A.W. Law LLC — Advocates & Solicitors
Roy Paul Mukkam, Associate Director at A.W. Law LLC

Handled by

Roy Paul Mukkam

Associate Director

CONSTRUCTION DISPUTE LAWYER SINGAPORE

Construction Dispute Lawyer in Singapore

A Singapore construction dispute lawyer in Chinatown. BCISOP adjudication, simple terms, fees in writing, free 10-min Discovery Session. Open weekdays until 10pm on WhatsApp.

★ ★ ★ ★ ★ 4.8 on Google · 177+ reviews Law Society of Singapore English · Bahasa · 中文 · தமிழ் · Tiếng Việt

Or · weekdays, 9am – 10pm · Updated 29 April 2026

Timeline
6–8 weeks for SOP adjudication · 6–18 months for court or arbitration
First meeting
Free · 10 minutes
Fees
Fixed fee for adjudication stages · capped hourly for court and arbitration
Heard at
Singapore Mediation Centre (SOP adjudication), State Courts, High Court, or SIAC
Governing law
Building and Construction Industry Security of Payment Act (BCISOP)
Suitable for
Unpaid progress claims, defects, variations, delay disputes, or retention sum disputes
Not for
Personal renovation disputes under S$20,000. A Small Claims Tribunal route may be cheaper
Languages we handle
English · Bahasa · 中文 · தமிழ் · Tiếng Việt
Translation staff on hand for each.

Unpaid progress claims and defect fights need a fast, clear route

If you’re a contractor, subcontractor, or supplier who hasn’t been paid, or an owner staring at defects and a contractor who’s walked off, you don’t need a long brief on construction law. You need to know the fastest, cheapest way to get this resolved.

I’m Roy. I handle civil litigation at A.W. Law LLC in Chinatown. Over the years I’ve dealt with the full range of Singapore construction matters, from S$30,000 subcontractor payment claims to multi-party condominium disputes.

This page is for you if there’s an unpaid progress claim, a contested variation, a delay argument, defects after handover, or a retention sum dispute. The first 10 minutes are free, and nothing commits you.

What a construction dispute in Singapore actually is

A construction dispute is any legal fight over work done on a building, renovation, or civil engineering project. Most fall into five buckets: payment, variations, delay, defects, and retention.

The core piece of Singapore law here is the Building and Construction Industry Security of Payment Act, usually shortened to SOP or BCISOP. It exists because construction work in Singapore used to suffer badly from delayed or unpaid progress claims. The Act gives contractors, subcontractors, and suppliers a fast adjudication route that runs alongside the ordinary courts.

Venues and routes:

  1. SOP adjudication. Filed at the Singapore Mediation Centre. Decision usually within about 7 weeks. Best for unpaid payment claims where you did the work, issued a claim, and weren’t properly responded to.
  2. State Courts. Claims up to S$250,000. Better for defects, delay, or variation fights that aren’t suited to fast-track adjudication.
  3. High Court. For claims above S$250,000 or for matters where an injunction or other special relief is needed.
  4. SIAC arbitration. If the contract sends disputes to arbitration (which many SIA and FIDIC-based contracts do), court is off the table. Check the dispute resolution clause in your contract first.

Underneath SOP, you’ll also sometimes use the ordinary law of contract (see our breach of contract and contract disputes pages), negligence, and specific construction-industry rules around certifiers, variations, and liquidated damages.

The key procedural terms worth knowing:

  • Payment claim. The formal request for payment a contractor or supplier serves on the paying party.
  • Payment response. The paying party’s formal reply, within 21 days, saying what they accept and dispute.
  • Adjudication determination. The written ruling from the SMC adjudicator. Enforceable as a court judgment.
  • Defects liability period (DLP). Usually 12 to 24 months after practical completion, during which the contractor must fix defects at its cost.

When to act on a construction dispute in Singapore

Before I take a matter on, I ask a few questions.

  • Is the contract under SOP? Almost all construction work in Singapore is, but there are exceptions (for example, contracts with a natural-person owner of a dwelling, in some cases). If SOP doesn’t apply, we’ll say so and plan a different route.
  • Has a payment claim actually been served? SOP procedure turns on documents served on specific dates. If the payment claim is malformed or out of time, the adjudication may fail on technicality.
  • Is this really a SOP matter, or something else? Defects fights, delay claims, and variation disputes that are heavily contested may be better in court or arbitration. We’ll tell you which route fits.
  • What does the dispute clause say? If the contract sends disputes to SIAC or to a specific adjudication body, that controls. Always read the clause first.
  • Who’s the right defendant? Main contractor, subcontractor, employer, owner, developer. Getting the right party on the claim is half the battle.

The three patterns we see most often:

  • Main contractor vs subcontractor on progress claims. A payment claim is ignored or short-paid. Classic SOP adjudication territory.
  • Owner vs contractor on defects and delay. After handover, defects emerge, or liquidated damages are in play.
  • Variations and scope creep. Extra work was done; the contractor says it’s a paid variation, the owner says it was in the original scope.

When to act and what to expect

How long you have. SOP payment claims have tight statutory deadlines (usually the payment claim must be served by a set date each month, and the response and adjudication application windows are counted in days). Outside SOP, contract claims have a 6-year limit under the Limitation Act, and negligence claims also 6 years from when the damage was reasonably discoverable.

How long it takes. SOP adjudication usually delivers a written determination within about 6 to 8 weeks of the payment claim. State Courts litigation takes 6 to 12 months. High Court and SIAC arbitration typically take 9 to 18 months for a straightforward matter, longer if expert evidence on defects or delay is needed.

How much it costs. An SOP adjudication runs S$5,000 to S$15,000 in legal fees for most matters, plus SMC and adjudicator fees. A State Courts litigation through to trial runs S$10,000 to S$25,000. High Court and SIAC matters cost more, typically starting around S$25,000 for a fully run arbitration and going up fast if expert witnesses are needed. The 10-min Construction Disputes Discovery Session is free.

What’s hard. Two things. First, the documents. Construction disputes live or die on the paper trail: certificates, payment claims, site instructions, photos. We’ll ask for a lot, early. Second, the technical side. Defects and delay often need expert evidence (a quantity surveyor, an engineer). That adds cost, and it’s something we’ll flag upfront.

How we handle construction disputes at A.W. Law

A few things we do differently:

  • Fixed fees for SOP adjudication where possible. So you know the cost of each stage before you commit.
  • One lawyer end to end. The person you meet at the first session runs the matter through to determination, judgment, or award.
  • Plain-English advice. The construction industry is full of jargon. We translate it so you can make commercial decisions, not just legal ones.
  • WhatsApp until 10pm on weekdays. Site problems don’t wait for 9am Monday.
  • Speak your language. English, Malay, or Tamil. Roy also speaks Malayalam.
  • Honest about the route. If SOP won’t work and a court or arbitration is the right call, we’ll say so on day one rather than running a doomed adjudication.

We’re at 133 New Bridge Road, #20-03 Chinatown Point. Two minutes’ walk from Chinatown MRT, Exit E. Walk-ins welcome most afternoons between 2pm and 5pm on weekdays.

What happens next

If you’ve served a payment claim and haven’t been paid, or you’re staring at defects or a delay fight, the next step is simple. Book a free 10-min Construction Disputes Discovery Session using the form on this page, or message us on WhatsApp using the button anywhere on the screen.

Nothing commits you. Bring the contract, the most recent payment claim, and any response. You’ll leave knowing whether SOP adjudication, court, or arbitration is the right route, what the realistic recovery is, and what the first 4 to 6 weeks will look like.

How we handle it

Your construction disputes, step by step.

  1. Step 01

    Book free 10-min Construction Disputes Discovery Session

    A short call or walk-in. Bring the contract, the payment claim, and any response or certificate. We'll tell you straight away if this is an SOP adjudication, a court matter, or something you should mediate first.

  2. Step 02

    Review the contract and the payment trail

    We read the construction contract, the payment claim, the payment response, and any architect or certifier's notes. You get a written view: who's likely right, what the realistic recovery is, and which route to use.

  3. Step 03

    Adjudicate, mediate, or file

    If it's an unpaid progress claim, the Security of Payment Act route is fast: a decision in about 7 weeks. If it's a defects or variation fight, we'll advise on mediation, court, or SIAC arbitration based on what the contract says.

  4. Step 04

    Enforcement and final recovery

    An adjudication determination can be enforced as a court judgment. We also assist with writs of seizure and sale, garnishee, and winding-up proceedings if the contractor or owner still refuses to pay.

What to bring

For your first meeting.

Don't worry if you can't get everything — come anyway, and we'll tell you what's missing.

  • The signed construction contract, including all tender documents and specifications
  • The most recent payment claim and any payment response
  • Certificates, variation orders, and architect or QS reports
  • Photographs or reports of defects, incomplete works, or delay
  • Correspondence with the other side (emails, site instructions, WhatsApp threads)
  • A rough timeline of key site events: handover, practical completion, defects notice

Your bench

Who handles your construction disputes

3 lawyers at A.W. Law LLC take construction disputes matters. The lead takes your first meeting.

Lead on this matter
Roy Paul Mukkam — Associate Director at A.W. Law LLC

Your lawyer on this matter

Roy Paul Mukkam

Associate Director

Roy was called to the Singapore Bar in 2013 and regularly appears before the State Courts and the Supreme Court of Singapore on civil and commercial matters. He has acted in ICC arbitration for a multinational and condominium collective sale litigation, giving him depth on the contract, property, and construction interface. He speaks English, Malay, and Malayalam.
Languages
English · Malay · Malayalam
Practice focus
Civil Litigation · Bankruptcy & Insolvency · Criminal Law
Qualifications
LL.B. (Hons), University of Warwick (2006) · Advocate & Solicitor, Singapore Bar (2013)
Read full biography
Abdul Wahab — Managing Director at A.W. Law LLC

Also on this matter

Wahab

Managing Director

Wahab is Managing Director of A.W. Law LLC and appears in arbitration proceedings at the Singapore International Arbitration Centre (SIAC). His practice covers shipping, energy, and commercial disputes alongside civil litigation, useful background for construction matters with cross-border suppliers. He speaks English, Malay, and Tamil.
Speaks
English · Malay · Tamil
Focus
Family Law (Civil & Syariah) · Civil Litigation
Muhammad Hasif — Associate Director at A.W. Law LLC

Also on this matter

Hasif

Associate Director

Hasif represents clients in commercial and property-linked disputes, including the reported High Court matter Mface Pte Ltd v Chin Oi Ching [2024] SGHC 234. He speaks English, Malay, and Bahasa Indonesia.
Speaks
English · Malay · Bahasa Indonesia
Focus
Family Law (Civil & Syariah) · Civil Litigation

Common questions

Construction Disputes — frequently asked.

How does adjudication work in Singapore?

The Building and Construction Industry Security of Payment Act gives contractors, subcontractors, and suppliers a fast route to be paid for construction work. You serve a payment claim on the paying party. They have 21 days to serve a payment response. If they don't pay or only pay part, you can file for adjudication at the Singapore Mediation Centre. An adjudicator is appointed, reviews the papers, and usually issues a written determination within about 7 weeks of the claim. The determination is binding and can be enforced as a court judgment.

How long does a construction adjudication take?

From the date of the payment claim to a written determination, roughly 6 to 8 weeks in the usual case. That makes SOP adjudication one of the fastest dispute routes in Singapore. The trade-off is it's a document-heavy process with tight deadlines. Missing a response or an objection can sink an otherwise good case.

What is the Building and Construction Industry Security of Payment Act?

It's the Singapore law (often called SOP or BCISOP) that protects people doing construction work from being unpaid. It applies to most construction contracts in Singapore, including subcontracts and supply contracts linked to building work. It sets out how payment claims must be served, response deadlines, and a statutory adjudication route if the claim is ignored or disputed. The aim is to keep cash flowing through the industry.

What happens if a contractor is not paid in Singapore?

Under the SOP Act, if you serve a proper payment claim and the paying party doesn't respond or doesn't pay, you can start adjudication. You can also suspend work (with the right notice) and are entitled to recover the cost of suspension. Outside the SOP Act, you can also consider a letter of demand and a standard court claim for breach of contract or debt recovery, but adjudication is almost always faster.

Can I claim for defects after handover?

Yes. Most construction contracts include a defects liability period (usually 12 to 24 months after practical completion) during which the contractor must fix defects at its own cost. If defects appear after the DLP, you may still have a claim under the contract and in negligence, subject to limitation. Under the Limitation Act, contract claims must usually be filed within 6 years and negligence claims within 6 years from when the damage was discoverable. For older defects, get advice quickly.

How much does a construction dispute cost in Singapore?

An SOP adjudication usually runs S$5,000 to S$15,000 in legal fees depending on the size of the claim and the volume of documents. The adjudicator's fees and SMC filing fees are on top. A full court trial in the State Courts runs S$10,000 to S$25,000. High Court and SIAC arbitration cost more, typically S$25,000 and up for a fully run matter. We give you a written price cap before we start.

What is a payment claim and payment response?

A payment claim is the formal document a contractor or subcontractor serves to claim payment for work done up to that point. It must set out the work, the amount claimed, and the reference period. The paying party has 21 days to serve a payment response stating the amount they accept, what they dispute, and why. If they fail to respond or the amount isn't paid, you can move to adjudication. Strict deadlines apply, and they're not forgiving.

Do I need a lawyer for an SOP adjudication?

Strictly, no. Parties can represent themselves. In practice, the process is document-intensive and deadlines are tight. The adjudicator decides on the papers, so how the claim and response are written matters a lot. Most paying parties instruct lawyers, which tilts the field. We handle adjudications on a fixed fee where possible, so cost is predictable.

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