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Swiss Sports Governance Standard 2026

Swiss Sports Governance Standard 2026, Compliance, Arbitration & Swiss‑court Risk

By Global Law Experts
– posted 1 hour ago

Last updated: 1 May 2026

The Swiss Sports Governance Standard 2026, known in practice as the Branchenstandard, represents the most significant overhaul of organisational requirements for Swiss sport in over a decade. Developed jointly by Swiss Olympic and the Federal Office of Sport (BASPO), the Standard has been binding on national federations since its initial adoption and became mandatory for clubs and regional organisations on 1 January 2026. The rollout introduces detailed obligations across governance structures, safeguarding, transparency and disciplinary procedures, obligations that carry real consequences, from the withdrawal of federal funding to disciplinary proceedings and appeals before the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) and the Swiss Federal Supreme Court.

This guide provides federation executives, club officials, in‑house counsel and sports lawyers with the compliance roadmap and litigation risk assessment they need to navigate the new landscape.

Executive Summary and Key Takeaways

For readers who need the essentials before diving into the detail, the following points capture the core obligations and risks under the Swiss Sports Governance Standard 2026:

  • Binding from 1 January 2026. The Branchenstandard now applies to clubs and regional organisations affiliated with Swiss Olympic member federations, not just to the national federations themselves.
  • Statutes and governance documents must be updated. Every covered organisation needs compliant statutes, a published organisational chart, safeguarding policies and transparent election rules.
  • Publication obligations are enforceable. Federations and clubs must make key governance documents accessible on a website or member portal, as set out in the Swiss Olympic Branchenstandard checklist.
  • Disciplinary procedures must meet minimum standards. Written notice, an opportunity to be heard, reasoned decisions and a right of appeal are non‑negotiable requirements under the Standard.
  • Funding is directly linked to compliance. The BASPO Leistungs‑ und Kriterienkatalog 2026 ties federal funding allocations to governance compliance, non‑compliant organisations risk losing financial support.
  • Arbitration and litigation risk will increase. Industry observers expect a measurable spike in governance‑related disputes, disciplinary proceedings and CAS arbitrations as the Standard is enforced across the club tier for the first time.

What the Swiss Sports Governance Standard 2026 Is, Scope and Timeline

The Swiss Sports Governance Standard for Sport is a comprehensive framework of minimum governance, integrity and organisational requirements that all entities within the Swiss Olympic family must satisfy. It was published by Swiss Olympic in coordination with BASPO and is set out in a detailed checklist table (the Tabelle Branchenstandard) that specifies mandatory and recommended criteria across categories including governance structures, financial management, safeguarding, anti‑doping, ethics and transparency. The Standard does not have the force of a federal statute; instead, it operates through the contractual and membership relationships that bind federations, regional associations and clubs to Swiss Olympic and, by extension, to BASPO funding criteria.

The legal architecture is straightforward. Swiss Olympic requires its member federations to adopt and enforce the Branchenstandard as a condition of membership and continued recognition. Federations in turn pass those obligations down to their affiliated regional associations and clubs through their own statutes and regulations. BASPO reinforces the framework by making compliance a criterion in its Leistungs‑ und Kriterienkatalog 2026, the catalogue that determines the allocation of federal financial contributions to sport.

Effective Dates and Phased Rollout

The rollout of sports governance requirements in Switzerland 2026 has followed a phased approach. National federations were the first to be held to the Standard’s requirements. The critical expansion occurred on 1 January 2026, when the Standard became binding for clubs and regional organisations. Federation implementation notices, such as those published by SwissRowing and Swiss Volley, confirmed this effective date and provided clubs with checklists and guidance for bringing their statutes and policies into line. The Canton of Fribourg, for example, published specific guidance for organisations active in sport within its territory, illustrating how cantonal authorities are also treating the Standard as a benchmark for registration and support decisions.

Who Must Comply: Federations, Clubs, Regional Organisations and Exceptions

The Swiss Sports Governance Standard 2026 applies to a broad range of entities. At the top level, all national federations that are members of Swiss Olympic are directly bound. Below them, every regional association, cantonal league and local club affiliated with a covered federation is now subject to the Standard’s requirements, provided the federation’s own statutes incorporate the Branchenstandard obligations, which Swiss Olympic effectively requires them to do.

There are, however, important nuances. Organisations that are not affiliated with any Swiss Olympic member federation fall outside the Standard’s direct reach, though they may still face governance expectations if they seek BASPO funding or cantonal subsidies. Commercial sports companies, for example, entities organised as limited companies (AG or GmbH) rather than associations (Verein), must also comply if they operate within a federation’s structure, though the practical implementation may differ given corporate governance rules under the Swiss Code of Obligations.

Membership Organisations vs Incorporated Sport Societies, Implications for Statutes

The distinction between an association under Art. 60 ff. of the Swiss Civil Code and an incorporated sport society matters for compliance. Associations have broad freedom to draft their own statutes, which means they can directly embed Branchenstandard requirements, safeguarding policies, election rules, disciplinary procedures, into their governing documents. Incorporated entities, by contrast, must navigate the mandatory provisions of corporate law alongside the Standard’s requirements. In practice, this means commercial sport organisations typically satisfy the Standard through a combination of articles of association, internal regulations and compliance charters, rather than through a single set of statutes.

Core Governance and Safeguarding Duties, A Practical Compliance Checklist for Sports Federations in Switzerland

Compliance for sports federations in Switzerland under the 2026 Standard requires action across several interconnected areas. The Swiss Olympic Branchenstandard checklist organises these into mandatory criteria (which must be satisfied) and recommended criteria (which are encouraged but not yet enforced with sanctions). The following checklist covers the mandatory elements every covered organisation must address.

  • Updated statutes. Statutes must clearly define the organisation’s purpose, membership criteria, governance structure, decision‑making procedures and dispute‑resolution mechanisms. They should include an explicit reference to the Branchenstandard and a commitment to comply with Swiss Olympic and federation integrity regulations.
  • Organisational chart and role definitions. Every organisation must publish a current organisational chart identifying board members, key officers and any persons with signing authority.
  • Safeguarding and child protection policy. A written safeguarding policy covering the protection of minors and vulnerable persons is mandatory. The policy must include reporting channels, designated safeguarding officers and procedures for responding to allegations.
  • Conflict of interest register. Board members and senior officers must declare conflicts of interest. The mechanism, whether a register, annual declaration form or standing agenda item, must be documented in the statutes or internal regulations.
  • Election and term‑limit rules. Statutes must provide for transparent election procedures, including nomination processes, voting methods and, where applicable, term limits for board positions.
  • Whistleblowing channel. Organisations must establish a mechanism through which members, athletes, coaches and staff can report concerns about integrity, safeguarding or governance without fear of retaliation.
  • Data protection compliance. Policies must address the handling of personal data in accordance with the revised Swiss Federal Act on Data Protection (revFADP), particularly in the context of safeguarding reports and disciplinary proceedings.

Publication and Recordkeeping Obligations

The Standard imposes specific transparency requirements. Federations must publish their statutes, organisational charts, senior appointments and safeguarding policies on a publicly accessible website or, at minimum, on a secure member portal. Meeting outcomes, particularly general assembly resolutions, must be documented and made available to members. These publication obligations are not merely administrative; they form part of the criteria against which BASPO assesses eligibility for federal funding under the Leistungs‑ und Kriterienkatalog 2026.

Minimum Disciplinary Procedure Standards

The governance standard for clubs in Switzerland now requires that every covered organisation maintain a sports disciplinary procedure that meets minimum due‑process requirements. At a minimum, these procedures must guarantee:

  • Written notice of the charges or allegations against the person concerned.
  • An opportunity to be heard, either in writing or at a hearing, before any sanction is imposed.
  • A reasoned decision issued in writing that explains the factual findings, the legal basis and the sanction.
  • A right of internal appeal to a body that is independent of the first‑instance decision‑maker.

These requirements align with established CAS jurisprudence on procedural fairness and are designed to reduce the risk that disciplinary decisions are overturned on appeal for procedural defects.

Disciplinary Procedures, Internal Dispute Resolution and Evidentiary Standards

Beyond the minimum procedural checklist, the Swiss Sports Governance Standard 2026 expects organisations to implement disciplinary frameworks that withstand scrutiny at every level, from internal appeal through CAS arbitration to the Swiss Federal Supreme Court. This means paying attention not only to the structure of proceedings but also to evidentiary standards, the independence of decision‑makers and the proportionality of sanctions.

Common drafting traps that expose organisations to challenge include:

  • Conflating investigative and adjudicative functions. Where the same body that investigates an allegation also decides on the sanction, the process is vulnerable to challenges on grounds of bias and lack of independence.
  • Inadequate evidence preservation. Organisations that fail to document witness statements, correspondence and contemporaneous records risk having their disciplinary decisions overturned for insufficient evidentiary basis.
  • Disproportionate sanctions. Sanctions that are not calibrated to the severity of the offence, or that lack a published sanctioning grid, invite appeals grounded in the principle of proportionality, a cornerstone of Swiss sports law 2026 practice.
  • Missing or ambiguous appeal mechanisms. If the statutes do not clearly specify appeal routes, timelines and the composition of the appellate body, parties can challenge the enforceability of the entire disciplinary framework.

Interim Measures and Safeguarding During Investigations

The Standard recognises that certain situations, particularly safeguarding allegations involving minors, require immediate protective action before a full disciplinary hearing can take place. Interim measures may include provisional suspensions, restrictions on contact with vulnerable persons, and the preservation of electronic evidence. Organisations should establish clear criteria for when interim measures are justified (typically where there is a risk of harm, evidence destruction or interference with witnesses) and ensure that any provisional suspension is time‑limited and subject to periodic review. These measures must be documented and communicated in writing, and the affected person must have the right to challenge them promptly.

Arbitration and CAS Risk Under the Swiss Sports Governance Standard 2026, What Changes

Sports arbitration in Switzerland is set to enter a new phase as the Branchenstandard extends enforceable governance requirements to hundreds of clubs and regional organisations for the first time. The Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS), seated in Lausanne, remains the primary external forum for disputes arising from the decisions of Swiss sports bodies. Typical claim types that industry observers expect to increase include eligibility and selection disputes, challenges to disciplinary sanctions, election and governance disputes, and appeals against funding decisions linked to non‑compliance.

The arbitration pathway is usually triggered by a clause in the federation’s statutes or regulations that designates CAS as the final appellate body. Under Swiss law, specifically the Private International Law Act (PILA), CAS arbitrations are treated as international arbitrations seated in Switzerland, with the Swiss Federal Supreme Court as the sole judicial authority competent to review awards.

Practically, the expansion of governance obligations to clubs means that disputes which previously would have been handled informally or through ad hoc internal mechanisms will now generate formal decisions, decisions that carry a right of appeal. The likely practical effect will be a measurable increase in CAS filings, particularly in the areas of safeguarding sanctions, election challenges and funding‑related disputes.

When to Accept CAS Arbitration; When to Litigate

Not every governance dispute should go to CAS. The decision depends on the nature of the dispute, the arbitration clause’s scope and the available remedies. CAS is typically appropriate for disputes involving federation or club decisions that affect sporting rights, selection, eligibility, disciplinary sanctions and governance compliance determinations. However, purely contractual employment disputes, tort claims or matters falling outside the arbitration clause may be better pursued before Swiss civil courts. Organisations and athletes should assess the following factors before committing to CAS arbitration:

  • Scope of the arbitration clause. Does it cover governance and disciplinary disputes, or only sporting results and doping matters?
  • Costs and timelines. CAS proceedings typically involve panel fees, administrative costs and legal representation expenses. An ordinary CAS procedure can take six to twelve months; an appeal procedure may be resolved in three to six months.
  • Confidentiality. CAS proceedings are generally confidential unless both parties agree to publication, which may be preferred for governance disputes where transparency is at stake.
  • Enforceability. CAS awards are enforceable as arbitral awards under the New York Convention and Swiss law, giving them strong cross‑border effect.

Tactical Use of Jurisdictional Challenges

A respondent that believes the dispute falls outside the scope of the CAS arbitration clause, or that the clause itself is invalid, can raise a jurisdictional objection under Art. 186 PILA. This is a legitimate tactical tool, particularly where the governance standard has been imposed on a club through a chain of membership agreements rather than through a direct arbitration agreement signed by the club. Early indications suggest that jurisdictional challenges will become more frequent as clubs that did not previously interact with CAS find themselves subject to its jurisdiction through updated federation statutes.

Challenging CAS Awards Before the Swiss Federal Supreme Court

CAS awards rendered in Switzerland can be challenged before the Swiss Federal Supreme Court under Art. 190 para. 2 of the PILA. This is not a full appeal on the merits, the Supreme Court exercises a narrow, targeted review limited to specific procedural and constitutional grounds. The challenge must be filed within 30 days of notification of the reasoned award.

Common Overturn Grounds: Public Policy and Denial of Due Process

The grounds for annulment under Art. 190 para. 2 PILA are exhaustive:

  • Irregular constitution of the arbitral tribunal (e.g., undisclosed conflicts of interest of an arbitrator).
  • Erroneous acceptance or denial of jurisdiction by the tribunal.
  • Decision beyond the claims submitted (ultra petita) or failure to decide on a claim (infra petita).
  • Violation of the right to be heard or equal treatment, a denial of due process, which is the most frequently invoked ground in sports cases.
  • Incompatibility with public policy (ordre public), this covers both procedural public policy and substantive public policy, the latter requiring a violation of fundamental principles of law.

The success rate for challenges to CAS awards before the Swiss Federal Supreme Court is low, industry observers consistently estimate it at below ten per cent of all applications filed. Successful challenges most commonly involve procedural defects such as a failure to consider key evidence, a denial of the right to be heard on a decisive issue, or a tribunal that exceeded its jurisdiction. Substantive public policy arguments succeed only in exceptional cases. Practitioners preparing Federal Supreme Court challenges should focus on building a precise record during the CAS proceedings, including timely objections to procedural irregularities and comprehensive written submissions that preserve every argument for subsequent review.

Practical Playbook for Clubs and Federations, Step‑by‑Step Compliance

Implementing the governance standard for clubs in Switzerland need not be overwhelming, but it does require a structured approach. The following ten‑step checklist provides a practical roadmap for compliance readiness:

  1. Conduct a gap analysis. Compare current statutes, policies and procedures against the Swiss Olympic Branchenstandard checklist to identify areas of non‑compliance.
  2. Amend statutes. Draft and adopt updated statutes that incorporate governance, safeguarding, election and disciplinary requirements. Include a reference to the Branchenstandard and an arbitration clause aligned with federation rules.
  3. Adopt a safeguarding policy. Develop and publish a safeguarding and child protection policy with designated officers and reporting channels.
  4. Establish a disciplinary procedure. Draft or update disciplinary regulations that satisfy the minimum due‑process requirements (notice, hearing, reasoned decision, appeal).
  5. Publish required documents. Make statutes, organisational charts, safeguarding policies and governance documents accessible online or via a member portal.
  6. Create a conflict of interest register. Implement annual declarations for all board members and senior officers.
  7. Set up a whistleblowing channel. Establish a reporting mechanism, this can be a dedicated email address, an online form or a third‑party platform.
  8. Train the board. Ensure all board members and key officers understand their obligations under the Standard, including safeguarding duties and conflict‑of‑interest rules.
  9. Review insurance and indemnity provisions. Confirm that the organisation’s D&O insurance and indemnity clauses cover governance disputes, disciplinary proceedings and potential CAS arbitrations.
  10. Establish an evidence retention protocol. Implement procedures for preserving documents, communications and records relevant to governance decisions, disciplinary cases and potential disputes.

Fast Checklist for Small Clubs (50–100 Members)

Smaller clubs with limited administrative capacity should prioritise the following actions:

  • Update statutes to include basic governance, safeguarding and disciplinary provisions.
  • Designate one board member as the safeguarding officer.
  • Publish statutes and the safeguarding policy on the club website or a shared member document.
  • Document all board decisions and general assembly resolutions in written minutes.
  • Complete and return any compliance self‑assessment forms required by the parent federation, many federations, including Swiss Volley, have published specific club‑level checklists for this purpose.

Comparison Table: Reporting and Publication Obligations by Entity Type

Entity Type Required Publication / Governance Duties (Examples) Disciplinary / Arbitration Risk (Practical Consequence)
National federation Publish statutes, organisational chart, senior appointments, safeguarding policy; implement election rules and conflict of interest registers High: disputes on elections, eligibility and delegation of powers frequently escalate to CAS
Regional association / league Publish statutes, meeting minutes summaries, safeguarding and child protection measures Medium: internal appeals; possible CAS referral if federation statutes include an arbitration clause covering regional bodies
Local club (association or incorporated society) Adopt Branchenstandard‑aligned statutes; safeguarding policy; basic transparency (organisational chart, document access) Low → Medium: increased internal complaints; risk of funding withdrawal and appeals to federation or CAS if federation rules apply to club decisions

Key Dates Timeline

Date Event
Pre‑2026 Branchenstandard binding on national federations; federations begin integrating requirements into their own regulations
1 January 2026 Standard becomes binding for clubs and regional organisations affiliated with Swiss Olympic member federations
Throughout 2026 BASPO applies governance criteria from the Leistungs‑ und Kriterienkatalog 2026 in funding allocation decisions
Ongoing Swiss Olympic and federations monitor compliance; non‑compliant organisations risk sanctions, funding withdrawal and disciplinary proceedings

Conclusion: Preparing for the Swiss Sports Governance Standard 2026

The Swiss Sports Governance Standard 2026 is not a theoretical exercise, it is a binding framework with immediate practical consequences for every federation, club and regional organisation in Swiss sport. Compliance requires concrete action: updated statutes, published governance documents, robust safeguarding policies and disciplinary procedures that meet due‑process standards. Failure to act exposes organisations to funding cuts, disciplinary proceedings and escalating dispute risk through CAS arbitration and the Swiss Federal Supreme Court. The organisations that treat this as a compliance priority, rather than a bureaucratic formality, will be best positioned to protect their members, their funding and their reputation in the years ahead.

Need Legal Advice?

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.

Sources

  1. Swiss Olympic, Branchenstandard (Table/Checklist PDF)
  2. Bundesamt für Sport (BASPO), Leistungs‑ und Kriterienkatalog 2026
  3. Bär & Karrer, New Governance Standard for Swiss Sports
  4. Valloni.ch, New Governance Standard for Sport in Switzerland
  5. Canton of Fribourg, Requirements for Organisations Active in Swiss Sport from 2026
  6. SwissRowing, Reminder: New Branchenstandard from 1 January 2026
  7. Swiss Volley, Branchenstandard Verein
  8. Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS/TAS)
  9. Swiss Federal Supreme Court, Decisions Database

FAQs

1. What is the Swiss Governance Standard for Sport and who must follow it?
The Swiss Governance Standard for Sport (Branchenstandard) is a comprehensive framework of minimum governance, integrity, safeguarding and transparency requirements published by Swiss Olympic in coordination with BASPO. It applies to all national federations that are members of Swiss Olympic and, from 1 January 2026, to all clubs and regional organisations affiliated with those federations.
The Standard became binding for clubs and regional organisations on 1 January 2026. Federation implementation notices, including those published by SwissRowing and Swiss Volley, confirmed this effective date and provided clubs with specific guidance and checklists for compliance.
Clubs should prioritise three actions: (1) update their statutes to include governance, safeguarding and disciplinary provisions aligned with the Branchenstandard; (2) adopt and publish a safeguarding policy with designated officers and reporting channels; and (3) ensure key governance documents are accessible to members online or via a secure portal.
Yes, provided the federation’s statutes or regulations include an arbitration clause that designates CAS as the appellate body for disciplinary decisions. Most Swiss Olympic member federations include such a clause, which means clubs and their members may have standing to appeal disciplinary sanctions, eligibility decisions or governance rulings to CAS.
CAS awards can be challenged under Art. 190 para. 2 of the PILA on five exhaustive grounds: irregular constitution of the tribunal, erroneous jurisdictional decisions, decisions beyond or short of the claims submitted, violation of the right to be heard or equal treatment, and incompatibility with public policy. The challenge must be filed within 30 days of notification of the reasoned award.
Organisations can impose provisional suspensions, restrict contact with vulnerable persons, and order the preservation of electronic evidence. These measures must be time‑limited, documented in writing and subject to periodic review. The affected person must have the right to challenge the interim measure promptly, either through an internal procedure or before CAS if the arbitration clause permits.
Yes. The BASPO Leistungs‑ und Kriterienkatalog 2026 explicitly includes governance compliance among the criteria used to allocate federal financial contributions to sport. Organisations that fail to meet the Branchenstandard requirements risk reduced funding or exclusion from federal support programmes administered through Swiss Olympic and BASPO.
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