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How to Obtain Interim Relief in Malaysia, Emergency Arbitrator, AIAC & Court Orders (2026 Update)

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Understanding how to obtain interim relief in Malaysia is critical for any party that needs to preserve assets, protect evidence, or maintain the status quo before or during arbitration. Malaysian law offers two parallel routes, an application to an emergency arbitrator (“EA”) under the Asian International Arbitration Centre (AIAC) Arbitration Rules 2026, and a direct application to the Malaysian High Court under the Arbitration Act 2005 (Act 646). This guide sets out each route step by step, lists the documents needed, consolidates key timelines and costs, and explains the 2026 procedural changes that affect how quickly relief can be secured.

It is designed for in-house counsel, claims teams, general counsel and SME legal leads who must act rapidly when dissipation, destruction of evidence, or breach of a contractual obligation is imminent.

Last reviewed: 12 June 2026. Reflects the AIAC Arbitration Rules 2026 and current Arbitration Act 2005 provisions.

Overview of Interim Relief in Malaysia and Who This Guide Applies To

Interim relief in Malaysia describes the range of urgent protective measures, freezing orders, asset-preservation injunctions, document-disclosure orders and security for awards, that a party may seek before an arbitral tribunal is fully constituted, or at any stage once arbitration is under way. The governing framework rests on two pillars: the Arbitration Act 2005, which defines the powers of both the tribunal and the courts, and the AIAC Arbitration Rules 2026, which contain a dedicated emergency-arbitrator procedure enabling relief within days of filing.

The general principle in Malaysian arbitration law is that the arbitral tribunal takes priority in granting interim measures where it has the power to do so. Courts, however, retain a supporting role, particularly where enforcement against Malaysian assets is needed, where a party is not bound by the arbitration agreement, or where the urgency outstrips the time required to constitute the tribunal. Malaysian courts have reconfirmed this tribunal-first approach in recent case law, reinforcing the importance of selecting the correct forum at the outset.

This guide applies to any claimant, respondent or potential party to a domestic or international arbitration seated in Malaysia (or with assets in Malaysia) who needs urgent protective measures. You should use this procedure if you face any of the following scenarios:

  • Asset dissipation risk. A counterparty is transferring, encumbering or concealing assets that may be needed to satisfy an eventual award.
  • Evidence destruction. Digital records, financial documents or physical evidence may be deleted, altered or removed.
  • Status-quo preservation. Ongoing contractual performance must be maintained to prevent irreparable commercial harm.
  • Security for award. A party seeks a financial guarantee that any future award can be enforced.

The tactical decision at the outset is straightforward: if the parties’ arbitration agreement incorporates the AIAC emergency-arbitrator provisions (as it does by default under the AIAC Rules 2026 unless expressly excluded), file an EA request first. If assets need to be frozen through domestic enforcement machinery, or if the counterparty is a non-signatory, apply concurrently or alternatively to the Malaysian High Court.

Eligibility and Prerequisites for How to Obtain Interim Relief in Malaysia

Before filing an application, an applicant must satisfy itself, and ultimately the decision-maker, that the legal and factual preconditions for relief are met. These preconditions apply whether the application is made to an emergency arbitrator under the AIAC Rules 2026 or to the Malaysian High Court.

Statutory Bases, Tribunal Powers and Court Powers

The Arbitration Act 2005 provides the statutory foundation. Section 19 empowers an arbitral tribunal (and, by extension, an emergency arbitrator appointed under institutional rules) to grant interim measures including orders to preserve assets, maintain the status quo, preserve evidence and provide security for costs or the amount in dispute. Section 11 governs the relationship between courts and the arbitral process; it restricts court intervention but expressly preserves the court’s power to grant interim measures in support of arbitration. Section 17 further addresses the circumstances in which the High Court may act in aid of arbitral proceedings.

For EA applications, the applicant must confirm that the arbitration agreement incorporates the AIAC emergency-arbitrator procedure. Under the AIAC Arbitration Rules 2026, the EA provisions apply automatically unless the parties have expressly opted out. The applicant must have a live or prospective dispute referable to arbitration, the Notice of Arbitration need not yet have been served, but there must be an existing arbitration agreement.

For court applications, the applicant must demonstrate that the High Court has jurisdiction, typically because the respondent is domiciled in Malaysia, assets are located in Malaysia, or the arbitration is seated in Malaysia. The court’s power under Section 11 of the Arbitration Act 2005 is exercised in aid of, not as a substitute for, the arbitral process.

When a Foreign Party Can Apply

A foreign company or non-Malaysian party may apply for interim relief in Malaysia provided the arbitration agreement designates Malaysia as the seat of arbitration, or Malaysian assets or parties are the subject of the proposed measures. Foreign applicants may file directly with the AIAC for an EA appointment and may apply to the Malaysian High Court for court interim measures in Malaysia, subject to establishing jurisdiction and effecting proper service.

In every case, EA or court, the decision-maker will assess four core criteria: (1) a prima facie case on the merits; (2) a real risk of irreparable harm that cannot be adequately compensated by damages; (3) the balance of convenience favours granting relief; and (4) the applicant provides an appropriate undertaking as to damages (in court applications) or equivalent security (in EA proceedings). Ex parte relief, without notice to the respondent, is available from the Malaysian courts in cases of extreme urgency, and the AIAC emergency-arbitrator procedure permits expedited (though typically on-notice) proceedings.

Step-by-Step Procedure for Interim Relief in Malaysia

The procedure splits into two parallel pathways. An applicant may pursue one or both, depending on urgency, enforcement needs and clause coverage.

Path A, Emergency Arbitrator (AIAC): Steps 1–6

  1. Confirm the emergency-arbitrator clause and applicable AIAC Rules version. Review the arbitration agreement to confirm it incorporates the AIAC Arbitration Rules 2026 (or an earlier version with EA provisions) and has not expressly excluded the emergency-arbitrator mechanism. If the clause is silent on EA, the AIAC Rules 2026 include the EA procedure by default. Identify the relevant Schedule (Schedule 3 of the AIAC Rules 2026 governs the EA procedure) and note the specific Rule numbers that apply.
  2. Prepare the EA request and supporting evidence bundle. Draft a written request addressed to the AIAC Director that sets out: the nature of the dispute, the relief sought, the reasons why emergency relief is necessary before the tribunal is constituted, and the factual and legal basis for urgency and irreparable harm. Attach a copy of the arbitration agreement, a cover letter signed by counsel, the evidence bundle (contracts, bank statements, emails, forensic export logs, digitally paginated), the proposed wording of the order sought (e.g., “The Respondent is restrained from transferring, encumbering or otherwise disposing of any interest in [specified asset]…”), and any undertaking as to damages or security the applicant is prepared to offer.
  3. File the EA request with the AIAC Registry. Submit the completed request, evidence bundle and applicable filing fee to the AIAC Registry. Filing may be made electronically through the AIAC’s online system or in hard copy at the AIAC offices in Kuala Lumpur. Serve a copy of the filed request on the respondent simultaneously or as directed by the AIAC. The filing fee for an EA application is set out in the AIAC fee schedule, see the costs table below for estimates.
  4. Receive appointment of the Emergency Arbitrator and the initial procedural order. The AIAC Director appoints an Emergency Arbitrator, typically within one to three days of receiving a complete filing. The EA issues a procedural order setting out directions for the respondent’s reply (if any), the procedure for the hearing (documents-only or oral, including by video conference), and the timetable for the EA’s decision. Under the AIAC Rules 2026, the EA is directed to decide as expeditiously as possible.
  5. Receive the EA decision. The EA issues a decision in the form of an order or procedural order, typically within three to seven days of appointment (often on a documents-only basis where the urgency warrants it). The order specifies the interim measure granted, freezing relief, document preservation, disclosure, or status-quo maintenance, together with its duration and any conditions. The EA order remains in force until the arbitral tribunal is constituted and confirms, varies or revokes it.
  6. Post-order steps: service, enforcement and tribunal confirmation. Serve the EA order on the respondent immediately (via counsel, registered post or process server). If voluntary compliance is not forthcoming, consider applying to the Malaysian High Court for recognition and enforcement of the EA order. Once the arbitral tribunal is constituted, request that the tribunal confirm or continue the EA order as a tribunal order. This confirmation step is critical for enforceability, an EA order that is not confirmed by the tribunal may lapse.

Path B, Malaysian Courts: Steps 1–6

  1. Determine whether to apply ex parte or inter partes and identify the correct court division. If the urgency is extreme and giving notice would defeat the purpose of the relief (e.g., risk of immediate asset dissipation), apply ex parte to the High Court. Otherwise, proceed inter partes. For commercial disputes, file in the Commercial Division of the High Court in Kuala Lumpur or the relevant state High Court.
  2. Draft the originating summons and supporting documents. Prepare an originating summons (or notice of application within existing proceedings), a grounding affidavit setting out the factual basis, the legal grounds under Section 11 and Section 17 of the Arbitration Act 2005, the four-part test for interim relief (prima facie case, irreparable harm, balance of convenience, undertaking as to damages), a draft order in precise terms, and the applicant’s undertaking as to damages.
  3. Obtain the ex parte order and serve it on the respondent. If the court grants an ex parte order, it typically does so on the same day or the next court day. The applicant must serve the ex parte order, together with all supporting documents, on the respondent promptly. Common practice requires service within seven days of the order date. An inter partes hearing is then listed, typically within 21 days of service, at which the respondent may contest the order.
  4. Respond to the respondent’s challenges. The respondent may apply to set aside the ex parte order, seek cross-undertakings in damages, or raise a jurisdictional challenge arguing that the arbitral tribunal, not the court, should determine the application. Malaysian courts will assess whether the tribunal-first principle under the Arbitration Act 2005 applies and whether the court’s intervention is genuinely in aid of the arbitral process.
  5. Enforce the court order. Court orders are enforced through the Malaysian Sheriff or Deputy Sheriff (execution officers). Contempt proceedings may be commenced against a party that breaches a court injunction. For asset-freezing orders, third-party notices (e.g., to banks) must be served immediately.
  6. Manage the interaction with the arbitration. If the arbitral tribunal is subsequently constituted, the court order may be referred to the tribunal for confirmation, variation or discharge. A stay application under Section 11 may be relevant if the respondent argues the court should defer to the tribunal. Coordinate the court proceedings and the arbitration to avoid conflicting orders.

Consolidated Timeline Table

Step Who Does It Typical Duration (from filing)
Prepare EA request & evidence bundle Applicant counsel / in-house 24–72 hours (urgent cases)
File EA request with AIAC Registry Applicant counsel Same day (AIAC online filing)
EA appointment & first procedural order AIAC / Emergency Arbitrator 1–3 days from filing
EA decision / order issuance Emergency Arbitrator 3–7 days (often documents-only)
Serve EA order on respondent Applicant (via counsel / process server) Within 1–3 days of order
File court application for ex parte injunction (if chosen) Applicant counsel Same day / 24–48 hours
Court ex parte order issued High Court registrar / judge Same day or next court day (if urgent)
Inter partes hearing on ex parte order Court Typically within 21 days of service

Enforcement and Practical Next Steps

  • Convert the EA order to a tribunal order. Once the arbitral tribunal is constituted, file a request for the tribunal to confirm or adopt the EA order. Without confirmation, the EA order may lapse.
  • Court recognition of EA orders. If the respondent does not comply voluntarily, apply to the Malaysian High Court under Section 11 or Section 17 of the Arbitration Act 2005 for recognition and enforcement of the interim order Malaysia.
  • Third-party notifications. For freezing orders, serve copies immediately on relevant banks, land registries, or company registries (Suruhanjaya Syarikat Malaysia / SSM).
  • Cross-jurisdictional enforcement. If assets are located outside Malaysia, seek enforcement in the relevant foreign jurisdiction under applicable treaties or local court procedures, coordinate this with local counsel in each jurisdiction.

Required Documents and Information for an Interim Relief Application

Incomplete filings are the most common cause of delay. The documents needed for an interim relief application in Malaysia vary slightly between the EA and court routes, but the core evidence requirements are substantially the same. Assemble the following before filing:

Document Notes
Request for Emergency Arbitrator / EA application form Addressed to the AIAC Director; must include a copy of the arbitration agreement and clause reference; PDF format with signed cover letter.
Affidavit in support (sworn / affirmed) Sets out the factual basis for urgency, prima facie case, irreparable harm and balance of convenience. Exhibits numbered sequentially.
Evidence bundle (exhibits) Contracts, transfer records, bank statements, emails, screenshots, forensic export logs. Digitally paginated and bound.
Draft interim order / injunction wording Precise relief requested (freezing, preservation, document disclosure). Include proposed enforcement language and duration clause.
Undertaking as to damages Applicant undertakes to compensate the respondent for losses if the order is later found to have been wrongly granted. May require supporting financial evidence.
Notice of Arbitration (if issued) Copy of the Notice of Arbitration and proof of service, if arbitration has already been commenced.
Power of Attorney / authority letter (corporate applicant) Board resolution or corporate minutes authorising the application and naming the authorised signatory.
Security for costs estimate If the respondent requests or the decision-maker orders security, provide a certified estimate of likely costs.
Court originating documents (for court path) Originating summons, grounding affidavit, draft order, filing fee receipts.
Proof of service Process server affidavit or courier tracking confirming the respondent was served.
Identification and company registry extracts Passport / identity card for individuals; SSM company search for Malaysian corporate parties.

Prepare all documents in both hard copy and electronic format. For AIAC filings, confirm the Registry’s current requirements for electronic submission (file size limits, accepted formats). For court filings, comply with the relevant High Court practice directions on document formatting, pagination and filing fees.

Timeline and Key Deadlines for Interim Relief in Malaysia

Timing is the defining feature of interim relief. Missing a deadline can cause an order to lapse or be set aside. The following deadlines govern the process:

Emergency Arbitrator (AIAC) Timeline

  • Filing to EA appointment: The AIAC Director appoints the Emergency Arbitrator as soon as practicable, typically within 1–3 days of receiving a complete filing under the AIAC Arbitration Rules 2026.
  • EA appointment to decision: The EA is directed to decide as expeditiously as possible. In practice, EA decisions are commonly issued within 3–7 days of appointment, often on a documents-only basis.
  • Duration of the EA order: The EA order remains in effect until the arbitral tribunal is constituted and confirms, varies or revokes it. If no tribunal is constituted within the timeframe specified in the order (or a reasonable period), the order may lapse. Industry observers expect that the 2026 Rules reinforce the expectation of prompt tribunal constitution after an EA order is made.

Court Path Timeline

  • Ex parte application to order: The court may grant an ex parte order on the same day or the next court day if urgency is demonstrated.
  • Service of ex parte order: Common practice requires the applicant to serve the ex parte order and all supporting documents on the respondent within 7 days of the order date.
  • Inter partes hearing: The inter partes return date, at which the respondent may contest the order, is typically listed within 21 days of service. Failure to effect service within the required window may result in the ex parte order lapsing automatically.
  • Variation and discharge: The respondent may apply at or before the inter partes hearing to discharge or vary the order. The court retains discretion over timelines.

All timeframes are subject to judicial or arbitrator discretion and may vary depending on case complexity, court listing pressures, and the availability of the emergency arbitrator. Applicants should build in a buffer of 24–48 hours for document preparation and internal approvals.

Costs, Fees and Financial Considerations for Interim Relief in Malaysia

The cost of interim relief in Malaysia depends on the route chosen, the complexity of the application and the seniority of counsel engaged. The following table provides indicative estimates. All amounts should be verified directly with the AIAC Registry and the relevant High Court before filing.

Item Estimated Amount (MYR) Notes
AIAC Emergency Arbitrator filing fee 2,000 – 10,000 Verify against the AIAC 2026 fee schedule published on aiac.world.
AIAC administrative / case management fees 5,000 – 25,000 Varies by amount in dispute and case complexity.
Counsel fees (urgent EA application) 15,000 – 80,000+ Depends on seniority, overnight drafting, hearing attendance; includes disbursements.
Court filing fee (interlocutory application) 300 – 2,000 Check the current High Court fee schedule for interlocutory applications.
Security for costs / undertaking Variable May require a deposit or bank guarantee; amount is at the court’s or EA’s discretion.
Enforcement (Sheriff, asset tracing, interim attachment) 5,000 – 50,000+ Includes enforcement officers, local counsel for execution steps.
Expert evidence (forensic accountant / IT specialist) 5,000 – 50,000+ Typical for preservation or disclosure orders requiring forensic analysis.

Note: All figures are estimates current as of June 2026. Verify fees directly with the AIAC Registry and local courts before filing. Counsel fees vary significantly between firms and depending on the complexity and urgency of the matter.

What Changes in 2026, AIAC Rules and Arbitration Reform

The AIAC Arbitration Rules 2026 introduce several changes that directly affect how to obtain interim relief in Malaysia through the emergency-arbitrator procedure. The key changes, based on the published rules and practitioner commentary, include:

  • Clarified EA appointment timelines. The 2026 Rules make explicit the expectation that the AIAC Director appoint an Emergency Arbitrator as soon as practicable, with a targeted window that early indications suggest will be shorter than under previous rule iterations.
  • Confirmed EA powers. The EA’s authority to grant the full range of interim measures equivalent to those available to a constituted tribunal, freezing orders, preservation orders, disclosure orders, security for awards, is expressly affirmed.
  • Documents-only proceedings. The 2026 Rules provide increased express guidance on documents-only EA proceedings and the use of virtual hearings, reflecting post-pandemic practice and enabling faster resolution.
  • Challenge and recognition processes. Procedures for challenging an EA or seeking court recognition of an EA order are clarified, with the likely practical effect being a more predictable route to enforcement in Malaysian courts.

The practical impact for applicants is clear: prepare shorter, crisper evidence bundles that are suited to documents-only determination; include comprehensive proposed order wording; and expect the EA decision to be delivered within days of filing, not weeks. Parties drafting arbitration clauses should ensure they do not inadvertently opt out of the EA provisions in the AIAC Rules 2026.

Common Pitfalls and How to Avoid Them

  • Late or incomplete service. Failing to serve the respondent within the required window causes orders to lapse. Remedy: engage a process server before filing and serve immediately upon receipt of the order.
  • Vague draft order wording. Imprecise relief language makes enforcement difficult. Remedy: draft the proposed order with the specificity of a final injunction, name assets, specify prohibited actions, include duration and enforcement clauses.
  • Insufficient evidence of irreparable harm. Bare assertions are not enough. Remedy: front-load forensic evidence, bank statements, transaction records and contemporaneous correspondence demonstrating actual risk of dissipation or destruction.
  • Ignoring the undertaking as to damages. Courts and EAs expect the applicant to put forward a credible undertaking. Remedy: prepare a financial statement or bank guarantee in advance and include it in the application.
  • Contradictory relief in tribunal and court. Filing overlapping or inconsistent applications creates procedural chaos and may undermine credibility. Remedy: follow a decision tree, EA first if the clause covers it; court only for enforcement or sovereign-immunity cases, and disclose all parallel proceedings to each forum.
  • Failing to convert the EA order into a tribunal order. An EA order that is never confirmed by the tribunal may become unenforceable. Remedy: calendar a confirmation application as soon as the tribunal is constituted.
  • Opting out of EA provisions inadvertently. Standard-form clauses sometimes exclude emergency-arbitrator mechanisms. Remedy: review arbitration clauses at the contracting stage and expressly preserve EA provisions.
  • Not notifying third parties. Freezing orders are useless if banks and registries are not informed. Remedy: prepare third-party notice letters in advance and serve them simultaneously with the order.
  • Overlooking foreign enforcement requirements. Assets outside Malaysia require separate enforcement proceedings. Remedy: instruct local counsel in each relevant jurisdiction before filing.
  • Delay in instructing counsel. Interim relief is time-critical; internal approval cycles can be fatal to an application. Remedy: pre-authorise counsel engagement for urgent matters and maintain standing board resolutions for corporate applicants.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Lim Tuck Sun at Chooi & Co, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. AIAC Arbitration Rules 2026 (official PDF)
  2. AIAC, Arbitration Rules (site / rules PDF)
  3. Arbitration Act 2005 (Laws of Malaysia / Attorney-General’s Chambers), Act 646
  4. Malaysian Judiciary, High Court practice notes and procedural guidance
  5. Malaysian Bar, AIAC practitioner guidance
  6. Thomas Philip, AIAC Rules 2026 practitioner note
  7. Multilaw, Interim and precautionary measures in Malaysia

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