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

Handled by

Roy Paul Mukkam

Associate Director

CONTRACT DISPUTE LAWYER SINGAPORE

Contract Dispute Lawyer in Singapore

A Singapore contract dispute lawyer in Chinatown. Legal terms explained simply, fees in writing, free 10-min Contract Dispute Discovery Session. Open weekdays until 10pm on WhatsApp.

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

Timeline
4–8 weeks if mediation works · 6–18 months if litigated
First meeting
Free · 10 minutes
Fees
Fixed fee for initial review and advice · capped hourly for proceedings
Heard at
State Courts, High Court, or SIAC arbitration
Governing law
Contracts Act (the main contract law)
Suitable for
Disputes over meaning, performance, termination, or variation of a commercial agreement
Not for
Clear-cut non-payment. See Debt Recovery
Languages we handle
English · Bahasa · 中文 · தமிழ் · Tiếng Việt
Translation staff on hand for each.

When a deal goes sideways, you need a clear read first

Most people don’t come in because they want a fight. They come in because a commercial relationship has stopped making sense, and they need someone to say, in plain words, who’s right and what it’ll take to sort out.

I’m Roy. I handle civil litigation at A.W. Law LLC in Chinatown. Over the years I’ve read a lot of contracts and a lot of email threads, from three-page service agreements to hundred-page shareholder deals. Most disputes turn on one or two key clauses and a handful of messages.

This page is for you if you’re in an argument over what a contract means, whether the other side has done its part, or whether the deal is still on. The first 10 minutes are free, and nothing commits you.

What a contract dispute in Singapore actually is

A contract dispute is a disagreement between parties about a contract they’ve entered into. Under Singapore law, the framework comes from common law and the Contracts Act, with specific statutes (like the Sale of Goods Act and the Misrepresentation Act) sitting on top. Most commercial disputes go to the State Courts (up to S$250,000) or the High Court (above that). Some contracts send disputes to SIAC arbitration instead: check the dispute resolution clause first.

Contract disputes tend to fall into one of four types:

  1. Interpretation disputes. You and the other side read the same clause differently. Scope of work, delivery timing, exclusivity, payment milestones.
  2. Performance disputes. One side says the work has been done; the other side says it hasn’t, or says it was defective. Often overlaps with our breach of contract work.
  3. Termination disputes. One side has tried to end the contract; the other side says they had no right to. Wrongful termination is itself a breach.
  4. Formation and validity disputes. Was there a contract at all? Was there misrepresentation? Was the other side entitled to sign? These cases turn on pre-contract emails and conduct.

The blog post on business contracts in Singapore and their key clauses is a good primer on which clauses cause the most trouble.

The usual remedies are damages (money for the loss caused), declaratory relief (a court order stating what the contract means), specific performance (an order to do the thing promised, fairly rare), and injunctions (stopping the other side doing something the contract forbids).

When taking action on a contract dispute is the right answer

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

  • What does the contract actually say? Many disputes dissolve once we read the clauses carefully. Others look weak on paper but have a strong case through the conduct and emails around them.
  • Is this really a contract dispute, or something else? If it’s a straight unpaid invoice, debt recovery is faster. If it’s a breach that’s already caused loss, see breach of contract. If it’s a construction or renovation matter, see construction disputes.
  • What’s the dispute resolution clause? If the contract sends disputes to SIAC arbitration, you can’t go to court, and we need to plan accordingly.
  • Is there a limitation issue? Most contract claims die after 6 years. Contracts by deed get 12. If the breach or dispute is old, we need to file quickly.
  • What’s commercially sensible? Sometimes the right answer is to renegotiate, not to litigate. A two-week settlement can save a two-year fight.

The three patterns we see most often:

  • Scope creep or shifting goalposts. The work doesn’t match what either side thought they signed up for.
  • A party wants out. One side is trying to terminate; the other says there’s no valid ground.
  • Partners or shareholders fall out. The contract turns into a weapon in a broader commercial fight. See our partnership and shareholder disputes page.

When to act and what to expect

How long you have. Under the Limitation Act, most contract claims have to be filed within 6 years of the cause of action. Deeds get 12 years. Don’t let the clock run down.

How long it takes. A letter and mediation can resolve a matter in 4 to 8 weeks. State Courts litigation typically takes 6 to 12 months. High Court matters take 9 to 18 months. SIAC arbitration runs 12 to 24 months for complex cases.

How much it costs. An initial written review and advice is usually S$1,500 to S$3,500. If negotiation and mediation resolves the matter, total cost is typically S$3,000 to S$10,000. State Courts litigation through to trial runs S$10,000 to S$25,000. High Court and SIAC matters cost more, because the pleadings, disclosure, and hearing preparation are heavier, and SIAC filing fees alone can run into the thousands. We quote a written price cap before we start and keep it updated. The 10-min Contract Dispute Discovery Session is free.

What’s hard. Two things. First, the paperwork. We’ll need the contract, every email, every message, and every invoice. That takes time to pull together. Second, uncertainty. Contract interpretation is rarely black and white. We give you honest odds, not guarantees.

How we handle contract disputes at A.W. Law

A few things we do differently:

  • Written opinion, not vibes. After the first paid meeting, you get a clear written view of your position, risks, and realistic outcomes.
  • Settlement-first mindset. Most commercial disputes should settle. We aim for the cheapest route that actually solves the problem.
  • One lawyer, end to end. No handoffs between associates. Whoever takes your first meeting sees it through.
  • Letters in simple terms. The other side’s decision-maker can read them without a lawyer.
  • WhatsApp until 10pm on weekdays. Commercial problems don’t wait for office hours.
  • Speak your language. English, Malay, or Tamil. Roy also speaks Malayalam.

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’re stuck in a contract dispute, or about to start one, the next step is simple. Book a free 10-min Contract Dispute Discovery Session using the form on this page, or message us on WhatsApp using the button anywhere on the screen.

Nothing commits you. You’ll leave knowing whether the contract is on your side, what the realistic outcomes are, and what the first move should look like.

How we handle it

Your contract disputes, step by step.

  1. Step 01

    Book free 10-min Contract Dispute Discovery Session

    A short call or walk-in. Bring the contract and the key emails. We'll tell you straight away what the weak points are, what the other side is likely arguing, and what your real options are.

  2. Step 02

    Contract review and written advice

    We read the contract properly, map out the clauses in dispute, and give you a written opinion: who's likely right, what the risks are, and what a realistic settlement looks like.

  3. Step 03

    Negotiate, mediate, or file

    Most disputes settle through a negotiated letter or formal mediation. If the other side won't engage, we file in the State Courts, High Court, or SIAC arbitration depending on what the contract says.

  4. Step 04

    Hearing and enforcement

    If the matter doesn't settle, we take it to trial or arbitration. We also help with enforcement if the other side doesn't comply with the ruling.

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 full signed contract, including all annexes and schedules
  • All emails, WhatsApp messages, and letters on the disputed points
  • Any variations, addendums, or side letters
  • Invoices, delivery notes, and payment records
  • A short note on what you think the contract means and what the other side claims
  • Any previous legal correspondence on the matter

Your bench

Who handles your contract disputes

3 lawyers at A.W. Law LLC take contract 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 represents clients in sensitive and complex commercial litigation. He appears before the State Courts and the Supreme Court of Singapore, and has acted in ICC arbitration for a multinational and a High Court minority oppression dispute. 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. He appears in arbitration proceedings at the Singapore International Arbitration Centre (SIAC) and holds full rights of audience at the Dubai International Financial Centre (DIFC) Courts, which matters for cross-border commercial matters. 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 disputes, including the reported High Court matter Mface Pte Ltd v Chin Oi Ching [2024] SGHC 234 and the District Court decision ANHI Pte. Ltd. v Hamdan bin Zakaria [2025] SGDC 46. He speaks English, Malay, and Bahasa Indonesia.
Speaks
English · Malay · Bahasa Indonesia
Focus
Family Law (Civil & Syariah) · Civil Litigation

Common questions

Contract Disputes — frequently asked.

What is a contract dispute in Singapore?

A contract dispute is any disagreement between the parties about a contract they've signed. The argument can be about what the contract means, whether one side has performed properly, whether the contract is still on, or whether it was valid in the first place. Most disputes in Singapore are commercial: supply contracts, service agreements, shareholder agreements, construction contracts, employment contracts. The Contracts Act and Singapore common law set the framework for resolving them.

How do you resolve a contract dispute in Singapore?

Most disputes resolve in one of three ways. First, a negotiated settlement after a formal letter from your lawyer. Second, mediation (a neutral person helping you reach a settlement), often at the Singapore Mediation Centre. Third, proceedings: court at the State Courts or High Court, or arbitration at SIAC if the contract says so. Around 80% of commercial disputes settle before trial. We aim for the cheapest route that actually works.

Can you get out of a contract in Singapore?

Sometimes. You might be able to terminate if the contract has a termination clause that applies, if the other side has committed a repudiatory breach (a breach going to the heart of the deal), if the contract was frustrated by a genuinely unforeseeable event, or if you were induced into it by misrepresentation. Walking away without a valid reason is itself a breach. Don't send that termination email before getting advice.

What happens when two parties disagree on contract terms?

Singapore courts follow a few interpretation rules. They read the contract as a whole, give words their ordinary meaning in context, and look at what a reasonable person in the parties' position would have understood. If a term is genuinely ambiguous, the court may look at the surrounding commercial context, but not the private negotiations. That's why the emails between the parties matter, and why what people thought they meant often isn't the point.

How long does a contract dispute take to resolve?

A letter exchange and mediation can close a matter in 4 to 8 weeks. If we file in the State Courts, expect 6 to 12 months to trial. High Court matters typically take 9 to 18 months. SIAC arbitration can be faster if both sides move, but complex arbitrations run 12 to 24 months. The contract's dispute resolution clause sets the route, so always read that first.

Do I have to go to court for a contract dispute?

No, in most cases. Many contracts require mediation or arbitration before court. Even without such a clause, the courts will usually encourage mediation early on. Roughly four out of five commercial disputes in Singapore settle before trial. Court is an option, not a default. The right first step depends on what the contract says and how the other side is behaving.

What if a contract is unclear or ambiguous?

Ambiguity is one of the commonest reasons for disputes. Singapore courts will try to work out the parties' intention from the contract read as a whole. If the words reasonably bear two meanings, the court may consider the surrounding commercial context. For standard-form contracts, ambiguous terms are sometimes read against the side that drafted them. Badly drafted contracts tend to lose: a lesson for the next one.

Can I claim misrepresentation in Singapore?

Yes. If you were induced to sign by a false statement of fact that the other side knew or ought to have known was false, you may have a claim under the Misrepresentation Act. Remedies can include setting the contract aside and damages. You need to show what was said, that it was false, that it influenced your decision, and the loss that followed. Keep any emails or marketing materials that contain the statement.

Related matters we handle

Still have questions?

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From our blog

Further reading on contract disputes

All blog posts →

What clients say

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Get in touch

Have a question? Start a conversation.

First consultations are free and obligation-free. We respond within one business day — usually faster.

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