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Understanding how to enforce an international arbitration award in Indonesia is essential for any foreign investor or creditor holding a favourable award against an Indonesian party. Indonesia is a signatory to the 1958 New York Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards, and its domestic framework, anchored by Supreme Court Regulation No. 3 of 2023, now provides a structured, if still demanding, pathway to convert a foreign arbitral award into an enforceable Indonesian court order. The process centres on obtaining an exequatur from the Chairman of the Central Jakarta District Court, a procedure that requires meticulous documentary preparation and awareness of the specific grounds on which Indonesian courts may refuse recognition.
This guide sets out every step, document, timeline and cost benchmark that in-house and external counsel need in 2026.
Yes. A foreign arbitral award can be recognised and enforced in Indonesia provided the award originates from a state that is also party to the New York Convention, the dispute is commercial in nature under Indonesian law, and the award does not contravene Indonesian public policy. The practical route involves registration and an application for exequatur at the Central Jakarta District Court.
Indonesia’s arbitration regime rests on two primary pillars. The first is Law No. 30 of 1999 on Arbitration and Alternative Dispute Resolution (the “Arbitration Law”), which governs both domestic and international arbitration proceedings, sets out the requirements for recognition and enforcement of foreign arbitral awards, and designates the Central Jakarta District Court as the competent venue. The second is Indonesia’s accession to the New York Convention, which Indonesia ratified through Presidential Decree No. 34 of 1981, committing Indonesian courts to recognise and enforce awards rendered in other contracting states subject to the Convention’s limited refusal grounds.
In practice, however, the procedural detail of how enforcement applications are handled was for many years left to court circulars and ad hoc practice directions. That changed with the issuance of Supreme Court Regulation No. 3 of 2023 (Peraturan Mahkamah Agung or “PERMA 3/2023”), which consolidated and clarified the procedural requirements for the registration, recognition and enforcement of both domestic and foreign arbitral awards. Industry observers note that the regulation brought welcome certainty on filing timelines, document formalities and the sequencing of the registration-to-exequatur process.
For practitioners navigating recognition and enforcement of an international arbitration award in Indonesia in 2026, PERMA 3/2023 is the operative procedural instrument. Its key contributions include formalising the registration requirement as a precondition to exequatur, prescribing the documentary bundle the applicant must submit, and setting procedural time frames for the court’s consideration of the application.
| Date | Instrument | Effect on enforcement |
|---|---|---|
| 1981 | Presidential Decree No. 34/1981 | Ratified the New York Convention, Indonesia committed to recognising foreign arbitral awards from contracting states |
| 1999 | Law No. 30/1999 (Arbitration Law) | Established the domestic enforcement framework, designated the Central Jakarta District Court, and set the commercial-nature and public-policy conditions |
| 2023 | Supreme Court Regulation No. 3/2023 (PERMA 3/2023) | Consolidated procedural rules: registration steps, document requirements, time frames and sequencing for exequatur applications |
Under Article 65 of the Arbitration Law, every application for recognition and enforcement of a foreign arbitral award in Indonesia must be submitted to the Chairman of the Central Jakarta District Court (Ketua Pengadilan Negeri Jakarta Pusat). No other Indonesian court has jurisdiction over exequatur for international awards. This centralisation simplifies the filing process but also means that applicants, regardless of where the debtor’s assets are located, must engage with the Central Jakarta court in the first instance.
In practice, the applicant (the award creditor or their Indonesian legal representative) files the registration and exequatur application at the court’s civil registry office (kepaniteraan). A cover letter addressed to the Chairman of the court should accompany the submission, identifying the parties, summarising the award, and requesting registration followed by the grant of exequatur. Early indications from practitioners suggest that engaging experienced local counsel familiar with the Central Jakarta District Court’s registry staff and scheduling preferences can materially reduce administrative delays.
One critical jurisdictional requirement is that the award must have been rendered in a state that has a bilateral or multilateral treaty relationship with Indonesia on the recognition of arbitral awards, in most cases, this is satisfied through both states being parties to the New York Convention. If the seat of arbitration is in a non-Convention state, enforcement through this route is not available.
The exequatur is the judicial order that converts a foreign arbitral award into a domestically enforceable instrument. Below is the step-by-step procedure that award creditors must follow to obtain exequatur in Indonesia under the current framework.
Assemble the complete set of original or certified-copy documents required for filing. At a minimum, this includes the authenticated original (or certified copy) of the arbitral award, the original arbitration agreement (or certified copy), and any relevant procedural orders. Organise the bundle using a consistent annex-naming convention, for example, Annex A: Arbitral Award (certified copy), Annex B: Arbitration Agreement, Annex C: Power of Attorney, to facilitate efficient registry processing.
All documents not in Bahasa Indonesia must be accompanied by a certified Indonesian-language translation prepared by a sworn translator (penerjemah tersumpah) registered with a competent Indonesian court. The arbitral award and arbitration agreement must also be legalised, either through apostille (if the country of origin is a party to the Hague Apostille Convention) or through consular legalisation at the Indonesian embassy or consulate in the country of origin. Notarisation of supporting documents such as the power of attorney is typically performed by a notary public in the country of origin and then legalised for use in Indonesia.
Submit the prepared bundle to the civil registry office of the Central Jakarta District Court. The applicant’s Indonesian counsel should present:
The registry will record the filing, assign a case number, and confirm receipt. Award creditors should retain a stamped copy of every submitted document for their records.
Once the registration is complete, the Chairman of the Central Jakarta District Court will examine the application. The court’s review is not a re-examination of the merits of the underlying dispute. Instead, the Chairman verifies that the formal conditions for recognition are met, including the New York Convention requirements, the commercial-nature condition, and the absence of public-policy conflicts. The likely practical effect of PERMA 3/2023 is that this review now follows more predictable procedural time frames than under the previous, largely ad hoc practice. If the Chairman is satisfied, an exequatur order (penetapan eksekuatur) is issued.
Should the application be refused, the award creditor may pursue further legal remedies, including an appeal. If the exequatur is granted, the award creditor may then proceed to the execution stage, requesting the court to issue an execution order (penetapan eksekusi) and, where necessary, instructing the court bailiff to seize and liquidate the debtor’s Indonesian assets.
The documentary requirements are one of the most common sources of delay in enforcement proceedings. The following table provides a detailed checklist of the documents required to enforce a foreign arbitral award in Indonesia, together with the applicable formalities and practical sourcing notes.
| Document | Formality required | Where to obtain |
|---|---|---|
| Arbitral award (authenticated original or certified copy) | Original or certified copy; apostille or consular legalisation; certified Indonesian translation | Arbitral institution or tribunal secretariat |
| Arbitration agreement (original or certified copy) | Certified copy; apostille or consular legalisation; certified Indonesian translation | Client files or institutional records |
| Special power of attorney for Indonesian counsel | Notarised in country of origin; apostille or consular legalisation; certified Indonesian translation | Executed by award creditor; notarised locally |
| Cover letter / registration request to the Chairman | In Bahasa Indonesia; signed by Indonesian counsel | Prepared by local counsel |
| Exequatur application (petition) | In Bahasa Indonesia; signed by Indonesian counsel | Prepared by local counsel |
| Evidence that the award is final and binding | Certificate from the arbitral institution or a declaration; certified Indonesian translation | Arbitral institution |
| Proof of New York Convention membership (seat state) | Documentary evidence (e.g., UNCITRAL status list printout) | New York Convention website or UN Treaty Collection |
| Identity documents of the parties | Copies; certified Indonesian translation where not in Bahasa Indonesia | Client files |
Sample annex naming convention:
Practical notes on translations and legalisation: Only sworn translators officially registered with an Indonesian court may prepare the certified translations. For awards originating in apostille-convention countries, the apostille route is faster and more cost-effective than consular legalisation. Award creditors should verify the apostille status of the seat country before initiating the legalisation process, and they should allow adequate lead time, obtaining apostilles or consular legalisations typically takes one to four weeks depending on the jurisdiction.
Indonesian courts may refuse the recognition and enforcement of a foreign arbitral award only on the grounds prescribed by Article V of the New York Convention, as incorporated into Indonesian law. These grounds are exhaustive, they represent the only bases on which a respondent (award debtor) may resist enforcement, and the only bases on which the court may decline to issue an exequatur of its own motion.
The Article V grounds fall into two categories. The first covers grounds that the respondent must raise and prove:
The second category covers grounds the court may raise of its own motion:
The public-policy ground is, in practice, the most contested basis for refusal of recognition in Indonesian courts. Indonesian jurisprudence has not always applied the narrow, internationally accepted interpretation of public policy that limits the defence to violations of fundamental principles of law and justice. Industry observers expect that post-PERMA 3/2023 court practice will increasingly align with the international consensus, treating public policy as a narrow safety valve rather than a broad mechanism for reviewing the merits, but award creditors should prepare for the possibility that respondents will raise public-policy objections and that courts may engage with them substantively.
Due-process challenges are the second most frequently invoked ground. To mitigate this risk, award creditors should attach to their exequatur application complete evidence that the respondent was properly notified at every stage of the arbitral proceedings, including notices of arbitration, appointment communications, hearing schedules, and procedural orders. A comprehensive procedural record submitted at the filing stage can significantly reduce the likelihood that a due-process challenge will succeed.
Tactical tips for foreclosing refusal arguments include: attaching a sworn witness statement or affidavit confirming service and notice; providing the full procedural history certified by the arbitral institution; and addressing any known irregularity proactively in the exequatur application itself rather than waiting for the respondent to raise it.
One of the most frequent questions from award creditors is how long enforcement will take and what it will cost. The answer depends heavily on whether the respondent contests the exequatur application and, if so, on what grounds. The table below provides benchmark estimates for three common scenarios based on practitioner experience and published firm guidance.
| Scenario | Typical timeline | Typical cost range (USD) |
|---|---|---|
| Uncontested registration and exequatur | 6–10 weeks | $3,000 – $7,500 |
| Registration with minor challenge | 3–6 months | $8,000 – $20,000 |
| Full contest on public policy / appeal to Supreme Court | 9–18+ months | $25,000+ (varies widely) |
Cost breakdown notes: Court filing fees at the Central Jakarta District Court are relatively modest. The bulk of costs arise from local counsel fees, sworn translation charges (which vary by document length and language pair), legalisation or apostille fees, and, in contested matters, advocacy costs for defending the exequatur application against the respondent’s challenges. Where enforcement proceeds to execution (asset seizure), additional court bailiff and administrative fees apply.
Best-practice tips to reduce time and costs:
Successful enforcement of a foreign arbitral award in Indonesia requires not only procedural compliance but also strategic planning. The following action checklist provides a client-ready timeline for the enforcement process.
Phase 1, Days 0–7: Pre-filing preparation
Phase 2, Days 8–30: Filing and registration
Phase 3, Months 1–3+: Court examination and execution
Common pitfalls to avoid:
Enforcing an international arbitration award in Indonesia is a structured but demanding process. The framework, comprising the Arbitration Law, the New York Convention, and Supreme Court Regulation No. 3/2023, gives award creditors a clear pathway to exequatur at the Central Jakarta District Court, provided they comply meticulously with documentary formalities and anticipate the refusal grounds that respondents may invoke. With careful preparation, experienced local counsel, and strategic timing, the process can be completed efficiently and cost-effectively. To connect with an experienced arbitration practitioner or browse the Indonesia lawyer directory, visit Global Law Experts.
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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