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product recall requirements in switzerland

Product Recall Requirements in Switzerland: Authority Reporting, Recallswiss and Sector Rules

By Global Law Experts
– posted 2 days ago

Last reviewed: 11 June 2026

Understanding the product recall requirements in Switzerland is essential for any manufacturer, importer or distributor that places goods on the Swiss market. The Swiss Product Safety Act (Produktesicherheitsgesetz, PrSG; SR 930. 11) imposes a clear obligation: when a product already on the market presents a serious risk to health or safety, the responsible economic operator must notify the competent authority and, where necessary, recall the product from consumers. Switzerland operates both a centralised recall portal, RecallSwiss, administered in collaboration with the Federal Food Safety and Veterinary Office (BLV/FSVO), and sector-specific reporting channels through authorities such as Swissmedic for pharmaceuticals and medical devices.

This article provides a complete compliance playbook covering every step from the legal triggers for a recall through to authority notification, notification content, operational checklists and sector-specific procedures.

Key takeaways:

  • Notify the competent authority as soon as you know or should know that a product on the Swiss market poses a danger, the PrSG does not prescribe a fixed number of days but requires action without delay.
  • Use RecallSwiss for consumer-goods recalls and public warnings; use Swissmedic or BLV/FSVO portals for sector-regulated products (medicines, devices, food).
  • Document everything, from internal risk assessment through to consumer communications, to demonstrate compliance and limit liability under the Swiss Product Liability Act.

1. Legal Framework and Triggers for Product Recall Requirements in Switzerland

The principal regulation for product recall obligations in Switzerland is the Product Safety Act (PrSG, SR 930.11), supplemented by the Product Safety Ordinance (PrSV). The PrSG applies to all products intended for consumers or that may, under reasonably foreseeable conditions, be used by consumers. It aligns Switzerland’s product-safety regime closely with the EU’s General Product Safety Directive and its successor, the General Product Safety Regulation (GPSR).

Under the PrSG, any person who places a product on the market (manufacturer, importer or distributor) must ensure it is safe. Article 8 PrSG establishes a duty to cooperate with enforcement authorities, and Article 11 sets out a notification obligation: when an economic operator knows or, on the basis of available information, ought to know that a product it has placed on the market poses a risk to the health or safety of users, it must immediately inform the competent enforcement authority and describe the measures already taken to prevent risk to consumers.

The legal requirements for product recalls in Switzerland are therefore triggered when:

  • A product defect causes or could cause injury or harm to consumers.
  • A manufacturing, design or labelling defect affects a batch or product line already in circulation.
  • Post-market surveillance, consumer complaints or incident reports reveal a previously unknown hazard.
  • A foreign authority (e.g. through the EU’s Safety Gate / RAPEX system) issues a recall or safety warning that concerns a product also distributed in Switzerland.

In addition to the PrSG, the Swiss Product Liability Act (Produktehaftpflichtgesetz, PrHG) governs civil liability for damage caused by defective products. While the PrHG does not itself mandate recalls, a failure to recall a known-dangerous product significantly increases the producer’s exposure to strict liability claims and may also attract criminal sanctions under the PrSG.

Voluntary vs Compulsory Recalls, Legal Triggers

Swiss law distinguishes between voluntary and compulsory recalls, although the practical outcome for businesses is often the same. A voluntary recall is initiated by the economic operator itself once it identifies a risk. Industry observers expect voluntary recalls to remain the dominant pathway, because proactive action typically reduces both regulatory scrutiny and consumer-litigation risk. A compulsory recall, by contrast, is ordered by the competent enforcement authority (usually a cantonal enforcement body or a federal authority such as Swissmedic or BLV) when the operator fails to act or when the authority concludes that measures already taken are insufficient.

The authority can order a market withdrawal, a recall from consumers, or a destruction of stock, and non-compliance with such an order can lead to fines and criminal prosecution.

2. Authorities, Portals and Which to Notify

One of the most common compliance questions is: which Swiss authority must I notify, and through which portal? The answer depends on the product category. Switzerland does not have a single unified recall authority; instead, product safety notification responsibilities are distributed across several bodies.

  • Consumer products and general goods: The federal RecallSwiss portal, operated in collaboration with the BLV/FSVO, is the central public-facing platform for product safety notifications in Switzerland. It publishes recall notices and public warnings for non-food consumer products. Economic operators submit their notifications to the competent enforcement authority (usually the relevant cantonal chemist’s office or, for certain product categories, a federal body), and approved notices are then published on RecallSwiss.
  • Medicines and pharmaceuticals: Swissmedic is the sole competent authority. Quality defects and batch recalls must be reported directly to Swissmedic using the designated reporting form (document reference MU102_10_001e). Swissmedic classifies defects into Class I (potentially life-threatening), Class II (may cause illness or mistreatment) and Class III (unlikely to cause harm), and the urgency of the recall response scales accordingly.
  • Medical devices: Post-market surveillance incidents and Field Safety Corrective Actions (FSCA) are also reported to Swissmedic. Manufacturers must issue a Field Safety Notice (FSN) to affected users and simultaneously notify Swissmedic, which publishes the FSN on its website.
  • Food and feed: The BLV/FSVO is the lead authority. Notifications are submitted through the RASFF (Rapid Alert System for Food and Feed) framework for cross-border incidents, and public warnings are published on the BLV website alongside the RecallSwiss portal.
  • Motor vehicles: Vehicle recalls are coordinated through the Federal Roads Office (ASTRA/FEDRO), which maintains its own recall database and cooperates with EU and international vehicle-safety systems.

When to Use RecallSwiss vs a Sector Regulator

The decision of which portal to use follows a straightforward logic:

  • Scenario 1, defective children’s toy: This is a general consumer product. Notify the cantonal enforcement authority and submit the recall notice for publication on RecallSwiss.
  • Scenario 2, contaminated pharmaceutical batch: Notify Swissmedic directly using the quality-defect reporting form. Swissmedic publishes the batch recall on its own website; the notice may also appear on RecallSwiss for consumer visibility.
  • Scenario 3, allergen mislabelling on a food product: Notify the BLV/FSVO and the cantonal food inspector. The public warning is published on the BLV website and on RecallSwiss. If the product was imported from or also sold in the EU, a RASFF notification is required.

3. Product Safety Notification Content, Required Elements and Templates

A recall notification to Swiss authorities must be comprehensive enough for the authority to assess the risk and for the public to identify the affected product and take action. While the PrSG does not prescribe a rigid template for the notification itself, Swiss enforcement practice closely mirrors the recall notice elements set out in the EU’s GPSR framework, making the EU recall notice template a useful baseline for businesses that operate in both markets.

The following elements should be included in every product safety notification in Switzerland:

Minimum Fields for Swiss Recall Notifications

  • Product identification: Brand name, product name, model number, article number, barcode (EAN/UPC) and, where applicable, batch or lot number and serial number range.
  • Product description: A clear description of the product, including photographs, so that consumers and retailers can identify it unambiguously.
  • Hazard description: A plain-language explanation of the risk, what the defect is, what can happen if the product is used, and any reported injuries or incidents.
  • Distribution information: Countries and channels through which the product was distributed, approximate quantities placed on the market, and the sales period.
  • Action for consumers: The specific instruction, stop using the product, return it for a refund, contact the manufacturer for a replacement part, and so on.
  • Remedy offered: Whether the consumer will receive a refund, replacement, repair, or other corrective measure.
  • Contact details: Telephone number, email address and, where applicable, a web address for the consumer to reach the operator or its customer-service team.
  • Operator information: Name and address of the responsible economic operator (manufacturer, authorised representative or importer).
  • Photographs: Clear images of the product and, ideally, the defect or the label/barcode area for identification.
  • Languages: Best practice in Switzerland is to issue the notice in German, French and Italian, the three main official languages, to cover the entire national market. English versions are recommended for business-to-business communications and for products with cross-border distribution.

Businesses that also place products on the EU market should note that the EU GPSR recall notice template (developed under the implementing regulations to the GPSR) specifies comparable minimum fields and adds requirements around visual prominence and standardised headings. Aligning Swiss and EU recall notices from the outset saves time and reduces the risk of inconsistencies in cross-border recall campaigns.

4. Step-by-Step Recall Procedure and Operational Checklist

The standard procedures for a product recall in Switzerland follow a logical sequence: identify, assess, contain, notify, execute, and follow up. The following ten-step operational checklist is designed for in-house counsel and product-safety teams managing a recall from start to finish.

  1. Internal triage and incident assessment: As soon as a potential safety issue is identified, whether through a consumer complaint, quality-control failure, or a foreign authority alert, assemble a cross-functional incident team (legal, quality, supply chain, communications).
  2. Risk assessment: Evaluate the severity and likelihood of harm. For pharmaceuticals, use Swissmedic’s Class I/II/III framework. For general products, assess against the standard of “serious risk” under the PrSG.
  3. Immediate stop-sale: Issue an internal stop-sale and stop-distribution instruction to all warehouses, logistics partners and retail customers. Quarantine affected stock.
  4. Traceability and lot tracking: Identify the full scope of the recall, which batches, lots, serial numbers and distribution channels are affected. Pull sales records and shipping documentation.
  5. Authority notification: Notify the competent authority without delay (see Section 2 above for the correct authority per product type). Submit the notification with all required fields (see Section 3).
  6. Consumer communication: Prepare and publish the recall notice in all required languages. Distribute through the RecallSwiss portal (or sector portal), the company website, point-of-sale notices and, where appropriate, direct consumer contact (email, letter).
  7. Retailer and supply-chain notification: Inform all downstream distribution partners (wholesalers, retailers, e-commerce platforms) and instruct them to remove the product from shelves and online listings.
  8. Remedy logistics: Set up the consumer return or repair process, reverse logistics, refund processing, replacement stock allocation. Ensure the consumer-facing process is simple and frictionless.
  9. Monitoring and follow-up reporting: Track the recall’s effectiveness (return rates, consumer contacts, remaining stock in the field). Report progress to the authority as requested or at agreed intervals.
  10. Recordkeeping and post-mortem: Maintain a complete file of all recall-related documentation, risk assessments, authority correspondence, consumer contacts, costs, for a minimum of ten years. Conduct a root-cause analysis and update internal quality-management systems to prevent recurrence.

Practical Timeline

The PrSG does not specify a fixed deadline (e.g. “within 24 hours”) for authority notification; it requires action “immediately” once the operator becomes aware of the risk. In practice, the following timeline represents accepted best practice:

Timeframe Action
Immediately (within hours) Internal triage; stop-sale instruction issued; initial authority contact (by telephone if the risk is acute)
24–72 hours Formal written notification submitted to the competent authority with all available information; consumer recall notice drafted
7 days Recall notice published on RecallSwiss or sector portal; retailer notification completed; consumer return process operational
30 days First progress report to the authority; interim effectiveness assessment; update recall notice if scope changes

For Swissmedic-regulated products, timelines are more prescriptive. Class I pharmaceutical defects (potentially life-threatening) require immediate notification and may trigger a recall within hours. Class II defects generally allow a slightly longer assessment window, while Class III defects may result in a quality notification without a full public recall.

5. Sector Rules and Special Procedures

While the PrSG provides the general framework, several product categories are subject to sector-specific recall regulations that supplement or, in some areas, replace the general rules.

Pharmaceuticals

Swissmedic recalls for medicines follow a dedicated process. Marketing authorisation holders must report quality defects using the official reporting form (MU102_10_001e, available on the Swissmedic website). Swissmedic assesses the defect, assigns a classification (Class I, II or III), and determines whether a batch recall, market withdrawal or public warning is required. All batch recalls are published on the Swissmedic website. Communication to healthcare professionals and pharmacies is handled via a coordinated “Dear Healthcare Professional” letter (DHPC) when clinically significant risks are involved.

Medical Devices

Manufacturers of medical devices placed on the Swiss market must report incidents and Field Safety Corrective Actions (FSCA) to Swissmedic. The manufacturer issues a Field Safety Notice (FSN) to affected users and institutions, and Swissmedic publishes the FSN on its website. The device vigilance reporting framework applies under the Swiss Medical Devices Ordinance (MepV), which aligns with the EU’s Medical Device Regulation (MDR) and In Vitro Diagnostic Regulation (IVDR) vigilance requirements.

Food and Feed

Food recalls are coordinated by the BLV/FSVO and cantonal food inspectors. When a food product on the Swiss market poses a health risk (e.g., undeclared allergens, microbiological contamination, foreign bodies), the responsible food business operator must notify the cantonal enforcement authority and the BLV. Public warnings are published on the BLV website and on RecallSwiss. For products imported from or exported to the EU, notifications are also submitted through the RASFF system to ensure cross-border coordination.

Key Forms and Links by Sector

Sector Authority Reporting mechanism
General consumer goods Cantonal enforcement bodies / BLV RecallSwiss portal
Medicines / pharmaceuticals Swissmedic Form MU102_10_001e (quality defects)
Medical devices Swissmedic FSN / FSCA vigilance report
Food and feed BLV / cantonal food inspectors BLV notification + RASFF (cross-border)
Motor vehicles ASTRA / FEDRO ASTRA recall database

6. Liability, Consumer Remedies and Enforcement

Failing to comply with Swiss product recall requirements carries significant consequences. The Swiss Product Liability Act (PrHG) imposes strict liability on producers for damage caused by defective products, the injured party does not need to prove fault, only the defect, the damage, and the causal link. Failure to recall a known-dangerous product strengthens a plaintiff’s case considerably.

Under the PrSG, intentional violations of the notification and cooperation obligations, such as knowingly failing to report a dangerous product or obstructing an authority investigation, can result in criminal fines of up to CHF 40,000. Negligent violations attract lower fines. Enforcement authorities also have the power to order market withdrawals, product destructions and import bans, and may publicise non-compliance, which creates substantial reputational risk.

Consumers affected by a recall are typically entitled to one of the following remedies from the responsible economic operator:

  • Full refund of the purchase price.
  • Free replacement with a safe product.
  • Free repair to eliminate the defect.

The likely practical effect of Switzerland’s recall and liability framework is that businesses face a strong incentive to act quickly and transparently. Early voluntary action not only protects consumers but also demonstrates good faith to enforcement authorities and reduces the scope of civil-liability exposure.

7. Reporting Obligations by Entity Type

Entity type Who must notify Portal / authority
Manufacturer Must notify the competent enforcement authority immediately when it knows or ought to know that a product on the market poses a risk. Must cooperate fully with the authority and take corrective measures (recall, withdrawal, warning). RecallSwiss (consumer goods); Swissmedic (medicines, devices); BLV (food)
Importer Must notify both the manufacturer and the competent authority when aware that a product placed on the Swiss market is dangerous. Bears parallel obligations to the manufacturer for products it has imported. RecallSwiss / BLV / Swissmedic (as applicable to the product sector)
Distributor / Retailer Must notify the manufacturer or importer upstream and cooperate with the recall. Must notify the authority directly if it has reason to believe consumer health or safety is at immediate risk and the upstream operator has not acted. Notify upstream operator; support RecallSwiss / authority communications; remove product from sale

8. Key Legislative and Portal Dates

Date Event Relevance to compliance
1 July 2010 PrSG (Product Safety Act, SR 930.11) enters into force Establishes the core notification and cooperation obligations for all economic operators in Switzerland
December 2020 RecallSwiss portal launched Centralises public recall notices and safety warnings for Swiss consumers; operators should ensure notices are submitted for publication
1 September 2023 Latest consolidated version of PrSG takes effect Businesses should review internal procedures against the updated statutory text
13 December 2024 EU General Product Safety Regulation (GPSR) begins to apply in the EU Switzerland is not bound by the GPSR directly, but cross-border operators should align Swiss recall notices with GPSR templates for efficiency

Conclusion

Meeting the product recall requirements in Switzerland demands more than a reactive response to a safety incident. It requires advance preparation: mapped authority contacts, pre-drafted notification templates, documented traceability systems and trained internal teams ready to execute a recall within hours. The legal framework, anchored in the PrSG and reinforced by sector-specific rules from Swissmedic and the BLV/FSVO, leaves little room for delay. Businesses that invest in recall readiness not only protect consumers but also limit their exposure under the Swiss Product Liability Act and avoid the reputational and financial consequences of enforcement action.

For businesses seeking to audit their recall procedures or requiring representation in a live product-safety matter, specialist legal guidance is essential to navigate the intersection of Swiss and EU obligations effectively. The Global Law Experts lawyer directory can help identify qualified liability counsel in Switzerland.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Marcel Lanz at Schärer Rechtsanwalte, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. RecallSwiss, Federal Recall Portal
  2. BLV / Federal Food Safety and Veterinary Office, Recalls and Public Warnings
  3. Swissmedic, Quality Defects and Batch Recalls
  4. EU Safety Gate
  5. Lexology, Product Recall Requirements in Switzerland
  6. Walder Wyss, Product Safety and Recall (Switzerland)
  7. Chambers Practice Guides, Product Liability and Safety (Switzerland)
  8. SGS, Product Recalls

FAQs

What are the legal requirements for product recalls in Switzerland?
Under the Product Safety Act (PrSG, SR 930.11), any economic operator that places a product on the Swiss market must notify the competent enforcement authority immediately when it knows or ought to know that the product poses a risk to health or safety. The operator must cooperate with the authority and take all necessary corrective measures, which may include a public recall, withdrawal from the market, or a safety warning. The obligation applies to manufacturers, importers and distributors alike.
The authority depends on the product type. For general consumer goods, notify the cantonal enforcement authority; the notice is published on the RecallSwiss portal. For medicines and pharmaceuticals, report quality defects directly to Swissmedic. For medical devices, submit a Field Safety Corrective Action (FSCA) report to Swissmedic. For food and feed products, notify the BLV/FSVO and, for cross-border products, submit a RASFF notification.
The PrSG requires notification “immediately”, there is no fixed statutory deadline in days or hours for general consumer products. In practice, businesses should notify the authority within hours of confirming a serious risk and submit a formal written notification within 24 to 72 hours. For Swissmedic-regulated pharmaceuticals, Class I defects (potentially life-threatening) require the fastest response, with notification and recall action expected within hours.
A recall notice should include: product identification (brand, model, batch/lot number, barcode), a clear description of the hazard, the action consumers should take, the remedy offered (refund, replacement or repair), photographs, distribution information and the operator’s contact details. Notices should be issued in German, French and Italian to cover the Swiss national market, with English recommended for cross-border products.
Intentional violations of the PrSG notification and cooperation obligations can result in criminal fines of up to CHF 40,000. Negligent violations attract lower fines. In addition, enforcement authorities can order compulsory market withdrawals, product destructions and import bans, and may publicise the non-compliance, creating significant reputational damage on top of any financial penalty.
Economic operators submit their recall notification to the competent enforcement authority (typically the cantonal authority or a federal body). Once approved, the recall notice is published on the RecallSwiss web portal, where consumers can view current recalls and subscribe to alerts. Operators should ensure the notice contains all required fields (see Section 3 above) and is provided in the relevant official languages.
Yes. Switzerland has three main official languages, German, French and Italian, and best practice is to issue recall notices in all three to ensure full national coverage. Notices published on RecallSwiss and on the BLV website typically appear in multiple languages. For products distributed internationally, an English-language version is also recommended for business-to-business communications and EU coordination.
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Product Recall Requirements in Switzerland: Authority Reporting, Recallswiss and Sector Rules

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