Why the Construction Industry Uses Arbitration

Construction and real estate disputes are among the most technically complex commercial disputes that arise in any legal system. They typically involve:

  • Large sums of money — often tens or hundreds of millions of shekels;
  • Technical questions that require engineering, quantity surveying, or architectural expertise to understand;
  • Voluminous documentation — hundreds of thousands of pages of drawings, specifications, correspondence, and variations orders;
  • Multiple parties with interconnected obligations (developer, main contractor, subcontractors, consultants, suppliers);
  • Ongoing commercial relationships and projects that continue during the dispute.

These features make construction and real estate disputes particularly well-suited to arbitration:

  • Expert arbitrators with engineering, quantity surveying, or real estate backgrounds can assess technical evidence without the need for extensive expert education that courts require.
  • Confidentiality prevents reputational harm and protects commercially sensitive information (project costs, subcontractor pricing, profit margins).
  • Flexibility to conduct site inspections, manage large document volumes, and adapt procedure to the dispute.
  • Speed compared to the District Court's commercial litigation docket, which can extend proceedings over several years.

Common Construction and Real Estate Disputes in Israeli Arbitration

Construction Contract Disputes

  • Payment disputes. Contractor claims for unpaid progress payments or final account; developer counterclaims for defects or delay.
  • Variations and changes. Disputes about whether additional work was authorised, whether instructions constituted a change order, and what the variation is worth.
  • Delay and extension of time. Who caused the delay, whether the contractor is entitled to an extension of time, and whether liquidated damages are payable.
  • Defects. Claims for latent defects, the cost of remediation, and liability between the developer, main contractor, and subcontractors.
  • Termination disputes. Whether termination of a construction contract was valid, and the financial consequences.
  • Ground conditions. Unforeseen site conditions that increase the contractor's costs.

Real Estate Disputes

  • Developer-purchaser disputes. Delays in delivering apartments, defects in newly completed units, disagreements about whether the delivered unit conforms to the contract specification.
  • Apartment purchase agreements . Disputes about possession date, specification changes, and completion.
  • Landlord-tenant disputes. Commercial tenancy disputes involving significant rental arrears, early termination, and rent review.
  • Joint venture and partnership disputes. Disagreements between co-investors in a real estate project about contributions, profits, and management.
  • Valuation disputes. Disagreements about property value in the context of a sale, buyout, or compensation claim.

Arbitration Clauses in Standard Israeli Construction Contracts

Most standard-form construction contracts used in Israel contain arbitration clauses. The leading Israeli standard form — MOB — the Ministry of Construction and Housing standard terms for public works contracts — traditionally provided for disputes to be referred to an engineer-arbitrator, often the project engineer. The approach has evolved over the years with updated contract forms.

Private sector construction contracts typically include arbitration clauses drafted by the developer's lawyers, often designating a three-member tribunal (one technical expert, one lawyer, one quantity surveyor or real estate appraiser) for large disputes, or a sole expert-arbitrator for smaller claims.

The FIDIC (F?d?ration Internationale des Ing?nieurs-Conseils) suite of construction contracts — widely used for international infrastructure projects, including Israeli government projects with foreign contractors — includes multi-tier dispute resolution provisions: first, the Engineer's decision; then a Dispute Adjudication Board (DAB); then friendly settlement; then ICC arbitration. Israeli courts have upheld FIDIC dispute resolution provisions and enforced DAB decisions pending arbitration.

Expert Arbitrators in Construction Arbitration

One of the most important features of construction arbitration is the ability to appoint arbitrators with relevant technical expertise. Common arbitrator profiles for Israeli construction disputes include:

  • Retired engineers (civil, structural, mechanical) who can evaluate technical submissions without needing extensive lay explanation.
  • Quantity surveyors for disputes primarily involving measurement, valuation, and final account calculations.
  • Retired District Court judges who handled commercial or real estate litigation — valuable for legally complex disputes.
  • Mixed tribunals: A lawyer serving as presiding arbitrator with two technical co-arbitrators is common in high-value construction disputes involving both legal and engineering issues.

ICCA's roster includes arbitrators with construction and real estate expertise. When selecting arbitrators, verify their actual experience with construction disputes, not merely their professional background.

Site Inspections

A distinctive feature of construction arbitration is the site inspection. The arbitrator may visit the project to inspect defects, assess the condition of works, or understand the physical context of the dispute. This is explicitly authorised by section 17 of the Arbitration Law, 1968, which permits arbitrators to inspect property.

Site visits are typically conducted with both parties and their representatives present, and a contemporaneous record is made. Expert witnesses may accompany the arbitrator. The site visit findings often carry significant evidentiary weight, especially in defects cases where "seeing is believing."

Expert Evidence in Construction Arbitration

Expert evidence is central to most construction arbitrations. Common types of expert evidence include:

  • Structural engineers — for defects, building safety, and design liability.
  • Quantity surveyors — for valuation of works, variations, and final account disputes.
  • Project schedulers — for delay analysis, identifying the critical path, and apportioning responsibility for delays.
  • Cost consultants / forensic accountants — for loss of profit claims, overheads, and financial damages.
  • Geotechnical engineers — for unforeseen ground conditions disputes.

Best practice in construction arbitration is for experts to exchange reports in advance of the hearing and then hold a joint "experts' meeting" to narrow the issues in dispute. The arbitrator may also appoint a tribunal-appointed expert to provide an independent view on specific technical questions.

Multi-Party Disputes

Construction projects involve chains of contracts: developer ? main contractor ? subcontractors ? sub-subcontractors ? suppliers. When a dispute arises, the same factual issues often affect multiple contractual relationships. However, under Israeli arbitration law, an arbitrator has jurisdiction only over the parties to the arbitration agreement — a main contractor cannot bring a subcontractor into the arbitration with the developer unless all three parties agree.

To manage multi-party situations, construction contracts increasingly include:

  • Back-to-back arbitration clauses that mirror the arbitration procedure down the contract chain, allowing sequential arbitrations to proceed consistently.
  • Joinder provisions allowing a third party to be joined to proceedings if all parties consent.
  • Consolidation provisions allowing related arbitrations to be consolidated before the same arbitrator.

Without such provisions, parallel arbitrations between different parties in the same project are common, creating the risk of inconsistent findings.

A Norwegian shipping company that had financed a Tel Aviv warehouse development through an Israeli joint venture partner brought an ICCA arbitration after the Israeli contractor claimed NIS 3,600,000 in delay liquidated damages over a 120-day overrun; the Norwegian side engaged an Israeli-registered civil engineer as co-arbitrator and, during a site inspection conducted under Section 17 of the Arbitration Law 1968, the arbitral tribunal directly observed that the allegedly defective drainage system that the Israeli contractor blamed for the delay had in fact been specified in drawings issued by the developer's own engineer — a fact that had been obscured in the written submissions by attribution to a subcontractor. The expert-arbitrator's site inspection finding, recorded in a contemporaneous inspection memorandum signed by both parties' representatives on the day, proved determinative: the tribunal apportioned 78% of the delay period to developer-caused events and reduced the liquidated damages award to NIS 792,000 from the claimed NIS 3,600,000.

Real Estate-Specific Issues

Registration and Title

An arbitral award cannot directly transfer title to land — only the Land Registry (Tabu) can do that. An arbitral award requiring a party to execute a deed of transfer must be enforced through the court, which may then order the transfer or (in default) execute the deed on behalf of the party.

Betterment Tax Disputes

Disputes about whether planning approvals constitute a "betterment" (shevach) under Israeli tax law, and who bears the betterment tax in a transaction, are increasingly resolved by arbitration — particularly in off-plan developer sales where the allocation of betterment tax liability is hotly contested.

Property Management Disputes

Disputes between building owners and property managers, and disputes in homeowners' associations (va'ad bayit), are frequently resolved by arbitration. The flexibility of arbitration makes it well-suited to these ongoing relationship disputes where a quick, private resolution is preferable to litigation.

TAMA 38 and Urban Renewal Disputes

Israel's TAMA 38 urban renewal scheme (strengthening older buildings against earthquakes in exchange for additional construction rights) and the related "Pinui-Binui" (evacuation-construction) scheme have generated a new category of construction and real estate dispute. These involve:

  • Disputes between apartment owners and developers about the terms and timing of agreements;
  • Disputes about the scope of renovations and upgrades;
  • Disputes about delay in completing works and relocating tenants;
  • Disputes between majority and minority apartment owners about consenting to urban renewal schemes.

Many TAMA 38 agreements include arbitration clauses. The combination of technical construction issues, real estate law, and the personal dimension (apartment owners' homes) makes mediation an attractive first step — with arbitration as the backstop if mediation fails.

Practical Tips for Drafting Construction Arbitration Clauses

  • Specify arbitrator qualifications. "A chartered engineer with at least 15 years' experience in Israeli residential construction" is more useful than "a technical expert."
  • Include a site inspection provision. Expressly authorise the arbitrator to conduct site inspections, particularly in contracts involving defects risk.
  • Address multi-tier and multi-party scenarios. Include back-to-back language in subcontracts and consider joinder/consolidation provisions.
  • Build in a fast-track mechanism. For urgent disputes about payment withholding, consider an expedited track or adjudication procedure (as used in FIDIC or UK-style contracts) to get an interim decision quickly.
  • Address DAB/adjudication for FIDIC contracts. If using FIDIC, ensure the Dispute Adjudication Board provisions are properly implemented and the arbitration backstop is operable in Israel.
  • Specify Hebrew or English. For international contractors, specify the language of proceedings expressly to avoid disputes about which language applies.
In Practice: An arbitral award ordering title transfer cannot directly update the Land Registry — only a court order or the parties' own signed documentation can do that. An award requiring a developer to transfer an apartment must be confirmed by the District Court under Section 28 of the Arbitration Law 1968, and then the transfer must be separately executed through a Land Registry application. Budget 3–5 additional months for post-award title processing in construction arbitrations involving ownership disputes; failure to account for this delay has caused financing and tax complications for award-winning buyers.
In Practice: For TAMA 38 and Pinui-Binui disputes involving residents' primary homes, mediation before arbitration is strongly advisable. These disputes carry personal and emotional stakes — residents face displacement, construction noise, and financial uncertainty — that respond far better to facilitated negotiation than adversarial proceedings. An experienced urban renewal mediator can often settle in a single day what would take 18 months in arbitration, at a fraction of the cost and without the relationship damage that litigation inflicts on an ongoing development project.
Common Mistake: Property purchasers who receive a defective apartment and want to arbitrate a claim under the Sales Law (Apartments) 5733-1973 often overlook the mandatory notice requirement. Under Section 4A of the Sales Law (Apartments) Warranty Law 5730-1990, a buyer must give written notice of each defect to the developer within a specific period after discovery — 1 year for visible defects from handover. Missing that notice period extinguishes the warranty claim entirely, even for structural defects worth NIS 80,000–500,000 to repair. Arbitrating a defect claim without first serving timely written notice means the claim will fail on procedural grounds before any merits hearing.

Frequently Asked Questions

Only if the subcontractor and developer are parties to the same arbitration agreement. In standard Israeli construction practice, subcontractors have a contract with the main contractor only, not the developer. To arbitrate with the developer, the subcontractor must rely on a separate agreement, a direct warranty, or a novation of the main contract.
Yes. An arbitrator can award specific performance — ordering a party to perform contractual obligations, including remedying defects. However, if the party refuses to comply, enforcement requires a court order through the Execution Office, which in practice converts the specific-performance award into a damages assessment if the party continues to default.
For a moderately complex construction dispute (variations + delay + defects), 12–24 months from commencement to award is typical. Large infrastructure disputes with multiple parties and extensive expert evidence may take 3–5 years. An experienced arbitrator and disciplined case management can significantly compress the timeline.
Increasingly, yes. Many construction disputes are now resolved through mediation, either as a contractual pre-condition to arbitration or as a parallel track once litigation or arbitration has commenced. Mediators with construction expertise are available through ICCA and through specialist construction dispute resolution practitioners.
The parties may choose any law they agree on. In the absence of a choice, Israeli law will generally govern if the project is located in Israel. Specifying Israeli law as the governing law in the contract and Tel Aviv as the seat of arbitration is advisable for Israel-located projects, as it ensures the local regulatory and planning framework (building permits, Israel Standards Institute specifications, etc.) is properly applied.
Adv. Eli Shimony
Adv. Eli Shimony
Israeli Real Estate & Construction Law Attorney

Eli Shimony advises developers, contractors, and investors in Israeli real estate and construction disputes, including arbitration, mediation, and court litigation. He has experience with residential, commercial, and infrastructure projects.

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