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Product liability in Switzerland is entering a new era of complexity. The revised EU Product Liability Directive (Directive (EU) 2024/2853) must be transposed into national law by every EU Member State by 9 December 2026, and its reach extends well beyond the borders of the European Union. For Swiss manufacturers, software developers and exporters that place products on the EU market, the Directive introduces strict liability for software, including stand-alone software, clarifies that a failure to provide necessary security or functional updates can constitute a product defect, and shifts important evidentiary burdens toward producers.
Even though Switzerland is not itself required to transpose EU directives, any Swiss business that sells, distributes or licenses products to customers within the EU must understand, plan for and comply with these changes now.
This guide provides a practical compliance playbook: the legal changes that matter, how they apply to Swiss exporters, the operational steps to implement before the deadline, the contract clauses to draft and the insurance reviews to initiate. Two immediate decisions face every affected Swiss manufacturer: (1) whether to adapt internal processes, contracts and product-lifecycle management to meet the new EU standard, or (2) whether to restrict or restructure EU market placement entirely. The sections below equip in-house counsel, product managers, CE/QA directors and compliance officers with the information they need to make, and implement, that choice.
The EU Product Liability Directive, as revised by Directive (EU) 2024/2853, replaces the original 1985 framework (Directive 85/374/EEC) with a regime designed for a digital, connected economy. The changes are substantial and affect every link in the product supply chain. Below is a structured overview of the three most consequential shifts.
Under the revised Directive, the definition of “product” now explicitly encompasses software, including stand-alone software that is not embedded in or bundled with a physical device. This means a Swiss firm that develops and licenses a mobile application, an enterprise SaaS tool or an AI model to EU customers is now classified as a producer of a “product” for the purposes of strict liability. Digital manufacturing files, such as 3D-printing blueprints, and related digital services that are integrated into or interconnected with a product are similarly captured. The practical consequence is that liability for software is no longer a matter of contractual negotiation alone; it is a statutory obligation.
The revised Directive clarifies the defect standard by linking it to the safety that a person is entitled to expect, taking into account the product’s presentation, its reasonably foreseeable use, the moment it was placed on the market or put into service, and, critically, any mandatory safety requirements in EU law. Non-compliance with such requirements creates a strong presumption of defect. Furthermore, the burden of proof shifts: where a claimant faces excessive technical or scientific difficulty in establishing defectiveness or the causal link, courts may presume defect or causation. This reversal of evidentiary default is a significant departure from the claimant-friendly but still traditional burden in the 1985 Directive and means manufacturers must be prepared to demonstrate safety affirmatively.
The circle of potentially liable parties has widened. The Directive imposes strict liability on manufacturers, importers and, in defined circumstances, authorised representatives and fulfilment service providers. Where a defective product is placed on the EU market and no EU-based manufacturer or authorised representative can be identified, the importer or even the distributor may be treated as the liable “manufacturer” for the purposes of the Directive. For Swiss exporters, this creates a direct incentive to ensure that their EU distribution chain is clearly documented and that at least one EU-established entity formally accepts the role of authorised representative or importer.
Online platforms that allow consumers to conclude transactions may, in certain circumstances, also bear liability, an important consideration for Swiss businesses selling through EU marketplaces.
Swiss domestic product liability law, principally the Swiss Product Liability Act (Produktehaftpflichtgesetz, PrHG), which entered into force in 1994 and was modelled on the original 1985 EU Directive, does not automatically incorporate the revised EU Directive. Switzerland is not an EU Member State and is not bound by the transposition obligation. However, the territorial reach of the revised PLD means that Swiss exporters who place products on the EU market, or whose products are put into service within the EU, will be subject to the national implementing laws of the Member State in which harm occurs.
The practical test is straightforward: if a product reaches an EU consumer or business user, whether sold directly, through a distributor, via an online marketplace or through an OEM integration, the revised PLD framework governs claims for defect-related damage. Swiss exporters EU compliance therefore depends not on Swiss domestic transposition, but on the nature and destination of the export itself.
The revised Directive makes software update liability a central feature of the new regime. Where a product, whether hardware, firmware or stand-alone software, requires updates to remain safe, a failure to provide those updates within a reasonable time can constitute a defect for which the producer bears strict liability. This creates enforceable post-market obligations that go far beyond traditional product-safety recall duties.
The following operational checklist maps the key actions Swiss manufacturers and software developers should implement before 9 December 2026.
Every Swiss exporter placing software or connected products on the EU market should formalise a patching and update policy that addresses the following elements:
Under the revised Directive’s disclosure and evidence rules, manufacturers may be ordered by courts to disclose relevant evidence. Proactive logging is therefore both a compliance requirement and a litigation-defence strategy. Swiss manufacturers should ensure:
| Product type | Update obligation | Key risk if obligation unmet |
|---|---|---|
| Hardware with embedded firmware | Security and functional patches for the product’s reasonably expected useful life | Failure to patch a known firmware vulnerability is treated as a product defect under PLD |
| Stand-alone software (on-premise) | Security updates and compatibility patches for the defined support period | Unpatched exploit causing data loss or physical harm triggers strict liability for software |
| Connected / IoT device | Continuous security monitoring; OTA patch delivery; vulnerability disclosure | Highest exposure, connected devices are remotely exploitable and often safety-critical |
| SaaS / cloud-delivered service integrated into a product | Maintain service-level security; document shared responsibility with cloud provider | Supply-chain liability if SaaS component introduces a defect into the end product |
The revised Directive cannot be contracted out of in the consumer-facing relationship: strict liability is mandatory and any clause purporting to exclude or limit it vis-à-vis the injured party is void. However, business-to-business contracts within the supply chain remain the primary tool for allocating economic risk, defining responsibility for updates and ensuring that the party best placed to prevent a defect carries the corresponding financial exposure. For Swiss exporters navigating supply-chain liability, the following contract strategies are essential.
Indemnity clause (component supplier → OEM): “The Supplier shall indemnify and hold harmless the Buyer against all claims, losses, costs and expenses (including reasonable legal fees) arising from a defect in the Supplied Component, including any defect attributable to a failure by the Supplier to provide security or functional updates as required by applicable product liability and product safety legislation in the jurisdiction in which the End Product is placed on the market.”
Update SLA clause (software licensor → integrator): “The Licensor shall provide security updates for Critical and High-severity vulnerabilities within [14] calendar days of confirmed triage. Functional updates required to maintain compliance with mandatory safety requirements shall be provided within [30] calendar days. Update delivery shall be logged and the Licensor shall provide quarterly compliance reports to the Integrator.”
Limitation of liability tied to revenue: “The aggregate liability of either Party under this Agreement shall not exceed [200]% of the total fees paid or payable by the Buyer in the [12]-month period preceding the event giving rise to the claim; provided, however, that this limitation shall not apply to liabilities arising from (a) wilful misconduct or gross negligence, (b) death or personal injury caused by a defective product, or (c) mandatory statutory obligations under applicable product liability law.”
Swiss exporters should not assume that general limitation-of-liability clauses drafted under Swiss domestic law (particularly the Swiss Code of Obligations) will be effective in an EU PLD claim governed by a Member State’s implementing law. Specific risks include:
The financial exposure created by the revised PLD, particularly the inclusion of software, connected products and the broadened circle of liable parties, demands a thorough review of existing insurance coverage. Many Swiss product liability policies were written for a pre-digital product landscape and may contain exclusions that leave software-related claims uninsured.
Industry observers expect a significant wave of policy reviews and renegotiations in the second half of 2026 as Swiss exporters and their brokers recalibrate coverage to the new Directive’s scope. Recall costs, in particular, are often excluded from standard product liability policies and must be addressed through dedicated product-recall or product-contamination endorsements.
From a logistics perspective, Swiss manufacturers must decide whether recall coordination will be managed directly from Switzerland or delegated to an EU-based representative. Under EU market-surveillance regulations, the responsible economic operator in the EU (typically the importer or authorised representative) must be able to cooperate with Member State authorities, provide documentation and coordinate corrective actions. Swiss manufacturers should pre-negotiate recall workflows with their EU partners and document them in distribution agreements.
One of the most consequential procedural changes in the revised EU Product Liability Directive is the introduction of mandatory disclosure obligations. Where a claimant presents facts and evidence sufficient to support the plausibility of a claim, the court may order the defendant to disclose relevant evidence in its control. Refusal or failure to comply may lead to a presumption of defect or causation, a powerful incentive for manufacturers to maintain comprehensive records.
For Swiss manufacturers, this shifts the litigation strategy from reactive document production to proactive evidence architecture. The cost of building and maintaining proper records is modest compared to the cost of an adverse presumption in a multi-million-franc damages claim.
The following categories of evidence should be preserved as a matter of routine, with defined retention periods aligned to the Directive’s limitation rules and the product’s expected useful life:
Not every Swiss manufacturer will face the same level of exposure under the revised PLD. The matrix below provides a structured framework for assessing the risk profile of a new product launch and the appropriate commercial decision. The likely practical effect will vary depending on product type, software complexity and the maturity of the manufacturer’s post-market support infrastructure.
| Risk profile | Hardware + embedded software | Stand-alone software | Connected / IoT device |
|---|---|---|---|
| Low (mature update processes, EU partner, insurance in place) | Proceed, ensure contracts and documentation are PLD-aligned | Proceed, formalise support periods and logging | Proceed, confirm OTA infrastructure and recall workflow |
| Medium (partial processes, no dedicated EU representative) | Proceed with mitigation, appoint EU authorised representative; close contract gaps | Proceed with mitigation, implement patching SLA and evidence-retention policy | Proceed with mitigation, full IoT security audit and update-delivery validation |
| High (no update process, no EU presence, legacy architecture) | Delay launch, remediate before market entry or restructure distribution | Delay launch, fundamental compliance gap; software-lifecycle overhaul needed | Delay launch, connected devices without update capability present unacceptable PLD exposure |
Effective PLD transposition 2026 readiness requires coordinated action across multiple functions. The roadmap below assigns ownership and establishes a meeting cadence to ensure that compliance milestones are met before the 9 December 2026 deadline.
Days 1–30: Assessment and gap analysis
Days 31–60: Remediation and drafting
Days 61–90: Validation and sign-off
The revised Directive assigns different obligations depending on the entity’s role in the supply chain. Swiss manufacturers must understand not only their own duties but also those of their EU-based partners, as gaps in the chain create shared exposure.
| Entity type | Key PLD / post-market obligations | Practical examples / triggers |
|---|---|---|
| Manufacturer | Strict liability for defective products; duty to provide updates where required; evidence and documentation obligations; cooperate in recalls; respond to court-ordered disclosure | Failure to supply a security patch for a known exploit; bug introduced in a release causing a safety risk; inability to produce version-control logs when ordered by court |
| Importer | Ensure product compliance before placing on EU market; act as representative for products from non-EU manufacturers; assist in traceability and recalls; maintain distributor records; report incidents to market surveillance authorities | Importer must verify that the Swiss manufacturer’s update policy meets PLD requirements; must maintain records of all downstream distributors and report safety incidents promptly |
| Distributor / Retailer | Preserve product traceability; notify manufacturer and authorities of defects discovered post-sale; may be treated as manufacturer if product is modified or if no EU manufacturer/importer can be identified | Distributor shipping refurbished connected devices without vendor-approved firmware updates; retailer receiving consumer complaints and failing to escalate to manufacturer |
The revised EU Product Liability Directive represents the most significant expansion of product liability in Europe in four decades, and its impact on product liability in Switzerland, particularly for exporters, is immediate and substantial. Swiss manufacturers, software developers and connected-product companies that sell into the EU cannot afford to treat this as a distant regulatory matter. The 9 December 2026 transposition deadline is the hard boundary; the operational, contractual and insurance readiness work must be completed well before that date.
Early indications suggest that manufacturers who begin the assessment and remediation process now, using the structured 30/60/90 day roadmap, contract templates and decision matrix provided in this guide, will be best positioned to continue serving EU customers without interruption and with manageable legal exposure. Those who delay face a binary choice: rush to comply under pressure, or restrict EU market access entirely.
For a downloadable compliance checklist, sample contract clauses and a tailored advisory assessment, qualified Swiss liability counsel listed in the Global Law Experts lawyer directory can provide jurisdiction-specific guidance aligned with the frameworks outlined in this article.
This article is published for general informational purposes and does not constitute legal advice. Readers should consult qualified legal counsel for advice specific to their circumstances.
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.
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