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When a federation decision threatens an athlete’s selection, suspends a club from competition, or freezes sponsorship funding, the window to preserve the status quo is measured in hours, not weeks. Understanding how to obtain provisional measures in Swiss sports disputes is the single most time-critical procedural skill for sports counsel operating in the Swiss legal system. Two distinct forums offer emergency relief: the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS), primarily through Article R37 of the CAS Code of Sports-related Arbitration, and Swiss cantonal courts, which grant interim injunctions under the Swiss Code of Civil Procedure and the Swiss Federal Act on Private International Law (PILA).
The 2026 Swiss Sports Governance Standard has compressed internal disciplinary timetables across federations, making external provisional relief filings more urgent than ever. This guide maps every actionable step, from the first 48 hours of evidence preservation through filing, hearing, enforcement, and costs, so that athletes, clubs, and their counsel can act decisively when careers and finances are at immediate risk.
Provisional measures in Switzerland encompass any court or tribunal order designed to preserve rights, prevent irreparable harm, or maintain the status quo while the merits of a dispute are decided. In the sports context, common forms of provisional relief include a stay or suspension of a disciplinary sanction, an order for interim reinstatement to competition or a national squad, a freezing order over assets (where financial penalties or transfer fees are at stake), and an order compelling a federation to continue funding or accreditation pending a final award.
Any party with a legitimate legal interest may apply. In practice, applicants are most often individual athletes facing suspension or deselection, clubs subject to relegation or licensing sanctions, agents or commercial partners whose contractual rights depend on an athlete’s eligibility, and, less commonly, federations seeking to enforce their own decisions against a non-compliant member.
Two forums handle these applications in parallel. CAS, seated in Lausanne, exercises jurisdiction over provisional measures under the CAS Procedural Rules when a CAS arbitration is pending or about to be filed. Swiss cantonal courts retain concurrent jurisdiction to grant interim injunctions under the Swiss Code of Civil Procedure, even when the merits of the dispute fall within an arbitration clause, a principle confirmed by Article 183 PILA. Choosing between these forums (or, in rare circumstances, applying to both) is the first tactical decision counsel must make.
The 2026 Swiss Sports Governance Standard has accelerated internal federation disciplinary timelines and imposed stricter duties to issue reasoned decisions, which in turn shortens the period in which an affected party can seek external provisional relief. Industry observers expect this compression to increase the volume of emergency CAS and cantonal court filings through 2026 and beyond.
Article R37 of the CAS Code permits a party to request provisional or conservatory measures before or during a CAS arbitration. The provision empowers the President of the relevant CAS Division (or the Deputy President, or the Panel once constituted) to order any interim measure deemed necessary to protect the applicant’s rights. To succeed, an applicant must satisfy four cumulative requirements:
Swiss cantonal courts may grant interim injunctions in sports disputes under the Swiss Code of Civil Procedure (CPC), even where the merits are subject to an arbitration agreement. Under Article 183(2) PILA, a party to an international arbitration seated in Switzerland may apply to state courts for provisional measures if the arbitral tribunal has not yet been constituted or cannot act in time. Swiss courts apply a three-part test:
The choice of forum depends on three factors: whether internal federation remedies have been exhausted (if not, CAS will usually decline), whether the seat of any arbitration is in Switzerland (which triggers PILA), and the nature of the relief sought. Asset-freezing orders are typically best pursued through cantonal courts, which have direct enforcement powers over Swiss bank accounts and assets. Suspensory relief tied to competition eligibility is often faster through CAS, particularly when the CAS Division President can issue a summary order.
In narrow circumstances, for example, where a CAS filing has been made but the panel is not yet constituted and an imminent event is days away, counsel may file simultaneously with both forums, though this carries the risk that one forum defers to the other, costing time.
The following procedure outlines each concrete action from the moment of an adverse federation decision through to enforcement of an interim order. Every step is designed to be completed in the sequence and timeframes indicated below.
| Step | Who does it | Typical duration |
|---|---|---|
| Preserve evidence and lodge internal emergency appeal | Applicant counsel / in-house counsel | Immediate, 0–48 hours |
| Emergency request to federation (written) | Applicant | 0–48 hours |
| File CAS provisional measures application (Art. R37) | Applicant counsel | 24–96 hours (decision often within days; may be summary) |
| File ex parte petition in cantonal court for injunction / freezing order | Applicant counsel (local Swiss counsel) | Ex parte: 24–72 hours to decision; Inter partes: 2–6 weeks |
| Oral hearing / expedited inter partes hearing | Parties / tribunal or court | Hearing often scheduled 1–4 weeks from filing |
| Enforcement of interim order (cantonal) | Applicant (enforcement counsel) | Enforcement can be immediate; registration formalities 1–2 weeks |
| Follow-on merits proceedings (CAS arbitration / Swiss litigation) | Parties | Weeks to months (depends on arbitration timetable) |
The clock starts the moment the federation decision is communicated. Counsel should take the following actions without delay:
Within the first 72 hours, counsel must decide whether to file with CAS, a Swiss cantonal court, or, exceptionally, both. The decision turns on the following practical factors:
To file for CAS interim measures, counsel must prepare and submit the following to the CAS Court Office in Lausanne:
Once filed, the CAS Division President (or Deputy President) may issue a summary decision on the papers alone, particularly where the opposing party has been given the opportunity to comment briefly, or may schedule an expedited hearing. Decisions on provisional measures under Article R37 are typically rendered within days of filing where genuine urgency is demonstrated. CAS may also impose conditions on the provisional relief, such as requiring the applicant to provide security for any loss the respondent may suffer.
Where the cantonal court route is selected, applicant counsel (who must be a Swiss-admitted attorney for court filings) should:
Once a hearing is scheduled, whether before CAS or a cantonal court, counsel should attend with all original documents, prepared to address the tribunal’s or court’s questions on urgency, irreparable harm, and the balance of interests. If the application succeeds:
An incomplete evidence bundle is one of the most common reasons for delay or refusal of emergency applications. The table below sets out the documents typically required for both CAS and Swiss court filings, together with practical notes on preparation. Counsel should use this as a working checklist from the moment an adverse federation decision is received.
| Document | Notes |
|---|---|
| Federation decision / disciplinary letter | Certified copy or PDF with the federation’s stamp; must include the date of decision and signatory identification. |
| Proof of exhaustion of internal remedies | Copies of internal appeals filed, timeline of internal steps, proof of service (email read receipts, registered post tracking). |
| Affidavit / Statement of urgent facts (sworn) | Signed by the applicant; witnessed or commissioned as required by the receiving forum. Must include a detailed chronology and an explanation of why the harm is irreparable. |
| Evidence of irreparable harm | Contracts (employment, sponsorship, image rights), selection lists, bank statements, sponsor correspondence, medical certificates, screenshots and social media evidence. |
| Witness statements | Short, signed statements from coaches, agents, medical staff, or team managers. Include full contact details and a truth declaration. Notarisation may be required for Swiss court filings. |
| Legal submissions / skeleton argument | Concise legal brief citing Article R37 (CAS) or Articles 261–269 CPC / Article 183 PILA (Swiss courts). Focus on prima facie entitlement, urgency, and the balance of interests. |
| Evidence of assets (for freezing orders) | Bank statements, asset registers, notarised affidavits from accountants, required only where the relief sought includes an attachment or freezing order. |
| Power of attorney / authority to act | A signed power of attorney authorising counsel to file on behalf of the applicant. Swiss courts require a local Swiss-admitted attorney; ensure a local power of attorney is in place. |
| Translation and notarisation certificates | Any document not in the official language of the forum (English for CAS; German, French, or Italian for Swiss courts depending on canton) must include a certified translation. |
| CAS procedural forms (if filing with CAS) | Statement of appeal / Request for provisional measures, check the CAS Court Office website for current form requirements and filing instructions. |
A recommended exhibit numbering system for emergency bundles is to label documents as C-1, C-2, C-3 (for claimant/applicant exhibits) and R-1, R-2 (for respondent documents produced by the applicant). Keep the total emergency bundle concise, industry observers suggest aiming for no more than 50–80 pages for the initial filing, with the option to supplement at the hearing stage.
Speed is the defining characteristic of a successful emergency application. The following 14-day timetable represents a realistic best-case scenario for an applicant who acts immediately upon receiving an adverse federation decision. Actual timelines will vary depending on the complexity of the dispute, the responsiveness of the federation, and cantonal court scheduling.
| Day | Action |
|---|---|
| Day 0 | Receive federation decision. Preserve evidence. Notify counsel. Lodge internal emergency appeal (if required by federation rules). |
| Day 1 | Prepare affidavit and evidence bundle. Decide forum (CAS vs Swiss court). Notify opposing party if strategically appropriate. |
| Day 2–3 | File CAS provisional measures application (Art. R37) OR ex parte Swiss petition. If filing both, coordinate counsel carefully and disclose to both forums. |
| Day 3–7 | Attend expedited hearing (if scheduled by CAS or cantonal court). Obtain provisional order if application succeeds. Begin enforcement steps. |
| Day 7–14 | File enforcement / registration with cantonal authorities (if needed). Prepare and file merits submission (CAS appeal or Swiss claim). Monitor compliance with order. |
Several critical deadlines must be watched throughout this process. CAS provisional measures under Article R37 are typically linked to the filing of an appeal or request for arbitration, if no merits proceeding is filed within the deadline specified by CAS, the provisional order may lapse. Similarly, cantonal court injunctions granted on an ex parte basis will be subject to a court-imposed deadline for the applicant to file an inter partes application or commence merits proceedings. Failure to meet either deadline results in automatic discharge of the interim order.
The 2026 Swiss Sports Governance Standard has shortened many federations’ internal appeal windows, in some cases to as little as a few days. The likely practical effect is that applicants must now be prepared to file for external provisional relief earlier in the process than in prior years, since the internal remedy will be exhausted (or deemed unavailable) more quickly.
Emergency applications are inherently expensive, driven primarily by the intensity of counsel work in a compressed timeframe. The table below provides indicative cost ranges for the main fee items. All figures are in Swiss francs (CHF) and should be verified with the relevant institution and local counsel before filing.
| Item | Typical amount (indicative) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| CAS registration / administrative fees | CHF 4,500 – CHF 8,000 | Varies by amount in dispute and case type. Provisional measures may trigger separate administrative handling. Verify with the CAS Court Office. |
| CAS expedited handling / emergency application | Variable | CAS may decide on procedure rapidly; counsel fees are the principal cost driver. |
| Cantonal court filing / court fees | CHF 200 – CHF 4,000 | Varies by canton and whether ex parte or inter partes. Geneva and Vaud are common filing locations for sports matters. |
| Counsel fees (lead counsel) | CHF 250 – CHF 700+ per hour; emergency retainer CHF 5,000 – CHF 30,000+ | Emergency matters require overnight and weekend availability. International counsel may charge separately. |
| Local Swiss counsel (court enforcement) | CHF 2,000 – CHF 15,000+ | Depends on complexity and whether freezing orders or enforcement steps are required. |
| Translation / notarisation | CHF 100 – CHF 2,000 | Depends on number of documents and languages involved. |
| Security / bond (if court requires) | Amount varies widely | Both CAS and cantonal courts may require the applicant to deposit security to cover the respondent’s potential loss. Check applicable practice. |
Applicants should budget for the full costs of provisional measures at the outset. The costs of provisional measures may be recoverable if the applicant ultimately succeeds on the merits, but this depends on the tribunal’s or court’s cost-allocation decision and is never guaranteed.
The 2026 Swiss Sports Governance Standard, developed under the auspices of Swiss Olympic and endorsed by the Swiss Federal Office of Sport (BASPO), introduces several requirements that directly affect how athletes and clubs pursue provisional measures in Switzerland. Three changes carry particular tactical significance:
Early indications suggest that the 2026 Standard is increasing the overall volume of emergency applications before both CAS and cantonal courts. Counsel advising athletes and clubs should take three immediate steps: first, review the specific federation’s implementation of the 2026 Standard (which may vary in detail from federation to federation); second, confirm the applicable internal remedy windows (which may now be as short as a few days); and third, pre-assemble the core documents listed in the checklist above so that an external filing can be made within 24–48 hours of an adverse internal decision.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Dr. Lucien W. Valloni at VALLONI ATTORNEYS AT LAW, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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