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Effective 1 January 2026, Switzerland overhauled its framework for cross-border evidence in Switzerland, introducing simplified mutual‑assistance procedures and generalising the use of videoconference testimony for persons located on Swiss territory. These reforms, anchored in amendments to the Swiss Civil Procedure Code and updated federal guidelines on international judicial assistance, fundamentally alter the decision calculus for litigators and in‑house counsel managing multi‑jurisdictional commercial disputes. For practitioners who have spent years navigating the slow, formal machinery of letters rogatory under the 1970 Hague Evidence Convention, the 2026 changes create faster, technology‑enabled alternatives, but they also introduce new tactical questions about when each route is appropriate and how cantonal implementation may vary.
Before diving into detailed procedure, practitioners should note the three headline shifts that reshape cross-border evidence strategy in Switzerland from 2026 onward:
Industry observers expect these changes to cut typical evidence‑gathering timelines significantly for cooperative matters, though compelled production, particularly from banks and financial institutions, still requires the formal Hague Convention route in most cases.
Under Swiss law, the examination or hearing of a person in Switzerland in aid of foreign civil proceedings has historically been considered an official act that could only be performed by Swiss authorities or through international judicial cooperation channels. The 2025–2026 reform package targeted this restrictive posture, bringing Switzerland closer to the approach of other major commercial jurisdictions that already permitted remote cross‑border testimony.
The legal architecture rests on three pillars: the Hague Evidence Convention of 1970 (to which Switzerland is a contracting state), Switzerland’s domestic legislation on international judicial assistance in civil matters, and the Swiss Civil Procedure Code. The reforms amend the second and third of these, while leaving Switzerland’s Hague 1970 obligations intact, meaning the Convention remains the mandatory channel for specific categories of evidence requests, particularly compelled document production from third parties.
The Swiss Federal Council’s updated guidelines on international judicial assistance in civil matters, published by the Federal Office of Justice (RHF/fedpol), provide the detailed procedural guidance that Swiss cantonal authorities follow when processing incoming requests. These guidelines now incorporate the videoconference and simplified‑procedure options, although cantonal roll‑outs are proceeding on staggered timelines through 2026–2027.
| Date | Act / Change | Practical Impact |
|---|---|---|
| 2025 (legislative process) | Swiss Parliament adopts amendments to the federal legislation on international judicial assistance in civil matters and related CPC provisions | Creates statutory basis for simplified mutual assistance and videoconference testimony |
| 11 November 2025 | Federal Council publishes updated RHF/fedpol guidelines | Detailed procedural guidance for Swiss cantonal authorities on processing new‑form requests |
| 1 January 2026 | Reforms enter into force at the federal level | Immediate availability of new procedures; cantonal courts begin accepting videoconference evidence requests |
| 2026–2027 (ongoing) | Cantonal implementation and technical infrastructure upgrades | Staggered availability of full videoconference capabilities across all 26 cantons; counsel should verify local readiness |
The central strategic question for any litigator planning evidence‑taking in Switzerland is now: should I use the new 2026 simplified procedures, or should I file a formal request under the Hague Evidence Convention? The answer depends on four variables: the type of evidence sought, the cooperation level of the witness or evidence holder, the compulsion powers needed, and the admissibility requirements of the requesting court.
Practitioners should lean toward the Hague Convention route when: compulsion against a non‑cooperative third party is essential; the evidence involves bank records or financial data subject to secrecy rules; the requesting court requires formal letters rogatory for admissibility; or sovereign immunity considerations apply. The Swiss 2026 simplified route is preferable when: speed is critical; the witness or evidence holder is cooperative; videoconference witness testimony is acceptable to the requesting court; and the matter involves routine witness examinations or document inspections without banking secrecy barriers.
This section provides the practitioner’s playbook for each of the three principal evidence‑taking routes now available. For each route, the guidance covers required documentation, filing procedures, estimated timelines and practical tips drawn from the updated RHF/fedpol guidelines and leading practitioner commentary.
The simplified mutual assistance procedure under the 2026 reforms allows a foreign court or tribunal to request the taking of evidence in Switzerland through a streamlined channel. The request is directed to the competent cantonal authority (typically the cantonal court or designated judicial assistance authority) and must satisfy certain formal requirements.
The 2026 reforms represent a major advance for videoconference witness testimony in Switzerland. Switzerland now accepts that persons staying in Switzerland may be questioned or examined by a commissioner located abroad, or may give testimony directly to a foreign court via video link, subject to the following conditions:
The Hague Convention remains the primary channel for taking evidence abroad in Switzerland when formal compulsion is required. The process under the Convention follows these steps:
| Action | Required Document | Estimated Time | Practical Tip |
|---|---|---|---|
| Prepare the Letter of Request | Model form per Hague Convention; specify evidence sought, questions, parties | 1–2 weeks (drafting) | Use the HCCH model form to avoid formal objections at the receiving end |
| Submit to requesting court for judicial endorsement | Court order or endorsement stamp | 1–3 weeks | Some courts fast‑track endorsement on application, request urgency if needed |
| Transmit via Central Authority | Original letter of request + certified translation into cantonal language | 2–4 weeks (transmission) | The Swiss Central Authority is the Federal Office of Justice (Bundesamt für Justiz) |
| Swiss authority executes the request | Witness summons, document orders, inspection protocol | 4–12 weeks (execution) | Execution timelines vary by canton and complexity; bank secrecy matters take longer |
| Return of evidence to requesting court | Certified transcripts, documents, inspection report | 2–4 weeks | Request that the Swiss authority certify compliance with special procedures (e.g., oath under requesting court’s law) |
Under the RHF/fedpol guidelines, a request transmitted under the Hague Evidence Convention shall be met unless the form is incompatible with Swiss law or the execution would prejudice Switzerland’s sovereignty or security. The practical refusal rate for properly formatted commercial evidence requests is very low.
The following table provides a side‑by‑side comparison of the three principal routes for obtaining international evidence from Swiss courts and authorities. Practitioners should use this as a quick‑reference decision tool alongside the detailed guidance above.
| Procedure | When to Use | Pros / Cons |
|---|---|---|
| Swiss 2026 simplified procedures (videoconference / simplified mutual assistance) | Witness is in Switzerland or Swiss resident; speed is critical; remote testimony acceptable to the requesting court; cooperative witness or evidence holder | Pros: Faster (4–8 weeks for cooperative matters); technology enabled; lower diplomatic overhead; reduced translation burden in some cases. Cons: May lack compulsion against non‑cooperative third parties; cantonal variations in implementation and technical readiness; limited application to banking secrecy matters. |
| Hague Evidence Convention (1970) | Formal letters rogatory / compulsion for documents or formal judicial act required; bank records or financial data subject to secrecy; requesting court requires Convention‑compliant evidence for admissibility | Pros: Formal compulsion power; internationally recognised and well‑established; clear procedural framework under HCCH guidance. Cons: Slower (10–24 weeks end‑to‑end); bureaucratic multi‑step process; possibility of refusal on limited grounds; requires certified translations. |
| Direct cooperation (voluntary commercial requests, subpoenas to multinational entities) | Service providers respond voluntarily; provider‑specific legal basis exists (e‑evidence frameworks, MLATs); informal pre‑litigation information gathering | Pros: Fastest route if voluntary compliance obtained; minimal formality. Cons: Variable admissibility in court proceedings; depends entirely on provider policy and applicable local law; no formal compulsion available. |
The 2026 evidence reforms have significant implications for asset recovery in Switzerland, particularly for parties seeking freezing orders, disclosure of asset information, or emergency preservation measures in cross‑border commercial disputes. Switzerland remains one of the world’s most important jurisdictions for asset tracing and recovery, and the interplay between the new evidence‑taking rules and existing provisional‑measures frameworks deserves careful attention.
The simplified mutual legal assistance Switzerland procedures can accelerate the early‑stage information gathering that precedes a formal freezing application. Where a foreign claimant needs to establish that assets are located in Switzerland before applying for provisional measures, the new route allows faster witness examinations and targeted document requests, provided the evidence holder cooperates. For non‑cooperative targets, the Hague Convention route and Swiss domestic provisional measures (including superprovisionelle Massnahmen, emergency measures without prior hearing) remain essential.
The Lugano Convention continues to govern the recognition and enforcement of foreign freezing orders in Switzerland for parties from EU/EFTA states. For parties outside the Lugano framework, bilateral treaties or the Swiss Private International Law Act (PILA) apply. The 2026 evidence reforms do not change the substantive rules on provisional measures, but they provide a faster pathway to obtain the evidentiary foundation needed to support such applications.
Practitioners advising Swiss‑based parties who receive a foreign evidence request, whether under the Hague Convention or the new 2026 procedures, must understand the available grounds for objection and the tactical options for narrowing scope or imposing protective conditions.
Under the RHF/fedpol guidelines, a Swiss authority may refuse to execute a request if it would prejudice Switzerland’s sovereignty or security, or if the form of execution requested is incompatible with Swiss law. In practice, these grounds are construed narrowly for commercial matters. More commonly, the responding party’s strategy focuses on:
When advising a client who must appear as a witness via videoconference for a foreign proceeding, provide clear instructions on: the scope of questions that may be asked (and the right to object to questions exceeding the scope of the request); the role of the Swiss judicial officer present; the client’s rights under Swiss law, including the right to refuse testimony on grounds of self‑incrimination; and the practical logistics of the videoconference, including identity verification and recording protocols. Preparation sessions with local counsel familiar with the cantonal implementation of the 2026 procedures are strongly recommended.
The following resources provide a starting point for practitioners initiating or responding to cross-border evidence requests involving Switzerland. These templates should be adapted to the specific facts and jurisdictional requirements of each case, and reviewed by qualified Swiss counsel before filing.
“The [name of court/tribunal] respectfully requests the competent cantonal authority of [Canton] to facilitate the taking of evidence in the form of [witness examination / document inspection / videoconference testimony] in connection with proceedings [case reference] pending before [court]. This request is made under the provisions of Swiss federal legislation on international judicial assistance in civil matters, as amended effective 1 January 2026. The requesting court seeks [brief description of evidence]. The witness [name, address in Switzerland] has indicated willingness to cooperate. The requesting court proposes that the examination be conducted via videoconference on [proposed date].”
“Dear [Swiss counsel], we are instructed in proceedings before [court/jurisdiction] and need to obtain [witness testimony / documents] from a person located in [Canton]. We are considering using the simplified mutual assistance route under the 2026 reforms. Could you please confirm: (1) whether the relevant cantonal authority is accepting requests under the new procedure; (2) the cantonal language requirement; (3) your availability to attend the examination as local counsel; and (4) any specific cantonal requirements for videoconference setup. We attach a draft request letter for your review.”
The 2026 reforms mark a genuine shift in how cross-border evidence in Switzerland is obtained and managed. For Commercial Litigation practitioners, the practical imperative is clear: reassess your evidence‑gathering strategy for any pending or anticipated dispute with a Swiss nexus. The new simplified procedures and videoconference options offer speed and efficiency advantages that, used correctly, can materially advance case timelines. For matters requiring formal compulsion, particularly those involving Swiss banking secrecy, the Hague Convention remains indispensable. To find a Commercial Litigation lawyer in Switzerland with expertise in cross‑border evidence matters, consult a qualified specialist without delay.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Gregory Lachat at Angelozzi Lachat Attorneys-at-law, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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