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can you sue for defamation in switzerland

Can You Sue for Defamation in Switzerland in 2026, Civil or Criminal, Time Limits & Right of Reply

By Global Law Experts
– posted 2 days ago

If you are wondering whether you can sue for defamation in Switzerland, the short answer is yes, Swiss law gives you two distinct routes, and you do not have to choose only one. You can file a criminal complaint under the Swiss Criminal Code (Articles 173–177, covering defamation, slander and insult) and, separately or simultaneously, bring a civil claim to protect your personality rights under Article 28 of the Swiss Civil Code. Beyond litigation, Switzerland’s 2025 Federal Act on Communication Platforms and Search Engines has introduced new platform-side reporting and takedown obligations that give individuals a faster, extrajudicial path for removing defamatory content published on social media.

This guide walks through every option step by step, from preserving evidence and sending a cease-and-desist letter to filing in court, exercising your right of reply, and requesting a platform takedown, so you can decide which route fits your situation in 2026.

Can You Sue for Defamation in Switzerland? Civil vs Criminal Routes Explained

Swiss defamation law operates on two parallel tracks. Understanding the difference is essential before you commit time or money to either path, because the remedies, the burden of proof, and the speed of each route differ considerably.

Criminal Defamation, the Code, the Process and the Penalties

The Swiss Criminal Code devotes an entire chapter, Offences Against Personal Honour, to reputational harm. Three provisions matter most:

  • Article 173, Defamation (Üble Nachrede). Anyone who makes or repeats a statement of fact that damages another person’s reputation may be punished with a monetary penalty. A defence of truth or good faith is available: if the accused proves the allegation was true, or shows they had serious grounds for believing it to be true, they are acquitted.
  • Article 174, Slander (Verleumdung). This is the aggravated form. If the person knew the statement was false when they made it, they face a custodial sentence of up to three years or a monetary penalty. There is no good-faith defence.
  • Article 177, Insult (Beschimpfung). A catch-all for abusive language or conduct that attacks someone’s honour without asserting a specific factual claim. The penalty is a monetary penalty.

All three offences are prosecuted on complaint, the victim must file a criminal complaint with the cantonal police or public prosecutor. The state does not act on its own initiative. If the complaint is upheld, the offender faces a criminal record, fines, and in serious slander cases, imprisonment. However, a criminal conviction does not automatically remove the offending content from the internet, nor does it award financial compensation to the victim. That is where the civil route comes in.

Civil Claims for Personality Rights Under Swiss Civil Code Article 28

Article 28 of the Swiss Civil Code protects every person against unlawful infringement of their personality, a broad concept that covers reputation, privacy, name, and image. Unlike the criminal route, a civil claim lets you pursue several practical remedies at once:

  • Injunction. A court order prohibiting the defendant from repeating or further disseminating the defamatory statement.
  • Rectification. An order requiring the defendant (or, in media cases, the publisher) to publish a correction or retraction.
  • Removal. An order directing the defendant to delete or de-index specific online content.
  • Monetary compensation. Damages for economic loss and, where appropriate, satisfaction (Genugtuung) for non-pecuniary harm, although Swiss courts historically award modest sums compared with common-law jurisdictions.

The claimant must demonstrate that the infringement is unlawful. An infringement is presumed unlawful unless the defendant can show it was justified by the victim’s consent, an overriding private or public interest, or a statutory basis. In media cases, courts balance personality protection against press freedom, and the outcome depends heavily on whether the statement concerns a matter of public interest and whether the journalist conducted adequate research.

Industry observers expect the civil route to remain the more popular choice for individuals seeking content removal and financial redress, while the criminal complaint serves primarily as a deterrent or is pursued in parallel where the defamation was clearly deliberate.

Where to File, Jurisdiction and Courts in Switzerland

Choosing the right forum is a procedural step that many victims overlook, but it can determine how quickly your case moves.

For a criminal complaint, you file with the police or the public prosecutor (Staatsanwaltschaft) in the canton where the offence was committed, typically the canton where the statement was published or, for online content, where it was first accessible to the Swiss public. The prosecutor investigates, and if charges are brought, the case proceeds before the cantonal criminal court.

For a civil personality-rights claim, you may sue at the domicile of either party or at the place where the harmful act took effect. The case begins in the cantonal civil court of first instance. Appeals on points of law can ultimately reach the Swiss Federal Tribunal in Lausanne.

If the Publisher Is Abroad, Cross-Border Jurisdiction

When defamatory content originates outside Switzerland, a common scenario with social media defamation in Switzerland, jurisdiction becomes more complex. Swiss courts may still have jurisdiction if the harmful effect is felt in Switzerland (the Erfolgsort principle). However, enforcing a Swiss judgment abroad requires navigating the Lugano Convention (for EU/EFTA states) or bilateral treaties. In practice, pursuing a takedown request directly with the platform is often faster than cross-border enforcement of a court order. A Swiss media-law specialist can advise on whether local proceedings, foreign proceedings, or a combined approach is most effective.

Time Limits and Urgent Remedies, the Defamation Time Limit in Switzerland

Acting quickly is critical. Every week of delay can reduce your options and weaken your evidence. The defamation time limit in Switzerland varies depending on the route you choose.

Type of action Statute or rule Typical time window
Civil personality-rights claim (Art. 28 CC) Swiss Code of Obligations / cantonal civil procedure Limitation periods vary, consult counsel promptly, as delay weakens claims for injunctive relief
Criminal complaint, defamation (Art. 173) or slander (Art. 174) Swiss Criminal Code, prosecution on complaint Complaint must generally be filed within three months of the victim learning the identity of the offender
Interim injunction (emergency relief) Swiss Civil Procedure Code (superprovisionelle Massnahmen) Emergency hearings within 24–72 hours (varies by canton); ex parte orders possible

The three-month window for filing a criminal complaint is strict and starts running from the date you discover who made or published the statement, not from the date of publication itself. Missing this deadline means you lose the criminal route entirely, although your civil options remain.

For civil cases, the most powerful urgent tool is the interim injunction (vorsorgliche Massnahme or superprovisorische Verfügung). Swiss courts can issue an ex parte blocking or removal order within hours if the applicant demonstrates urgency and a prima facie unlawful infringement. This is the fastest way to get defamatory content taken offline while the main proceedings are pending. Early indications suggest that cantonal courts are increasingly willing to grant interim orders for online content, particularly where the reputational harm is ongoing and irreversible.

Practical Step-by-Step: What to Do if You Are Being Defamed Online

Whether you ultimately pursue a criminal complaint, a civil claim, or a platform takedown, the first steps are the same. Follow this checklist to protect your position from day one.

  1. Preserve all evidence immediately. Take timestamped screenshots of every defamatory post, comment, video, or article. Save the full URL, page source code, and any metadata. If the content is on social media, record the author’s profile URL, follower count, and engagement metrics. Evidence can disappear within hours.
  2. Distinguish false fact from opinion. Swiss law protects statements of opinion more broadly than assertions of fact. A factual claim (“X committed fraud”) is far easier to challenge than a subjective assessment (“X is unprofessional”). If the statement blends fact and opinion, note both elements, courts will analyse them separately.
  3. Send a measured cease-and-desist letter. A formal letter to the author or publisher demanding removal and retraction is often enough to resolve straightforward cases. It also starts a paper trail that strengthens any later court application.
  4. File a platform reporting or takedown request. Use the platform’s own defamation or harassment reporting tool. For Swiss-specific enforcement, reference the 2025 Federal Act on Communication Platforms and Search Engines, which obliges platforms to provide transparent reporting mechanisms.
  5. Decide: criminal complaint, civil claim, or both. If the defamer’s identity is known and the statement was clearly false, a criminal complaint filed within three months is a strong deterrent. If your priority is content removal and financial compensation, the civil route under Article 28 is more flexible. Many victims pursue both in parallel.
  6. Exercise your right of reply. If the statement appeared in a periodically published medium (newspaper, magazine, online news outlet, or broadcast), you may be entitled to a published response under Swiss media law.

Evidence Checklist

The strength of any defamation case, civil or criminal, depends on the quality of your evidence. Gather the following from the outset:

Evidence type Why it matters
Timestamped screenshots (full page + URL bar visible) Proves the content existed at a specific time; essential if it is later deleted
Archived copies (e.g., Wayback Machine, Archive.today) Independent third-party verification that the content was publicly accessible
Witness statements Confirms that others saw the content and understood it as referring to you
Engagement data (shares, comments, view count) Demonstrates the reach and scale of reputational harm
Financial-loss documentation (lost contracts, revenue decline) Supports a damages claim in civil proceedings
Communication with the author/publisher Shows whether the author was asked to retract and refused, relevant to intent and to court costs

Cease-and-Desist Letter, Template and Sample Wording

A well-drafted cease-and-desist letter for Switzerland defamation cases should include the elements below. Tailor the wording to your circumstances and, ideally, have it reviewed by a media-law specialist before sending.

Sample structure for a cease-and-desist letter (Switzerland defamation):

  • Sender and recipient details. Your full name or company name, address, and the recipient’s details.
  • Identification of the defamatory content. Describe the specific statement(s), include the URL or publication reference, and attach your screenshots.
  • Legal basis. Reference Article 28 of the Swiss Civil Code (personality rights) and, if applicable, Articles 173–174 of the Swiss Criminal Code.
  • Demand. Request immediate removal or retraction within a stated deadline (seven to fourteen days is standard).
  • Consequences of non-compliance. State that you reserve the right to seek interim injunctive relief, file a criminal complaint, and claim damages.
  • Signature and date.

Sending the letter by registered post or a trackable digital channel creates proof of delivery. If the recipient does not comply within the stated deadline, this letter becomes exhibit one in any court application.

Social Media Defamation in Switzerland, Platform Takedowns and the 2025 Platforms Law

Social media defamation in Switzerland has become the most common scenario facing individuals and small businesses. A defamatory post can go viral before the victim even learns of its existence. Fortunately, there are now several ways to pursue removal without immediately going to court.

Switzerland’s 2025 Federal Act on Communication Platforms and Search Engines, announced by the Federal Department of the Environment, Transport, Energy and Communications (UVEK), requires large platforms operating in Switzerland to offer users transparent and accessible mechanisms for reporting illegal content, including defamatory material. The likely practical effect is that platforms must respond to Swiss user reports more promptly and provide clearer reasoning when they decline to act.

For the major platforms, the reporting process works as follows:

  • YouTube / Google. YouTube provides a specific legal complaint process for defamation. In certain cases, YouTube may require a court order before removing or geo-blocking content in Switzerland.
  • Meta (Facebook, Instagram). Use Meta’s Help Centre to report content that violates community standards. For defamation specifically, Meta may direct you to submit a legal request through its designated form.
  • X (formerly Twitter). Report the post via the in-app reporting tool and, for legal claims, submit a support request referencing the defamatory content and the applicable Swiss law.
  • TikTok. Use the in-app “Report” function, selecting the harassment or defamation category. For legal takedowns, submit a request through TikTok’s legal removal form.

How to Build a Takedown Request

When submitting a takedown request in Switzerland, include these fields to maximise the chance of a successful outcome:

  • Your full legal name and contact information
  • The exact URL(s) of the defamatory content
  • A clear explanation of why the content is defamatory under Swiss law (reference Art. 28 CC or Arts. 173–174 SCC)
  • Supporting evidence (screenshots, timestamps)
  • Any court order or formal legal correspondence already obtained
  • A declaration that the information provided is accurate

When to Seek a Court Order vs Relying on Platform Policy

Platform reporting is the fastest first step, but it has limits. Platforms apply their own community standards, which may not align perfectly with Swiss defamation law. If a platform declines your report, or if the content is clearly unlawful but the platform is slow to act, you can apply to a Swiss cantonal court for an interim injunction ordering the platform to remove or geo-block the content. Industry observers expect Swiss courts to continue issuing such orders, particularly where the 2025 platforms law strengthens the legal basis for compelling platform action.

The Right of Reply in Switzerland, Requirements, Deadlines and How to File

The right of reply in Switzerland is a distinctive remedy that gives any person directly affected by a factual assertion in a periodically published medium (a newspaper, magazine, online news portal, or broadcast) the right to have a response published in the same medium, free of charge. This right exists independently of any court proceeding and does not require you to prove that the original statement was false, only that you were directly affected and that you have a legitimate interest in responding.

The legal basis sits within the Swiss Civil Code’s personality-rights framework, reinforced by specific media legislation. Key requirements include:

  • Timeliness. The reply must be submitted promptly after publication. While the exact deadline varies by cantonal practice, most commentators advise submitting within 20 days of the publication date.
  • Scope. The reply must be limited to correcting or responding to the specific factual assertions in the original piece. It cannot be longer than necessary and must not itself contain defamatory content.
  • Form. Submit the reply in writing to the editor-in-chief or responsible editor of the relevant publication. Include your name, the date and title of the original article, and the text of your proposed response.

Model right-of-reply submission:

  • To: [Editor-in-chief / responsible editor], [Publication name]
  • From: [Your full name and address]
  • Date: [Date]
  • Re: Right of reply to article titled “[Title]”, published on [Date], [page/URL]
  • Body: “Pursuant to my right of reply under Swiss law, I request that the following response be published in the next edition / on the same web page: [Your factual response, limited to the assertions in the original article].”
  • Signature

If the publication refuses to print or post your reply, you may apply to a civil court for an order compelling publication. Courts generally treat these applications urgently. The right of reply is one of the fastest and most cost-effective tools available for reputation protection in Switzerland, it is well worth exercising before or alongside any defamation lawsuit.

Should You Sue for Defamation in Switzerland? Costs, Outcomes and Alternatives

Deciding whether to sue requires a realistic assessment of what each route can achieve, how much it costs, and how long it takes. The comparison table below summarises the trade-offs.

Action route Typical remedy Pros / Cons
Civil (Art. 28 personality rights) Injunction, correction, damages Pros: Direct remedies, financial compensation, content removal. Cons: Legal costs (court fees + attorney fees), burden of proof on claimant for damages, proceedings can take months.
Criminal (Arts. 173–175 SCC) Fines, criminal record for offender Pros: Strong deterrent, state-led investigation. Cons: Three-month filing deadline, prosecutor’s discretion, does not directly remove content or compensate victim.
Platform / Right of Reply Takedown, labelling, published correction Pros: Fastest route, often free, no court needed initially. Cons: Platform discretion, no damages, may need court order if platform refuses.

For many individuals, the optimal strategy combines all three: file a platform report for immediate visibility reduction, exercise the right of reply where a media outlet is involved, send a cease-and-desist letter, and then decide, based on the response, whether to escalate to court. Consulting a Swiss media-law specialist at the outset can save considerable time and expense by identifying the strategy most likely to achieve your specific goal, whether that is content removal, financial compensation, or public vindication.

Next Steps, Find a Swiss Media-Law Specialist

If you believe you have been defamed and are weighing your options, early legal advice can make the difference between a swift resolution and a drawn-out dispute. Whether you need an urgent takedown, a cease-and-desist letter, a criminal complaint, or a full civil claim, a specialist in Swiss media and defamation law can assess your situation, advise on the strongest route, and act within the critical time windows. Find a media and entertainment lawyer in Switzerland through the Global Law Experts directory to arrange an initial consultation and take the first step towards protecting your reputation.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Andreas D Blattmann at Quadra Attorneys At Law, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Swiss Criminal Code (official), Offences Against Personal Honour (Arts. 173–177)
  2. Swiss Civil Code, Personality Rights (Art. 28)
  3. UVEK, Federal Act on Communication Platforms and Search Engines (2025)
  4. Google / YouTube, Defamation Policy and Legal Complaint Process
  5. Penalex, Offences Against Honour and Secrecy (Swiss Legal Commentary)
  6. Carter-Ruck, Defamation and Privacy Law in Switzerland
  7. Leaders League, Swiss Federal Court on Defamation
  8. Meta Help Centre, Reporting and Content Removal

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Can You Sue for Defamation in Switzerland in 2026, Civil or Criminal, Time Limits & Right of Reply

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