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Civil vs Criminal Liability in Switzerland (2026): When to Defend, When to Settle, and When to Hire a Lawyer

posted 4 hours ago

When a Swiss company faces an incident, a product failure, a workplace fatality, a fraud allegation, a data breach, the first question board members and in-house counsel must answer is deceptively simple: is this a civil matter or a criminal exposure? Understanding civil vs criminal liability in Switzerland is not an academic exercise. It dictates whether you negotiate a settlement with an injured party or retain criminal defence counsel within hours. With the expanded corporate criminal liability framework taking practical effect in 2025–2026 under Article 102 of the Swiss Criminal Code (SR 311. 0), the stakes of making this call incorrectly have never been higher.

This guide provides a direct, side-by-side decision framework for directors, CFOs, founders and risk managers who need to act now.

Option A: Treating the Matter as Civil, What It Means and When It Applies

Civil liability in Switzerland is governed primarily by the Swiss Code of Obligations (CO) and the Swiss Civil Code (ZGB). It concerns disputes between private parties, a company and its customer, a contractor and a principal, an investor and a board. The goal is financial compensation for proven harm, not punishment.

Typical Scenarios

  • Product defect causing economic loss. A manufacturing batch fails quality standards, causing downstream losses for a distributor. The distributor sues under contractual or product liability provisions of the CO.
  • Contractual disputes. A technology vendor fails to deliver on a milestone, triggering liquidated damages or a claim for breach of contract.
  • Investor or shareholder claims. Minority shareholders allege that a board decision diminished company value, pursuing derivative claims under corporate law provisions of the CO.
  • Workplace injury (economic component). An employee injured on site claims damages for lost earnings and medical costs beyond social insurance coverage.

Remedies Available

Swiss civil courts can award compensatory damages (including loss of profit and consequential losses), order injunctions to prevent ongoing harm, and issue declaratory relief establishing parties’ rights. Damages are calculated based on proven loss, plus interest and litigation costs. Switzerland is a civil law jurisdiction, courts apply enacted law, and there are no punitive damages in the common-law sense.

Who Normally Sues

The claimant is always a private party: an individual, a company, a subrogated insurer, or, in shareholder disputes, an investor. The state does not initiate civil proceedings. This distinction is critical: if the state is involved, the matter is no longer purely civil. Director liability in civil proceedings typically arises through direct claims by third parties or derivative actions brought on behalf of the company under the CO. Liability requires proof of a breach of duty, damage, and a causal link, assessed on a balance of probabilities.

Option B: Treating the Matter as Criminal, What It Means and When It Applies

Criminal liability in Switzerland is governed by the Swiss Criminal Code (SCC, SR 311.0) and ancillary federal criminal statutes. Unlike civil proceedings, criminal law protects public interests. The state investigates and prosecutes offences, the company or its directors do not control the process.

Typical Scenarios That Create Criminal Exposure

  • Fraud and dishonesty offences. Falsification of accounts, submission of fraudulent invoices, misrepresentation to investors.
  • Bribery and corruption. Payments to foreign public officials, facilitation payments, or private-sector corruption, all covered by the SCC and the Federal Act on Combating Corruption.
  • Gross safety breaches causing death or serious injury. A workplace fatality caused by systemic safety failures can trigger prosecution of responsible individuals for negligent homicide.
  • Serious environmental offences. Unlawful discharge of pollutants causing substantial environmental damage.
  • Data privacy crimes. Intentional violations of the revised Federal Act on Data Protection (FADP) can carry criminal penalties for responsible individuals.

Criminal Consequences

For individuals, including directors, criminal conviction can result in pecuniary penalties (day-fines), monetary fines, and in serious cases, custodial sentences. For companies, Article 102 of the SCC now provides a framework for direct corporate criminal liability. Where an offence cannot be attributed to a specific individual due to organisational failings, the company itself faces prosecution and fines. Additionally, where an enterprise fails to take all reasonable organisational measures to prevent certain specified offences (including bribery, money laundering, and financing of terrorism), the enterprise faces independent criminal liability regardless of individual attribution.

Who Prosecutes

Criminal cases are initiated and driven by the public prosecutor, either a cantonal prosecutor for most offences or the Office of the Attorney General (OAG) for federal matters such as corruption, money laundering, and terrorism financing. Victims may file criminal complaints and participate as private claimants (Privatkläger) within criminal proceedings, but they do not control the prosecution. Civil proceedings can run in parallel with, in advance of, or within criminal proceedings, as Swiss procedural law allows injured parties to pursue civil claims directly before the criminal court.

Civil vs Criminal Liability in Switzerland: The Side-by-Side Comparison

The table below is the centrepiece of this guide. Use it to map your incident against each dimension and identify which path, civil claim or criminal prosecution, governs your immediate response.

Dimension Treat as Civil (Option A) Treat as Criminal (Option B)
Who initiates Private claimant (individual, company, insurer) Public prosecutor (cantonal or federal)
Primary remedy Compensatory damages, injunctions, contractual remedies Pecuniary penalties, fines, custodial sentences for individuals; corporate fines and measures under Article 102
Burden of proof Balance of probabilities (preponderance of evidence) Beyond reasonable doubt
Possible penalties Monetary damages, costs, reputational harm Fines, day-fines, custodial sentences, corporate sanctions, criminal record
Timing / speed Months to years (negotiation → writ → trial/settlement) Investigations can be rapid and intrusive (searches, seizures); prosecution timelines vary
Evidence collection Limited civil discovery; courts may order document production Prosecutors have investigative powers (searches, subpoenas, account freezes); right against self-incrimination applies to individuals
Enforceability Civil judgments enforceable domestically and (often) internationally under Lugano Convention / Hague frameworks Criminal fines enforced by the state; criminal-court damages orders recognised as enforceable civil judgments in most foreign jurisdictions
Insurance coverage Often covered under D&O, product liability, or general liability policies Criminal fines typically excluded; defence costs coverage varies, check policy immediately
Management exposure Directors exposed to derivative or direct civil claims for breach of duty Directors face personal criminal liability depending on mens rea and negligence standards
Reputational / market impact Commercial damage, contract loss, client attrition Greater regulatory scrutiny, media coverage, tender exclusions, long-term restrictions

Three triggers that demand immediate criminal counsel:

  • A prosecutor has contacted the company, or a search warrant has been executed. This is not a civil matter. Retain criminal defence counsel within hours.
  • A whistleblower or internal investigation reveals evidence of intentional wrongdoing, fraud, bribery, data manipulation. Self-reporting options and privilege must be assessed before any disclosures.
  • A death or serious injury has occurred in circumstances suggesting systemic safety failures. Prosecutors routinely open investigations for negligent homicide or serious bodily harm; civil claims will follow, but the criminal exposure is the immediate priority.

Dimension-by-Dimension Analysis: Civil Claim vs Criminal Prosecution in Switzerland

Each dimension below unpacks a specific decision factor. Where possible, statutory references and market data are provided. For directors assessing a live incident, the liability allocation and cost dimensions will typically determine whether to escalate immediately.

Legal Basis and Eligibility

The legal foundations for civil and criminal liability in Switzerland differ fundamentally.

  • Civil liability arises under the Swiss Code of Obligations, primarily Articles 41–61 CO (tort/delict) and the relevant contractual provisions. Product liability follows the Federal Act on Product Liability. No criminal intent is required; negligence or strict liability suffices depending on the statutory basis.
  • Criminal liability requires conduct meeting the elements of an offence defined in the Swiss Criminal Code (SR 311.0) or ancillary criminal statutes. For individuals, this means proof of the objective and subjective elements (typically intent, or negligence where the offence so provides). For companies, Article 102 SCC establishes two tracks of corporate criminal liability, subsidiary liability where the offence cannot be attributed to an individual, and independent liability for failure to take reasonable organisational measures to prevent specified offences.

Cost

Cost is frequently the factor that forces the decision. The table below sets out illustrative ranges for small-to-medium Swiss business matters.

Cost Item Civil Path (Option A) Criminal Path (Option B)
Typical direct legal fees CHF 20,000–100,000 (negotiation and civil suit phase; wide variance by complexity) CHF 50,000–250,000+ (specialist criminal counsel, forensic costs, potential multi-jurisdictional expenses)
Potential financial exposure Damages equal to proven loss + interest + costs (CO provisions) Pecuniary penalties/fines determined by offence severity; corporate fines under Article 102 measures can be substantial
Insurance (D&O / GL) Often triggers defence and indemnity coverage (subject to policy terms) Criminal fines typically excluded from coverage; defence cost coverage uncertain, notify insurer early and review policy wording
Ancillary compliance / forensics Lower: targeted expert reports, damage quantification Higher: digital forensics, independent monitors, compliance program remediation, regulator settlement costs

The cost differential is stark. Criminal matters routinely cost two to five times more than equivalent civil disputes, because they require specialist counsel, forensic support, and compliance remediation, costs that are often uninsurable.

Timing

  • Civil claims typically move through a negotiation or mediation phase, followed by conciliation and litigation if settlement fails. Timelines of one to three years are common for contested matters, though complex disputes can extend further. The general limitation period for tort claims is three years from knowledge of the damage and the responsible party (Article 60 CO).
  • Criminal investigations can commence without warning. Prosecutors may execute search warrants, seize documents and electronic devices, and freeze bank accounts within days of opening a case. Limitation periods for criminal offences vary by severity, typically seven to fifteen years for serious offences under the SCC. The speed and intrusiveness of criminal proceedings fundamentally changes the required response tempo.

Liability Allocation: Company vs Directors

This dimension is where the distinction between director liability and company liability becomes critical.

  • Civil path: The company is the primary defendant in most contractual and product liability claims. Directors face personal civil liability only where they have breached their duties of care or loyalty under Articles 717–718 CO, and the claimant (or the company) proves duty, breach, causation, and damage.
  • Criminal path: Directors can be prosecuted personally for criminal acts they committed, directed, or failed to prevent where they had a duty to act. Under Article 102 SCC, the company itself can also be prosecuted where organisational deficiencies prevented attribution to an individual, or where specified offences occurred due to lack of reasonable preventive measures. This means both the company and one or more directors can be defendants simultaneously, a dual-track exposure that requires coordinated but independent defence strategies.

Enforceability and Remedies

  • Civil judgments are enforceable in Switzerland through debt enforcement proceedings (SchKG). Internationally, Swiss civil judgments are enforceable within Lugano Convention states and, more broadly, under bilateral treaties and the Hague framework. Monetary damages can be seized from company assets.
  • Criminal-court damages, awarded to a private claimant (Privatkläger) within criminal proceedings, are recognised as enforceable foreign civil judgments in most jurisdictions, including common-law countries. This can make the criminal route strategically attractive for victims seeking cross-border enforcement.

Regulatory Burden and Collateral Consequences

  • Civil path: A civil judgment carries commercial consequences, contract termination clauses may trigger, and clients may reassess the relationship, but it does not automatically affect regulatory licences or public tender eligibility.
  • Criminal path: A corporate criminal conviction can trigger exclusion from public procurement, revocation or non-renewal of regulatory licences, and mandatory compliance program requirements imposed by prosecutors as conditions of a settlement. Industry observers expect these collateral consequences to increase as Swiss enforcement practice under Article 102 matures.

What Changed in 2025–2026: Corporate Criminal Liability Switzerland Under Article 102

The landscape for corporate criminal liability in Switzerland shifted materially in 2025–2026. While Article 102 of the Swiss Criminal Code has existed since 2003, its practical application was historically limited. According to practitioner analysis, notably the Walder Wyss briefing published in November 2025, prosecutors have begun using Article 102 with greater frequency and sophistication, reflecting an international trend toward holding enterprises criminally responsible for organisational failures.

The key developments affecting the decision calculus include:

  • Expanded enforcement practice. Federal and cantonal prosecutors are now more willing to open corporate criminal proceedings alongside individual prosecutions, particularly for bribery, money laundering, and serious regulatory offences. The Transparency International Switzerland report documented a trend of increasing numbers of corporate entities facing prosecution.
  • Greater use of corporate measures. Prosecutors are deploying compliance-program conditions, monitorship arrangements, and organisational remediation orders as part of negotiated resolutions, measures that carry significant cost and operational disruption for the target company.
  • Lower effective threshold for director exposure. As corporate investigations become more common, directors are increasingly drawn into proceedings either as co-accused or as witnesses whose testimony may trigger personal liability. The line between company liability and director liability has blurred in practice.
  • Self-reporting incentives and risks. Practitioner guidance from firms such as Bär & Karrer has long emphasised the strategic considerations of self-reporting. In the current enforcement environment, early voluntary disclosure to prosecutors can secure more favourable treatment, but it also waives certain procedural protections. Self-reporting vs settlement in Switzerland is now a genuine strategic fork, not a theoretical one.

The practical effect for directors and in-house counsel: the threshold at which an incident should be treated as a potential criminal matter has dropped. Where previously a company might have handled a compliance failure as a purely civil or regulatory matter, the 2025–2026 enforcement environment demands that criminal exposure be assessed from the outset.

Decision Framework: When to Choose the Civil Path and When to Treat It as Criminal

If your priority is… Choose
Recovering money owed or enforcing a contract where misconduct is economic and no public wrongdoing is alleged Treat as civil, negotiate, mediate, or litigate for damages
Avoiding public investigation, managing risk of prosecution, evidence seizure, personal director exposure, or responding to indicators of fraud, bribery, or serious safety failings Treat as criminal, immediately retain criminal defence counsel and preserve privilege

Choose the civil path when:

  • The harm is primarily contractual or economic, the claimant is a private party, and the facts do not suggest criminal intent or gross negligence.
  • Documentary evidence supports a damages calculation and civil remedies are sufficient to make the claimant whole.
  • No regulator or prosecutor has expressed interest in the matter.

Choose the criminal defence path when:

  • There is evidence of intentional wrongdoing, fraud, corruption, or serious safety violations causing bodily harm or death.
  • A regulator or prosecutor has initiated inquiries, requested documents, or executed a search.
  • A whistleblower allegation alleges conduct that, if true, would constitute a criminal offence.
  • There is risk of search and seizure, witness coercion, or urgent interim criminal measures.

Critical practical note: Many matters are hybrid. A workplace fatality generates both a civil claim for damages and a criminal investigation for negligent homicide. A bribery allegation triggers civil claims by the company against the offending director and criminal prosecution by the OAG. In every hybrid scenario, prioritise criminal counsel first. Criminal defence counsel can coordinate the civil strategy; the reverse is rarely true.

Illustrative example: A mid-sized Swiss manufacturer discovered that a production-line supervisor had systematically falsified quality-control records for a component supplied to a medical-device client. The client suffered product recalls and economic losses exceeding CHF 2 million. The manufacturer’s board initially treated the matter as a civil dispute, negotiating a settlement with the client. However, the falsified records also constituted criminal forgery of documents (SCC Art. 251) and potentially fraud. When the cantonal prosecutor independently opened an investigation following a regulatory notification, the company was forced to retain criminal defence counsel under time pressure, without having preserved privilege or conducted a protected internal investigation.

The recommended path: upon discovering evidence of systematic falsification, the board should have engaged criminal defence counsel immediately, conducted a privilege-protected internal review, and then negotiated the civil settlement in parallel, with full awareness of the criminal exposure.

When to Hire a Criminal Lawyer in Switzerland

Do not wait for a formal charge. The following situations require you to engage a lawyer, specifically one with criminal defence experience, within 24 to 48 hours:

  • A prosecutor has contacted the company, by letter, phone, or through execution of a search warrant.
  • A criminal complaint has been threatened or filed by a counterparty, employee, regulator, or whistleblower.
  • Internal investigations reveal evidence of intentional wrongdoing, fraud, falsification, bribery, data manipulation.
  • A whistleblower allegation describes conduct that, if true, constitutes a criminal offence under the SCC or ancillary statutes.
  • A cross-border evidence request has been received from a foreign authority, potentially engaging Article 271 SCC restrictions on unauthorised activities for a foreign state.

Immediate action checklist:

  • Preserve all evidence, implement a document and data hold; stop any routine destruction.
  • Evaluate and protect legal privilege before making any disclosures.
  • Notify your D&O / GL insurer, but take legal advice on notification wording to avoid inadvertent waiver of defences.
  • Prepare for forensic review of electronic records and communications.
  • Do not conduct unstructured internal interviews, these may compromise privilege and create additional witness issues.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Marcel Lanz at Schärer Rechtsanwalte, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Fedlex, Swiss Criminal Code (SR 311.0)
  2. Walder Wyss, Corporate Criminal Liability Comes to Switzerland
  3. LALive / ICLG, Switzerland Jurisdiction Overview
  4. Bär & Karrer, Aspects of Swiss Law Regarding Corporate Criminal Liability and Self-Reporting
  5. Transparency International Switzerland, Corporate Criminal Liability Report
  6. Universität Zürich, Introduction to Swiss Law: Civil Procedure
  7. Teichmann Law, Code of Criminal Procedure: A Brief Overview

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