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Last reviewed: July 10, 2026
Whether an international arbitral award Indonesia-bound parties seek to enforce will actually be recognised as “international” now depends on clause-level drafting choices that many contracting teams have historically treated as boilerplate. A January 2025 Constitutional Court decision reaffirmed the constitutionality of the definition in Law No. 30 of 1999 while sharpening the criteria courts apply, producing immediate enforcement risk for awards that were previously assumed to be international without further analysis. This guide provides the practical clause templates, redline language and courtroom-risk mitigation that in-house counsel and external advisors need to protect enforceability in Indonesia’s evolving arbitration landscape.
Every recommendation below is grounded in the statutory framework, recent jurisprudence and Indonesia’s obligations under the 1958 New York Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards.
If you are negotiating or re-negotiating a cross-border contract with an Indonesian counterparty, this is the year to audit your arbitration clause. Two converging developments demand attention.
First, the Constitutional Court’s January 3, 2025 decision declared the provisions of Article 1(9) of Law No. 30 of 1999 on Arbitration and Alternative Dispute Resolution (“Arbitration Law”) constitutional, while clarifying that an award qualifies as “international” only when it is rendered by an arbitral institution or ad hoc arbitrator in a territory outside the jurisdiction of the Republic of Indonesia. The decision reinforced a textual reading that privileges the place where the award is rendered, raising the stakes for any clause that leaves seat or place language ambiguous.
Second, ongoing academic and practitioner commentary continues to call for legislative amendment to bring the Arbitration Law into closer alignment with the UNCITRAL Model Law. Until that reform materialises, industry observers expect Indonesian courts to apply the existing statutory test strictly, making defensive drafting the only reliable safeguard.
Is the seat alone decisive? Not automatically. While the seat of arbitration is the single most important factor, Indonesian courts have historically examined surrounding facts, the nationality of parties, the institution administering the arbitration, the place of hearings, and the law governing the arbitration agreement. Careful clause drafting must therefore address multiple elements, not just the seat.
Practical takeaway: every arbitration clause in an Indonesia-connected contract should expressly identify the seat, the institutional rules, the governing law of the arbitration agreement, and a recognition statement, relying on a single “place of arbitration” reference is no longer sufficient.
The starting point for any analysis of an international arbitral award Indonesia’s courts must recognise is Law No. 30 of 1999, the country’s primary arbitration statute. Two clusters of provisions govern the definition and the enforcement procedure.
Article 1(9) of the Arbitration Law defines an “international arbitral award” as an award rendered by an arbitral institution or ad hoc arbitrator outside the jurisdiction of the Republic of Indonesia. Articles 65 through 69 then set out the recognition and enforcement regime: an international arbitral award may only be recognised and enforced in Indonesia if the award involves a state that is party to a bilateral or multilateral treaty on recognition and enforcement of international arbitral awards (aligning with Indonesia’s accession to the New York Convention), the subject matter falls within the scope of commercial law under Indonesian law, and the award does not violate Indonesian public policy.
Article 66 explicitly requires that enforcement applications be filed with the Central Jakarta District Court (Pengadilan Negeri Jakarta Pusat), channelling all international enforcement proceedings through a single forum.
| Date | Decision / Event | Practical Effect on the “International” Test |
|---|---|---|
| June 9, 2010 | Supreme Court Decision No. 904 K/Pdt.Sus/2009, the court examined whether an award should be classified as foreign based on surrounding factual connections, even where certain proceedings occurred in Indonesia. | Early precedent establishing that courts may look beyond a single formal factor and consider the totality of circumstances when deciding whether an award is international. |
| January 3, 2025 | Constitutional Court declared Article 1(9) of Law No. 30/1999 constitutional, clarifying that an award is “international” when rendered outside Indonesian territory by an arbitral institution or ad hoc arbitrator. | Tightened the textual reading, reinforced that the place where the award is rendered is the primary determinant. Drafting must now ensure the seat (and thereby the place of the award) is unambiguously located outside Indonesia. |
| 2025–2026 | Ongoing calls from academics and practitioners to amend the Arbitration Law and align the definition with the UNCITRAL Model Law. | Heightened litigation risk during the reform gap, until legislative change occurs, defensive clause drafting is the principal risk-mitigation tool. |
Practical takeaway: the Constitutional Court arbitration Indonesia ruling in January 2025 did not change the statutory text but narrowed interpretive flexibility, making the precise wording in your arbitration clause more consequential than ever.
When an award-creditor applies to enforce a foreign award in Indonesia, the Central Jakarta District Court examines several fact patterns before classifying the award. Understanding these factors is essential for anyone determining when is an award international Indonesia-side.
When filing at the Central Jakarta District Court, include documentary evidence addressing each of the factors above: a certified copy of the award, the arbitration agreement, proof of the seat designation, institutional correspondence confirming the place of administration, party nationality documentation, and a sworn Indonesian-language translation of all materials. Failing to proactively address any single factor gives the respondent an argument that the award should be reclassified as domestic, triggering different procedural rules and potentially different outcomes.
Practical takeaway: treat the enforcement application as a second opportunity to prove international character, assemble evidence that maps to every fact pattern listed above.
This section is the operational core for anyone drafting an arbitration clause Indonesia-connected contracts will rely upon. The goal is to lock in as many indicia of international character as possible at the contracting stage, so that by the time an award is rendered, its classification is difficult to contest.
The following six drafting areas are critical:
| Clause Type | Draft Text (Excerpt) | When to Use |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Preferred full-protection clause | “Any dispute arising out of or in connection with this contract shall be finally resolved by arbitration administered by the ICC under its Rules of Arbitration. The seat of arbitration shall be Singapore. The language of the arbitration shall be English. The arbitration agreement shall be governed by the laws of Singapore. The parties acknowledge that any award shall constitute an international arbitral award within the meaning of the New York Convention.” | Default best-practice for cross-border Indonesia contracts where counterparty agrees to a foreign seat. |
| 2. Alternative, Indonesia seat | “The seat of arbitration shall be Jakarta, Indonesia. The arbitration shall be administered by [BANI / SIAC] under its [applicable] Rules. The substantive law of the contract shall be Indonesian law. The parties agree that the arbitration agreement is governed by the laws of [seat jurisdiction].” | When the counterparty insists on an Indonesian seat. Note: an award from an Indonesian seat will likely be classified as domestic. Use only after confirming domestic enforcement rules are acceptable. |
| 3. Dual-seat / bifurcated option | “The seat of arbitration shall be Singapore. Hearings may, for the convenience of the parties, be held in Jakarta, Indonesia, without affecting the juridical seat. The tribunal may render the award at the seat or at any other place it deems appropriate, provided such place shall be deemed the seat for all legal purposes only if expressly designated as such by the tribunal.” | When parties want physical hearings in Indonesia but need to preserve the foreign seat and international character of the award. |
| 4. Hybrid, foreign seat + recognition + forum selection | “The seat of arbitration shall be Hong Kong. The parties expressly agree that any award rendered shall be an international arbitral award and shall be enforceable in any jurisdiction, including Indonesia, in accordance with the New York Convention. For the purposes of enforcement in Indonesia, the parties consent to the jurisdiction of the Central Jakarta District Court under Articles 65–69 of Law No. 30 of 1999.” | When parties want to pre-designate the enforcement forum in Indonesia and link it to the statutory regime for international awards. |
| 5. Narrow fallback, regulatory requirement for Indonesian forum | “If Indonesian law mandates that this dispute be resolved by an Indonesian arbitral forum, such arbitration shall be administered by BANI. In all other cases, disputes shall be resolved under the ICC Rules with a seat in Singapore.” | When sector-specific regulations (e.g., oil and gas, mining, banking) may require an Indonesian forum for certain disputes while allowing international arbitration for others. |
| 6. Emergency arbitrator + interim measures | “The parties agree that the Emergency Arbitrator Provisions of the [ICC / SIAC] Rules shall apply. Either party may apply to any court of competent jurisdiction for interim or conservatory measures without prejudice to the arbitration. An emergency arbitrator’s decision shall be binding and enforceable to the extent permitted by applicable law.” | When urgent relief may be needed before a full tribunal is constituted, particularly relevant for IP, joint venture or supply-chain disputes. |
What exact wording reduces risk of domestic classification? The single most protective combination is: (a) an express foreign seat designation using the word “seat,” (b) nomination of a recognised international arbitral institution, (c) a separate governing-law clause for the arbitration agreement designating the law of the seat, and (d) an express recognition statement referencing the New York Convention.
Practical takeaway: use Clause 1 as your baseline. Fall back to Clauses 2–6 only when commercial or regulatory constraints require it, and document the reasons so enforcement counsel can later explain the choice to the court.
Confusion between “seat,” “place of hearing,” and “venue” is a recurring source of enforcement disputes in Indonesia. The distinctions carry real legal consequences for the classification of an international arbitral award Indonesia courts are asked to enforce.
| Term | Legal Meaning / Effect in Indonesia | Drafting Note |
|---|---|---|
| Seat | The juridical home of the arbitration. Determines the lex arbitri, the supervisory court, and, critically, whether the resulting award is classified as international under Article 1(9) of Law No. 30/1999. | Always state expressly: “The seat of arbitration shall be [City, Country].” Never rely on an institution’s default seat rule alone. |
| Place of hearing | The physical location where oral hearings, witness examinations or procedural meetings take place. Does not, by itself, change the seat, but inconsistent language can be exploited by a respondent to argue the award was “rendered” in Indonesia. | Add: “Hearings may be held at [location] without altering the juridical seat.” |
| Venue | An ambiguous term with no fixed legal meaning under Indonesian arbitration law. Courts may interpret “venue” as either the seat or the hearing location, depending on context. | Avoid the standalone term “venue” entirely. If used, pair it with an explicit seat designation to eliminate ambiguity. |
Practical takeaway: never let “seat” and “place” remain undefined or interchangeable in a contract, one ambiguous word can convert an international award into a domestic one in the eyes of the Central Jakarta District Court.
Understanding how to enforce a foreign award in Indonesia, and the grounds on which enforcement may be refused, is essential for anyone seeking to avoid a set-aside award Indonesia respondents may pursue. The procedural pathway and risk points are as follows.
To enforce an international arbitral award, the award-creditor must file an application with the Central Jakarta District Court under Article 66 of Law No. 30/1999. The application must include the authenticated original or certified copy of the award, the original arbitration agreement, a sworn Indonesian-language translation of both documents, and a statement from the Indonesian diplomatic representative in the country where the award was rendered confirming that the country is party to a bilateral or multilateral treaty on enforcement (typically the New York Convention).
The Central Jakarta District Court then examines the award against the requirements of Articles 66 and 67. It forwards the application to the Supreme Court (Mahkamah Agung), which issues an exequatur, a formal order granting enforcement. The process typically takes several months and may be longer if the respondent contests the application.
Common grounds for refusal include:
Defensive drafting mitigates several of these risks. An express seat designation addresses classification. A clear scope-of-disputes clause limits excess-of-authority challenges. A due-process-compliant notice and appointment mechanism, specified in the arbitration agreement, neutralises procedural-defect arguments.
An award that is set aside at the seat will, in most jurisdictions, be unenforceable under Article V(1)(e) of the New York Convention. However, a small number of jurisdictions, notably France, have enforced awards even after annulment at the seat. For Indonesia-connected disputes, the practical consequence is straightforward: if the seat-court annuls the award, obtaining enforcement in Indonesia becomes extremely difficult. This reinforces the importance of choosing a seat with a strong, pro-arbitration judiciary, and of drafting the clause to avoid set-aside exposure from the outset.
Practical takeaway: treat enforcement risk as a drafting input, choose the seat, institution and procedural safeguards at the contract stage, not after a dispute arises.
Before signing any cross-border contract with Indonesian parties or Indonesian-seated performance obligations, run this 12-point arbitration clause audit:
When your counterparty resists key protective provisions, use these negotiation scripts:
Parties drafting arbitration clauses for Indonesia in 2026 should account for recent institutional rule revisions. The ICC’s latest rule amendments (effective 2024–2026 cycle) expanded provisions on consolidation and joinder of additional parties, strengthened disclosure obligations for arbitrators, and refined the emergency arbitrator procedure. For Indonesia-connected contracts, the practical drafting implications are:
SIAC’s 2025 rule revisions similarly updated early-dismissal and expedited-procedure mechanisms. When choosing SIAC as administrator, reference the specific edition of rules to avoid ambiguity.
The practical landscape for enforcing an international arbitral award in Indonesia has shifted. The Constitutional Court’s 2025 clarification, combined with ongoing calls for legislative reform, means that clause-level precision is now the primary safeguard for award-creditors. Three immediate steps are recommended:
Proactive drafting is far cheaper than litigating classification after the fact. For international commercial transactions touching Indonesia, the clause is the first, and often the last, line of defence.
This article provides general guidance on drafting arbitration clauses for Indonesia-connected contracts. It does not constitute legal advice. Parties should seek qualified local counsel before finalising contractual provisions or pursuing enforcement proceedings.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Mahareksha S. Dillon at SSEK Law Firm, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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