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If you need to bring a cross‑border commercial claim in Switzerland in 2026, the procedural landscape has shifted materially since 1 January 2026. Federal‑level amendments to the Federal Act on Private International Law (PILA) and Switzerland’s declaration under the Hague Evidence Convention now permit videoconference testimony, voluntary witness participation, and streamlined cooperation channels, all of which change pre‑filing calculations, evidence routes, and realistic timelines. This guide walks general counsel, fund managers, and international trading or FinTech businesses through every stage of cross‑border commercial litigation in Switzerland: from jurisdiction tests and forum selection, through filing, service abroad, evidence collection, provisional measures, and enforcement.
It also covers the documents you will need, indicative costs, and the pitfalls that regularly derail otherwise meritorious claims.
A “cross‑border commercial claim” in the Swiss context means any contractual, tortious, or insolvency‑related dispute with a foreign element, for example, a claimant or defendant domiciled outside Switzerland, a contract governed by foreign law, or assets located across multiple jurisdictions. Switzerland’s procedural framework for these claims rests on two primary statutes: the PILA, which governs jurisdiction and applicable law for international matters, and the Swiss Code of Civil Procedure (ZPO/CPC), which sets out domestic procedural rules applicable once jurisdiction is established.
The first strategic decision for any claimant is whether to pursue court litigation or international arbitration. Where the contract contains an arbitration clause, and Switzerland remains one of the world’s preferred arbitration seats under PILA Chapter 12, state court proceedings will generally be unavailable for the merits. Where no valid arbitration clause exists, Swiss courts may have jurisdiction if the defendant is domiciled in Switzerland, if the contract designates a Swiss forum, or if Swiss‑located assets provide a basis for interim relief and enforcement.
Evidence‑only actions are also common: a foreign litigant may need to obtain witness testimony or documents located in Switzerland in aid of proceedings abroad. The 2026 reforms to cross‑border evidence rules, effective 1 January 2026, have made this process faster but have not removed the compliance risks under Article 271 of the Swiss Criminal Code (SCC), which criminalises certain foreign official acts on Swiss territory. Understanding both the opportunities and the constraints is essential before any filing.
Swiss courts accept jurisdiction over cross‑border commercial claims under several connecting factors. The most straightforward is a contractual choice‑of‑forum clause designating a Swiss canton. In the absence of a forum‑selection clause, the PILA provides default rules: jurisdiction at the defendant’s domicile or habitual residence in Switzerland, jurisdiction at the place of performance of the contractual obligation, and, for tort claims, jurisdiction at the place where the harmful act occurred or produced its effects. Where a defendant has no Swiss domicile but holds assets in Switzerland, provisional measures (attachment of assets) may create a jurisdictional basis under the Federal Debt Enforcement and Bankruptcy Act (DEBA/SchKG).
For disputes between parties from states bound by the Lugano Convention, that instrument’s jurisdiction rules apply instead of the PILA and take precedence.
Cross‑border commercial claims in Switzerland are typically heard by cantonal commercial courts, specialised chambers that exist in several cantons including Zurich, Bern, Aargau, and St. Gallen. These courts handle disputes of a commercial nature where at least one party is registered in the commercial register.
A significant development is the introduction of pilot international commercial court initiatives in selected cantons, enabling proceedings in English where both parties consent and the court grants permission. These pilots aim to position Switzerland as a competitive forum for international commercial disputes. Industry observers expect additional cantons to join these pilot schemes in the coming years. Parties wishing to use English proceedings should include an express language‑of‑proceedings clause in their contracts and confirm availability with the specific cantonal court before filing.
Arbitration under PILA Chapter 12 is generally preferable where the contract already contains an arbitration clause, where confidentiality is important, where the dispute involves parties from jurisdictions that have ratified the New York Convention (facilitating enforcement), or where the parties want to choose their adjudicators. Swiss court litigation may be more appropriate where no arbitration agreement exists, where interim relief is needed urgently before an arbitral tribunal is constituted, or where the claimant wishes to attach assets in Switzerland under DEBA/SchKG. In practice, many cross‑border commercial claims involve both tracks: an attachment or freezing application in court, followed by arbitral proceedings on the merits.
The following numbered steps set out the operational flow from pre‑filing preparation through to enforcement. The timeline table below summarises who does what and how long each stage typically takes.
| Step | Who Does It | Typical Duration |
|---|---|---|
| Pre‑filing preservation & demand letter | Claimant + in‑house legal / external counsel | Preservation hold within 0–7 days; demand letter 7–14 days pre‑filing |
| Forum selection & preparation of claim | Claimant counsel | 1–4 weeks |
| Filing & service (domestic) | Claimant counsel / court clerk | 1–4 weeks (file & acknowledgement) |
| Service abroad (Hague or consular) | Claimant counsel / central authority | 2–12 weeks (Hague route) |
| FOJ authorisation / Art. 271 clearance (if needed) | Federal Office of Justice (FOJ) / courts | 4–12 weeks historically; 2026 reforms may shorten |
| Interim measures (attachment/freezing) | Claimant counsel + court | 1–4 weeks (urgent ex parte possible within 24–72 hours) |
| Evidence collection (witness testimony, documents) | Court / parties / experts | 1–6 months (2026 reforms allow videoconference options) |
| Final judgment (court trial) | Court | 3–12 months (varies by canton & complexity) |
| Enforcement (domestic) | Cantonal enforcement authority | 1–6 months (depending on assets & defences) |
Before filing any claim, the claimant should take three immediate actions. First, issue an evidence preservation hold to all internal teams and relevant counterparties. This means instructing IT departments to suspend routine data‑deletion policies, backing up email servers, preserving metadata on all electronic communications, and documenting the chain of custody for hard‑copy records. Second, assess whether interim relief, such as a freezing order or asset attachment, is needed urgently. If assets are at risk of dissipation, skip ahead to provisional measures (Step 5 below) and apply on an ex parte basis before the formal claim is filed. Third, send a formal demand letter to the defendant setting out the claim, the legal basis, and the relief sought.
Under Swiss practice, a demand letter is not always a statutory prerequisite, but it is standard commercial practice and can establish the start date for default interest.
Confirm the appropriate forum: the canton designated in the contract, the canton of the defendant’s domicile, or the canton where interim relief is sought. Identify whether the cantonal commercial court has jurisdiction (commercial register requirements) or whether a general civil court applies. If the parties have agreed to English proceedings and the chosen canton participates in the international commercial court pilot, request language permission at this stage. Prepare the statement of claim (Klageschrift / demande), which must set out the jurisdictional basis, the factual narrative, the legal grounds, and the specific relief sought. Attach all supporting evidence available at the time of filing.
File the statement of claim at the competent cantonal court. Pay the court filing fee, which is calculated based on the amount in dispute and varies by canton. The claim must be filed in the official language of the canton, German, French, or Italian, unless English proceedings have been authorised. If the contract or supporting evidence is in a foreign language, certified translations must accompany the filing. The court will issue a procedural acknowledgement and set the case on its docket.
In some cantons, a conciliation hearing before the justice of the peace is required before the claim reaches the commercial court; where the amount in dispute exceeds CHF 100,000 and both parties agree, the parties may waive conciliation and proceed directly.
Where the defendant is domiciled abroad, service must comply with the Hague Service Convention if the destination state is a contracting party. The claimant transmits the documents through the Swiss central authority (the cantonal court or the FOJ, depending on the canton) to the foreign central authority. This process typically takes 2–12 weeks depending on the receiving jurisdiction’s efficiency. For non‑Hague states, consular or diplomatic service channels apply, which are slower.
Article 271 of the SCC is a critical compliance point. This provision criminalises the performance on Swiss territory of acts on behalf of a foreign state, a foreign public authority, or a foreign organisation without official authorisation. In practical terms, this means a foreign litigant or foreign authority cannot directly instruct witnesses, collect documents, or conduct depositions in Switzerland without going through proper channels, either the FOJ, the Hague Evidence Convention process, or by obtaining prior authorisation. Violations can result in criminal penalties. The 2026 reforms have relaxed the rules for voluntary participation and videoconference testimony, but the underlying Article 271 prohibition remains in force.
Any evidence‑gathering activity in Switzerland should be reviewed by Swiss counsel for Article 271 compliance before it begins.
Where there is a credible risk of asset dissipation, destruction of evidence, or irreparable harm, the claimant should apply for provisional measures. Swiss courts can grant asset attachments (Arrest) under the DEBA/SchKG, freezing orders, and other protective measures. Applications may be made ex parte in urgent cases, courts can hear these within 24–72 hours. The applicant must demonstrate a prima facie claim, a credible risk, and proportionality. In most cases, the court will require the applicant to post a security deposit to cover potential damages if the measures later prove unjustified. Once granted, the measures must be validated by commencing the main proceedings within a deadline set by the court, typically 10–30 days.
Collecting cross‑border evidence in Switzerland has become materially more efficient since 1 January 2026. Key changes include the option for witnesses to give testimony by videoconference without requiring the physical presence of foreign officials on Swiss soil, and the ability for persons in Switzerland to voluntarily participate in foreign proceedings (including providing documents) without triggering the full FOJ authorisation process. The traditional route, a formal letter rogatory through the Hague Evidence Convention, remains available and is still required where the witness is unwilling or where formal compulsion is needed. Typical timeframes for evidence collection range from 2–6 weeks for straightforward documentary requests to 3–6 months for multi‑witness, cross‑border exercises.
Swiss courts appoint their own experts in most cases, though party‑appointed experts are accepted subject to court approval.
Once evidence has been taken and oral hearings concluded, the court will render its judgment. For domestic enforcement, the prevailing party can use the procedures set out in the ZPO/CPC and the DEBA/SchKG to enforce against the losing party’s Swiss assets. For enforcement of foreign judgments in Switzerland, the Lugano Convention governs recognition between Switzerland and EU/EFTA member states; other foreign judgments require recognition under the PILA. Arbitral awards rendered in Switzerland are enforceable directly under the ZPO/CPC, while foreign arbitral awards benefit from recognition and enforcement under the New York Convention, to which Switzerland is a contracting party. The enforcement stage typically takes 1–6 months depending on the complexity of the assets involved and any defences raised.
Compiling the right documentation before and during proceedings is essential. The checklist below covers both filing requirements and evidence‑gathering needs. Missing or incorrectly formatted documents are among the most common causes of procedural delay.
| Document | Notes |
|---|---|
| Statement of claim / writ (Klageschrift) | Signed by claimant counsel; must include jurisdictional facts, the relief sought, a summary of the evidence, and applicable legal provisions. |
| Power of attorney | Notarised if foreign counsel is acting; translated into the court language if issued abroad. |
| Contract(s) in dispute | Certified copy; apostille or consular legalisation required if executed abroad. |
| Evidence preservation notices & ESI logs | Copies of internal hold notices, IT backup confirmations, and metadata export logs. Document chain of custody. |
| Witness list & signed statements | Signed declarations or affidavits where permitted; indicate availability for videoconference testimony under the 2026 rules. |
| Expert reports | Include CV, scope of instruction, methodology; the court may appoint its own expert or accept a party‑appointed expert. |
| Service proof (certificate of service) | Hague Service Certificate or central authority transmission acknowledgement; attach translations as required. |
| Corporate records (commercial register extracts) | Extract or certificate of good standing from the relevant company registry; apostille if issued abroad. |
| Bank / asset trace reports | Signed investigator report with methodology; used to support provisional measures and enforcement applications. |
| Certified translations | All foreign‑language documents must be translated into the court language (German, French, or Italian) unless English proceedings are authorised. |
Before filing, verify that every document requiring legalisation or apostille has been properly certified. Courts will not accept unverified foreign‑language originals. Build in at least 2–3 weeks for translations and notarisations when planning the filing timeline.
Realistic timeframes vary significantly depending on claim complexity, the number of parties, and whether evidence must be collected from multiple jurisdictions. The table below provides indicative ranges for a routine versus a complex cross‑border commercial claim.
| Milestone | Earliest | Typical / Latest |
|---|---|---|
| Demand letter → filing | 1–2 weeks after demand | 4–8 weeks if negotiation ongoing |
| Service abroad complete | 2 weeks (Hague direct route) | 3 months (complex consular routes) |
| Interim measures hearing | 24–72 hours (urgent ex parte) | 2–4 weeks (if scheduled hearing) |
| Evidence collection completed | 2–6 weeks (simple documentary) | 3–6 months (multi‑witness, cross‑border) |
| Final judgment | 3 months (fast track / cantonal chamber) | 12+ months (complex multi‑party cases) |
| Enforcement completed | 1–3 months | 6–12 months (if debt collection defences invoked) |
Statutes of limitation. Under the Swiss Code of Obligations, the general limitation period for contractual claims is 10 years. However, specific shorter periods apply to certain claim types, for example, tort claims are subject to shorter limitation periods. Claimants must verify the applicable limitation period for their specific cause of action before commencing proceedings. An expired limitation period is a complete defence and cannot be remedied after the fact.
Deadlines after interim relief. Where a court grants provisional measures before the main claim is filed, the applicant must typically commence proceedings on the merits within a court‑imposed deadline, commonly 10–30 days. Failing to do so results in automatic lapse of the provisional measures.
The 2026 cross‑border evidence reforms have shortened the evidence‑gathering phase in many cases. Industry observers expect the average duration for obtaining witness testimony from Switzerland to decrease by several weeks where videoconference options are used instead of the traditional letter‑rogatory process.
| Item | Amount (Indicative) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Court filing fee | CHF 200 – CHF 2,000 | Varies by canton and claim value; check the specific cantonal fee schedule before filing. |
| Counsel (local Swiss counsel) | CHF 250 – CHF 700 / hour | Senior counsel rates; complexity, emergency work, and English‑language capability increase cost. |
| Interim measures application (urgent) | CHF 3,000 – CHF 25,000 | Includes counsel fees, court costs, and potential security deposit. |
| Service abroad (Hague/consular) | CHF 100 – CHF 1,000+ | Depends on route and translation / legalisation costs. |
| Expert fees | CHF 3,000 – CHF 50,000+ | Highly variable by discipline, scope, and hours. |
| Enforcement proceedings | CHF 500 – CHF 10,000+ | Cantonal enforcement fees vary; asset tracing adds cost. |
| Translation / notarisation / apostille | CHF 50 – CHF 1,000 | Per document; complexity and target language affect pricing. |
Cost recovery. Swiss courts award costs to the prevailing party under the ZPO/CPC, but the recoverable amount typically does not cover the full hourly rate of external counsel. Parties engaged in cross‑border commercial litigation should factor in an irrecoverable cost component. Including an indemnity costs clause in future contracts can help mitigate this gap.
The reforms effective 1 January 2026 represent the most significant modernisation of Switzerland’s cross‑border civil procedure framework in decades. Three changes carry the greatest practical impact for commercial claimants:
Critically, Article 271 SCC remains in force. The 2026 reforms do not authorise foreign states or their agents to conduct official acts on Swiss territory without authorisation. Any evidence‑gathering activity that goes beyond voluntary cooperation, such as a foreign regulator compelling testimony or conducting depositions, still requires FOJ clearance. Swiss counsel should be instructed before any cross‑border evidence activity is initiated.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Martin Eisenring at EISENRING Attorneys & Notaries, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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