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If you are asking whether you can file for bankruptcy in Indonesia, the short answer is yes, provided the statutory conditions set out in Law No. 37 Year 2004 concerning Bankruptcy and Suspension of Debt Payment Obligations (UU 37/2004) are satisfied. Indonesia’s insolvency framework permits debtors, creditors, and in limited circumstances the Public Prosecutor to petition the Commercial Court for a bankruptcy declaration (pernyataan pailit). The critical threshold is deceptively simple: the debtor must have at least two creditors and must have failed to pay at least one debt that has matured and become payable.
For many businesses and individuals, however, the more important strategic question is whether a Suspension of Debt Payment Obligations (PKPU), Indonesia’s formal restructuring procedure, is the better path forward.
Yes. Under Article 2(1) of UU 37/2004, any debtor who has two or more creditors and has failed to pay at least one debt that is due and payable may be declared bankrupt by a decision of the Commercial Court (Pengadilan Niaga). The petition can be brought by the debtor itself, by one or more of its creditors, or, in cases involving the public interest, by the Public Prosecutor. There is no statutory minimum debt amount, which means even relatively small unpaid obligations can, in principle, form the basis of a bankruptcy petition.
This low threshold is intentional. The Indonesian legislature designed the system to give creditors a fast, court-supervised mechanism for collective debt enforcement. In practice, however, courts scrutinise whether the two-creditor requirement is genuinely met and whether the debt relied upon is truly matured and undisputed, points that generate the majority of contested hearings at the petition stage.
UU 37/2004 identifies several categories of petitioner. Understanding which party you fall into determines the documents you need, the procedural route you follow, and any special permissions required before the Commercial Court will accept your petition.
A debtor may voluntarily petition for its own bankruptcy under Article 2(1) of UU 37/2004. In practice, debtor petitions are uncommon because bankruptcy leads to loss of management control and asset liquidation. A debtor petition typically arises when a company’s directors conclude that continuing to trade would worsen creditor losses, or when a debtor wants to trigger the orderly distribution mechanism rather than face piecemeal enforcement actions. Documents required for a debtor petition include:
The creditor petition route is far more common. Under Article 2(1), one or more creditors can file if they can demonstrate that the debtor has at least two creditors and has failed to pay at least one matured debt. The petitioning creditor does not need to prove insolvency in the balance-sheet sense, it only needs to show the existence of the threshold conditions. Key documents include:
The Public Prosecutor may file a bankruptcy petition where there is a public interest, for example where the debtor has absconded or its operations threaten public welfare (Article 2(2)). Separately, bankruptcy petitions against banks may only be filed by Bank Indonesia (or, since the transfer of supervisory authority, the Financial Services Authority, OJK); petitions against insurance companies and reinsurance companies may only be filed by the Minister of Finance; and petitions against securities companies may only be filed by the OJK (Articles 2(3)–(5)). These restrictions exist to protect systemically important sectors and to ensure that the relevant regulator controls the timing and process of any formal insolvency.
The threshold for a bankruptcy declaration under Indonesian law is deliberately streamlined. The Commercial Court does not conduct a full trial on the merits of every claim, it examines whether the statutory conditions are “summarily proven” (pembuktian sederhana, as required by Article 8(4) of UU 37/2004). This summary-proof standard means the petition stage is faster than ordinary civil litigation, but it also means that genuinely disputed debts can defeat a petition.
| Threshold | Legal Basis | Practical Note |
|---|---|---|
| Minimum two creditors | Article 2(1) UU 37/2004 | The petitioner must prove the existence of at least one other creditor. Tax authorities, employees with unpaid wages, and trade creditors all qualify. Courts have rejected petitions where the alleged “second creditor” was contrived or disputed. |
| At least one matured, unpaid debt | Article 2(1) UU 37/2004 | The debt must be due and payable at the time of filing. Future or conditional debts do not satisfy this element. Courts examine contractual maturity dates and any prior demand notices. |
| Summary proof (pembuktian sederhana) | Article 8(4) UU 37/2004 | If the existence or amount of the debt is genuinely contested, for example, because the debtor has a counterclaim or the contract is ambiguous, the Commercial Court may reject the petition on the basis that the facts cannot be summarily proven. |
Foreign creditors can file for bankruptcy in Indonesia provided they meet the same statutory thresholds. UU 37/2004 does not distinguish between domestic and foreign creditors. The jurisdictional test is whether the debtor is domiciled in Indonesia or conducts business in Indonesia. For corporate debtors, the registered office as recorded with the Ministry of Law and Human Rights determines the competent Commercial Court. Foreign creditors should note that all filings must be in Bahasa Indonesia and that a notarised power of attorney in favour of Indonesian-licensed counsel is required.
Debtors regularly resist bankruptcy petitions on several grounds that practitioners should anticipate:
The Commercial Court procedure is designed to move quickly by the standards of Indonesian civil litigation, although delays are not uncommon in complex cases. Below is the typical procedural sequence, followed by a realistic timeline table.
The petitioner files the bankruptcy petition with the registrar (panitera) of the competent Commercial Court. Indonesia currently has five Commercial Courts: Jakarta Pusat (Central Jakarta), Surabaya, Semarang, Medan, and Makassar. The petition must include the petition letter, evidence of debts, list of known creditors, power of attorney (if counsel is appointed), and supporting company documents. Filing fees are paid to the court registrar at the time of submission.
Court filing fees for bankruptcy petitions are set by the Supreme Court and are modest by international standards. In addition to the filing fee, the court may require the petitioner to deposit an advance for the costs of the curator (trustee) and the supervisory judge’s administration. Legal counsel fees are separate and vary depending on the complexity of the case.
Once the petition is registered, the Commercial Court must summon the debtor and schedule a hearing. At the hearing, the court examines whether the statutory threshold conditions are met under the summary-proof standard. Both the petitioner and the debtor may present documentary evidence and oral arguments. The court may also hear from other creditors who intervene.
If the court declares the debtor bankrupt, it simultaneously appoints a curator (kurator) to manage the bankruptcy estate and a supervisory judge (hakim pengawas) to oversee the process. The debtor loses management authority over its assets from the moment of the bankruptcy declaration. The curator takes control, inventories assets, and begins the formal claim verification process in which all creditors submit their claims for adjudication.
After claims are verified and the asset inventory is complete, the curator proceeds to liquidate the estate. Assets are typically sold through public auction conducted by the State Auction Office (KPKNL). Proceeds are distributed to creditors in the order of priority established by law: secured creditors first, then preferential creditors (including employees and tax authorities), and finally unsecured creditors on a pro rata basis.
A party dissatisfied with the Commercial Court’s bankruptcy declaration (or refusal to declare bankruptcy) may file a kasasi (cassation appeal) to the Supreme Court (Mahkamah Agung). The Supreme Court must decide the cassation within a statutory timeframe. A further extraordinary review (peninjauan kembali) is available in limited circumstances, such as the discovery of new evidence. Appeals can add months to the overall process.
| Stage | Statutory / Typical Duration | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Filing to first hearing | Within 20 days of registration (Article 6(4)) | The registrar must register the petition within 2 days; the court must begin hearings no later than 20 days after registration. |
| Hearing to bankruptcy declaration | No later than 60 days after registration (Article 8(5)) | The court must issue its decision within 60 days of the petition’s registration. Extensions are rare but can occur in complex multi-creditor cases. |
| Cassation appeal (if filed) | No later than 60 days after receipt of the cassation petition (Article 13(1)) | The Supreme Court must render its decision within 60 days. In practice, some delays have been observed. |
| Claim verification and distribution | Months to years | Depends on the size and complexity of the estate, the number of creditors, and whether assets are contested or located overseas. |
| Full process (filing to final distribution) | 6 months to 2+ years (typical range) | Simple cases with cooperative parties can conclude within 6–12 months. Complex estates with appeals and disputed assets take longer. |
Industry observers expect that ongoing digitalisation of the Commercial Court registry and electronic filing systems may gradually reduce administrative delays, though the statutory timeframes themselves remain unchanged under UU 37/2004.
Filing for insolvency is not the same as filing for bankruptcy in Indonesia. The term “insolvency” is often used loosely, but Indonesian law draws a sharp distinction between pailit (bankruptcy, a liquidation procedure) and PKPU (Penundaan Kewajiban Pembayaran Utang, a suspension of debt payment obligations that is closer to a restructuring or reorganisation procedure). Choosing the wrong procedure can have irreversible consequences for a debtor’s business and a creditor’s recovery prospects.
PKPU is governed by Articles 222–294 of UU 37/2004. A debtor that anticipates it will be unable to continue paying its debts may file for PKPU to obtain an automatic stay on enforcement while it negotiates a composition plan (rencana perdamaian) with its creditors. Creditors can also petition for PKPU if they believe the debtor cannot pay its debts as they fall due. If the composition plan is approved by the requisite creditor majorities and ratified (homologasi) by the court, the debtor avoids bankruptcy entirely and continues operating under the plan’s terms.
Approval of a composition plan under PKPU requires supermajority votes in each class of creditors. Under Article 281 of UU 37/2004, the plan must be approved by more than one-half in number of the recognised creditors present and voting who represent at least two-thirds in value of the total claims in each class. If the composition plan is rejected or fails, the Commercial Court must declare the debtor bankrupt, a critical risk that debtors entering PKPU must weigh carefully. PKPU voting thresholds are one of the most technically complex areas of Indonesian insolvency practice.
| Feature | PKPU (Suspension of Debt Payment) | Bankruptcy (Pailit) |
|---|---|---|
| Primary goal | Restructuring, negotiate a composition plan to compromise or reschedule debts | Liquidation, realise assets and distribute proceeds to creditors |
| Who initiates | Usually the debtor; creditors may also petition | Debtor, one or more creditors, or Public Prosecutor (rare) |
| Immediate effect | Automatic stay on enforcement actions from the date the court accepts the PKPU petition | Debtor loses management control; curator takes over the estate |
| Voting and approval | Creditors’ meeting with supermajority thresholds under Article 281 | Not applicable, the court declares bankruptcy after verifying threshold conditions |
| Outcome if unsuccessful | Court declares the debtor bankrupt | Assets liquidated and distributed; debtor may be discharged after completion |
| Typical timeline | 45 days (temporary PKPU) extendable to 270 days (permanent PKPU) | Months to years (filing through distribution) |
The practical decision tree for creditors and debtors generally works as follows. If the debtor’s business is viable and creditors are likely to recover more through restructuring than liquidation, PKPU is the preferred route. If the debtor’s operations are terminal, assets are dissipating, or the debtor is uncooperative, bankruptcy is the appropriate mechanism. Early indications from recent Commercial Court practice suggest that courts are increasingly willing to convert failed PKPUs into bankruptcies swiftly, reinforcing the importance of entering PKPU only with a realistic composition plan.
Once a bankruptcy or PKPU is declared, all creditors must submit their claims to the curator for verification. Claim verification (pencocokan piutang) is the process by which the curator examines and either accepts or disputes each claim. Only verified claims entitle a creditor to vote at creditors’ meetings and to share in the distribution of the estate.
Creditors should assemble a complete claim dossier. The following checklist covers the essential documents:
If the curator or another creditor disputes a claim, the matter is heard by the supervisory judge and, if necessary, referred to the Commercial Court for adjudication. Contested claims are placed in a “disputed” category and the creditor may not vote or receive distributions until the dispute is resolved. Common grounds for rejection include: expired limitation periods, claims based on unenforceable contracts, and failure to provide adequate documentary proof. For creditors with claims that may be challenged, preparing a thorough claim dossier, supported by notarised originals and certified translations, is essential to avoid rejection. This process of filing evidence in commercial proceedings shares structural similarities across jurisdictions, though Indonesian practice has its own distinct documentary requirements.
Foreign creditors can file for bankruptcy in Indonesia on the same basis as domestic creditors. The jurisdictional test focuses on the debtor, specifically, whether the debtor is domiciled in Indonesia, has a registered office with the Ministry of Law and Human Rights, or conducts business operations within the country. If the debtor satisfies any of these criteria, the Indonesian Commercial Court has jurisdiction regardless of the creditor’s nationality.
However, foreign creditors face several practical challenges that domestic parties do not:
The process of proving claims as a foreign creditor is comparable to the challenges faced in other developing-market insolvency systems. Those familiar with filing for insolvency in India will recognise similar themes around local-counsel requirements, translation obligations, and the importance of early evidence preparation.
The question of whether you can file for bankruptcy in Indonesia has a clear statutory answer: yes, provided the two-creditor and one-matured-debt thresholds under UU 37/2004 are met. The real challenge lies in choosing the right procedure, assembling bulletproof evidence, and navigating the Commercial Court’s summary-proof standard. Before filing, every prospective petitioner, whether debtor or creditor, should confirm that the threshold conditions are genuinely satisfied, prepare a complete documentary dossier, and consider whether PKPU offers a better strategic outcome than outright bankruptcy.
Indonesian insolvency proceedings move on tight statutory timelines, and missteps at the petition stage can be difficult to correct. Foreign creditors face additional hurdles around document legalisation, local-counsel requirements, and the non-enforceability of foreign judgments. Whether the priority is recovering a debt, restructuring a business, or defending against a petition, engaging experienced Indonesian insolvency counsel at the earliest possible stage is the single most important step a party can take.
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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