[codicts-css-switcher id=”346″]

Global Law Experts Logo
corporal punishment ban switzerland

Switzerland's 2026 Corporal‑punishment Ban: What Parents, KESB and Family Lawyers Need to Know

By Global Law Experts
– posted 3 hours ago

On 1 July 2026, Switzerland’s revised Civil Code entered into force, making the country one of the latest jurisdictions worldwide to enshrine a child’s right to non‑violent parenting in statute. The corporal punishment ban in Switzerland, adopted by Parliament on 26 September 2025, amends Article 302 of the Swiss Civil Code (ZGB) to expressly prohibit physical punishment, severe verbal humiliation and other degrading treatment of children. For parents, the change sets a clear legal boundary around parental discipline; for KESB (Kindes‑ und Erwachsenenschutzbehörde) officers, it sharpens the mandate and triggers new cantonal support obligations; and for family lawyers, it fundamentally reshapes how custody, access and separation agreements must be drafted and litigated.

This guide explains the practical implications for every stakeholder affected by the reform.

Quick Summary: What Changed on 1 July 2026 and Why It Matters

Switzerland’s non‑violent parenting law introduces three changes that practitioners and parents must understand immediately:

  • Statutory amendment. Article 302 ZGB now includes an explicit right of the child to be raised without violence. Physical punishments (slapping, hitting, shaking), severe psychological humiliation and degrading disciplinary treatment are expressly prohibited.
  • Cantonal support obligations. The cantons are required to ensure adequate parenting support services and prevention programmes. This is not merely aspirational, cantons must create or expand accessible counselling and family‑support infrastructure.
  • Enforcement and reporting. While the amendment does not create a standalone criminal offence, it strengthens the civil‑law basis for KESB intervention and reinforces existing criminal provisions (principally Art. 126 StGB on assault and Art. 219 StGB on neglect of duties of care). KESB child protection in 2026 now operates within a clearer framework that treats any use of corporal punishment as a potential child‑welfare concern.

The Federal Council confirmed the entry into force date of 1 July 2026 following the parliamentary adoption on 26 September 2025. The Federal Commission for Children and Youth (EKKJ/CFIG) had advocated for the reform since its 2019 position paper, citing evidence that corporal punishment harms children’s development and that a statutory prohibition is the single most effective prevention tool.

The Corporal Punishment Ban in Switzerland: Statutory Text, Scope and Thresholds

The amendment to Article 302 ZGB establishes that children have a right to non‑violent upbringing. In practical terms, the revised provision covers all persons exercising parental authority or guardianship, biological parents, adoptive parents, foster parents and legal guardians, and extends to any disciplinary context, whether at home or in public.

The scope of prohibited conduct under the non‑violent parenting law in Switzerland includes three categories:

  • Physical punishment. Any use of physical force intended as discipline, slaps, smacks, ear‑pulling, shaking, hitting with objects or hands, regardless of intensity.
  • Severe verbal humiliation. Persistent verbal attacks designed to demean or psychologically harm a child as a form of discipline, such as systematic threats, insults targeting the child’s identity, or deliberately frightening the child.
  • Degrading treatment. Other forms of discipline that violate the child’s dignity, for example, forced extended isolation, public shaming, or withholding basic needs as punishment.

The law functions as a guiding principle (Leitprinzip) within the child protection framework. It does not prescribe a specific sanction for every infraction. Instead, it establishes a normative baseline that informs how KESB, courts and prosecutors evaluate parental conduct. The practical effect is that any parental discipline laws in Switzerland must now be read against this standard: conduct that was previously tolerated as a “light” disciplinary measure (such as an occasional slap) can no longer be defended as lawful parenting.

Criminal Law vs Civil Protection: Where the Lines Fall

The Civil Code amendment does not replace existing criminal provisions. The Penal Code (StGB) continues to apply independently:

  • Art. 123 StGB (assault causing bodily harm), applies where physical punishment causes injury.
  • Art. 126 StGB (simple assault / repeated acts of violence), covers repeated low‑level physical violence, including slapping.
  • Art. 219 StGB (neglect of duties of care or upbringing), applies where a parent’s conduct endangers the child’s physical or psychological development.

The Federal Office of Justice (BJ) has confirmed that the child protection law in Switzerland now operates on two parallel tracks: the civil track (KESB measures aimed at support and protection) and the criminal track (prosecution for conduct meeting Penal Code thresholds). A single incident may trigger both, and each authority acts independently.

How KESB Will Respond: Reporting, Triage and Possible Measures

For KESB officers, the 2026 reform provides a firmer legal footing for intervention in cases involving corporal punishment. The typical process follows a well‑established sequence, though the threshold for initiating it is now lower than before the amendment.

Upon receiving a report, whether from a school, a medical professional, a neighbour or through a self‑referral, KESB conducts an initial assessment. This includes contacting the family, reviewing available documentation, and determining whether immediate protective measures are required or whether the case can proceed through voluntary support.

The range of KESB measures, from least to most intrusive, includes:

  1. Guidance and counselling (Ermahnung). KESB directs the parents to specific parenting support services and may require regular check‑ins.
  2. Supervision (Beistandschaft). A deputy guardian is appointed to support and monitor the family, with specific tasks defined by KESB.
  3. Removal of custody or residence (Aufhebung des Aufenthaltsbestimmungsrechts). In serious cases, KESB may remove the child from the home temporarily or permanently.
  4. Withdrawal of parental authority (Entziehung der elterlichen Sorge). Reserved for the most serious situations where other measures have failed.

Industry observers expect that the majority of cases triggered by the corporal punishment ban will be handled at the first two levels, guidance and supervision, particularly where the parent cooperates and the conduct is a first or isolated incident. Cantonal KESB authorities, such as those in the Canton of Zug, have published procedural guidance emphasising the proportionality principle: the least intrusive effective measure is always preferred.

Who Must or Should Report?

Reporting obligations parents in Switzerland should understand vary by reporter type. Medical professionals and education staff hold a strong professional and, in many cantons, statutory duty to report suspected serious harm to children. Neighbours, family members and other community members have no general statutory reporting duty, but they may, and are encouraged to, file concerns with KESB or police. The KESCHA information centre provides a national contact point for anyone uncertain about whether or how to report.

Evidence and Documentation KESB Looks For

KESB typically relies on a combination of evidence types: medical records documenting injuries or behavioural changes; school reports noting attendance issues, behavioural shifts or visible marks; statements from the child (age‑appropriate interview); and parental explanations. Photographic documentation, time‑stamped notes from professionals and records of prior reports or warnings all contribute to the overall assessment. KESB officers are trained to evaluate evidence in context, a single anonymous allegation will prompt inquiries but will not, on its own, justify invasive measures.

Reporter Type Typical Action Expected Likely KESB / Legal Outcome
Medical professional (doctor, hospital) Mandatory or strong professional duty to report suspected serious harm; document injuries and provide a clinical statement Rapid KESB triage; medical evidence supports protective measures and possible criminal referral
School / daycare staff Duty to report concerns about child welfare; file an internal report and notify KESB KESB assessment; may trigger protective measures, family support or supervision
Neighbour / family member No general statutory duty, but may file an anonymous or named report with KESB KESB will assess; anonymous reports can prompt inquiries but carry lower evidential weight unless corroborated
Police / prosecutor If criminal offences are suspected, police open an investigation; KESB is notified in parallel Potential criminal proceedings under StGB; KESB can act simultaneously for child‑protection purposes

Criminal Exposure: When Could a Parent Face Charges?

A question uppermost in many parents’ minds is whether the corporal punishment ban in Switzerland means that a single smack will lead to a criminal record. The short answer is that criminal prosecution remains tied to the Penal Code thresholds, the Civil Code amendment alone does not create new criminal offences.

However, the reform changes the practical landscape. Prior to the amendment, courts, including the Federal Supreme Court in a landmark 2003 ruling, had acknowledged that “light” corporal punishment could, in certain circumstances, be considered a socially tolerated form of discipline, even if technically meeting the definition of assault under Art. 126 StGB. The new Article 302 ZGB removes the normative basis for that tolerance. Industry observers expect prosecutors and courts to take a harder line on conduct that was previously regarded as a grey area.

Criminal charges are most likely in the following situations:

  • Injury. Any physical punishment that causes visible injury (bruising, welts, fractures) will engage Art. 123 StGB (bodily harm).
  • Repeated acts. A pattern of slapping, hitting or shaking, even without significant individual injury, may constitute repeated assault under Art. 126 StGB.
  • Severe neglect or endangerment. Conduct that endangers the child’s physical or psychological development (extreme isolation, systematic humiliation combined with physical force) may be prosecuted under Art. 219 StGB.

For parents, the practical defence strategy begins with immediate cessation of prohibited conduct, engagement with KESB support measures and, where a criminal investigation is opened, early retention of defence counsel experienced in family and criminal law. Mitigation factors, such as voluntary participation in parenting courses, cooperation with KESB and the absence of prior incidents, will be significant in both prosecutorial charging decisions and judicial sentencing.

Custody, Access and Divorce Negotiations: Practical Implications

The custody implications of the corporal punishment ban are substantial and will reshape family litigation in Switzerland for years to come. Under the best interests of the child standard (Art. 296 ff. ZGB), courts have always considered the quality of the parent‑child relationship and any risk of harm. The 2026 amendment makes corporal punishment an explicit factor in that assessment.

In custody disputes, an allegation, or proof, that one parent has used physical punishment may now lead to:

  • Supervised access. Courts may order that the accused parent’s contact with the child take place under professional supervision until the concern is resolved.
  • Mandatory parenting programmes. A parent may be required to complete an approved non‑violent parenting course as a condition of maintaining unsupervised access or shared custody.
  • Protective orders. In acute situations, interim protective measures under Art. 307 ff. ZGB may restrict the parent’s access or residence rights pending a full hearing.
  • Modification of existing orders. Where an existing custody or access order predates the reform, either parent, or KESB, may apply for modification based on evidence of corporal punishment.

For family lawyers drafting or negotiating separation and divorce agreements, the early indications suggest that proactive clause‑drafting will become standard practice. Consider including the following elements:

Sample settlement clause (illustrative):

“Both parents undertake to raise the child/children without violence, in accordance with Article 302 ZGB. Neither parent shall use physical punishment, severe verbal humiliation or degrading treatment as a form of discipline. Each parent agrees to participate in an approved parenting support programme within [timeframe] and to provide evidence of completion. Any alleged breach of this clause shall be referred to mediation before either party applies to the court for modification of the custody or access arrangement.”

Negotiation checklist for practitioners:

  • Include an express non‑violence undertaking referencing Art. 302 ZGB.
  • Specify the parenting programme provider, timeline and evidence requirements.
  • Define what constitutes a “breach” and establish a graduated response (mediation → KESB referral → court application).
  • Address documentation obligations, both parents should agree on how incidents or concerns are recorded.
  • Incorporate a review mechanism at defined intervals (e.g., annually or upon any reported concern).

For Parents: What to Do Now, A Practical Checklist

Whether you are a parent concerned about the new law, or one who has already been reported to KESB, the following steps provide a practical roadmap under the corporal punishment ban in Switzerland:

  1. Stop all prohibited practices immediately. Physical punishment of any intensity is now expressly unlawful. This includes slaps, smacks and any use of physical force as discipline.
  2. Seek parenting support. Contact your cantonal parenting support service or the EKKJ/CFIG resource page for information on locally available programmes. The law is designed to support parents, not merely punish them, take advantage of the resources the cantons are now required to provide.
  3. Document your parenting efforts. If you are concerned about a potential report, keep a contemporaneous journal of your parenting approach, including any courses attended, support services engaged and positive discipline strategies adopted.
  4. Cooperate with KESB. If KESB contacts you, engage cooperatively. Initial inquiries are aimed at assessment and support, not punishment. Refusal to cooperate may escalate the matter.
  5. Obtain legal advice early. If a KESB investigation or criminal complaint is opened, consult a family lawyer without delay. Early legal advice can prevent escalation and protect your rights.
  6. Do not discuss the matter on social media or with third parties. Statements made publicly can become evidence. Speak to your lawyer first.
  7. Attend any required parenting programme promptly. Voluntary and early attendance is viewed favourably by both KESB and courts as a sign of good faith and willingness to change.

For Lawyers and KESB Officers: Evidence, Casework and Courtroom Tactics

Practitioners on both sides of corporal punishment cases, whether representing parents, acting for children or serving as KESB officers, need a structured approach to evidence and strategy under the 2026 framework.

Evidence preservation and gathering:

  • Medical records. Request hospital and GP records immediately. Time‑stamped clinical notes documenting injuries consistent (or inconsistent) with the reported incident are critical.
  • School and daycare reports. Obtain attendance records, behavioural incident logs and any written concerns filed by staff.
  • Child’s statement. Ensure any forensic interview of the child is conducted by a trained professional and recorded. Improper interviewing can undermine the evidence and harm the child.
  • Witness statements. Identify and interview witnesses promptly. Neighbours, family members and other caregivers may corroborate or contradict allegations.

Mitigation and defence strategy:

  • Demonstrate the parent’s immediate engagement with support services and parenting courses.
  • Present evidence of an otherwise stable and nurturing home environment.
  • Challenge the proportionality of proposed KESB measures where they exceed what the evidence justifies.
  • In criminal proceedings, emphasise the distinction between the Civil Code’s guiding principle and the Penal Code’s criminal thresholds, not every breach of Art. 302 ZGB will meet the standard for criminal liability.

Courtroom considerations:

  • Cross‑examine on the reliability of anonymous reports and the methodology of any KESB assessment.
  • Use expert witnesses (child psychologists, paediatricians) to contextualise the child’s situation and the parent’s capacity for change.
  • In custody proceedings, frame the issue around the best interests standard and demonstrate concrete behavioural change, not merely verbal assurances.

Legislative Timeline: From Parliamentary Adoption to Enforcement

The following table traces the key milestones of the corporal punishment ban in Switzerland from parliamentary debate to practical enforcement:

Date Event Practical Effect
2019 EKKJ/CFIG publishes position paper advocating a statutory ban on corporal punishment Policy momentum builds; cantonal pilot programmes launched
26 September 2025 Parliament adopts the amendment to Article 302 ZGB Legislative process complete; Federal Council tasked with setting entry into force date
1 July 2026 Amendment enters into force Corporal punishment expressly prohibited; cantonal support obligations activated; KESB mandate strengthened
Ongoing (2026–) Cantons implement support services and prevention programmes Parents gain access to expanded parenting resources; KESB applies new standard in assessments

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Eva Staub at Märki Staub Rechtsanwälte AG, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Further Resources

Switzerland’s corporal punishment ban marks a watershed in parental discipline laws in Switzerland. Whether you are a parent seeking to understand your obligations, a KESB officer applying the new framework, or a family lawyer advising clients on custody and settlement strategy, the reform demands immediate attention and practical adaptation. For access to experienced family law practitioners in Switzerland, consult the Global Law Experts Switzerland lawyer directory.

Sources

  1. Federal Administration (admin.ch), Press release on non‑violent parenting provisions, entry into force 1 July 2026
  2. Federal Commission for Children and Youth (EKKJ/CFIG), Erziehung ohne Gewalt (Non‑violent parenting)
  3. EKKJ/CFIG, Position paper: Educazione senza violenza (2019)
  4. Federal Office of Justice (BJ), Domestic violence
  5. Canton of Zug, KESB (Child and Adult Protection Authority)
  6. OHCHR, Universal Periodic Review briefing on Switzerland (corporal punishment)

FAQs

Is spanking or corporal punishment now illegal in Switzerland?
Yes. Since 1 July 2026, Article 302 ZGB expressly establishes the child’s right to non‑violent upbringing. All forms of physical punishment, including slapping, smacking and hitting, are prohibited, regardless of intensity. The prohibition also covers severe verbal humiliation and degrading treatment used as discipline.
The law prohibits physical punishment of any kind, severe verbal humiliation and degrading treatment when used as a disciplinary tool. It applies to all persons exercising parental authority or guardianship. The Federal Commission for Children and Youth (EKKJ/CFIG) has clarified that the provision is a guiding principle that also triggers cantonal obligations to provide parenting support services.
For minor or first incidents, the likely practical effect will be a referral to KESB for supportive measures, counselling, parenting programmes or supervision. Criminal prosecution remains governed by the Penal Code and is reserved for cases involving injury, repeated violence or serious neglect. Both tracks can operate in parallel.
Custody and separation agreements should include an express non‑violence clause referencing Article 302 ZGB, requirements for parenting programme participation, a graduated response mechanism for alleged breaches and clear documentation obligations. A sample clause is provided in this article.
Medical professionals and education staff have a strong professional (and in many cantons, statutory) duty to report suspected serious harm to children. Any person may report concerns to KESB or the police. The KESCHA information centre offers a national contact point for guidance on reporting.
No. The amendment to Article 302 ZGB is a Civil Code provision establishing a guiding principle. Existing Penal Code provisions, Art. 123 (bodily harm), Art. 126 (simple assault) and Art. 219 (neglect of duties of care), remain the basis for criminal prosecution. The Civil Code change removes any normative justification for corporal punishment that courts previously tolerated.
How to resolve WHS disputes in Australia 2026
By Global Law Experts

posted 2 hours ago

how to register a company in palestine for foreigners
By Global Law Experts

posted 4 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.

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

GLE

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

Switzerland's 2026 Corporal‑punishment Ban: What Parents, KESB and Family Lawyers Need to Know

Send welcome message

Custom Message