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Arbitration lawyers in Switzerland face an unusually dense wave of rule changes in 2026, and the window for passive observation has closed. The Swiss Rules 2026, issued by the Swiss Arbitration Centre, overhaul the mechanics of joinder and consolidation, streamline procedural timelines and introduce clearer default positions for multi-party disputes. Simultaneously, amendments to the Federal Act on Private International Law (PILA) sharpen the lex arbitri framework governing seat, arbitrability and the enforceability of arbitration clauses in unilateral legal acts. For in-house counsel, external advisors and contract managers responsible for arbitration agreements across M&A, insurance and construction portfolios, these changes demand immediate, clause-level action, not just awareness.
Last reviewed: 8 May 2026
Before diving into the technical detail, here are the six immediate priorities every legal team should address in response to the Swiss Rules 2026 and recent PILA amendments. Each action has a one-sentence rationale and a recommended deadline.
A downloadable 2026 Swiss Rules clause bank, containing all model clauses referenced in this article, is available as a companion resource.
The Swiss Arbitration Centre, the institution formed by the merger of the arbitration courts of the Zurich and Geneva chambers of commerce, published the Swiss Rules 2026 as the successor to its earlier set of institutional arbitration rules. The revisions respond to practitioner feedback gathered over several years and were signalled as priorities at the Swiss Arbitration Summit on 25 March 2026. Below is a concise summary of what changed and why it matters for arbitration counsel in Switzerland.
The Swiss Rules 2026 apply to all arbitrations administered by the Swiss Arbitration Centre where the arbitration agreement references the “Swiss Rules” without specifying a prior version and where the request for arbitration is filed on or after the effective date. Industry observers expect the practical impact to be greatest in multi-party disputes, insurance towers, M&A earn-out claims, joint venture disputes and construction adjudications, where joinder and consolidation are routine tactical questions.
The most actionable step for Swiss arbitration lawyers and in-house teams is to redraft standard arbitration clauses. Below are seven model clauses with commentary, use-cases and cross-references to relevant Swiss Rules provisions. Each clause should be tailored to the specific transaction and reviewed by qualified arbitration counsel.
Suggested wording: “Any dispute, controversy or claim arising out of or in connection with this contract, including its validity, breach, termination or nullity, shall be resolved by arbitration in accordance with the Swiss Rules of the Swiss Arbitration Centre in force on the date on which the Notice of Arbitration is submitted. The seat of arbitration shall be [Zurich/Geneva]. The arbitral proceedings shall be conducted in [English/German/French]. The number of arbitrators shall be [one/three].”
When to use: Standard two-party commercial contracts. Pros: Clear, enforceable, tracks the Swiss Arbitration Centre’s recommended model clause. Cons: Does not address joinder or consolidation, acceptable only where multi-party scenarios are genuinely unlikely.
Suggested wording: “The parties expressly consent to the joinder of additional parties to arbitral proceedings commenced under this clause, provided that the additional party is bound by a compatible arbitration agreement and the application for joinder is made before the constitution of the arbitral tribunal, or thereafter with the tribunal’s leave.”
When to use: Insurance programmes, group company transactions and supply-chain contracts where related parties may need to participate. Pros: Removes ambiguity about consent; facilitates efficient multi-party resolution. Cons: May expose a party to joinder applications it would prefer to resist on a case-by-case basis.
Suggested wording: “No party may be joined to arbitral proceedings commenced under this clause without the prior written consent of all existing parties to the arbitration. If joinder is refused, any dispute involving the additional party shall be resolved in separate arbitral proceedings under the same Swiss Rules and at the same seat.”
When to use: Transactions where confidentiality or strategic independence is paramount (e.g., joint ventures between competitors). Pros: Preserves party control. Cons: Risk of parallel proceedings and inconsistent outcomes.
Suggested wording: “Where disputes arise under this contract and one or more related contracts between any of the parties, the Swiss Arbitration Centre’s Court may consolidate those arbitrations if the arbitration agreements are compatible and consolidation serves the efficient resolution of the disputes.”
When to use: M&A transaction suites (share purchase agreement, warranty & indemnity policy, escrow agreement) and construction contracts with sub-contracts. Pros: Reduces costs, avoids inconsistent awards. Cons: Counsel must ensure all related contracts contain compatible clauses.
Suggested wording: “This arbitration clause shall extend to any insurer, reinsurer or other party providing coverage in respect of the obligations arising under this contract, to the extent that such party has agreed in writing to be bound by arbitration under the Swiss Rules.”
When to use: Insurance and reinsurance contracts, warranty & indemnity policies. Pros: Brings the insurer into the same forum as the commercial dispute. Cons: Requires separate written confirmation from the insurer; may conflict with the insurer’s own arbitration clause.
Suggested wording: “Nothing in this arbitration clause shall prevent any party from applying to the competent state court for provisional or protective measures before or during arbitral proceedings. The arbitral tribunal shall also have power to order interim measures in accordance with the Swiss Rules.”
When to use: Any contract where urgent asset preservation, anti-dissipation or injunctive relief may be needed. Pros: Expressly preserves court access (as contemplated by Art. 183 and Art. 184 PILA) alongside tribunal powers. Cons: Minimal, this clause is now widely regarded as best practice.
Suggested wording: “The parties shall first seek to resolve any dispute by negotiation between senior executives within [30] days of written notice. Failing settlement, the dispute shall be submitted to arbitration under the Swiss Rules of the Swiss Arbitration Centre. The seat of arbitration shall be Zurich for disputes arising under the Share Purchase Agreement and Geneva for disputes arising under the Shareholders’ Agreement. The language shall be English. The tribunal shall consist of three arbitrators.”
When to use: Complex M&A transactions with multiple transaction documents and different governing laws. Pros: Combines escalation with seat allocation. Cons: Split-seat design can complicate consolidation; should include express consolidation wording (see Clause 4).
| Clause Name | Description | Recommended Practice |
|---|---|---|
| Basic bilateral | Standard two-party clause; seat, language, number of arbitrators | Use for simple bilateral contracts; supplement with joinder/consolidation wording if multi-party risk exists |
| Joinder opt-in | Express consent to joinder of additional parties | Preferred for insurance, group and supply-chain contracts |
| Joinder opt-out | Requires all-party consent before joinder; fallback to separate proceedings | Use where confidentiality or strategic separation is critical |
| Consolidation (multi-contract) | Permits the Centre’s Court to consolidate related arbitrations | Essential for M&A suites and construction programmes |
| Third-party / insurer | Extends arbitration clause to insurers and reinsurers | Requires insurer’s written agreement; coordinate with policy wording |
| Interim measures | Preserves court access for provisional measures alongside tribunal powers | Best practice for all contracts, include by default |
| Multi-seat / M&A escalation | Escalation mechanism plus split-seat allocation for different documents | Use with care; always pair with consolidation wording |
Joinder and consolidation are among the most consequential changes in the Swiss Rules 2026. Getting the tactical approach right, before a dispute crystallises, is critical for arbitration lawyers in Switzerland and the clients they advise.
Joinder makes strategic sense when a party needs a single proceeding to bind all relevant stakeholders, for example, a policyholder, insurer and reinsurer in a coverage dispute, or multiple group companies in an M&A warranty claim. Where the underlying contracts contain compatible arbitration agreements, opting in to joinder avoids the cost, delay and inconsistency risk of parallel proceedings. The Swiss Rules 2026 framework reinforces this by giving the tribunal clearer procedural tools to manage joined parties efficiently.
Joinder is not always advantageous. In joint venture disputes between competitors, bringing a third party into the arbitration may expose commercially sensitive information. Where the additional party’s interests are adverse to both existing parties, joinder can complicate the proceedings and shift the tribunal’s focus. Swiss arbitration lawyers should advise clients to build explicit opt-out protections into the clause where these risks are foreseeable.
Under PILA, Swiss courts retain a supervisory role over arbitration, including the power to intervene on jurisdictional questions. Where a joinder or consolidation application is contested, the tribunal’s decision may ultimately be reviewed by the Swiss Federal Tribunal on jurisdictional grounds. Early indications suggest that practitioners expect the Federal Tribunal to take a pragmatic approach to joinder decisions made under the Swiss Rules 2026, but the risk of challenge should be factored into any tactical decision.
Audit question checklist for joinder and consolidation:
The Federal Act on Private International Law (PILA), codified in the official compilation at SR 291, is the lex arbitri for international arbitrations seated in Switzerland. Chapter 12 of PILA contains the provisions governing international arbitration, and recent amendments have modernised several critical areas. These PILA amendments affect the daily work of Swiss arbitration lawyers on multiple fronts.
One of the most significant developments is the clarification of PILA’s application to arbitration clauses contained in unilateral legal acts. Under the revised framework, arbitration agreements embedded in corporate by-laws, foundation charters, trust instruments and similar documents are given express statutory recognition, provided they meet the formal requirements of PILA. This resolves a long-standing grey area in Swiss law. For practitioners drafting trust deeds or foundation statutes, the practical takeaway is to include a freestanding arbitration clause that satisfies PILA’s form requirements, rather than relying on an implied incorporation by reference.
PILA provides that any claim involving a financial interest may be the subject of an arbitration. This broad definition of arbitrability remains unchanged, but the amendments reinforce the principle and clarify its interaction with Swiss public policy (ordre public). Matters that cannot be resolved by arbitration under Swiss law remain limited to narrowly defined areas of public interest, for instance, certain regulatory or criminal-law matters. The likely practical effect will be to further strengthen Switzerland’s reputation as a jurisdiction with minimal arbitrability barriers for commercial disputes.
Choosing between Zurich and Geneva as the arbitration seat remains one of the most common tactical decisions for arbitration experts and their clients. Both cities offer world-class arbitration infrastructure, but they differ in practice.
| Factor | Zurich | Geneva |
|---|---|---|
| Commercial court practice | Zurich Commercial Court handles interim measures efficiently; strong track record in complex commercial disputes | Geneva courts equally experienced; slight edge in public-international-law-adjacent disputes |
| Language | German (court proceedings); English widely used in arbitration | French (court proceedings); English equally common in international arbitration |
| International organisations | Major banking and financial centre | Home to numerous international organisations; natural forum for diplomatic and trade disputes |
| Practitioner density | High concentration of Swiss arbitration lawyers and expert witnesses in finance and M&A | High concentration of arbitration counsel experienced in energy, commodities and treaty arbitration |
| Recommended for | Insurance, banking, M&A, technology | Energy, commodities, investment treaty, international-organisation-related disputes |
Both seats produce awards enforceable under the New York Convention in over 170 jurisdictions. The choice should be driven by the dispute type, the governing language of the contract and the likely composition of the tribunal rather than by any inherent legal advantage.
Switzerland’s pro-arbitration framework extends to both interim relief and the enforcement of final awards. The combination of PILA and the Swiss Rules 2026 provides arbitration counsel with robust procedural tools.
Swiss cantonal courts can act within days when the circumstances require it, making Switzerland an attractive jurisdiction for parties needing emergency relief. For enforcement of final arbitral awards, Switzerland is a contracting state to the New York Convention, and domestic enforcement follows a streamlined procedure. Awards rendered in Switzerland benefit from the presumption of enforceability in all Convention states. The Federal Tribunal’s annulment jurisdiction under Art. 190 PILA is deliberately narrow, confined to grounds such as lack of jurisdiction, violation of due process and incompatibility with public policy.
For in-house legal teams managing large contract portfolios, a structured audit is essential. The following eight-step playbook provides a practical framework for rolling out updated arbitration clauses across the organisation.
Before: An industrial policyholder’s arbitration clause referenced Swiss Rules and named Zurich as the seat but was silent on joinder. When a coverage dispute arose involving both the insurer and the reinsurer, the policyholder was forced into two separate proceedings. After: The clause now includes the joinder opt-in wording (Clause 2) and the third-party insurer clause (Clause 5), enabling all three parties to participate in a single arbitration.
Before: The share purchase agreement and escrow agreement each contained arbitration clauses, but with different seats and no consolidation mechanism. An earn-out dispute required parallel arbitrations in Zurich and Geneva. After: Both agreements now include the consolidation clause (Clause 4) and the multi-seat escalation clause (Clause 7), enabling the Centre’s Court to consolidate both disputes at a single seat.
Before: A general contractor faced claims from the employer and cross-claims from subcontractors, each under separate contracts with different arbitration clauses. After: The clause suite now uses compatible joinder consent wording (Clause 2) across all contracts in the programme, combined with the consolidation clause (Clause 4), to facilitate a single, efficient proceeding.
| Date | Change | Practical Effect for Clauses / Contracts |
|---|---|---|
| 1 January 2019 | Previous PILA amendment (insolvency and cross-border restructuring clarifications) | Demonstrated Parliament’s willingness to modernise PILA in targeted areas; established precedent for future Chapter 12 revisions |
| 25 March 2026 | Swiss Arbitration Summit, practitioner community signals and interpretation trends | Signalled broad practitioner adoption of Swiss Rules 2026 and emerging consensus on joinder/consolidation best practices |
| 2026 | Swiss Rules 2026 entry into force | Joinder and consolidation framework changes take effect; parties should adopt new model clauses and audit all existing arbitration agreements |
The convergence of the Swiss Rules 2026 and recent PILA amendments represents the most significant single-year shift in Swiss arbitration practice in over a decade. Arbitration lawyers in Switzerland, whether advising on insurance programmes, M&A transactions or multi-party construction disputes, must move from awareness to implementation without delay.
Immediate (this week): Audit high-risk clauses and insert stop-gap joinder and consolidation language. Within 30 days: Update all standard template libraries and brief internal deal teams. Within 90 days: Complete full contract portfolio review, notify counterparties and establish a quarterly review cadence. To find arbitration lawyers in Switzerland who can assist with bespoke clause audits, consult the Global Law Experts directory.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Joachim at Baker McKenzie Switzerland AG, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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