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Last updated: 9 July 2026
When a debtor in Indonesia enters Penundaan Kewajiban Pembayaran Utang (PKPU, suspension of debt‑payment obligations) or is declared bankrupt (pailit) by a Commercial Court, every secured creditor faces a critical question: how to enforce security after insolvency in Indonesia without forfeiting priority or missing a statutory deadline. Under Law No. 37 of 2004 on Bankruptcy and PKPU (UU 37/2004), secured creditors, holders of Hak Tanggungan (land mortgage), fiduciary assignments, or pledges, are subject to an automatic stay of up to 90 days, after which they must exercise their enforcement rights within a strict two‑month window or risk surrendering the collateral to the court‑appointed receiver (kurator).
This guide sets out the complete enforcement of security Indonesia procedure for 2026: who qualifies, what documents are needed, the exact timeline and key deadlines, realistic costs, and the common pitfalls that can derail even well‑prepared creditors.
Enforcement of security after insolvency in Indonesia is governed primarily by UU 37/2004, which establishes the bankruptcy and PKPU framework, read alongside the specific security laws that define each type of collateral interest. The process applies to any creditor whose claim is backed by a proprietary right in the debtor’s assets, most commonly a Hak Tanggungan over land and buildings (governed by Law No. 4 of 1996, the Hak Tanggungan Law), a fiduciary assignment over movable assets or intangibles (governed by the Fiduciary Transfer Law), or a traditional pledge (gadai) over movable property.
Secured creditor enforcement follows a defined statutory sequence. Once the Commercial Court issues a bankruptcy decision or admits a PKPU petition, an automatic stay takes effect. During this stay, lasting a maximum of 90 days from the date of the decision, the secured creditor cannot execute against its collateral. After the stay expires, the creditor receives a two‑month enforcement window in which to realise the security and recover proceeds. If the creditor fails to complete enforcement within those two months, the kurator is entitled to take custody of the collateral and to sell it as part of the general bankruptcy estate.
This article is relevant to banks, bondholders, export credit agencies, asset managers and any other party holding registered security over Indonesian assets. It also addresses foreign secured creditors who hold security perfected in Indonesia but operate from outside the jurisdiction. Understanding each stage of the bankruptcy enforcement procedure, and the precise triggers for the 90‑day and two‑month periods, is essential for preserving priority and maximising recovery.
Not every creditor with a contractual claim over collateral qualifies as a secured creditor under Indonesian insolvency law. Eligibility hinges on two conditions: the type of security interest held, and whether that interest was properly perfected before (or, in limited cases, after) the insolvency filing.
The following creditors are eligible to exercise self‑help enforcement rights under UU 37/2004:
Creditors whose security was never registered or perfected, for example, where an APHT was signed but not lodged with BPN, are treated as unsecured creditors and lose the right to self‑help enforcement. This distinction is crucial: proof of perfection must be assembled immediately upon learning of the insolvency filing.
Foreign secured creditors face additional eligibility requirements when seeking to enforce security after insolvency in Indonesia. The following practical prerequisites apply:
The secured creditor enforcement process follows a five‑stage sequence, from the moment the insolvency filing becomes known through to the distribution of auction proceeds. Each step below identifies the responsible party, the governing provision, and the practical time frame.
The moment a secured creditor learns of a debtor’s PKPU application or bankruptcy declaration, the clock starts. The creditor, typically through its in‑house legal or credit recovery team, should take the following immediate actions:
Failure to act within the first week can narrow options significantly, particularly if the kurator moves quickly to take inventory of the debtor’s estate.
Under UU 37/2004, all creditors, secured and unsecured, must lodge a proof of debt (pendaftaran tagihan) with the court‑appointed kurator. Although secured creditors retain the right to enforce independently, registering the claim protects the creditor’s position in the event that the security proves insufficient to cover the full amount owed (in which case the shortfall ranks as an unsecured claim).
This is the most consequential tactical decision in the entire bankruptcy enforcement procedure. During the 90‑day stay period, enforcement of security is suspended. The creditor uses this time to evaluate two options:
In a PKPU scenario (as distinct from outright bankruptcy), enforcement is generally stayed for the duration of the PKPU process while the debtor attempts to reach a composition plan (perdamaian) with its creditors. If the PKPU fails and converts to bankruptcy, the 90‑day → two‑month enforcement sequence then applies. Industry observers expect courts to scrutinise any attempt to lift the stay during an active PKPU, though creditors retain the right to oppose the composition plan and push for bankruptcy conversion.
Once the 90‑day stay ends, the two‑month enforcement window commences. The creditor must act decisively. The practical steps are:
After the auction, the creditor should monitor the distribution of proceeds closely. The auction price, net of KPKNL fees and taxes, is applied first to the secured creditor’s claim. Any surplus is returned to the bankruptcy estate. If the proceeds are insufficient to cover the full claim, the shortfall becomes an unsecured claim against the estate. The creditor retains the right to file objections with the supervisory judge if it believes the auction was conducted irregularly or the sale price was manifestly inadequate.
| Step | Who Does It | Typical Duration |
|---|---|---|
| Verify insolvency filing and instruct counsel | Secured creditor / counsel | Day 0–7 |
| Check registration/perfection; lodge proof of claim with kurator | Creditor / counsel | Day 7–30 |
| Tactical decision: enforce independently or coordinate with kurator | Creditor and counsel | By end of stay (maximum 90 days) |
| Submit auction application; enforce collateral via KPKNL | Creditor or kurator, and KPKNL | Two‑month enforcement window (Day 90–150) |
| Auction, realise proceeds, distribution | KPKNL / kurator | 4–12 weeks (varies by asset and location) |
Assembling a complete document set before the enforcement window opens is critical. Missing or defective documents can delay the KPKNL auction application or give the kurator grounds to challenge the creditor’s secured status. The table below sets out every document typically required, together with the issuing authority and practical notes.
| Document | Notes |
|---|---|
| Certified court order (PKPU admission or bankruptcy declaration) | Issued by the Commercial Court. A certified copy is required to prove the insolvency and the date from which statutory deadlines run. |
| Proof of debt / claim documentation (loan agreement, promissory notes, facility letter) | Issued or held by the creditor. Must be notarised if required under the original facility terms. Foreign‑language documents must be translated into Bahasa Indonesia by a sworn translator. |
| Evidence of perfected security, APHT / fiduciary registration certificate | APHT executed before a PPAT (land deed official) and registered with the Land Office (BPN) as required by Law No. 4 of 1996. Fiduciary assignments must be registered in the online Fiduciary Register. |
| Title certificate (Sertifikat Hak Milik or equivalent land right certificate) | Issued by BPN. A certified copy is required for the KPKNL auction application and for title transfer to the successful bidder. |
| Power of Attorney (in favour of local counsel) | Notarised; apostilled or consularly legalised if executed outside Indonesia. |
| Proof of default / notice of default | Creditor records: demand letters, account statements, evidence of missed payments. |
| Kurator appointment letter and bankruptcy registry entries | Issued by the Commercial Court. Required to confirm the identity of the kurator and to coordinate the KPKNL auction application. |
| Independent asset appraisal | Prepared by a licensed independent appraiser (penilai). Required by KPKNL as the basis for setting the minimum bid price. |
The enforcement timeline 90 days two months framework is the single most important procedural element for secured creditors. Missing either deadline can result in the loss of self‑help enforcement rights and significantly lower recovery. The table below maps each critical event to its legal trigger and practical consequence under UU 37/2004.
| Event | Trigger / Start Date | Practical Deadline and Consequence |
|---|---|---|
| Bankruptcy decision or PKPU commencement published | Date of Commercial Court decision | Automatic stay period begins. Secured creditors may not enforce collateral. Maximum duration: 90 days from the decision date (UU 37/2004). |
| End of automatic stay | 90 days from the decision date (unless terminated earlier by conversion or court order) | Secured creditor enforcement window opens. The creditor may commence execution actions including applying for a KPKNL auction. |
| Expiry of two‑month enforcement window | Two months after the 90‑day stay ends (approximately Day 150 from the original decision) | If the creditor has not completed or substantially commenced enforcement, the kurator may demand delivery of the collateral and administer its sale as part of the general estate. |
| KPKNL auction scheduling and conduct | After the auction application is filed and accepted | Allow 4–12 weeks for publication of auction notice, deposit collection, conduct of sale, and transfer of title. Timeframes vary by KPKNL office workload and asset type. |
The critical takeaway is that the combined statutory window, 90 days of stay plus two months of enforcement, gives secured creditors approximately five months from the bankruptcy decision to complete enforcement. In practice, the auction logistics alone can consume most of the two‑month window, making early preparation during the stay period essential.
Enforcement of security after insolvency in Indonesia involves several layers of cost. The table below outlines the main categories. Note that exact amounts vary by asset value, court location and the complexity of the case; creditors should budget conservatively and confirm current fee schedules with local counsel and the relevant KPKNL office.
| Item | Typical Amount (Estimate) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Commercial Court filing fee | Varies by claim size (official court scale) | Payable at the court registry. Confirm the current schedule with the clerk of the Commercial Court. |
| Kurator / Receiver fees | Percentage of realisation value or fixed amount, as determined by the court | Governed by Mahkamah Agung (Supreme Court) guidance. The supervisory judge sets the fee based on the complexity and value of the estate. |
| KPKNL auction administration fee | Nominal percentage of the hammer price, plus participation deposit | Administered by KPKNL under the DJKN. Bidders must typically lodge a bank guarantee or cash deposit before the auction. |
| Independent appraisal fee | Market rate (varies by asset type and size) | Paid by the party requesting the appraisal. Required by KPKNL for setting the reserve price. |
| Legal fees (creditor counsel) | Market rate, retainer plus hourly or success‑based fee | Varies by firm, seniority and case complexity. Obtain fee estimates from at least two firms before instructing. |
| Transfer taxes and duties on sale proceeds | Depends on asset type and transaction value | Land and buildings attract transfer tax; VAT may apply to certain asset categories. Consult tax counsel to determine the net recovery after deductions. |
Several developments in 2026 affect the practical landscape for secured creditor enforcement in Indonesia. The Mahkamah Agung (Supreme Court) has continued its programme of developing standardised guidelines for bankruptcy and PKPU administration. Early indications suggest that draft PERMA (Supreme Court regulations) workstreams are addressing kurator reporting obligations and fee calculation methodologies, aiming to increase transparency and reduce disputes between kurators and creditors.
Industry observers expect the 90‑day → two‑month enforcement framework to remain unchanged at the statutory level, as calls to revise UU 37/2004 have not yet resulted in amending legislation. However, the likely practical effect of the Supreme Court’s focus on standardised procedural guidance is tighter Receiver oversight and more consistent auction timelines across KPKNL offices. For secured creditors, this means that while the statutory deadlines remain the same, the administrative machinery through which enforcement occurs is becoming more predictable, but also potentially less tolerant of procedural deficiencies in auction applications.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Martin Patrick Nagel at FKNK Law Firm, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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