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For general counsel and international litigators evaluating cross-border forum options, the landscape for dispute resolution lawyers in Switzerland has shifted decisively in 2026. Two concurrent developments, the entry into force of the revised Swiss Rules of International Arbitration (Swiss Rules 2026) and the launch of English-language international commercial proceedings before the Bern cantonal courts in May 2026, create new tactical choices around timing, enforceability and interim relief. This practice guide maps every material change, compares the two forums head-to-head, and delivers the checklists counsel need to act immediately on clause drafting, asset preservation and enforcement strategy.
The practical effect of these changes is threefold. First, the Swiss Rules 2026 give arbitral tribunals stronger case-management powers and clearer coordination mechanisms with Swiss state courts on interim relief. Second, Bern’s new English-language commercial court proceedings eliminate the language barrier that historically pushed international parties toward arbitration by default. Third, enforcement pathways, whether under the Swiss Private International Law Act (PILA) and the New York Convention for awards, or via conventional routes for court judgments, now require recalibration. In-house counsel should take three immediate actions: review existing dispute-resolution clauses in key contracts, preserve digital and documentary evidence now, and consider whether a pre-emptive Swiss freezing application is warranted to secure assets before proceedings begin.
The Swiss Rules 2026, administered by the Swiss Arbitration Centre, introduce the most significant procedural updates since the 2012 revision. For counsel managing cross-border commercial disputes with a Swiss seat, these changes directly affect case-management timelines, disclosure strategy and the coordination of interim relief between tribunals and courts.
The updated rules strengthen the arbitral tribunal’s proactive role in structuring proceedings from the outset. Industry observers expect these changes to meaningfully reduce the time-to-award in medium-complexity cases, particularly where parties cooperate on procedural timetables. The key changes, their practical effects and tactical considerations are set out below.
| Rule Change (Swiss Rules 2026) | Practical Effect | Tactical Tip for Counsel |
|---|---|---|
| Enhanced case-management conference powers, tribunals now mandated to hold a case-management conference promptly after constitution and to issue a detailed procedural timetable. | Proceedings are front-loaded; delays caused by late procedural negotiations are reduced. Tribunals set disclosure deadlines, hearing windows and interim-relief coordination at the earliest stage. | Prepare a draft procedural timetable before the first case-management conference. Parties who propose realistic timelines influence the shape of proceedings significantly. |
| Clearer document-production framework, updated provisions on requests for document production, aligning with IBA Rules principles while preserving Swiss efficiency. | Counsel can request targeted document categories with greater procedural certainty. Tribunals have explicit authority to limit overly broad requests and to order production within defined timeframes. | Draft narrow, issue-specific document requests tied to your key legal arguments. Overly broad requests risk tribunal pushback under the new efficiency mandate. |
| Expedited procedure provisions, revised thresholds and streamlined procedural steps for lower-value or urgent disputes. | Expedited proceedings now offer a faster track to award with reduced formality, making Swiss-seated arbitration more cost-competitive for mid-value claims. | Evaluate whether your dispute qualifies under the revised thresholds. If speed is critical, elect the expedited procedure in your notice of arbitration. |
| Emergency arbitrator coordination, updated rules clarify the emergency arbitrator’s powers and coordination with Swiss state courts for interim and conservatory measures. | Emergency arbitrators can order interim relief quickly, and the rules now expressly contemplate parallel applications to Swiss courts where enforcement of emergency orders requires state-court backing. | Where assets are at immediate risk, file simultaneously: an emergency arbitrator application under the Swiss Rules 2026 and a superprovisional measures application before the competent Swiss court for direct enforcement. |
| Tribunal powers on costs and efficiency, tribunals may now take procedural efficiency into account when allocating costs, penalising dilatory conduct. | Obstructive behaviour (e.g., repeated adjournment requests, refusal to cooperate on timetables) can trigger adverse cost consequences in the final award. | Document all instances of the opposing party’s procedural delays. These records support costs submissions at the end of proceedings. |
The cumulative effect of the Swiss Rules 2026 is a procedural regime that incentivises early preparation, discourages tactical delay and provides dispute resolution lawyers in Switzerland with sharper tools for both offensive and defensive case management. Counsel should update their standard arbitration clauses to reference the Swiss Rules 2026 explicitly, and review internal litigation-readiness protocols to ensure evidence is preserved and accessible from day one. (Source: Swiss Arbitration Centre, Swiss Rules of International Arbitration.)
Yes, parties can now bring international commercial disputes in English before the Bern cantonal courts. As reported by leading Swiss law firms and confirmed in legal press coverage, Bern launched its International Commercial Court chamber in May 2026, permitting proceedings to be conducted entirely in English for the first time in Swiss state-court history. Zurich is expected to follow with a comparable offering, with early indications suggesting a 2027 launch.
This development transforms the forum-selection calculus for international commercial courts in Switzerland. Parties who previously defaulted to arbitration solely to avoid German or French court proceedings now have a viable state-court alternative, with the full coercive powers of a Swiss court, including direct enforcement of interim orders and judgments within the Swiss legal system.
Based on published commentary from Pestalozzi and Mondaq, the Bern English-language proceedings are available where the following conditions are met:
Counsel drafting or updating commercial contracts should consider the following checklist when specifying Bern as the forum:
The likely practical effect of the Bern offering will be greatest for mid-value disputes (CHF 100,000 to CHF 5 million) where arbitration costs may be disproportionate and where parties value the public precedent-setting function of a court judgment. For higher-value disputes with assets in multiple jurisdictions, arbitration under the Swiss Rules 2026 may still offer superior global enforceability via the New York Convention. (Sources: Pestalozzi; Mondaq.)
The choice between arbitration with a Swiss seat and English proceedings before the Bern International Commercial Court is now a genuine strategic decision rather than a default. The following comparison table maps the key factors that dispute resolution lawyers in Switzerland should evaluate when advising clients on forum selection.
| Factor | Arbitration (Swiss Seat / Swiss Rules 2026) | English State Court (Bern International Commercial Court) |
|---|---|---|
| Enforceability | Awards enforceable in 170+ jurisdictions under PILA and the 1958 New York Convention. Swiss-seated awards are treated as equivalent to Swiss court judgments domestically. | Judgments enforceable in Switzerland directly. Cross-border enforcement depends on bilateral treaties or the Lugano Convention (for EU/EFTA states); enforcement outside these frameworks requires exequatur proceedings, less automatic than the New York Convention route. |
| Interim measures | Tribunals (including emergency arbitrators under Swiss Rules 2026) can order interim relief. Swiss state courts cooperate by granting parallel freezing or preservation orders where urgent enforcement is needed. | The court has full coercive power under the Swiss CPC, can issue superprovisional (ex parte) measures, freezing orders and preservation orders directly enforceable in Switzerland without further proceedings. |
| Confidentiality | Proceedings are generally private and confidential. Awards are not published unless the parties consent. | Court proceedings are part of the public record. Some commercial matters may benefit from restricted access provisions, but full confidentiality cannot be guaranteed. |
| Appeal / set-aside | Limited set-aside grounds under Art. 190 PILA (e.g., lack of jurisdiction, violation of due process, incompatibility with public policy). Challenges are heard by the Swiss Federal Supreme Court. | Full appellate routes under Swiss procedural law, including appeal on fact and law to higher cantonal courts and, ultimately, to the Federal Supreme Court. |
| Timing and cost | Expedited procedures under Swiss Rules 2026 can deliver awards within 6–9 months. Standard proceedings typically take 12–18 months. Tribunal fees and counsel costs are the primary expenses. | Procedural timelines depend on the Bern docket; early indications suggest 12–24 months for a full trial. Court fees are generally lower than arbitration fees for mid-value disputes. |
| Tactical note | Best where global enforceability under the New York Convention is critical, where confidentiality is a priority, or where the dispute involves parties in jurisdictions that do not recognise foreign court judgments readily. | Attractive where parties want English-language public proceedings, direct access to Swiss court interim measures and enforcement powers, or a cost-competitive route for mid-value commercial disputes. |
Forum selection should be driven by the enforcement landscape, not by habit. The following triggers help counsel make a defensible recommendation:
Swiss courts routinely grant interim measures, including asset-freezing orders, to preserve assets pending arbitration or state-court proceedings. The Swiss Civil Procedure Code (CPC) provides a well-developed framework for urgent protective relief, and Swiss courts are highly experienced in coordinating with arbitral tribunals seated in Switzerland.
To obtain a freezing order from a Swiss court, the applicant must demonstrate:
Industry observers note that Swiss courts take a pragmatic approach to asset-freezing applications: where the evidence of dissipation risk is strong, orders can be issued ex parte within 24–48 hours. Counsel should prepare the application, supporting evidence and security offer before filing, to avoid delays once the window opens. (Source: Swiss CPC.)
Swiss court-issued freezing orders are directly enforceable within Switzerland. For cross-border recognition, the position depends on the jurisdiction. Within the Lugano Convention framework (covering EU and EFTA states), Swiss provisional measures are generally recognised and enforceable, subject to certain conditions. Outside this framework, recognition depends on bilateral treaties or domestic private international law in the target jurisdiction. Where the underlying proceedings are arbitral, counsel should consider obtaining both a tribunal order (for New York Convention enforcement of the final award) and a Swiss court order (for immediate domestic effect).
Enforcement is where forum selection meets commercial reality. The enforcement framework for arbitral awards seated in Switzerland is among the most efficient in the world, anchored by Chapter 12 of PILA and the 1958 New York Convention. Understanding the enforcement of arbitral awards in Switzerland, and comparing it to the enforcement of state-court judgments, is essential for counsel planning a dispute strategy in 2026.
Arbitral awards with a Swiss seat are treated as equivalent to Swiss court judgments for domestic enforcement purposes. The winning party can proceed directly to enforcement through the Swiss debt-collection and bankruptcy system (SchKG) without an intermediate exequatur proceeding. Internationally, Swiss-seated awards benefit from recognition and enforcement under the New York Convention in over 170 contracting states.
The grounds for setting aside a Swiss-seated award are limited to those listed in Art. 190 PILA:
Set-aside applications are heard exclusively by the Swiss Federal Supreme Court, which applies a narrow standard of review. In practice, set-aside challenges succeed in a small minority of cases, reinforcing Switzerland’s reputation as an enforcement-friendly arbitration jurisdiction. (Sources: PILA Art. 190; Global Arbitration Review; Loyens & Loeff.)
Foreign arbitral awards are recognised and enforced in Switzerland under Art. 194 PILA, which incorporates the New York Convention regime. The respondent bears the burden of proving that one of the Convention’s limited grounds for refusal applies. Swiss courts have consistently applied this framework in a pro-enforcement manner.
Judgments issued by the Bern International Commercial Court are directly enforceable within Switzerland, no recognition proceeding is required. For cross-border enforcement, Bern judgments benefit from the Lugano Convention (covering EU and EFTA states), which provides a streamlined recognition framework broadly comparable to the Brussels I Regulation. Outside the Lugano Convention framework, enforcement requires bilateral treaty coverage or domestic exequatur proceedings in the target jurisdiction, which may be slower and less predictable than New York Convention enforcement of an arbitral award.
The following roadmap illustrates three parallel pathways, from first sign of dispute through to enforcement, reflecting the 2026 procedural landscape for dispute resolution lawyers in Switzerland.
The 2026 reforms present a genuine inflection point for dispute resolution lawyers in Switzerland and the international clients they advise. Whether the right path is Swiss-seated arbitration under the Swiss Rules 2026, English proceedings before Bern’s new International Commercial Court, or a dual-track strategy combining both, the window for preparation is now. Use the following checklist to ensure readiness.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Simon M. Hohler at THOUVENIN, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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