Last updated: 28 April 2026
Switzerland corporate criminal liability 2026 has moved from a niche compliance topic to an urgent boardroom priority for every financial institution with a Swiss nexus. Early‑2026 rulings from the Federal Criminal Court have sharpened the legal test for attributing criminal conduct to corporate entities, while the Federal Council and the OECD have tightened anti‑corruption expectations across the banking and asset‑management sectors. This guide distils those developments into actionable steps, covering the statutory framework, recent case law, cross‑border enforcement mechanics and a ready‑to‑deploy response playbook, so that in‑house counsel, compliance officers and external advisors can update their operational posture without delay.
Compliance teams at Swiss banks and asset managers should note five headline points from the 2026 landscape:
The cornerstone of corporate criminal liability in Switzerland is Article 102 SCC, which establishes two distinct pathways through which a legal entity can incur criminal responsibility. Understanding the precise mechanics of each pathway is essential for any bank or asset manager operating within or through Switzerland.
The primary pathway (Article 102(2) SCC) applies to a closed list of predicate offences, including bribery of Swiss and foreign public officials, money laundering, financing of terrorism and criminal‑organisation participation. Where a company lacks the organisational measures necessary to prevent such an offence, it can be held directly liable regardless of whether a specific individual perpetrator has been identified and prosecuted. The practical significance for financial institutions is obvious: inadequate AML controls, deficient know‑your‑customer (KYC) processes or absent anti‑bribery policies can each serve as the organisational deficiency that triggers liability.
The subsidiary pathway (Article 102(1) SCC) covers all other criminal offences. Here, the company is liable only if it proves impossible to attribute the offence to any specific individual within the organisation “due to its inadequate organisation.” This is a fall‑back mechanism, but in complex banking structures, where operational acts cross multiple desks, departments and even jurisdictions, the inability to pinpoint a single responsible employee is far from theoretical.
Sanctions under Article 102 SCC currently cap corporate fines at CHF 5 million. However, practitioners note that the reputational and regulatory consequences, including FINMA enforcement proceedings running in parallel, routinely dwarf the monetary penalty itself.
A question frequently raised by in‑house teams is whether corporate criminal liability can transfer to a company following a merger or acquisition. Under current Swiss practice, liability generally attaches to the legal entity in which the offence occurred. In a standard asset deal, the acquirer does not automatically inherit the target’s criminal exposure. In a share deal or universal succession (merger), however, the legal position is less clear‑cut, and the Centre de droit bancaire et financier has highlighted that courts increasingly scrutinise whether the successor entity perpetuates the same organisational deficiency that gave rise to the original offence.
The practical lesson for M&A teams: pre‑closing compliance audits, carefully drafted indemnities and warranty packages addressing pending or potential criminal exposure are no longer optional, they are a prerequisite for prudent deal execution.
| Situation | Attribution Rule (Current Swiss Practice) | Practical Impact for Banks / Asset Managers |
|---|---|---|
| Subsidiary offence inside Switzerland | Liability attributed to the subsidiary where the offence occurred; parent liability limited | Ensure each entity maintains standalone compliance; parent must document oversight without assuming operational control |
| Group‑wide systemic failure (policy breach) | Harder to attribute to the parent unless direct management fault proven | Focus on documented group governance, delegated compliance frameworks and clear reporting lines |
| Liability after M&A (successor liability) | Depends on deal structure and whether the successor perpetuates the organisational deficiency | Use warranties, indemnities and pre‑closing compliance audits; consider carve‑outs for identified risk |
The draft NUFG, analysed in detail by Bär & Karrer in their April 2026 briefing, proposes to overhaul the negligence element of corporate criminal liability. The likely practical effect will be a shift from a pure “organisational deficiency” test towards a broader duty‑of‑care standard, meaning that companies could face liability not only for failing to prevent specific enumerated offences but also for general supervisory negligence. If enacted, the proposal would require banks and asset managers to demonstrate that their compliance programmes meet a defined minimum standard, making programme design, documentation and testing a de facto safe harbour. Early indications suggest that the Federal Council may publish a revised consultation text before the end of 2026.
The early months of 2026 have produced a cluster of developments that collectively raise the compliance bar for Swiss financial institutions. Practitioners surveyed by Global Investigations Review and Chambers Practice Guides identify two themes: (a) courts are applying the organisational‑deficiency test with greater rigour, and (b) the Federal Council is aligning Swiss anti‑corruption frameworks with evolving OECD standards.
On the policy front, the Federal Department of Foreign Affairs (EDA) published updated anti‑corruption guidance in early 2026, reaffirming Switzerland’s commitment to the OECD Anti‑Bribery Convention and announcing enhanced peer‑review follow‑up for the financial sector. Industry observers expect this to translate into more proactive FINMA engagement and a higher volume of self‑reporting referrals flowing from banks to the Office of the Attorney General.
For banks operating in or through Switzerland, the 2026 developments create specific operational exposures that compliance teams must address immediately. The principal risk vectors include failures in AML transaction monitoring, deficient correspondent‑banking due diligence, facilitation of upstream tax offences (a predicate offence for money laundering under Swiss law) and bribery of foreign public officials facilitated through Swiss accounts.
FINMA enforcement proceedings frequently run in parallel with criminal investigations, creating a dual‑track exposure that complicates defence strategy. A bank may face simultaneous demands from the Office of the Attorney General (OAG), cantonal prosecutors, FINMA and, in cross‑border matters, foreign regulators and law‑enforcement agencies. Coordinating these parallel streams without inadvertently waiving privilege or providing inconsistent positions is one of the most technically demanding aspects of Swiss bank investigations.
Based on published enforcement actions and practitioner analysis from Kellerhals Carrard and ICLG, common triggers include:
Immediate preservation checklist for banks under investigation:
Asset managers and private‑client advisory teams face a distinct but overlapping set of exposures. The 2026 enforcement environment targets weaknesses in client onboarding, portfolio company oversight, the use of nominee structures and the failure to detect proceeds of corruption or tax evasion flowing through managed accounts.
The interplay with foreign enforcement adds a further layer of complexity. US Department of Justice (DOJ) and UK Serious Fraud Office (SFO) investigations increasingly rely on Swiss‑sourced evidence, meaning that a Swiss asset manager may find itself drawn into a foreign proceeding long before Swiss authorities take independent action. Understanding how to manage simultaneous Swiss and foreign demands, while preserving Swiss banking secrecy obligations and avoiding breaches of Article 271 SCC (prohibited acts for a foreign state), is critical. For broader context on white‑collar crime investigation techniques, asset managers should ensure their internal teams are familiar with forensic evidence standards.
The decision to self‑report to Swiss authorities, whether to FINMA, the OAG or MROS, is one of the most consequential choices an asset manager will face. Industry observers expect Swiss regulators to look favourably on early, voluntary disclosure where the institution can demonstrate genuine remediation efforts, but there is no formal safe harbour equivalent to the US DOJ’s Corporate Enforcement Policy. The decision matrix should weigh:
Procedural checklist for asset managers:
Switzerland remains one of the most frequently targeted jurisdictions for mutual legal assistance requests in financial‑crime matters. The Federal Act on International Mutual Assistance in Criminal Matters (IMAC) governs the process, with the Federal Office of Justice (FOJ) acting as the central authority for incoming requests. Understanding cross‑border enforcement Switzerland mechanics is essential for any institution that holds client assets, transaction records or correspondence relevant to a foreign criminal investigation.
The process typically begins when a foreign authority, such as the US DOJ, the French Parquet National Financier or the UK SFO, submits a formal MLA request to the FOJ. The FOJ assesses the request for dual criminality and procedural compliance before delegating execution to the competent cantonal or federal authority. The executing authority then issues orders to the relevant bank or asset manager, compelling the production of documents, account records or witness testimony. Appeals against MLA orders are possible but are subject to strict time limits and rarely succeed in blocking disclosure entirely.
Voluntary production, where a bank or asset manager elects to provide information to a foreign authority outside the formal MLA channel, is a separate and riskier path. While it can accelerate resolution and demonstrate cooperation, it carries significant litigation risk, may breach Swiss banking secrecy (Article 47 of the Banking Act) and could expose the institution to liability under Article 271 SCC if conducted without proper authorisation. External counsel must always scope and manage any voluntary production.
| Process | Typical Origin | Time / Practical Note |
|---|---|---|
| Swiss domestic prosecutorial search / coercive measures | Initiated by Swiss prosecutor (OAG or cantonal) | Immediate (days); bank receives court order with narrow compliance window |
| Mutual Legal Assistance request (foreign → Switzerland) | Foreign authority requests via Federal Office of Justice | Weeks to months depending on complexity; evidence produced by court order after FOJ delegation |
| Voluntary production in foreign investigation | Bank or asset manager elects to cooperate subject to legal review | Faster but increases litigation risk, must use external counsel and document scope precisely |
For practitioners navigating parallel domestic and foreign proceedings, the international litigation guide provides additional context on coordinating multi‑jurisdictional defence strategies.
When a Swiss or foreign criminal probe targets a bank or asset manager, the first 48 hours are decisive. Missteps during this period, accidental privilege waivers, premature regulator communications, data spoliation, can permanently damage the institution’s defence position. The following playbook addresses Switzerland corporate criminal liability 2026 response best practices in a step‑by‑step format.
Sample internal escalation language: “The institution has been notified of [a domestic investigation / an MLA request / a foreign regulatory inquiry] concerning [brief description]. All relevant records are subject to an immediate litigation hold. No employee should discuss this matter externally or destroy, modify or relocate any documents. External counsel has been engaged. Further instructions will follow within [timeframe].”
The 2026 developments make compliance‑programme remediation an immediate priority, not a medium‑term project. Institutions that can demonstrate an updated, tested and documented programme will be in a materially stronger position if enforcement action follows. The remediation roadmap should address five pillars: risk assessment, controls, monitoring, training and third‑party due diligence.
A refreshed enterprise‑wide risk assessment should incorporate the updated attribution standard, specifically testing whether the institution’s compliance architecture would withstand scrutiny under the Federal Criminal Court’s “substantive compliance gap” reasoning. Controls must go beyond paper policies to include documented escalation protocols, calibrated transaction‑monitoring parameters and active beneficial‑ownership verification processes. For institutions with FINMA‑regulated operations or security interests in Switzerland, the remediation programme should integrate regulatory‑specific requirements alongside criminal‑law standards.
For banks:
For asset managers:
Enforcement outcomes in Switzerland differ structurally from those in the US and UK. Swiss law does not provide for deferred prosecution agreements (DPAs) or non‑prosecution agreements (NPAs) in the manner available to the DOJ or SFO. Corporate fines under Article 102 SCC are capped at CHF 5 million, but FINMA can impose additional sanctions, including disgorgement of profits, activity bans and licence revocations, that substantially increase the total cost of non‑compliance.
| Feature | Switzerland | United States / United Kingdom |
|---|---|---|
| Maximum corporate fine | CHF 5 million (Article 102 SCC) | Theoretically unlimited; multi‑billion‑dollar settlements common |
| Deferred / non‑prosecution agreements | Not available under current law | Widely used (DOJ Corporate Enforcement Policy; UK DPA regime) |
| Corporate monitors | Not a standard Swiss enforcement tool; FINMA may impose equivalent supervisory measures | Frequently imposed as a condition of DPAs/NPAs |
| Admissions of wrongdoing | Summary penalty orders may include factual findings; contested trials produce full judgments | DPAs/NPAs may or may not require formal admissions |
The absence of a Swiss DPA framework means that cooperation credit operates informally. Industry observers expect that institutions demonstrating genuine remediation, prompt self‑reporting and full cooperation will receive more favourable outcomes at sentencing, but there is no statutory guarantee.
The 2026 enforcement landscape demands that every bank and asset manager with a Swiss nexus take three concrete steps without delay. First, stress‑test existing compliance programmes against the Federal Criminal Court’s updated attribution standard, verifying that operational escalation protocols, not just written policies, meet the substantive compliance threshold. Second, review and update M&A due‑diligence protocols to address successor criminal liability, using the comparison table above as a starting reference. Third, establish or refresh a cross‑border response playbook that coordinates Swiss and foreign defence strategies before a crisis materialises. For institutions seeking specialist guidance, the Switzerland lawyer directory provides access to qualified criminal‑defence practitioners.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Bruno Ledrappier at CHARLES RUSSELL SPEECHLYS, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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