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When a construction payment dispute erupts on a Muscat infrastructure project or a commercial joint-venture unravels, in-house counsel and project sponsors in Oman face a concrete choice: pursue arbitration, whether Oman-seated through the Oman Commercial Arbitration Centre (OCAC) or at an international seat, or file a claim in the Omani civil and commercial courts. The arbitration vs litigation Oman 2026 calculus has shifted materially this year: the Omani Supreme Court clarified the enforcement route for foreign arbitral awards in April 2026, and OCAC Decision 3/2026 amended arbitration rules to streamline procedure.
This guide delivers a dimension-by-dimension comparison, a cost framework and a decisive “choose X when…” recommendation so that contractors, foreign investors, CFOs and construction lawyers can commit to the right dispute-resolution route before signing or shortly after a dispute arises.
Oman’s arbitration framework rests on Royal Decree No. 47/1997, the Civil and Commercial Disputes Arbitration Law, which draws on the UNCITRAL Model Law. The statute provides for both domestic and international arbitration, establishes the competence-competence principle (the tribunal decides its own jurisdiction), and sets out the grounds on which Omani courts may refuse to enforce an award. The Oman Commercial Arbitration Centre (OCAC), established by Royal Decree, administers institutional arbitrations and published amended rules through OCAC Decision 3/2026 on 12 April 2026, introducing procedural updates aimed at reducing administrative delay.
Parties can choose an Oman-seated OCAC arbitration, an international seat (London, Paris, Dubai or Singapore are common for GCC construction disputes), or an ad hoc arbitration under agreed rules. The choice of seat determines the supervisory court, the procedural law of the arbitration, and the enforcement treaty framework, a critical variable for cross-border enforceability. Oman is a signatory to the New York Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards, which underpins the enforceability of awards rendered at foreign seats.
Arbitration in Oman is best suited to:
What is the arbitration law in Oman? It is Royal Decree No. 47/1997, supplemented by OCAC institutional rules as most recently amended by Decision 3/2026. The statute governs the validity of arbitration agreements, tribunal appointment, interim measures, award form and the grounds for setting aside or refusing enforcement.
Omani court litigation proceeds through the Courts of First Instance, the Court of Appeal and ultimately the Supreme Court. Commercial disputes are heard by designated commercial divisions. Procedure is governed by the Civil and Commercial Procedures Law, which prescribes formal pleading stages, evidence rules, court-appointed experts and appeal rights. Judgments of Omani courts are directly enforceable within the Sultanate without a separate recognition step.
The court route retains clear advantages in specific scenarios:
The principal drawback is timing. Construction disputes Oman practitioners routinely report that complex construction and commercial cases, particularly those requiring multiple rounds of expert evidence and appeals, can take 18 to 36 months or longer through all court levels. Court proceedings are public, which limits confidentiality. And for cross-border creditors, enforcing an Omani court judgment abroad requires bilateral treaty arrangements or separate recognition proceedings in the target jurisdiction, a process that is less predictable than enforcing an arbitral award under the New York Convention.
| Dimension | Arbitration (Oman-seated or international seat) | Litigation (Omani courts) |
|---|---|---|
| Legal basis / rules | Royal Decree No. 47/1997; OCAC Rules (incl. Decision 3/2026). Parties choose seat and governing law. | Civil & Commercial Procedures Law. Courts determine jurisdiction. |
| Eligibility / scope | Most commercial and construction disputes arbitrable by agreement. Public-contract exceptions may apply. | All disputes within court jurisdiction. State/public contracts may require courts. |
| Interim relief | Tribunal can order interim measures; Omani courts can grant interim relief in support of arbitration. | Courts issue injunctions, attachment and freezing orders, enforceable immediately. |
| Enforcement (domestic) | Awards enforceable in Oman under Royal Decree No. 47/1997. 2026 Supreme Court ruling clarified route for foreign awards. | Judgments directly enforceable, no separate recognition step for domestic judgments. |
| Enforcement (cross-border) | New York Convention framework; 2026 practice improves domestic recognition of foreign-seated awards. | Requires bilateral treaties or local recognition proceedings, less predictable. |
| Typical timeline | 12–24 months for construction disputes (variable by complexity and seat). | 18–36+ months including appeals for complex construction/commercial cases. |
| Cost profile | Higher institutional and arbitrator fees; potentially lower total cost due to shorter duration and limited disclosure. | Lower court filing fees; total cost can escalate with extended timelines and formal discovery. |
| Discovery & procedure | Party-driven, limited document production, flexible procedure. | Formal procedure; broader evidence gathering but less party control. |
| Confidentiality | Proceedings and award confidential (default). | Hearings and judgments are public. |
| Remedies & damages | Damages, specific performance, declaratory relief (subject to seat law and arbitration agreement). | Damages, injunctions, statutory remedies, may include remedies unavailable in arbitration. |
| Best for | Cross-border disputes, technical construction claims, neutral forum, enforceability abroad. | Local enforcement against Omani parties, public-authority disputes, emergency judicial measures. |
For construction disputes in Oman, particularly large-scale infrastructure and EPC projects involving foreign contractors or lenders, the arbitration vs courts pros and cons have tilted further toward arbitration in 2026. The Supreme Court’s April 2026 enforcement guidance and the OCAC rule amendments mean that arbitration now offers stronger domestic enforceability alongside the established New York Convention route for cross-border recognition. Courts remain indispensable, however, when emergency freezing orders are needed before a tribunal is constituted, or when the dispute involves a public-authority contract with a mandatory court-jurisdiction clause.
The next six sections unpack each dimension with the specifics that determine the right choice for a given dispute.
Under Royal Decree No. 47/1997, the arbitration agreement must be in writing and signed by the parties or their authorised representatives. The statute enshrines the competence-competence principle: the arbitral tribunal has the power to rule on its own jurisdiction, including objections relating to the existence or validity of the arbitration clause. A party wishing to challenge tribunal jurisdiction must raise the objection no later than the submission of its statement of defence.
Cost is rarely the sole deciding factor, but it is the most frequently asked question. The table below sets out the principal fee categories for each route. Note that total cost depends on claim quantum, dispute complexity, number of experts and duration, the ranges below reflect typical construction and commercial disputes.
| Fee category | Arbitration (OCAC / international seat) | Litigation (Omani courts) |
|---|---|---|
| Institution / filing fee | OCAC registration and administrative fees calculated on claim quantum per OCAC fee schedule (Decision 3/2026). International institutions (ICC, LCIA) apply their own schedules. | Court filing fees set by Ministry of Justice schedule, typically substantially lower than institutional arbitration fees. |
| Arbitrator / judge costs | Arbitrator fees (hourly or per-diem rates; sole arbitrator vs three-member tribunal significantly affects total). Major construction disputes routinely incur material arbitrator costs. | No arbitrator fees, judicial costs borne by the State. |
| Counsel fees | Vary by firm, complexity and whether international counsel is engaged alongside Omani counsel. | Similar counsel fee ranges; may escalate with extended appeal timelines. |
| Expert / technical costs | Party-appointed experts common in construction disputes, quantum and delay experts can represent a significant cost component. | Court may appoint its own expert; party experts also possible. Similar cost range. |
| Enforcement costs | Separate court application to enforce award in Oman; additional costs if enforcing abroad under New York Convention. | Domestic enforcement costs lower for Omani judgments; cross-border enforcement less predictable and potentially more expensive. |
Is arbitration cheaper than court litigation for construction disputes in Oman? For high-value, complex technical claims, where court proceedings would likely involve multiple rounds of expert appointment, adjournment and appeal over two to three years, arbitration’s higher upfront institutional costs are frequently offset by shorter overall duration and reduced commercial disruption. For modest commercial claims where the dispute is legally straightforward, court filing fees and the absence of arbitrator fees make litigation the more cost-efficient route.
Timeline is a commercial risk factor as much as a procedural one. A delayed resolution ties up working capital, freezes project milestones and can trigger cascading contractual defaults.
Enforceability is the dimension most affected by the 2026 developments, and it is the strongest single argument for arbitration in cross-border disputes.
Can you enforce a foreign arbitral award in Oman in 2026? Yes. File an enforcement application with the competent Omani court, submit an authenticated copy of the award and the arbitration agreement, demonstrate that the award is final and binding, and confirm that no ground for refusal under Royal Decree No. 47/1997 applies. The 2026 Supreme Court ruling reinforces that this statutory procedure, rather than any more restrictive recognition route, governs enforcement of foreign awards.
Both routes can deliver compensatory damages, including liquidated damages, delay damages and loss-of-profit claims common in construction disputes. The differences are at the margins but can be commercially significant.
From a financial-impact perspective, neither route currently triggers a separate tax liability on the award or judgment itself in Oman. However, withholding-tax obligations on payments to foreign counsel or experts should be factored into cost planning for both routes.
The procedural environment for evidence gathering is a practical differentiator, particularly in document-heavy construction disputes.
For construction disputes involving trade secrets, proprietary engineering methods or sensitive pricing structures, the confidentiality default of arbitration is a material commercial benefit.
Two developments in April 2026 shifted the arbitration enforceability 2026 landscape in Oman:
Together, these developments strengthen the case for arbitration, particularly for cross-border construction and commercial disputes where the enforceability of foreign awards Oman has historically been a concern. The new law in Oman 2026 does not eliminate the role of courts; rather, it makes the arbitration route more reliable for parties who need both domestic and international enforceability.
Choose arbitration when:
Choose litigation when:
| If your priority is… | Choose… |
|---|---|
| Cross-border enforceability | Arbitration (international seat preferred) |
| Immediate asset preservation | Litigation (court injunction), then arbitration for the merits |
| Confidentiality | Arbitration |
| Lowest upfront institutional cost | Litigation |
| Fastest resolution for complex technical disputes | Arbitration |
| Public-authority or government-contract dispute | Litigation (verify arbitrability first) |
| Expert tribunal with sector knowledge | Arbitration |
| Broadest evidence-gathering powers | Litigation |
Note the hybrid option: many sophisticated construction contracts use a tiered dispute-resolution clause, negotiation, then mediation, then arbitration, with a carve-out permitting either party to seek emergency court relief at any stage. This captures the enforcement and confidentiality advantages of arbitration while preserving access to the court’s injunctive powers.
Knowing when to hire a lawyer Oman for dispute-resolution decisions is as important as making the right forum choice. Engage Oman-qualified counsel in these specific situations:
To find a lawyer in Oman with arbitration and construction-dispute experience, or to connect with Oman corporate lawyers for contract-clause review, use the links provided.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Ahmed Al Barwani at Al Tamimi, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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