arbitrator provisions under the amended Arbitration Law.
Use this checklist before and during every settlement negotiation:
<Model clause, Enforceable settlement execution clause>
“Within [15] business days following the execution of this Mediated Settlement Agreement, the Parties shall jointly apply to the [name] People’s Court for judicial confirmation of this Agreement pursuant to the Regulations on Commercial Mediation (State Council Decree No. [XX], effective 1 May 2026). Each Party irrevocably undertakes to cooperate in good faith with such application and to provide all documents and authorisations reasonably required by the court. In the alternative, the Parties may present this Agreement to [name] Notary Public for the issuance of an enforcement clause.”
Mediation confidentiality China practitioners have historically managed through contractual undertakings alone. The Commercial Mediation Regulation 2026 now provides a statutory baseline, giving confidentiality protections a firmer legal footing.
The Regulation requires mediators, mediation organisations and their staff to maintain the confidentiality of information obtained during the mediation process. This includes commercial secrets, personal information and the content of offers, concessions and discussions made during mediation. The duty extends beyond the conclusion of the mediation and survives the mediator’s departure from the organisation.
Confidentiality under the Regulation is not absolute. The statutory exceptions include:
Regarding evidence admissibility, statements, admissions and proposals made by parties during mediation are generally inadmissible in subsequent arbitration or court proceedings unless the parties agree otherwise. This “without prejudice” protection is critical to encouraging candid negotiations but requires careful handling, parties should ensure that any factual admissions they wish to preserve for enforcement purposes are recorded separately in the settlement agreement itself, not merely in mediation session minutes.
<Model clause, Confidentiality and waiver clause>
“All information disclosed, offers made and communications exchanged during the mediation (collectively, ‘Mediation Communications’) are confidential and subject to the confidentiality protections of the Regulations on Commercial Mediation. Neither Party shall use or disclose any Mediation Communications in any arbitration, court proceeding or other forum, except: (a) with the prior written consent of all Parties; (b) to the extent required by applicable PRC law or regulation; or (c) to the extent necessary to enforce the Mediated Settlement Agreement or to apply for judicial confirmation thereof. This clause shall survive the termination of the mediation.”
Deal teams should consider whether the confidentiality scope should extend to the existence of the mediation itself, or only to its content, and whether disclosures to parent companies, auditors or regulators should be carved out.
The question of mediator liability China has previously been governed by general principles of civil law and scattered professional regulations. The 2026 Regulation consolidates and expands these duties, creating real enforcement consequences for mediators and mediation organisations that fall below the new standards.
Mediation organisations must:
Individual mediators must disclose any circumstances that could give rise to justifiable doubt as to their impartiality, including financial interests, prior relationships with parties and concurrent engagements. Failure to disclose is a ground for challenge and, post-settlement, may provide a basis for invalidation.
Where a mediator or mediation organisation breaches its statutory duties and causes loss to a party, the injured party may seek compensation under general tort or contract principles. Potential scenarios include:
Damages are assessed under general PRC civil-law principles: actual loss, reasonably foreseeable consequential loss and, in exceptional cases, statutory damages where applicable.
In extreme cases, mediator misconduct may cross criminal thresholds. If a mediator colludes with one party to defraud the other, fabricates facts or forges documents in connection with the mediation, criminal liability under the PRC Criminal Law may arise, including charges of fraud or forgery. While criminal prosecutions of mediators remain rare, the Regulation’s explicit reference to legal liability “in accordance with law” signals that regulators intend these provisions to have real deterrent force.
Parties and mediation organisations may agree to reasonable limitations on liability, for example, capping the mediator’s liability at the amount of fees paid. However, limitations purporting to exclude liability for intentional misconduct, gross negligence or breach of confidentiality obligations under the Regulation are likely to be held unenforceable as a matter of public policy. A prudent approach is to:
The combined effect of the Commercial Mediation Regulation and the amended Arbitration Law demands a fresh approach to ADR clause drafting China deal teams have relied on for years. A well-crafted multi-tier clause now offers genuine commercial advantages: mediation provides speed and confidentiality, while arbitration or litigation remains available as a backstop with full enforcement power.
The arbitration vs mediation China decision depends on the nature of the relationship and the dispute risk profile:
| Factor | Mediation-first favoured | Arbitration-first favoured |
|---|---|---|
| Ongoing commercial relationship | Yes, preserves relationship | Less relevant if one-off transaction |
| Need for interim relief / asset preservation | Mediation alone cannot grant interim relief | Arbitration (especially with emergency arbitrator) can |
| Confidentiality priority | Statutory confidentiality under 2026 Regulation | Arbitration is also generally confidential |
| Cross-border enforcement | Mediated settlement needs judicial confirmation or notarisation first | Arbitral awards enforceable under New York Convention |
| Speed and cost | Typically faster and cheaper for suitable disputes | More structured but potentially lengthier |
| Binding outcome required | Enforceable only after confirmation / notarisation step | Award is binding upon issuance |
For most joint-venture, supply-chain and M&A-related disputes, a mediation-first clause with escalation to arbitration provides the optimal balance.
<Model clause 1, Mediation-first multi-tier ADR clause>
“Any dispute arising out of or in connection with this Agreement, including any question regarding its existence, validity or termination, shall be resolved as follows:
(a) The Parties shall first attempt to resolve the dispute through commercial mediation administered by [name of registered mediation organisation] in accordance with its mediation rules and the Regulations on Commercial Mediation (effective 1 May 2026). The mediation shall be conducted in [city] in [Chinese / English / bilingual].
(b) If the dispute is not settled within [45] days from the commencement of mediation (or such longer period as the Parties may agree in writing), either Party may refer the dispute to arbitration administered by [CIETAC / BAC / other institution] under its then-current arbitration rules. The seat of arbitration shall be [city]. The language of arbitration shall be [Chinese / English]. The arbitral tribunal shall consist of [one / three] arbitrator(s).
(c) Nothing in this clause shall prevent either Party from applying to a competent People’s Court for interim measures of protection, including asset preservation, prior to or during the mediation or arbitration.”
<Model clause 2, Enforceable settlement execution clause>
(Previously set out in the Enforceability section above, incorporate by reference or reproduce in the contract.)
<Model clause 3, Confidentiality and waiver clause>
(Previously set out in the Confidentiality section above, adapt scope of carve-outs to the specific transaction.)
For transactions with a China–Hong Kong nexus, the question of cross-border enforcement requires careful planning. The China–Hong Kong service arrangement 2026 framework, which facilitates mutual service of judicial documents between mainland China and Hong Kong, complements the new mediation regime but does not automatically extend to the recognition of mediated settlements across the border.
A mediated settlement agreement confirmed by a mainland People’s Court produces a judicial confirmation order that may, depending on the applicable arrangement, be recognised and enforced in Hong Kong through the relevant mutual recognition mechanism. However, an unconfirmed mediated settlement (i.e., one that has not been judicially confirmed or notarised with an enforcement clause) has no basis for direct enforcement in Hong Kong courts.
Industry observers expect that as the mediation regime matures, new administrative or treaty-based arrangements may emerge to facilitate cross-border mediation settlement enforcement, potentially building on the framework established by the Singapore Convention on Mediation. In the interim, practitioners should:
The Regulation is already in effect. The following time-bound checklist provides a structured response plan:
| Timeframe | Action |
|---|---|
| Days 1–30 | Complete contract audit, identify all China-nexus agreements with ADR clauses. Circulate model clauses internally. Brief deal teams on the Regulation’s enforceability and confidentiality provisions. Verify that current mediator panels or preferred mediation organisations meet the new management and roster obligations. |
| Days 31–60 | Amend template contracts to include mediation-first escalation, enforceable settlement execution language and confidentiality clauses. Update negotiation playbooks. Establish signature and seal protocols (board resolutions, powers of attorney) for settlement execution. Review D&O and professional indemnity insurance to confirm coverage for mediation-related exposures. |
| Days 61–90 | Conduct training for regional deal teams and portfolio-company management on the new mediation option. Roll out amended templates for new transactions. Begin re-negotiating ADR clauses in existing high-value contracts approaching renewal. Document lessons learned from any mediations commenced under the new framework and share across the group. |
| Date | Instrument / Event | Practical Effect for Practitioners |
|---|---|---|
| 31 December 2025 | State Council promulgates the Regulations on Commercial Mediation | Legal framework established; English notices published on english.gov.cn, begin operational preparation. |
| 1 March 2026 | Amended PRC Arbitration Law becomes effective | Revised arbitration practice affects ADR clause drafting; emergency arbitrator provisions now available. |
| 1 May 2026 | Regulations on Commercial Mediation enter into force | Enforceability routes, confidentiality protections and mediator duties become binding, immediate impact on all new mediations and settlements. |
The Commercial Mediation Regulation 2026 is not a theoretical reform, it is an operational change that reshapes how disputes are managed, settled and enforced across mainland China. For commercial litigation lawyers China-based and international alike, the practical imperatives are clear: redraft ADR clauses to capture the new mediation-first option and its enforceability mechanisms; update internal playbooks to address mediator selection, confidentiality and liability risks; and build the settlement execution protocols (signatures, seals, judicial confirmation timelines) into every negotiation workflow. The firms and in-house teams that adapt fastest will secure a meaningful advantage in dispute resolution speed, cost and commercial-relationship preservation. The regulatory framework is now in place, the task is implementation.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Sizhe Huang at Chance Bridge Partners, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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