Last Updated: March 2026 | LegalFund India β Pan India | ~5 min read
π Quick Answer A foreign arbitral award can be enforced in India under Part II of the Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996 β through the New York Convention (1958) or the Geneva Convention (1927). Once a court finds the award enforceable, it is executed as a court decree. India recognises awards from 48+ notified countries.
π Foreign Award Enforcement β Quick Summary
- Governed by Part II of the Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996
- India is a signatory to the New York Convention (1958)
- Awards from 48+ notified countries are enforceable in India
- Filed before the High Court with original jurisdiction
- Grounds to refuse enforcement are narrow β Section 48 only
- Once enforceable β executed as a court decree under Section 49
Four Businesses. One Problem. Same Country.
Meet four Indian business owners β all in different cities, different industries, different stories. But in 2025, they all faced the exact same nightmare.
Ankit β an exporter from Surat β won a SIAC arbitration against a Singapore buyer who refused to pay βΉ3.1 crore for textile shipments. Award passed. Singapore seated. Crystal clear.
Meera β a tech startup founder from Hyderabad β won an ICC arbitration against a US client who ghosted after taking her SaaS platform live. Award: $280,000. New York seated.
Ravi β a construction company owner from Chennai β completed a UAE infrastructure project, got shortchanged βΉ4.8 crore, won a DIAC arbitration in Dubai. Award in hand.
Sunita β an MSME manufacturer from Ludhiana β won a Singapore arbitration against a Malaysian buyer who disputed quality after delivery. βΉ1.9 crore. SIAC award.
All four had won their arbitrations. All four had valid, enforceable awards from internationally recognised institutions.
And all four had no idea how to actually collect the money in India.
This guide is for them β and for every Indian business sitting on a foreign award wondering what to do next.
What is a Foreign Award?
A foreign award is an arbitral award passed outside India β in a country that is a signatory to the New York Convention or Geneva Convention β on a dispute arising from a legal relationship considered commercial under Indian law.
Simply put: you won arbitration abroad. The money you’re owed is in India. Now you need Indian courts to enforce it.
The Legal Framework β How Foreign Awards Are Enforced in India
| Law | What It Covers |
|---|---|
| Part II, Chapter I β Arbitration Act 1996 | New York Convention awards (48+ countries) |
| Part II, Chapter II β Arbitration Act 1996 | Geneva Convention awards |
| Section 47 | Documents required to enforce a foreign award |
| Section 48 | Grounds on which enforcement can be refused |
| Section 49 | Enforced as a court decree once deemed enforceable |
| New York Convention (1958) | Global treaty β India signatory since 1960 |
Which countries are covered? India has notified 48+ countries including USA, UK, Singapore, UAE, Australia, Germany, France, Japan, and most major trading partners. Awards from non-notified countries cannot be enforced under Part II β they require a separate civil suit.
How to Enforce a Foreign Award in India β Step by Step
Step 1: File a petition before the High Court Foreign award enforcement petitions are filed before the High Court that has jurisdiction over the assets or the judgment-debtor’s location. Delhi HC, Bombay HC, Madras HC, and Calcutta HC are the most active forums.
Step 2: Submit required documents under Section 47
- Original award or certified copy
- Original arbitration agreement or certified copy
- Any translation (if the award is not in English)
Step 3: Court examines enforceability under Section 48 The court checks whether any of the narrow refusal grounds apply. This is NOT a re-examination of the merits. The court does not retry your case.
Step 4: Award declared enforceable β Section 49 Once satisfied, the court declares the award enforceable. It is then treated as a decree of that court β and executed through normal decree execution proceedings.
Step 5: Execute the decree Attach bank accounts. Seize movable assets. Attach immovable property. The full machinery of Indian civil execution becomes available to you.
Grounds to Refuse Enforcement β Section 48
This is the section every award-holder fears. But the grounds are deliberately narrow:
| Ground | What It Means |
|---|---|
| Incapacity of parties | Party lacked legal capacity to enter arbitration |
| Invalid agreement | Arbitration agreement not valid under applicable law |
| No proper notice | Party wasn’t given proper notice of proceedings |
| Award beyond scope | Award decides issues not submitted to arbitration |
| Tribunal not properly constituted | Arbitrators appointed contrary to agreement |
| Award not yet binding | Award still subject to challenge in home country |
| Public policy violation | Award conflicts with Indian public policy |
The most commonly raised ground is public policy β but Indian courts have narrowed its interpretation significantly after ONGC vs Saw Pipes and subsequent judgments. Courts will not refuse enforcement simply because they disagree with the outcome.
What Ankit, Meera, Ravi and Sunita Did Next
All four faced the same barrier after winning their awards: the cost of enforcement.
Enforcement petitions before High Courts cost βΉ8-20 lakhs. Senior counsel. Translation costs. Decree execution. Asset attachment. The whole process β even after winning abroad β costs serious money in India.
Ankit had the cash. He enforced in 8 months. Collected in full.
Meera, Ravi, and Sunita didn’t. They found LegalFund.
πΌ LegalFund β Pan India Foreign Award Enforcement Funding
LegalFund pays all enforcement costs β High Court petition, senior counsel, decree execution, asset attachment β upfront, in full. You pay nothing unless you collect.
How it works: Submit your award β Expert review in 10 days β Funding agreement β LegalFund funds enforcement β You collect β LegalFund takes pre-agreed share
β No upfront cost Β· No guarantee Β· No collateral Β· No repayment if enforcement fails
500+ cases evaluated Β· βΉ85Cr+ funded Β· 87% won or settled Β· Pan India
β Apply free at legalfund.in
Meera recovered $280,000. Ravi recovered βΉ4.1 crore. Sunita recovered βΉ1.9 crore.
All paid βΉ0 upfront.
Common Mistakes When Enforcing Foreign Awards in India
- β Filing in the wrong court β jurisdiction must match where assets or debtor is located
- β Missing documents β Section 47 requirements are strict; missing one document delays everything
- β Waiting too long β limitation period applies; act within 3 years of the award becoming enforceable
- β No asset tracing done upfront β debtor may transfer assets while petition is pending; file for attachment simultaneously
- β Assuming it’s automatic β enforcement is not automatic; it requires active court proceedings
People Also Ask
What is a foreign award under Indian law? A foreign award is an arbitral award passed outside India in a New York or Geneva Convention country on a commercial dispute. Enforceable in India under Part II of the Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996 β executed as a court decree under Section 49 once declared enforceable.
How long does foreign award enforcement take in India? Typically 1-3 years depending on whether the judgment-debtor challenges enforcement under Section 48. Uncontested enforcement in cooperative jurisdictions like Delhi HC can conclude in 8-14 months. Section 48 challenges extend the timeline.
Can a foreign award be challenged in India? Yes β under Section 48. But grounds are narrow: incapacity, invalid agreement, improper notice, award beyond scope, improperly constituted tribunal, non-binding award, or public policy violation. Courts do not re-examine the merits of the underlying dispute.
Which countries’ awards are enforceable in India? 48+ countries notified by India including USA, UK, Singapore, UAE, Australia, Germany, France, Netherlands, Japan, and others. Check the Ministry of Law’s current notification list β non-notified countries require a separate civil suit.
What documents are needed to enforce a foreign award in India? Under Section 47: original award (or certified copy), original arbitration agreement (or certified copy), and certified translation if the award is not in English. Missing any document leads to rejection of the petition.
What is the limitation period for enforcing a foreign award in India? 3 years from the date the foreign award becomes enforceable β under Article 137 of the Limitation Act, 1963. Don’t wait. The clock starts running from the date the award is passed and binding.
Can I get funding to enforce a foreign award in India? Yes. LegalFund finances foreign award enforcement proceedings across India β covering High Court petitions, counsel fees, and decree execution. Zero upfront. Non-recourse. Apply at legalfund.in.