China Revises Its Arbitration Law — 5 Key Takeaways for Foreign Executives

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China Revises Its Arbitration Law — 5 Key Takeaways for Foreign Executives

In August 2024, China released the first official draft revision of its 30-year-old Arbitration Law (仲裁法, zhòngcái fǎ), proposing over 90 amendments that fundamentally reshape how international commercial disputes can be resolved. This marks the most significant update since the law took effect in 1995, introducing ad hoc arbitration, codifying online proceedings, and expanding the role of foreign arbitration institutions. For foreign executives, these changes could reduce dispute resolution costs by an estimated 30–50% while cutting average case timelines from 18 months to under 12 months in certain scenarios.

The original 1994 law contained just 80 articles. The 2024 draft revision expands that to 95 articles — a nearly 19% increase — reflecting China’s drive to align its arbitration regime with international standards such as the UNCITRAL Model Law. With over 270 arbitration commissions currently operating across China and more than 80% of foreign-related commercial contracts already specifying arbitration, this revision touches nearly every foreign business with exposure to the Chinese market.

What the Draft Revision Changes — Key Amendments

The draft revision, now undergoing public comment and expected to pass its second reading in late 2025, introduces six structural changes that directly affect foreign parties. Below is a comparison of the current law against the proposed revision on the dimensions most relevant to international dispute resolution.

Dimension Current Law (1994) Draft Revision (2024)
Ad Hoc Arbitration (临时仲裁, línshí zhòngcái) Not permitted — all arbitration must be institutional Permitted for international disputes with clear party agreement
Foreign Arbitration Institutions Restricted to pilot Free Trade Zones only Allowed nationwide after registration with Ministry of Justice
Emergency Arbitrator Not recognized in statute; no binding authority Codified with binding interim orders enforceable by courts
Online Proceedings Not mentioned; in-person hearings presumed Explicitly authorized for hearings, evidence submission, and awards
Interim Measures Only courts could order asset preservation Arbitral tribunals can issue interim measures directly
Award Setting Aside Uniform standard for domestic and foreign-related awards Separate, more limited grounds for foreign-related awards

The most consequential change for foreign executives is the legal recognition of ad hoc arbitration (临时仲裁, línshí zhòngcái). Previously, parties doing business in China were forced to select from a list of institutional venues — typically the China International Economic and Trade Arbitration Commission (CIETAC) or the Beijing Arbitration Commission (BAC). Ad hoc arbitration, common in London and Singapore, allows parties to design their own procedural rules and appoint arbitrators without institutional administration. The draft permits this for “international disputes” defined as those where at least one party is domiciled outside mainland China.

Why This Matters for Foreign Companies

The timing of this revision is no coincidence. Over the past decade, Hong Kong and Singapore have captured the majority of China-related international arbitration cases. In 2023, the Singapore International Arbitration Centre (SIAC) reported 28% of its new cases involved a Chinese party — up from 18% in 2018. The draft revision is China’s attempt to repatriate some of that caseload by offering foreign parties more familiar procedural options within mainland China.

Three numbers illustrate the practical impact. First, the average cost of institutional arbitration in China currently runs between RMB 200,000 and RMB 500,000 per case, depending on claim value. Ad hoc arbitration under the new law could cut that to RMB 80,000–150,000 — a 60% reduction in some estimates. Second, the codification of online proceedings means parties no longer need to travel to China for hearings; virtual participation is expressly permitted, eliminating visa delays and travel costs that previously added 2–4 months to case timelines. Third, the new emergency arbitrator provisions allow interim relief within 15 days of application, compared to the current 30–60 day court process.

However, the revision is not yet law. The public comment period closed in September 2024, and the second reading before the Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress is expected in mid-2025. Foreign executives should plan for the draft to take effect in early 2026, but partial implementation — particularly the provisions on online proceedings — could be adopted sooner via judicial interpretations.

Decision Framework: Arbitration Under the New Law vs. Chinese Court Litigation

While the revision expands arbitration options, it does not replace litigation as a default path. Use the following framework to decide which route fits your contract profile:

  • If your contract value exceeds USD 1 million and involves two different jurisdictions, choose arbitration under the new law — the enforceability of awards under the New York Convention (172 signatories) far exceeds the limited bilateral treaties governing Chinese court judgments.
  • If your counterparty is a Chinese state-owned enterprise (SOE) or a government entity, choose arbitration with a recognized institution such as CIETAC or the Hong Kong International Arbitration Centre (HKIAC) — SOEs resist litigation in foreign courts but generally comply with arbitration awards.
  • If your claim value is under RMB 500,000 and both parties are based in China, choose litigation in the local People’s Court — the cost-to-recovery ratio favors court proceedings for smaller disputes.
  • If you need confidentiality, choose arbitration under all scenarios — Chinese court proceedings are publicly docketed, while arbitration hearings and awards remain private by default.

The decision also depends on which seat you select. Under the new law, parties can choose a mainland Chinese seat (e.g., Shanghai, Beijing, Shenzhen) with ad hoc rules, or an offshore seat (Hong Kong, Singapore) with institutional rules. Hong Kong remains the preferred seat for foreign parties due to its common law framework and separate enforcement regime. The draft revision allows this choice explicitly, removing earlier ambiguity about whether “foreign-seated” arbitration was recognized under Chinese law.

Three Common Pitfalls in China-Related Arbitration

Pitfall: Relying on outdated arbitration clauses that specify “institutional arbitration only” without an ad hoc fallback. The new law permits ad hoc arbitration, but only if the clause explicitly references the Chinese seat and the parties’ choice of procedural rules. Cost: If an ad hoc clause is ambiguous, the court may invalidate the entire arbitration agreement, forcing re-litigation — costs can exceed RMB 300,000 in legal fees alone. Fix: Audit all existing China-related contracts and update arbitration clauses to include an ad hoc option with a clear seat (e.g., “Beijing, with ad hoc arbitration under UNCITRAL Rules”).
Pitfall: Assuming foreign arbitration institutions can operate freely nationwide on Day One of the new law. The draft requires foreign institutions to register with the Ministry of Justice — a process that could take 6–12 months — and limits their scope to “international” disputes. Cost: Filing with a non-registered institution could render the arbitration award unenforceable, risking the entire claim value. Fix: Verify registration status of any foreign institution before including it in an arbitration clause; use a registered institution (CIETAC, BAC, HKIAC) as a default fallback.
Pitfall: Ignoring the new evidentiary standards for online arbitration. The draft revision permits electronic evidence submission but requires “verifiable authenticity” — a standard Chinese courts interpret strictly. Cost: Rejected evidence can undermine your entire case; a mid-value dispute of RMB 2 million could collapse on a single evidentiary ruling. Fix: Work with a China-qualified arbitrator or counsel to prepare evidence protocols before filing; use blockchain-based notarization tools (now accepted by 25+ arbitration commissions in China) to authenticate digital documents.

NEXT STEPS

  1. Review your existing China contract portfolio — Identify all arbitration clauses that reference the old 1994 law and update them to reflect the coming revision. Pay special attention to clauses that conflate “institutional” and “ad hoc” language. Read our Contract Review Checklist for China Disputes.
  2. Test the new ad hoc arbitration model — For contracts currently in negotiation, consider inserting a pilot ad hoc clause with a Chinese seat (e.g., Shanghai or Shenzhen) and UNCITRAL procedural rules. Use our Arbitration Clause Builder for China to generate compliant language.
  3. Monitor the law’s progress through the NPC — The second reading likely in mid-2025 may add or subtract provisions. Subscribe to our China Commercial Law Update Service for real-time alerts on legislative changes that impact your operations.

— China Gateway 360 —
Remote China market entry support, built around execution.

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