A.W. Law LLC — Advocates & Solicitors
Abdul Wahab, Managing Director at A.W. Law LLC

Handled by

Wahab

Managing Director

MEDIATION AND ARBITRATION LAWYER SINGAPORE

Mediation and Arbitration Lawyer in Singapore

A Singapore mediation and arbitration lawyer in Chinatown. SIMC, SIAC, private mediation. Legal terms explained simply, fees in writing, free 10-min Discovery Session.

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

Timeline
1–2 days for mediation · 6–18 months for arbitration
First meeting
Free · 10 minutes
Fees
Flat fee for mediation · capped hourly for arbitration
Heard at
SIMC, SIAC, FIDReC, or private ADR in Singapore
Governing law
Mediation Act, Arbitration Act, International Arbitration Act
Suitable for
Contract, family, commercial, employment, cross-border disputes
Not for
Criminal matters. See Criminal Defence.
Languages we handle
English · Bahasa · 中文 · தமிழ் · Tiếng Việt
Translation staff on hand for each.

If you’d rather not end up in court

Most people who call about a dispute don’t actually want the trial. They want the argument finished, the money sorted, and the matter behind them. Going to the State Courts or the High Court works, but it’s slow, public, and expensive. Mediation and arbitration are the other two real options, and for many commercial and family disputes, they’re the better fit.

I’m Wahab. I run A.W. Law LLC in Chinatown, and I appear regularly in arbitration proceedings at the Singapore International Arbitration Centre (SIAC) and as a neutral evaluator for FIDReC, the financial disputes resolution centre.

This page is for you if you have a real dispute but want to understand the alternative dispute resolution options before you file anything in court. The first 10 minutes are free, and nothing commits you.

What mediation and arbitration in Singapore actually are

Mediation and arbitration are the two main forms of alternative dispute resolution (ADR): ways of settling a legal dispute outside the usual court system. They’re separate processes, with separate rules, run at different institutions.

Mediation is a guided negotiation. A neutral mediator sits with both sides (sometimes together, sometimes shuttling between rooms), helps them understand each other’s position, and helps them reach a deal. The mediator doesn’t decide the case. If the two sides settle, the deal is written up and signed: that settlement agreement is binding like any contract. If they don’t settle, nothing said during mediation can be used against either party afterwards.

Arbitration is a private alternative to court. A neutral arbitrator (or a panel of three) hears both sides, reads the evidence, and issues a binding arbitral award. The award is enforceable in Singapore through the State or High Court, and internationally in over 170 countries under the New York Convention. It looks and feels more like a court hearing than a mediation does.

Singapore has world-class institutions for both:

  1. Singapore International Arbitration Centre (SIAC). The main venue for commercial and international arbitrations seated in Singapore. Runs under the Arbitration Act and the International Arbitration Act.
  2. Singapore Mediation Centre (SIMC). The main institution for commercial mediation, international and domestic.
  3. FIDReC. A free or low-cost scheme for individuals with banking, insurance, and capital markets disputes up to S$100,000. I’m a neutral evaluator there.
  4. Court-annexed mediation. Run by the State Courts, the Family Justice Courts, and the Supreme Court as part of live proceedings.
  5. Private mediation. A senior practitioner (sometimes a retired judge) acting as mediator outside any institution, on fees and terms agreed by the parties.

If your matter is a contract fight, see our contract disputes page too: most contract disputes are ADR-suitable. For family mediation, see divorce, since mediation is often required there. For property and co-ownership matters, see property disputes.

When to use ADR

ADR isn’t always the right answer. Before we recommend mediation or arbitration over court, I ask a few things.

  • Is there an arbitration or mediation clause in the contract? If yes, you usually have to honour it. Singapore courts enforce arbitration clauses by pausing parallel court proceedings.
  • Do you need a court remedy only the court can give? Some remedies, like an urgent injunction, a search order, or certain bankruptcy orders, need the court. Arbitration can grant most but not all.
  • How important is privacy? Arbitration is confidential. Court hearings are mostly public. If the dispute involves sensitive commercial information or reputation, ADR has real value.
  • Is the other side going to engage? Mediation needs two people willing to talk. If the other side is openly refusing, mediation is a waste of time, and arbitration or court is the route.
  • What’s the amount in dispute? Full SIAC arbitration isn’t economic for a S$20,000 dispute. The Small Claims Tribunal or court-annexed mediation is better for smaller sums.

The situations we see most often:

  • Two businesses, a contract, a commercial fight. Usually arbitration if the contract says so, otherwise mediation first.
  • Family matter with children. Compulsory mediation at the Family Justice Courts before any contested hearing.
  • Banking or insurance complaint. FIDReC first: it’s free for individuals up to S$100,000.
  • International dispute. SIAC arbitration, often with a neutral seat and a multilingual tribunal. For UAE-Singapore commercial matters with a court (rather than arbitration) clause, see our DIFC Courts page.

Our blog on alternative dispute resolution covers the divorce-specific side of ADR in more depth.

What to expect, honestly

How long it takes.

A commercial mediation at SIMC usually sits for 1 to 2 days of actual mediation, with 2 to 4 weeks of preparation before. Most settle on the day. If it doesn’t settle, you haven’t lost much time. A SIAC arbitration takes 9 to 18 months from Notice of Arbitration to award on a standard schedule, or 6 months or less on the Expedited Procedure for smaller claims. Complex multi-party international matters can run past 2 years. Court-annexed mediation happens during live proceedings: usually a single afternoon.

How much it costs.

  • SIMC mediation: the mediator’s fee is typically S$1,500 to S$8,000 per party for a full day, depending on the mediator and the claim size. Add lawyer’s preparation and attendance: usually a flat S$2,500 to S$6,000 per side.
  • FIDReC mediation: free for individuals, up to S$100,000, in banking, insurance, and capital markets disputes.
  • SIAC arbitration: tribunal and institution fees scale with the claim size (the SIAC schedule of fees is public). For a S$500,000 claim, tribunal and institution fees together typically total S$35,000 to S$60,000, shared between the parties. Lawyer’s fees are usually quoted as a capped hourly engagement and depend heavily on the complexity.

The 10-min Discovery Session is free. We quote every engagement in writing, with a cap, before any paid work begins.

What’s the hard part.

Commitment. Both sides need to actually want to settle for mediation to work. When one side only turns up because a court told them to, mediations rarely land. Arbitration is harder in the other direction: once an arbitral award is issued, appeals are very limited. Unlike a trial judgment, you can’t generally re-argue the merits. So the preparation has to be right the first time.

The other hard part is clause-drafting. A lot of disputes we see started with a badly worded arbitration or mediation clause, which then becomes its own preliminary fight. If you’re signing a commercial contract, get the clause reviewed before you sign.

How we handle mediation and arbitration at A.W. Law

  • One lawyer, start to finish. The director who takes your Discovery Session runs the mediation or arbitration through to settlement or award.
  • Honest route advice. If the matter belongs at the Small Claims Tribunal, or a quiet letter-exchange would do it, we’ll say so. Not every dispute needs a SIAC filing.
  • Plain-English strategy memos. Before any mediation or arbitration, you get a written memo showing the numbers, the risks, and our recommended settlement range.
  • WhatsApp in the evenings. We reply until 10pm on weekdays.
  • Multilingual. English, Malay, or Tamil.

We’re at 133 New Bridge Road, #20-03 Chinatown Point. Two minutes’ walk from Chinatown MRT, Exit E.

What happens next

If you have a dispute you’d rather not take to a full court trial, the next step is simple. Book a free 10-min Mediation & Arbitration Discovery Session using the form on this page, or message us on WhatsApp using the button anywhere on the screen.

Nothing commits you. Most sessions end with a short list of things to gather: the contract, the correspondence, the rough numbers. You’ll leave knowing whether mediation, arbitration, or court is the right route, which institution fits, and what a realistic timeline and cost look like.

How we handle it

Your mediation & arbitration, step by step.

  1. Step 01

    Book free 10-min Mediation & Arbitration Discovery Session

    A short call or walk-in. You tell us what the dispute is and what's already been tried. We tell you straight away whether mediation, arbitration, or going to court is the best fit, and which venue (SIMC, SIAC, FIDReC, or private) makes sense. No charge, no pushing.

  2. Step 02

    Plan and price, in writing

    Before we do any paid work, we send you a short letter. It says the ADR route, the likely timetable, the tribunal or mediator's fee band, and our own capped fee. You decide.

  3. Step 03

    Prepare and file

    For arbitration, we check the arbitration clause, draft the Notice of Arbitration, agree on the tribunal, and file at SIAC or the agreed institution. For mediation, we prepare your position paper, the opening statement, and the settlement range.

  4. Step 04

    Hearing, award, or settlement agreement

    Most mediations settle within 1 to 2 days of sitting down. We convert the deal into a binding settlement agreement (or an **International Mediated Settlement Agreement** under the Singapore Convention, if it's cross-border). Arbitration ends in an **arbitral award**, which is enforceable in Singapore and internationally.

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 contract, agreement, or written terms with the other side
  • Any arbitration or mediation clause, with the full wording
  • A short timeline of what happened, in your own words
  • All letters, emails, and WhatsApp messages between you and the other side
  • Any previous lawyer's letter, demand, or court papers already filed
  • A rough figure: what you believe you're owed or what's being claimed against you

Your bench

Who handles your mediation & arbitration

3 lawyers at A.W. Law LLC take mediation & arbitration matters. The lead takes your first meeting.

Lead on this matter
Abdul Wahab — Managing Director at A.W. Law LLC

Your lawyer on this matter

Wahab

Managing Director

Wahab appears in arbitration proceedings at the **Singapore International Arbitration Centre (SIAC)** and serves as a neutral evaluator at the **Financial Industry Disputes Resolution Centre (FIDReC)**. He holds full rights of audience at the Dubai International Financial Centre (DIFC) Courts. He's built his practice around ADR and dispute resolution across family, civil, and cross-border matters, and takes every ADR Discovery Session himself. He speaks English, Malay, and Tamil.
Languages
English · Malay · Tamil
Practice focus
Family Law (Civil & Syariah) · Civil Litigation · Bankruptcy & Insolvency
Qualifications
LL.B. (Hons), University of Leeds (2013) · Advocate & Solicitor, Singapore Bar (2015)
Read full biography
Muhammad Hasif — Associate Director at A.W. Law LLC

Also on this matter

Hasif

Associate Director

Hasif acts in commercial disputes at the High Court and Court of Appeal, including *Mface Pte Ltd v Chin Oi Ching* [2024] SGHC 234 and *Low Yin Ni & Anor v Tay Yuan Wei & Anor* [2020] SGCA 58. He prepares position papers and settlement strategy with meticulous attention to the underlying contract. He speaks English, Malay, and Bahasa Indonesia.
Speaks
English · Malay · Bahasa Indonesia
Focus
Family Law (Civil & Syariah) · Civil Litigation
Roy Paul Mukkam — Associate Director at A.W. Law LLC

Also on this matter

Roy Paul Mukkam

Associate Director

Roy has been at the Singapore Bar since 2013 and has handled ICC arbitration for a multinational, along with civil and criminal matters before the Court of Appeal. He's represented The Law Society of Singapore and run High Court minority oppression disputes. He speaks English, Malay, and Malayalam.
Speaks
English · Malay · Malayalam
Focus
Civil Litigation · Bankruptcy & Insolvency

Common questions

Mediation & Arbitration — frequently asked.

What is the difference between mediation and arbitration in Singapore?

Mediation is a settlement conversation run by a neutral mediator. The mediator doesn't decide the case: the two sides decide, and the mediator helps them get there. It's voluntary and without prejudice. Arbitration is a private alternative to court. An arbitrator (or a panel of three) hears the case and issues a binding arbitral award, which is enforceable like a court judgment. Both are forms of alternative dispute resolution (ADR) and both are faster and more private than going to court.

How much does mediation cost in Singapore?

At the Singapore Mediation Centre (SIMC), a private commercial mediation typically costs between S$1,500 and S$8,000 per party for a full-day session, depending on the sum in dispute and the mediator's rate. Add lawyer's fees for preparation and attendance (usually a flat fee of S$2,500 to S$6,000 per side). Court-annexed mediation during live State Courts or High Court proceedings is much cheaper. FIDReC mediation of banking and insurance disputes for individuals is free up to S$100,000. See our overview of mediation in Singapore for context.

Is a mediation settlement binding in Singapore?

Yes, once it's written down and signed. A settlement agreement from mediation is a contract and is enforceable like any other contract. Since 2020, international mediation settlements can also be enforced under the Singapore Convention on Mediation in other signatory countries, without needing a fresh lawsuit. Under the Mediation Act 2017, Singapore mediated settlements can also be recorded as a court order for easier enforcement.

How long does arbitration take in Singapore?

A standard SIAC arbitration (from Notice of Arbitration to final award) usually takes 9 to 18 months. Simple cases run on the expedited procedure and can conclude in 6 months or less. Complex international matters with multiple parties can take over 2 years. Court enforcement of an award, after it's issued, is usually quick. Singapore awards are enforceable in over 170 countries under the New York Convention.

Can I refuse mediation in Singapore?

In commercial matters you usually can, unless the contract contains a tiered dispute resolution clause that requires mediation first. Courts increasingly expect parties to have tried to settle. In family matters, mediation is often compulsory: the Family Justice Courts require it for cases involving children under 21 or maintenance. In employment and consumer matters, various sector schemes require or strongly encourage mediation first.

Do I need a lawyer for arbitration in Singapore?

You can technically represent yourself, but arbitration procedure is demanding. You deal with the arbitration clause interpretation, the seat and governing law, the tribunal appointment, the pleadings, the document production, and the hearing. Arbitral awards are final and hard to appeal. For any arbitration above a few thousand dollars, a lawyer is strongly recommended. Mediation is different: you can attend without a lawyer, though many people bring one to help them think through the numbers.

Is an arbitration clause enforceable in Singapore?

Yes. If your contract contains an arbitration clause, Singapore courts will usually enforce it by staying (pausing) any court proceedings and ordering the parties to arbitrate instead. This is mandated by the Arbitration Act (for domestic arbitrations) and the International Arbitration Act (for international ones). Courts only refuse if the clause is clearly invalid or the dispute falls outside it. Be careful: suing in court first, when you have an arbitration clause, usually wastes time and money.

What kinds of disputes can go to mediation or arbitration?

Most civil and commercial disputes: contract, shareholder, construction, employment, intellectual property, insurance, family (including divorce mediation), and international cross-border disputes. Criminal matters cannot be arbitrated. Some public law matters also can't be. A Discovery Session is the fastest way to find out whether your specific dispute is ADR-suitable.

Related matters we handle

Still have questions?

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From our blog

Further reading on mediation & arbitration

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What clients say

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