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When assets are being dissipated, evidence is at risk of destruction, or the outcome of a pending arbitration is about to be frustrated, knowing how to obtain interim relief in arbitration in Nigeria is a critical skill for every disputes practitioner. The Arbitration and Mediation Act 2023 (AMA 2023) introduced a modern statutory framework that, for the first time in Nigerian law, expressly recognises emergency arbitration alongside tribunal-ordered and court-ordered interim measures. In 2026, the rollout of the National Arbitration Policy 2024–2028 and new Federal High Court practice directions have reshaped how these routes interact in practice, making route-selection and filing tactics more consequential than ever.
This guide sets out the complete procedure, eligibility tests, step-by-step filing instructions, required documents, realistic timelines and costs, so that in-house counsel, general counsel and commercial litigators can act decisively at the moment urgency demands it.
Interim (or urgent) relief in arbitration refers to temporary protective measures designed to preserve the status quo, prevent irreparable harm, or safeguard assets and evidence while a dispute is resolved on its merits. In Nigeria, such relief can take multiple forms, freezing (Mareva) orders, injunctions, the appointment of a receiver, orders for the preservation or inspection of property, and security for costs, depending on the nature of the threat and the stage of proceedings.
Under the AMA 2023, three distinct routes to interim relief are available. First, the arbitral tribunal itself may order interim measures once it has been constituted. Second, a party may apply to an emergency arbitrator appointed under the rules of the administering institution, a mechanism now expressly recognised by the Act. Third, a party may apply directly to a competent court for interim relief, either before the tribunal is constituted or in circumstances where the tribunal cannot act effectively. This power is preserved under the Act and remains exercisable by the Federal High Court and State High Courts.
Arbitration awards, including orders on interim measures, are enforceable in Nigeria. The AMA 2023 provides a dedicated enforcement regime, and Nigeria is a party to the New York Convention, which facilitates recognition and enforcement of foreign arbitral awards. For a broader perspective on the role of arbitration in resolving disputes in Nigeria, readers can consult our companion guide.
The AMA 2023 allocates interim-relief powers across several key provisions. The tribunal’s power to grant interim measures is set out in the Act’s dedicated provisions on interim measures of protection, which empower the tribunal to order any party to take specified action to preserve assets, maintain the status quo, or prevent harm. The emergency arbitrator regime is separately provided for, giving parties recourse to a sole arbitrator appointed on an expedited basis before the full tribunal is constituted. The Act also expressly preserves the court’s power to grant interim measures in aid of arbitration, a codification of the prior position under Nigerian law, ensuring that a court application does not amount to a waiver of the arbitration agreement.
Any party to a valid arbitration agreement may apply for interim relief. The applicant need not be the claimant in the underlying arbitration, respondents and counterclaimants may equally seek protective measures. Where third-party funding is in place, disclosure may be required under the applicable institutional rules, but it does not of itself disqualify an application.
To succeed, the applicant must generally satisfy the following threshold tests:
Seat and venue matter. Where the arbitration is seated in Nigeria, Nigerian courts have clear jurisdiction to support the arbitral process with court interim measures. Where the seat is foreign, Nigerian courts may still grant interim relief over assets or persons within Nigeria, though enforcement considerations become more complex.
The court route is typically preferred when the arbitral tribunal has not yet been constituted and the arbitration agreement does not provide for emergency arbitration, or when the measure sought requires coercive state power (such as a freezing order directed at a bank). Emergency arbitration is preferred where the institutional rules permit it and the parties need a decision from within the arbitral framework, often because a court application risks delay, publicity, or jurisdictional objections. In practice, many applicants pursue both routes simultaneously to maximise protection.
The procedure for obtaining urgent interim relief follows two parallel tracks, depending on whether the applicant elects the institutional/emergency arbitrator route or the court route. Many of the preparatory steps overlap. The table below summarises the process before the detailed sub-steps that follow.
| Step | Who does it | Typical duration |
|---|---|---|
| Assess urgency and select route (court vs emergency arbitrator vs tribunal) | Lead counsel / GC | Immediate, same day (hours) |
| Draft affidavit-in-support and assemble documents bundle | Counsel + in-house litigation team | 1–3 business days (shorter for ex parte applications) |
| File with institution or court (including service) | Counsel | Same day – 1 business day |
| Emergency arbitrator appointed / court schedules urgent hearing | Institution or Court Registry | 24–72 hours (institutional rules); courts as fast as same day to 7 days |
| Emergency arbitrator determination | Emergency arbitrator | Commonly within 14 days of appointment |
| Enforcement of interim order | Enforcement counsel | 1–4 weeks (varies by asset location and interlocutory challenges) |
The first action is to evaluate the nature and imminence of the threat. If assets are being moved offshore or evidence is at risk of destruction, time is the dominant factor. Review the arbitration clause: does it incorporate institutional rules that provide for emergency arbitration? If so, and if the tribunal has not yet been constituted, the emergency arbitrator route is likely faster and more integrated with the arbitral process. If no emergency arbitrator mechanism exists, or if the relief requires the coercive power of the state (for example, a freezing order binding on third-party banks), apply to the Federal High Court or the relevant State High Court.
In many urgent situations, a dual-track approach, filing simultaneously at the institution and at court, is the most protective strategy.
Regardless of the route chosen, the application packet must be assembled with precision and speed. The central document is the affidavit-in-support, sworn by the applicant or a person with direct knowledge of the facts. This affidavit must set out: the nature of the underlying dispute; the arbitration agreement and its terms; the specific interim relief sought (with proposed wording for the order); the facts giving rise to urgency; the risk of irreparable harm if relief is not granted; and the balance-of-convenience analysis.
For freezing order applications, the draft order must follow Mareva-style wording, specifying the assets to be frozen, the maximum value, and any carve-outs for ordinary living or business expenses. All documentary evidence, bank records, contracts, correspondence, forensic schedules, should be exhibited and numbered sequentially. A corporate applicant must attach a board resolution authorising the application, and all parties’ identity/KYC documents should be ready, particularly where the relief targets beneficial owners.
Emergency arbitration route: File the application with the administering institution (for example, the ICC, LCIA, Lagos Court of Arbitration, or the Regional Centre for International Commercial Arbitration) using the institution’s prescribed emergency arbitration request form. Pay the required filing and administrative fees. The institution will appoint the emergency arbitrator, typically within 24–72 hours of receipt of a complete application. Serve the application on the respondent in accordance with the institutional rules, most rules require simultaneous service.
Court route: File the motion on notice (or an ex parte motion, if justified by the urgency) at the registry of the Federal High Court or the appropriate State High Court. Attach the affidavit-in-support, all exhibits, the draft order, and proof of the arbitration agreement. Pay the applicable court filing fees and process-service fees. Serve the respondent as directed by the rules, an urgent injunction application in Nigeria may be heard ex parte, but the court will ordinarily require an inter partes return date within days. Increasingly, courts accept electronic filing and service, but confirm the position at the relevant registry before filing.
At the hearing, whether before the emergency arbitrator or the court, the applicant must present oral and documentary evidence in support of the threshold tests. For an ex parte court hearing, the duty of full and frank disclosure is paramount: the applicant must bring to the attention of the court any facts that could weigh against the application, including any defence the respondent is likely to raise. Failure to make full disclosure is a recognised ground for the order to be discharged.
Emergency arbitrators typically conduct proceedings on an expedited documentary basis, with limited or no oral hearing, and issue a determination commonly within 14 days of appointment. Courts hearing urgent injunction applications in Nigeria will often schedule hearings within the same day to 7 days of filing, depending on the court’s calendar and the practice directions in force.
The tribunal or court may impose conditions, most commonly, a requirement that the applicant provide security for damages (an undertaking as to damages) or security for costs. Counsel should advise the client on the quantum and form of such security before the hearing.
Once an interim order is made, the applicant must act immediately. An emergency arbitrator’s order may need to be converted into a court order for effective enforcement, particularly where it binds third parties (such as banks or custodians). File the order with the court for recognition and enforcement, attaching the original order, the arbitration agreement, and evidence of due service.
Monitor compliance continuously. If the respondent breaches the interim order, apply to the court for contempt proceedings or to the tribunal for further directions. Interim relief is temporary: the applicant must apply to extend or convert the relief into a final order or award before its expiry. Track every deadline imposed by the order, missed deadlines can result in the automatic lapse of protection.
For detailed guidance on the hearing process, see our guide on preparation for and conduct of the arbitration hearings.
The documents needed for an urgent interim relief application must be assembled before filing. Incomplete or poorly organised bundles are among the most common causes of delay and refusal. The following checklist covers both the court and emergency arbitration routes.
| Document | Notes |
|---|---|
| Affidavit-in-support (sworn) | Principal affidavit by the applicant or a person with direct knowledge. Must set out facts, urgency, risk of harm, balance of convenience. Exhibits numbered sequentially. Sworn or commissioned under Nigerian affidavit rules. |
| Draft order / proposed interim relief | Precise wording of the order sought, Mareva/freezing order format where relevant, specifying assets, maximum value, and carve-outs. |
| Arbitration agreement and underlying contract | Clear copy of the contract containing the arbitration clause. Identify the seat, governing law, and any emergency arbitrator provision. |
| Evidence of risk (bank records, invoices, correspondence) | Certified copies. Include forensic bank schedules, transaction timelines, and any evidence of asset movement or dissipation. |
| Corporate authorisation / board resolution | Required where the applicant is a corporate entity, authorises counsel to act and to seek the specific relief. |
| Identity documents / KYC | For all parties and beneficial owners, essential for freezing orders directed at named individuals or entities. |
| Security valuation or asset schedule | For receiver appointments or where security for costs may be ordered. Include independent valuations where available. |
| Proof of service plan | Details of who to serve, method of service (personal, substituted, electronic), and an affidavit of service template. |
| Third-party funding agreement (if applicable) | Disclosure note with redaction instructions, where required by institutional rules. |
| Institutional rules and emergency arbitration request form | If applying to an institution: use the institution’s prescribed form (ICC, LCIA, LCA, RCICAL, or other). Attach a copy of the applicable rules. |
A well-structured affidavit-in-support for interim relief should follow this general skeleton:
Speed is the defining feature of any application for interim relief. The table below consolidates the key milestones, the actions required at each stage, and the typical timescales that apply in practice under the AMA 2023 framework and current court practice directions.
| Milestone | Action required | Typical timescale |
|---|---|---|
| Decision to seek interim relief | Evaluate urgency; choose court, emergency arbitrator, or dual-track route | Hours, same day |
| Prepare and assemble application packet | Draft affidavit, collate exhibits, prepare draft order, obtain corporate authorisation | 1–3 business days (can be compressed to same day for extreme urgency) |
| File application | Submit to institution registry or court registry; pay applicable fees | Same day – 1 business day |
| Emergency arbitrator appointed | Institution reviews application and appoints EA | 24–72 hours (institution dependent) |
| Emergency arbitrator determination | EA conducts expedited proceedings and issues decision | Commonly within 14 days of appointment |
| Urgent court hearing (ex parte or on notice) | Court schedules and hears the application | Same day – 7 days (court practice directions vary by division) |
| Enforcement of interim order | File for enforcement or recognition at court; serve on third parties (banks, custodians) | 1–4 weeks (varies by asset location and challenges) |
| Extension or conversion of interim relief | Apply to tribunal or court to extend/convert before expiry of the interim order | File before expiry, follow the specific terms of the order |
Nigeria’s position among the top countries for international arbitration and dispute resolution reflects improvements in these procedural timelines and the growing sophistication of institutional infrastructure.
The cost of obtaining interim relief varies significantly based on the route selected, the complexity of the application, the institution involved, and the amount in dispute. The following table provides realistic cost bands drawn from institutional fee schedules and practitioner experience.
| Item | Typical amount / estimate | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Institutional filing fee (emergency arbitration / administration) | ₦100,000 – ₦1,000,000+ | Varies by institution and sum in dispute. Some institutions apply a percentage-based scale. |
| Emergency arbitrator fees | ₦300,000 – ₦5,000,000+ | Dependent on complexity, arbitrator’s hourly rate, and the duration of the expedited proceedings. |
| Federal High Court filing fee (urgent petitions) | Variable (small fixed administrative fee + service costs) | Confirm with the specific court registry. Filing fees for interlocutory applications are modest relative to institutional costs. |
| Counsel fees (urgent application, drafting, attendance, travel) | ₦300,000 – ₦6,000,000+ | Ex parte and urgent work attracts a premium. Range spans junior counsel for straightforward applications to senior counsel for high-value complex matters. |
| Enforcement costs (process servers, bailiffs) | ₦50,000 – ₦500,000 | Depends on asset location, number of third parties to serve, and logistical complexity. |
| Security for damages / undertaking as to damages | Variable, potentially significant | Courts and emergency arbitrators may require the applicant to provide security. Discuss quantum and form with the client before the hearing. |
Where fees are payable to foreign-based arbitrators or foreign counsel, Nigerian withholding tax rules may apply to cross-border payments. In-house teams should confirm the applicable withholding tax rate and any treaty-based exemptions before remitting fees, as non-compliance can create secondary liability for the paying party.
Two developments in 2026 have meaningfully altered the landscape for parties seeking court interim measures in Nigeria and emergency arbitration in Nigeria.
National Arbitration Policy 2024–2028, 2026 implementation phase. The Federal Government’s National Policy on Arbitration and Alternative Dispute Resolution, covering the period 2024–2028, entered its active implementation phase in 2026. The policy encourages the use of arbitration as the primary mechanism for commercial dispute resolution, signals government support for institutional arbitration infrastructure, and promotes Nigeria as a seat for international arbitration. The likely practical effect for interim relief applicants will be greater institutional readiness, more institutions offering emergency arbitrator services, faster appointment processes, and a growing pool of qualified emergency arbitrators.
Federal High Court practice directions. Recent Federal High Court practice directions issued in 2026 have increased the court’s focus on expedited hearing of applications arising from arbitration proceedings. Early indications suggest that the court is scheduling urgent arbitration-related applications more rapidly, sometimes within the same sitting day, and requiring more detailed sworn evidence of urgency at the point of filing. In a notable example from early 2026, the Federal High Court moved swiftly to restore the status quo and suspend an interim administrator pending the resolution of an underlying arbitral dispute, underscoring the court’s willingness to intervene decisively in support of arbitral processes.
For additional insight into enforcing orders through specialised forums, see our article on enforcing intellectual property rights in Nigeria through arbitration and specialised courts.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Emokiniovo Dafe-Akpedeye at Compos Mentis Legal Practitioners, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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