[codicts-css-switcher id=”346″]

Global Law Experts Logo
swiss data protection compliance

How Swiss Companies Must Comply with the Revised Federal Data Protection Act (FADP), a Practical 2026 Compliance Checklist

By Global Law Experts
– posted 2 hours ago

Last updated: May 16, 2026

Swiss data protection compliance has moved from a background governance task to a board-level priority since the revised Federal Act on Data Protection (FADP) entered into force on 1 September 2023. The law introduced materially stronger obligations around breach notification, data protection impact assessments (DPIAs), cross-border transfers and individual rights, backed by criminal sanctions of up to CHF 250,000 against responsible individuals. With the Swiss–US Data Privacy Framework (Swiss–US DPF) taking effect on 15 September 2024 and ongoing FDPIC guidance shaping enforcement expectations through 2025 and 2026, companies that have not yet completed their implementation programmes face growing regulatory and reputational risk.

This article provides a step-by-step FADP compliance checklist designed for Swiss in-house counsel, DPOs, compliance officers and SME owners who need to know exactly what to do now.

Executive Summary: What Swiss Companies Must Do Now

The revised FADP applies to every organisation that processes the personal data of individuals in Switzerland, regardless of whether the organisation is domiciled there. Its core compliance demands can be distilled into six priority actions, each with a recommended implementation window:

  • Immediate (within 7 days). Audit all cross-border data transfers and confirm that every destination country is covered by an adequacy decision, contractual safeguards or the Swiss–US DPF.
  • Within 30 days. Compile a list of all high-risk processing activities and begin DPIAs where required under Article 22 FADP.
  • Within 30 days. Review and update privacy notices, consent mechanisms and cookie disclosures to reflect the revised law’s transparency requirements.
  • Within 60 days. Finalise a register of processing activities (Article 12 FADP) covering both controller and processor operations.
  • Within 90 days. Update standard operating procedures (SOPs) for breach notification, data-subject access requests and data-portability requests.
  • Ongoing. Roll out annual staff training and schedule periodic compliance reviews, with the next review no later than Q4 2026.

Key Dates Timeline

  • 1 September 2023. Revised FADP and its ordinances (DPO and DTPO) entered into force.
  • 15 September 2024. Swiss–US Data Privacy Framework became effective for Swiss-to-US transfers.
  • 2025–2026. Continued FDPIC guidance publications, enforcement focus on cross-border transfers and breach-notification compliance, and expanded scrutiny of high-risk profiling activities.

What Changed: The Revised FADP in Context

The revised Swiss data protection law replaced the original 1992 statute in its entirety. Its overarching purpose is to align Switzerland more closely with international standards, particularly the EU General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), while preserving distinctly Swiss features such as criminal rather than administrative enforcement. Below is a concise summary of the most operationally significant changes.

Scope and Definitions

The revised FADP now covers only the data of natural persons; legal entities are no longer protected data subjects. At the same time, the definitions of “profiling” and “high-risk profiling” have been added to Swiss data protection law for the first time, creating specific obligations when automated evaluation of personal aspects poses an elevated risk to personality or fundamental rights. The concept of “sensitive personal data” has been expanded to include genetic and biometric data where these identify a natural person.

Key New Obligations

  • Duty to inform. Controllers must proactively disclose the identity of the controller, processing purposes, recipient categories and, critically, any transfers to countries lacking adequate protection (Articles 19–21 FADP).
  • Register of processing activities. Organisations must maintain a written inventory of all processing activities, including purposes, data categories, retention periods and technical and organisational measures (Article 12 FADP). SMEs with fewer than 250 employees may qualify for a limited exemption, but only where their processing does not involve sensitive data at scale or high-risk profiling.
  • Data protection impact assessments. A DPIA must be conducted before any processing that poses a high risk to data subjects’ personality or fundamental rights (Article 22 FADP).
  • Breach notification. Controllers must notify the FDPIC as quickly as possible of any data security breach that is likely to result in a high risk to data subjects. Data subjects themselves must be informed where necessary for their protection or where the FDPIC requests it (Article 24 FADP).
  • Data portability. A new right to data portability allows individuals to request their personal data in a commonly used electronic format (Article 28 FADP).
  • Privacy by design and by default. Controllers must integrate data protection into the design of processing operations and ensure that default settings limit processing to what is necessary (Article 7 FADP).

FADP vs GDPR: Key Differences

While largely aligned, Swiss data protection law diverges from the GDPR in several material respects. The following comparison table highlights the most operationally relevant distinctions:

Topic FADP (Revised) GDPR (EU/EEA)
Profiling & automated decisions Introduces “high-risk profiling” as a distinct legal category requiring heightened safeguards; no general prohibition on automated individual decisions, but consent or statutory basis required for high-risk profiling by private controllers. Article 22 GDPR imposes a right not to be subject to solely automated decisions producing legal or similarly significant effects, with explicit consent or contract/law exceptions.
Breach notification Notify the FDPIC “as quickly as possible” when a breach is likely to pose a high risk; no fixed statutory deadline in hours. Mandatory 72-hour window to notify the supervisory authority; notification to data subjects “without undue delay” where high risk exists.
Sanctions Criminal fines of up to CHF 250,000 imposed on the responsible individual (not the company), plus potential fines on the enterprise of up to CHF 50,000 where the individual cannot be identified with proportionate effort. Administrative fines of up to €20 million or 4% of worldwide annual turnover, imposed on the organisation.
DPO appointment Voluntary for private organisations (termed “data protection advisor”); recommended but not mandated. Mandatory in specified circumstances (public bodies, large-scale systematic monitoring, sensitive data at scale).
Scope, legal entities Only natural persons are protected data subjects. Only natural persons (same result in practice).

Industry observers expect the practical effect of the criminal-sanctions model to be a heightened focus on personal accountability within Swiss management teams, particularly at the C-suite and board level, even though overall fine levels are lower than under the GDPR.

Practical FADP Compliance Checklist, Step-by-Step

This section forms the core of the swiss data protection compliance programme. Each sub-section corresponds to a discrete compliance workstream, with practical tasks, responsible roles and recommended evidence artifacts. Organisations should treat this as a living checklist, reviewed no less than annually.

A. Governance and Accountability

Strong governance is the foundation of every defensible compliance programme. Under the revised FADP, controllers must be able to demonstrate that they have implemented appropriate organisational measures.

  • Task 1. Adopt or update a group-level data protection policy that reflects the revised FADP’s requirements, including privacy by design and by default obligations (Article 7 FADP).
  • Task 2. Assign a named internal owner for data protection (even where appointing a DPO Switzerland is not legally mandatory, designating a responsible person is strongly recommended).
  • Task 3. Document the reporting line between the data protection function and the board or executive management.
  • Task 4. Establish a data protection committee or steering group for organisations processing sensitive data at scale.
  • Task 5. Implement a policy review cycle (minimum annual) and ensure version control of all data protection documentation.
  • Task 6. Prepare a data-subject rights procedure covering access, rectification, erasure, objection and portability requests, with defined SLAs for response.

Evidence artifacts: Board-approved policy, organisational chart, committee terms of reference, documented review schedule.

B. Data Mapping and Inventory

Article 12 of the revised FADP requires controllers and processors to maintain a register of processing activities. This register must include processing purposes, categories of personal data, recipients, retention periods and transfers abroad.

  • Task 7. Conduct a comprehensive data-mapping exercise across all business functions, IT systems and third-party processors.
  • Task 8. Populate a register of processing activities that includes every mandatory field prescribed by Article 12 FADP.
  • Task 9. Classify each processing activity by risk level (standard, elevated, high risk) to prioritise DPIA requirements.
  • Task 10. Map all data flows that cross Swiss borders, recording destination countries and the legal mechanism relied upon.
  • Task 11. Schedule a quarterly refresh of the register to capture new processing activities, system changes and vendor onboarding.

Evidence artifacts: Completed processing register (spreadsheet or dedicated tool), data-flow diagrams, classification matrix.

C. Lawful Basis and Transparency

The revised FADP does not adopt the GDPR’s six lawful-basis framework in identical terms; instead, processing by private persons is generally permitted unless it violates the data-processing principles (lawfulness, proportionality, purpose limitation, accuracy) or the data subject’s express wish. Nevertheless, consent remains critical for sensitive data processing, high-risk profiling and certain cross-border transfers.

  • Task 12. Review every privacy notice (website, app, employee, customer) to ensure it includes all disclosures required by Articles 19–21 FADP.
  • Task 13. Verify that consent mechanisms meet the revised law’s standard: voluntary, informed and, for sensitive data and high-risk profiling, explicit.
  • Task 14. Audit cookie banners and tracking technologies to ensure they reflect Swiss-specific requirements alongside any GDPR obligations.
  • Task 15. Document the lawful basis relied upon for each processing activity in the register.

Evidence artifacts: Updated privacy notices, consent logs, cookie audit report, lawful-basis mapping.

D. DPIA and High-Risk Processing

Article 22 FADP requires a data protection impact assessment before commencing any processing that could pose a high risk to the personality or fundamental rights of data subjects. This is one of the most scrutinised areas of DPIA Switzerland compliance.

  • Task 16. Identify all processing activities flagged as “high risk” in the data-mapping exercise (Step B above).
  • Task 17. Conduct a DPIA for each high-risk activity, documenting the nature, scope, context and purposes of the processing; the necessity and proportionality assessment; the identified risks; and the mitigating measures adopted.
  • Task 18. Where the DPIA reveals residual high risk that cannot be mitigated, consult the FDPIC before proceeding (Article 23 FADP).
  • Task 19. Integrate the DPIA into project and procurement workflows so that new processing activities trigger an assessment automatically.
  • Task 20. Review existing DPIAs at least annually or whenever a material change in processing occurs.

Evidence artifacts: Completed DPIA reports, FDPIC consultation log (if applicable), DPIA trigger checklist embedded in procurement procedures.

E. Technical and Organisational Measures

The principle of data security (Article 8 FADP) requires controllers and processors to implement technical and organisational measures that are appropriate to the risk. The implementing ordinance (DPO) provides further detail.

  • Task 21. Review encryption standards for data at rest and in transit; implement end-to-end encryption where proportionate.
  • Task 22. Enforce role-based access controls and apply the principle of least privilege across all systems holding personal data.
  • Task 23. Implement logging and monitoring to detect unauthorised access or data exfiltration.
  • Task 24. Conduct annual penetration testing and vulnerability assessments on systems processing sensitive data.
  • Task 25. Maintain documented incident-response and business-continuity plans that are tested at least once per year.

Evidence artifacts: Information security policy, penetration test reports, access-control matrix, incident-response playbook.

F. Processor Contracts and Vendor Due Diligence

Under Article 9 FADP, controllers may only engage processors that are capable of ensuring data security. Processing must be governed by a contract or statutory provision, and the processor may not sub-contract without the controller’s prior approval.

  • Task 26. Audit all existing processor agreements against Article 9 requirements, ensuring each contract specifies processing scope, security obligations, audit rights, sub-processing rules and data-return/deletion commitments.
  • Task 27. Implement a vendor due-diligence questionnaire that covers data protection certifications, security posture, breach-notification commitments and sub-processor locations.
  • Task 28. Establish a periodic processor-audit schedule (risk-based frequency: annually for critical vendors, every two years for standard).

Evidence artifacts: Updated Data Processing Agreements (DPAs), vendor risk assessments, sub-processor register.

G. Cross-Border Transfer Review

Cross-border data transfers Switzerland is one of the most complex compliance workstreams under the revised law. Article 16 FADP permits transfers to countries with an adequate level of protection as determined by the Federal Council. Where no adequacy decision exists, controllers must rely on alternative safeguards. A detailed treatment follows in the dedicated cross-border section below.

  • Task 29. Compile a transfer inventory listing every international data flow, the destination country, the recipients, and the safeguard mechanism relied upon.
  • Task 30. Confirm that transfers to the US are covered by the Swiss–US Data Privacy Framework where the US recipient is DPF-certified, or that alternative safeguards are in place.
  • Task 31. For transfers to non-adequate countries, execute updated standard contractual clauses or binding corporate rules and document the transfer-impact assessment.

Evidence artifacts: Transfer inventory, DPF verification records, executed SCCs/BCRs, transfer-impact assessments.

H. Training and Incident-Response Readiness

  • Task 32. Deliver role-specific data protection training to all employees who handle personal data, with refresher sessions at least annually.
  • Task 33. Conduct tabletop breach-simulation exercises with the incident-response team at least once per year.
  • Task 34. Maintain an up-to-date contact list for the FDPIC, external legal counsel, forensic investigators and communications teams.
  • Task 35. Document all training completions and exercise outcomes for audit evidence.

Evidence artifacts: Training attendance records, simulation exercise reports, incident-contact register.

Cross-Border Transfers: Mechanisms and Practical Exporter Steps

The revised FADP restructures the framework for cross-border data transfers Switzerland by granting the Federal Council (not the FDPIC) exclusive authority to determine which countries provide adequate protection. Where no adequacy decision exists, organisations must implement one of the alternative safeguards listed in Article 17 FADP.

When You Can Rely on Adequacy

The Federal Council maintains a list of countries deemed to offer adequate data protection. As of 2026, this list includes all EU/EEA member states and a number of other jurisdictions. If the destination country is on the list, no additional safeguard is required, though the controller must still disclose the transfer in its privacy notice.

Using the Swiss–US Data Privacy Framework

The Swiss–US Data Privacy Framework became effective on 15 September 2024, providing a recognised transfer mechanism for personal data flows from Switzerland to US organisations that have self-certified under the DPF. For Swiss exporters, the practical steps are:

  1. Verify the US recipient’s active DPF certification status on the Data Privacy Framework List maintained by the US Department of Commerce.
  2. Confirm that the scope of the certification covers the categories of data being transferred (HR data requires a separate certification).
  3. Document the verification in your transfer inventory, including the date of verification and the certificate reference.
  4. Ensure onward-transfer obligations are addressed, the DPF-certified recipient must apply the DPF principles or equivalent safeguards to any onward transfer.
  5. Review DPF certification status at least annually, as organisations may withdraw or allow certification to lapse.

Contractual Safeguards and Audit Clauses

Where no adequacy decision or DPF certification applies, controllers may use standard contractual clauses (SCCs), binding corporate rules (BCRs), or other contractual safeguards under Article 17 FADP. In practice, a transfer-impact assessment should accompany any SCC-based transfer to evaluate the legal framework in the recipient country and the effectiveness of supplementary measures.

  • Include audit rights in every SCC that allow the Swiss exporter to verify the importer’s compliance with the contractual data-protection commitments.
  • Document supplementary measures (encryption, pseudonymisation, access restrictions) where the legal framework in the destination country may not adequately protect data subjects’ rights.

Recordkeeping and Disclosures

All cross-border transfer mechanisms must be documented in the processing register and disclosed in the applicable privacy notice. For audit preparedness, maintain a transfer file containing the adequacy basis or executed SCC/BCR, the transfer-impact assessment (where applicable), the DPF verification record, and any relevant DPIA notes.

Breach Response and Notification in Switzerland

Breach notification Switzerland obligations under the revised FADP require controllers to notify the FDPIC “as quickly as possible” of any data security breach that is likely to result in a high risk to the personality or fundamental rights of data subjects (Article 24 FADP). Unlike the GDPR’s explicit 72-hour window, the FADP does not prescribe a fixed deadline, but regulatory expectations favour notification within a comparable timeframe where the facts are sufficiently clear.

Internal Response Steps

  1. Contain. Isolate affected systems and stop ongoing data loss within hours of detection.
  2. Assess. Determine the nature, scope and likely impact of the breach. Classify whether the breach meets the “high risk” threshold.
  3. Notify the FDPIC. If high risk is likely, notify the FDPIC as quickly as possible, providing as a minimum: the nature of the breach, the categories and approximate number of data subjects affected, the likely consequences, and the measures taken or proposed to mitigate the breach.
  4. Notify data subjects. Where notification is necessary for data subjects’ protection, or where the FDPIC requests it, inform affected individuals without delay.
  5. Remediate. Implement corrective measures, update the DPIA where relevant, and document the entire incident lifecycle for audit evidence.

Sample Notification Content (Redacted Template)

“We are writing to inform you that [Organisation Name] has identified a data security breach affecting [description of data categories]. The breach occurred on [date] and was detected on [date]. We have taken the following measures to contain the breach: [measures]. We recommend that you [protective steps for data subjects]. For further information, please contact [DPO/contact details].”

This template should be adapted to the specific circumstances of each incident, reviewed by legal counsel and co-ordinated with the FDPIC where required.

Governance: DPOs, DPIAs, Recordkeeping and Staff Training

The revised FADP does not mandate the appointment of a Data Protection Officer for private organisations. Instead, it encourages the voluntary designation of a “data protection advisor” (Article 10 FADP). Where an advisor is appointed and meets certain independence and expertise criteria, the organisation may benefit from an exemption from the obligation to consult the FDPIC on DPIAs that reveal residual high risk. Appointing a DPO Switzerland is therefore a strategic decision that can streamline compliance operations.

For DPIA Switzerland requirements, Article 22 FADP sets the trigger at processing that is likely to result in a high risk to personality or fundamental rights. Typical triggers include large-scale processing of sensitive data, systematic monitoring of public areas, and high-risk profiling. The completed DPIA must document the processing description, necessity and proportionality analysis, identified risks, and the measures adopted to mitigate those risks.

Recordkeeping under Article 12 FADP requires both controllers and processors to maintain a register of processing activities. Staff training should be documented, role-specific and refreshed at least annually, with particular emphasis on incident-response procedures and data-subject rights handling.

Enforcement, Fines and Sanctions Under the FADP

The sanctions FADP regime is one of the most distinctive features of the revised Swiss data protection law. Unlike the GDPR’s administrative-fine model, the FADP relies primarily on criminal sanctions targeting responsible individuals. Fines of up to CHF 250,000 can be imposed on the natural person who caused or failed to prevent the infringement, a feature that has significant implications for directors, officers, DPOs and compliance managers.

Where the responsible individual cannot be identified with proportionate effort and the fine would not exceed CHF 50,000, the enterprise itself may be sanctioned. Sanctionable conduct includes breaches of information duties, processing-register obligations, data-security requirements, cross-border transfer rules and FDPIC orders. Early indications suggest that the FDPIC’s enforcement focus in 2025–2026 centres on cross-border transfer compliance and breach-notification failures, given the operational complexity of these areas.

Practical mitigation strategies include voluntary remediation, co-operation with the FDPIC during investigations, documented compliance programmes (which can serve as mitigating evidence), and directors’ and officers’ liability insurance that covers data protection proceedings.

Reporting Obligations and Timelines by Entity Type

Entity Type When to Notify the FDPIC When to Notify Data Subjects
Private company processing sensitive data at scale or conducting high-risk profiling As quickly as possible after identifying a breach likely to result in high risk to data subjects. Where necessary for their protection, or where the FDPIC so requests.
SME with low-risk processing (under 250 employees, no sensitive data at scale) Same threshold: as quickly as possible if the breach meets the high-risk test. The SME exemption for the processing register does not exempt SMEs from breach-notification duties. Same criteria as above, assessed on a case-by-case basis.
Federal public authority (federal body) As quickly as possible; additional sector-specific reporting obligations may apply depending on the public body’s mandate. Where necessary for protection, or at the FDPIC’s request; additional transparency obligations under public-law statutes may apply.
Processor (acting on behalf of a controller) Processors must notify the controller as quickly as possible. The controller then assesses whether FDPIC notification is required. Not directly, the controller bears the notification obligation to data subjects.

Conclusion: 10-Point Immediate Action Plan for Swiss Data Protection Compliance

Achieving and maintaining swiss data protection compliance under the revised FADP is not a one-off project but a continuous programme. The following ten actions represent the minimum viable compliance posture every Swiss organisation should have in place:

  1. Audit all cross-border data transfers and confirm valid legal mechanisms for each destination.
  2. Complete or update your register of processing activities under Article 12 FADP.
  3. Conduct DPIAs for all processing activities classified as high risk.
  4. Review and update all privacy notices and consent mechanisms for Articles 19–21 compliance.
  5. Execute updated processor agreements that meet Article 9 requirements.
  6. Implement a documented breach-notification SOP with defined escalation triggers and FDPIC contact details.
  7. Consider appointing a data protection advisor to benefit from the DPIA consultation exemption.
  8. Deploy role-specific training for all staff handling personal data, refreshed annually.
  9. Verify Swiss–US DPF certification status for all US-based service providers receiving Swiss personal data.
  10. Schedule a formal compliance review for Q4 2026 to incorporate the latest FDPIC guidance and enforcement developments.

Organisations seeking specialist advice on FADP compliance programmes, cross-border transfer strategies or breach-response preparedness can find a data privacy lawyer in Switzerland through the Global Law Experts directory.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Alexandros Manousakis at Privintelligent Solutions, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Federal Act on Data Protection (FADP), Fedlex Official Consolidated Text
  2. KMU Portal (SECO), New Federal Act on Data Protection (nFADP) Guidance
  3. Swiss Federal Data Protection and Information Commissioner (FDPIC)
  4. DataGuidance, Switzerland Jurisdiction Overview
  5. PwC Switzerland, New Swiss Federal Act on Data Protection
  6. DLA Piper Data Protection Country Guide, Switzerland
  7. Iubenda, How to Comply with the Revised Swiss FADP
  8. Linklaters, Data Protected: Switzerland

FAQs

What are the main changes in the new Swiss FADP?
The revised FADP, which entered into force on 1 September 2023, removed legal entities from its scope of protection, introduced mandatory breach notification to the FDPIC, created new DPIA obligations for high-risk processing, expanded the definition of sensitive data to include genetic and biometric data, established a right to data portability, and introduced criminal sanctions of up to CHF 250,000 against responsible individuals. The KMU Portal (SECO) provides an accessible summary for SMEs alongside the official consolidated text on Fedlex.
The Federal Council now determines which countries offer adequate data protection. Where no adequacy decision covers the destination, organisations must rely on standard contractual clauses, binding corporate rules or, for US transfers, the Swiss–US Data Privacy Framework (effective 15 September 2024). Exporters must document the transfer mechanism, verify DPF certification where relevant, and disclose transfers in their privacy notices.
Controllers must notify the FDPIC as quickly as possible of any data security breach likely to result in a high risk to data subjects’ personality or fundamental rights. The notification must include the nature of the breach, categories of data subjects affected, likely consequences and mitigating measures taken. Data subjects must be informed where necessary for their protection or at the FDPIC’s request.
The revised FADP does not require private organisations to appoint a Data Protection Officer. However, organisations that voluntarily designate a data protection advisor meeting the independence and expertise criteria set out in Article 10 FADP may benefit from an exemption from the duty to consult the FDPIC on high-risk DPIAs. Appointing a DPO is therefore strongly recommended for organisations with complex or high-risk processing operations.
A DPIA is required under Article 22 FADP before commencing any processing that is likely to pose a high risk to data subjects’ personality or fundamental rights. Common triggers include large-scale processing of sensitive data, systematic monitoring of public areas, and high-risk profiling. The DPIA must document the processing purpose, necessity, proportionality, identified risks and mitigating measures.
No. While the revised FADP is broadly aligned with the GDPR, there are material differences. The FADP imposes criminal rather than administrative fines, targets responsible individuals rather than organisations, does not mandate DPO appointment for private entities, and applies a different breach-notification timeline (as quickly as possible rather than 72 hours). Organisations operating in both jurisdictions must maintain compliance with each regime independently.
The revised FADP provides for criminal fines of up to CHF 250,000 against the responsible individual for intentional violations of key obligations, including information duties, data-security requirements, cross-border transfer rules and FDPIC orders. Where the responsible person cannot be identified with proportionate effort and the fine would not exceed CHF 50,000, the enterprise may be sanctioned directly.
Maintain a transfer inventory listing each international data flow, the destination country, the recipient, and the legal mechanism relied upon (adequacy, SCC, BCR or DPF). For DPF-based transfers, record the US recipient’s certification status and date of verification. For SCC-based transfers, keep executed clauses, transfer-impact assessments and any supplementary-measure documentation. Include relevant entries in your processing register and ensure privacy notices are updated.
remote notarisation ireland
By Global Law Experts

posted 38 minutes ago

uae child custody law
By Global Law Experts

posted 2 hours ago

Find the right Legal Expert for your business

The premier guide to leading legal professionals throughout the world

Specialism
Country
Practice Area
LAWYERS RECOGNIZED
0
EVALUATIONS OF LAWYERS BY THEIR PEERS
0 m+
PRACTICE AREAS
0
COUNTRIES AROUND THE WORLD
0
Join
who are already getting the benefits
0

Sign up for the latest legal briefings and news within Global Law Experts’ community, as well as a whole host of features, editorial and conference updates direct to your email inbox.

Naturally you can unsubscribe at any time.

Newsletter Sign Up
About Us

Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.

Global Law Experts App

Now Available on the App & Google Play Stores.

Social Posts
[wp_social_ninja id="50714" platform="instagram"]
[codicts-social-feeds platform="instagram" url="https://www.instagram.com/globallawexperts/" template="carousel" results_limit="10" header="false" column_count="1"]

See More:

Contact Us

Stay Informed

Join Mailing List
About Us

Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.

Social Posts
[wp_social_ninja id="50714" platform="instagram"]
[codicts-social-feeds platform="instagram" url="https://www.instagram.com/globallawexperts/" template="carousel" results_limit="10" header="false" column_count="1"]

See More:

Global Law Experts App

Now Available on the App & Google Play Stores.

Contact Us

Stay Informed

Join Mailing List

GLE

Lawyer Profile Page - Lead Capture
GLE-Logo-White
Lawyer Profile Page - Lead Capture

How Swiss Companies Must Comply with the Revised Federal Data Protection Act (FADP), a Practical 2026 Compliance Checklist

Send welcome message

Custom Message