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Indonesia’s 2026 competition law amendment package represents the most significant overhaul of the country’s antitrust framework since Law No. 5/1999 first introduced prohibitions on monopolistic practices and unfair business competition. For state-owned enterprises competition indonesia rules have historically occupied a grey zone, Article 51 of the original law carved out SOE monopolies over “production and/or marketing of goods and/or services that affect the livelihood of the general public,” shielding large swathes of SOE conduct from KPPU scrutiny. The 2026 reforms narrow that shield, strengthen KPPU’s enforcement toolkit, extend merger control reach, and place new emphasis on digital markets where SOEs increasingly partner with private technology firms.
As of June 30, 2026, the amendment package has progressed through legislative deliberation and industry observers expect the final implementing regulations to crystallise KPPU’s expanded mandate within the coming months.
Will SOEs still be exempt? The short answer is: only partially, and under far tighter conditions than before. The detailed analysis follows in this guide.
TL;DR, Six immediate compliance actions:
The SOE exemption under Indonesia competition law has long been one of the most debated features of the antitrust regime. Understanding what the 2026 amendments change, and what they preserve, is essential for every SOE board, compliance officer, and private partner.
Under the original Law No. 5/1999, Article 51 permitted SOE monopolies over goods and services deemed vital to public welfare, provided the monopoly was established by statute. In practice, the scope of the exemption was defined by Government Regulations and further shaped by KPPU decisions. The result was a patchwork: some SOE activities operated entirely outside KPPU jurisdiction, while others fell into an uncertain middle ground where enforcement was theoretically possible but rarely pursued. Private firms contracting with exempt SOEs often assumed, sometimes incorrectly, that the exemption extended to their own conduct within the arrangement.
The 2026 amendment package introduces several critical changes to the SOE exemption framework. The reforms condition the exemption on a demonstrable public-interest justification that must be periodically reviewed. The amendments also clarify that the exemption applies only to the specific statutory monopoly activity, not to ancillary commercial operations conducted by the same SOE entity. Industry observers expect this distinction to expose significant portions of SOE commercial conduct to standard competition analysis for the first time.
The amendments further empower KPPU to conduct its own assessment of whether a claimed exemption meets the statutory criteria, rather than deferring entirely to the government regulation that granted the monopoly. This procedural shift is significant: it transforms KPPU from a passive recipient of government classifications to an active evaluator of SOE conduct.
Legal teams should apply the following test to each SOE activity or transaction to determine whether it falls within or outside the narrowed exemption:
If the activity is commercial, produces competitive effects, and operates in a priority sector, the likely practical effect will be full application of Indonesia competition law, including merger control, conduct prohibitions, and KPPU investigative powers.
Determining when a transaction involving state-owned enterprises competition indonesia rules require KPPU notification or conduct review demands a structured analysis. The following decision tree provides a step-by-step framework.
Example 1, SOE acquires shares in a private competitor. An Indonesian SOE in the logistics sector acquires a 45% stake in a privately held competing freight company. The combined entity’s assets and revenues exceed the applicable merger control thresholds under KPPU Regulation No. 3/2023. Under the 2026 amendments, the SOE cannot rely on the exemption because the acquisition is a commercial transaction outside the scope of any statutory monopoly. Result: mandatory merger notification to KPPU within the prescribed timeline.
Example 2, SOE enters an exclusive supply contract with a private digital platform. A state‑owned telecommunications company signs a five‑year exclusive data-routing agreement with a private e‑commerce platform, granting the platform preferential access to government‑subsidised broadband infrastructure. This arrangement does not constitute a merger, but it raises conduct concerns under the prohibitions on exclusive dealing and abuse of dominance. Under the amended law, KPPU can investigate the arrangement regardless of the SOE’s public-service mandate. Result: conduct review risk, parties should document the public-interest justification and competitive rationale before execution.
Example 3, Joint venture: 40% SOE, 60% foreign private party. An Indonesian SOE and a foreign investment fund form a JV to develop a digital financial services platform. The SOE contributes 40% equity and a banking licence; the foreign party contributes capital and technology. The JV will operate as a full-function entity. Because the JV creates a new market participant with combined assets likely exceeding thresholds, notification is required. The foreign party’s incorporation outside Indonesia does not remove the obligation, the amendments reinforce KPPU’s extraterritorial reach where conduct affects Indonesian markets. Result: pre‑merger notification required; both parties share the filing obligation.
| Transaction / Conduct | Typical KPPU Obligation | Practical Notes / Threshold Triggers |
|---|---|---|
| Merger or acquisition involving an SOE | Mandatory notification if asset or revenue thresholds are met; post‑2026 amendments broaden KPPU’s reach to formerly exempt SOE transactions | Verify combined asset and revenue figures; consider KPPU’s expanded extraterritorial jurisdiction for cross‑border deals |
| Joint venture with SOE participation | Notification required if the JV results in a change of control or creates a full-function entity exceeding thresholds | Distinguish full-function JVs (notifiable) from contractual cooperation (conduct review); assess market share implications |
| Preferential contract or exclusive dealing by an SOE | Subject to KPPU conduct review even where the SOE asserts a commercial or public-policy objective | Prepare and preserve documentation of public-interest justification, procurement basis, and competitive alternatives considered |
Indonesia’s merger control SOE regime operates under KPPU Regulation No. 3/2023, which establishes the notification framework, asset and revenue thresholds, and procedural timelines. The 2026 amendments reinforce this framework and expand its application to transactions that were previously considered outside KPPU’s mandate due to SOE involvement.
Under KPPU Regulation No. 3/2023, parties to a notifiable transaction must submit a post-closing notification to KPPU. Parties may also submit a voluntary pre-merger consultation before closing to obtain KPPU’s preliminary assessment. The regulation sets out the required filing documents, including transaction summaries, market share data, financial statements, and competition impact analyses.
The 2026 amendments signal a shift toward encouraging, and in some cases requiring, pre‑merger notification for transactions involving SOEs in sensitive sectors. Early indications suggest that KPPU will issue implementing guidelines specifying which SOE transactions must undergo pre‑clearance rather than post‑closing notification alone. Legal teams should prepare the following core documents in advance of any filing:
KPPU’s review process typically involves an initial assessment phase followed by a detailed investigation if concerns arise. The regulation provides for KPPU to accept commitments, behavioural or structural, as conditions for clearance. For transactions involving SOEs, industry observers expect KPPU to apply more rigorous scrutiny, particularly where the SOE holds a dominant position or operates in a sector with limited private competition. Parties should budget for extended review timelines and prepare contingency plans for commitment negotiations. For detailed guidance on Indonesia M&A transaction procedures in 2026, including filing mechanics, refer to the companion guide.
The 2026 KPPU amendments substantially strengthen the commission’s enforcement toolkit. For businesses, including state-owned enterprises, the practical consequence is a significantly higher risk profile for anti‑competitive conduct.
The amendments expand KPPU’s authority in several key areas. The commission gains broader power to impose administrative fines calibrated to the severity of the infringement and the turnover of the infringing entity. Structural remedies, such as mandatory divestiture of assets or business lines, become an explicit tool in KPPU’s arsenal, whereas previously the commission relied almost exclusively on behavioural orders and relatively modest fines. Interim measures allow KPPU to suspend or modify conduct during an ongoing investigation, preventing further competitive harm before a final decision is reached.
The amendments also reinforce KPPU’s extraterritorial reach, clarifying that conduct by foreign-incorporated entities, including foreign JV partners of Indonesian SOEs, falls within KPPU jurisdiction if the conduct produces effects in Indonesian markets.
| Conduct | Likely Penalty Range | Practical Mitigation |
|---|---|---|
| Cartel or price‑fixing (SOE involved) | Substantial administrative fines (turnover-based); potential structural remedies; director liability exposure | Implement a leniency application strategy; conduct immediate internal investigation; preserve all communications |
| Abuse of dominance by SOE | Administrative fines plus behavioural and/or structural remedies (e.g., mandatory access, divestiture) | Conduct a market dominance self‑assessment; prepare a compliance plan with technical separation measures |
| Failure to notify a merger or late notification | Administrative fines; potential order to unwind the transaction | Map all pending and planned transactions against thresholds; file proactively where doubt exists |
| Exclusive dealing or vertical restraints | Fines; behavioural orders (e.g., contract modification, market opening) | Document the business justification; ensure contracts include competition compliance clauses |
KPPU has signalled that digital markets represent a priority enforcement area under the amended Indonesia competition law. SOEs are increasingly active participants in the digital economy, through state-owned payment gateways, logistics platforms, data infrastructure, and telecommunications networks. When these SOEs partner with or compete against private digital firms, specific competition risks arise that legal teams must proactively identify and manage.
The following red flags should prompt immediate compliance review and documentation:
For each red flag, legal teams should preserve contemporaneous documentation, including board minutes, pricing analyses, procurement records, and communications with government stakeholders, to demonstrate compliance in the event of a KPPU inquiry.
The following compliance checklist provides a structured 30/60/90‑day action plan for SOE legal teams and their private partners responding to the 2026 competition law amendments. Each step maps to the substantive risks identified in this guide.
| Date / Reference | Milestone | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|
| KPPU Regulation No. 3/2023 | Current merger control regulation establishing notification thresholds, filing procedures, and review timelines | Baseline framework for all merger notifications, remains in force and is reinforced by the 2026 amendments |
| Late 2025 | Public draft of competition law amendments circulated; legal community and industry begin analysis | Marks the start of the visible reform process and the window for stakeholder submissions |
| As of June 30, 2026 | Amendment package has progressed through legislative deliberation; implementing regulations anticipated | Determines the scope of the narrowed SOE exemption, expanded KPPU powers, and new merger control obligations |
The 2026 amendments fundamentally alter the competition law landscape for state-owned enterprises competition indonesia stakeholders have navigated for over two decades. The narrowed SOE exemption, expanded KPPU enforcement powers, heightened merger control obligations, and new focus on digital markets demand immediate action. SOE legal teams and their private partners should commence internal audits, map notification obligations, and engage experienced Indonesian competition counsel without delay. The window for proactive compliance, before KPPU’s implementing regulations take full effect, is narrowing.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Jonathan Toni Tjenggoro at Alizia & Partners Law Office, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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