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The ongoing copyright reform in Switzerland is reshaping compliance obligations for every entity that creates, distributes or monetises content in the Swiss market. From the landmark amendments Parliament approved on 27 September 2019 to the Federal Council’s June 2025 bill proposing remuneration for online snippets, the regulatory trajectory is clear: platforms, broadcasters and creators face tighter licensing rules, expanded transparency duties and new collective-management reporting requirements. This practitioner guide translates each wave of the Swiss copyright reform into concrete actions, contract clause updates, licensing audits and 90-day implementation checklists, so that in-house counsel and rights managers can move from awareness to compliance without delay.
The Swiss copyright reform affects three broad categories of market participants: linear and digital broadcasters, streaming platforms (SVOD and AVOD), and individual creators and influencers. Below are the headline points every compliance team should absorb before reading further.
Switzerland’s Federal Act on Copyright and Related Rights dates to 1992. While the statute has been amended several times, the pace of digital transformation, streaming services, user-generated content platforms, podcast networks and AI-driven content creation, has outstripped the existing legal framework. The Swiss copyright reform aims to simultaneously strengthen the position of creative artists and improve public access to works, while adapting enforcement tools to the realities of online distribution.
Several external forces have accelerated the reform. The EU’s Digital Single Market Directive prompted Swiss policymakers to evaluate alignment with European standards on platform liability and press-publisher rights. Domestically, the Federal Council has pursued cultural-policy goals, including better representation of Swiss music on streaming platforms. Industry observers expect these converging pressures to produce a significantly modernised regime by the end of the current legislative cycle.
| Date | Event | Practical Impact |
|---|---|---|
| 27 September 2019 | Parliament approves a series of amendments to modernise the Copyright Act | Extended protection for photographs, longer performer/producer protection terms, improved video-on-demand rights management |
| 1 April 2020 | Revised Copyright Act enters into force | New enforcement provisions (IP-address recording), updated exceptions for research and data mining |
| 20 June 2025 | Federal Council introduces bill proposing remuneration for online snippets | Potential new obligations for platforms and aggregators using press-publisher content |
| 29 October 2025 | UVEK publishes draft law on communication platforms and search engines | Transparency, moderation and notice-and-action duties for platform operators |
| 2026 (ongoing) | Parliamentary deliberation on snippet bill and platform-regulation proposals | Compliance teams should monitor the Official Federal Gazette for final text and commencement dates |
Understanding scope is the first step toward copyright reform compliance in Switzerland. The obligations vary significantly depending on the entity type and the nature of the content being exploited.
| Entity Type | Key New Obligations Under Reform | Immediate Compliance Action (30/90 Days) |
|---|---|---|
| Broadcasters (linear & DAB+) | Licensing reconciliation, reporting to CMOs, DAB+ metadata and catalogue obligations | Conduct licence audit; update contracts with producers; submit reports to SUISA/CMOs within 30 days |
| Streaming platforms (SVOD/AVOD) | Platform transparency, prominence quotas for Swiss/European works, rights clearance for catalogue, potential snippet remuneration | Run territorial rights check; update Terms of Service; negotiate blanket licences where possible |
| User-generated platforms/hosts | Notice and information obligations (UVEK overlap), moderation transparency | Implement notice and appeal workflows; update user-facing moderation pages |
| Creators & influencers | Strengthened moral rights, new remuneration avenues, AI-training opt-out considerations | Review existing assignment clauses; negotiate rights-retention carve-outs in new deals |
A frequently asked question concerns streaming legality in Switzerland for end users. Under Swiss law, downloading or streaming works for private use is permitted. This applies even to downloading from illegal sources, a distinctive feature of the Swiss regime. However, uploading or making content available to the public without the rights holder’s consent remains unlawful. For platforms, this means that user behaviour may be legal while the platform’s own hosting or distribution activity triggers separate licensing obligations.
Edge cases include embedded content (where a platform frames third-party streams), user-uploaded compilations and podcast syndication feeds that incorporate licensed music. Each scenario requires a distinct rights analysis, and the reform’s expanded enforcement provisions make it riskier to rely on assumptions.
The Swiss copyright reform introduces several changes with direct operational implications for media companies. Below is a structured overview of the principal amendments and proposals currently in the legislative pipeline.
Platform liability in Switzerland is evolving on two parallel tracks. The copyright reform strengthens rights-holder remedies against platforms that host infringing material, while the separate communication-platforms law imposes broader transparency and moderation duties. Taken together, platforms operating in Switzerland face a dual compliance burden: they must maintain robust notice-and-takedown processes under copyright law and meet the procedural fairness requirements of the platform-regulation framework.
Practically, this means that a platform’s content-moderation policy can no longer treat copyright takedowns as a standalone workflow. Instead, the takedown decision must be documented, the affected user must be notified with reasons, and an appeals pathway must be available, all within defined timeframes.
On 20 June 2025, the Federal Council introduced a bill proposing changes to the Swiss Copyright Act. The bill aims to address the imbalance between online platforms that display snippets of news content and the press publishers that produce it. If enacted, platforms and aggregators would owe remuneration to publishers for the use of excerpts beyond minimal quotation. The bill is modelled in part on the EU’s press-publisher right under Article 15 of the Digital Single Market Directive, though the Swiss version includes several jurisdiction-specific features.
The bill remains under parliamentary deliberation. Media companies that aggregate or display third-party press content should begin assessing their exposure now, even before the final text is confirmed.
Collective rights management in Switzerland is anchored by SUISA (for musical works) and a network of sister societies covering audiovisual, literary and neighbouring rights. The Swiss copyright reform reinforces the role of these collecting societies while introducing stricter reporting and transparency expectations for licensees.
SUISA is the collective management organisation in charge of managing copyrights for non-theatrical music in Switzerland. Any broadcaster, streaming platform or venue that uses music commercially must hold a valid licence from SUISA, or from the relevant society if the rights fall outside SUISA’s mandate.
The migration from FM to DAB+ is not merely a technical project; it carries licensing implications that intersect directly with the copyright reform. Broadcaster obligations under the DAB+ framework include:
For SVOD and AVOD platforms, the licensing landscape under the Swiss copyright reform requires careful territorial analysis. Switzerland is not an EU member state, which means that EU-wide licensing mechanisms (such as the portability regulation) do not apply automatically. Platforms must therefore secure Swiss-specific rights for each title in their catalogue, or rely on contractual passthrough provisions from pan-European distribution agreements.
Key steps for licensing music on radio and streaming platforms in Switzerland include:
Platforms serving Swiss users must adapt their contractual frameworks, moderation practices and reporting systems to meet the combined requirements of the copyright reform and the communication-platforms law.
Platform Terms of Service should be updated to address the following areas:
The communication-platforms law, as outlined by UVEK, requires platform operators to inform users when removing content or blocking accounts and to explain their grounds for doing so. This intersects with copyright enforcement in several ways:
Linear broadcasters and radio stations face a specific set of compliance tasks under the Swiss copyright reform. The checklist below is designed to be handed directly to legal and operations teams.
Podcasts that incorporate third-party music, sound effects or spoken-word recordings require separate licences. Under the reform’s clarified framework:
Creators rights in Switzerland are strengthened under the reform, but exercising those rights effectively depends on the contractual framework in place. Swiss law provides that only commercial rights can be transferred; moral rights, including the right to be identified as the author, can never be assigned. However, in practice, broad assignment clauses can hollow out a creator’s economic position if not carefully negotiated.
Creators and their advisers should consider the following contractual strategies:
The Swiss copyright reform has sharpened the enforcement toolkit available to rights holders, making proactive compliance all the more important for platforms and content distributors.
Switzerland does not have a statutory safe-harbour regime identical to the US DMCA. Instead, platform liability is assessed under general principles of Swiss civil law, supplemented by the copyright-specific provisions in the revised Act. Key enforcement features include:
Litigation should be considered when notice-and-takedown processes fail, when infringement is systematic, or when the commercial value of the infringed rights justifies the cost of proceedings. For lower-value disputes, mediation or arbitration may offer a faster resolution.
The following checklist assigns ownership by function (LEGAL, PRODUCT, COMMS) and provides a phased timeline for implementation.
Days 1–30: Foundation
Days 31–60: Implementation
Days 61–90: Verification
The copyright reform in Switzerland is not a single legislative event but an evolving programme of amendments, new bills and regulatory proposals that collectively redefine how content is licensed, distributed and enforced across the Swiss media landscape. The three actions that matter most right now are: complete a licence audit to close coverage gaps, update platform Terms of Service and moderation workflows to satisfy both copyright and platform-regulation requirements, and renegotiate creator contracts to reflect strengthened rights and emerging AI-training considerations. Organisations that treat these tasks as a 90-day sprint, rather than a multi-year aspiration, will be best positioned to operate confidently as the final legislative texts take shape.
For tailored guidance on any aspect of the Swiss copyright reform, consult a qualified media and entertainment lawyer in Switzerland.
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.
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