Our Expert in Switzerland
No results available
Last updated: 12 May 2026
Corporate criminal liability in Switzerland has moved from a relatively dormant legal risk to an urgent boardroom priority. The Federal Council’s adoption of the Anti‑Corruption Strategy 2026–29, combined with a visible increase in enforcement activity by the Office of the Attorney General and the Federal Criminal Court, means that Swiss companies of every size now face materially higher exposure to criminal prosecution, regulatory sanctions and reputational harm. At the same time, FINMA investigations into regulated financial institutions continue to expand, blurring the boundary between administrative enforcement and criminal proceedings.
This guide delivers exactly what in‑house counsel, chief compliance officers, CFOs and directors need in one place: a clear explanation of the legal rules under Article 102 of the Swiss Criminal Code (SCC), the penalties that companies and individual executives face, a prioritised seven‑step incident response playbook, and a practical economic crime compliance upgrade roadmap calibrated for 2026 and beyond.
Yes. Under Article 102 of the Swiss Criminal Code, a company can be held criminally liable for felonies and misdemeanours committed in the exercise of its commercial activities. Company criminal liability is triggered when the offence cannot be attributed to a specific individual because the enterprise failed to take all reasonable organisational measures to prevent it, the so‑called “inadequate organisation” doctrine. For a defined catalogue of serious offences, including bribery and money laundering, the company is liable regardless of whether a responsible individual can be identified.
The four core circumstances that expose a Swiss company to criminal prosecution are:
Article 102 SCC, which entered into force on 1 October 2003, is the sole statutory foundation for corporate liability in Switzerland. It operates through two distinct liability tracks. Under paragraph 1, a company becomes liable for any felony or misdemeanour committed in the exercise of its commercial activities when, due to inadequate corporate organisation, the offence cannot be attributed to any specific individual. Under paragraph 2, for a closed catalogue of particularly serious offences, active bribery of Swiss officials, bribery of foreign officials, money laundering and financing of terrorism, the enterprise is independently liable irrespective of whether a natural person can be prosecuted.
This dual-track structure makes corporate liability Switzerland’s most significant mechanism for holding enterprises accountable in economic crime cases.
The Federal Criminal Court and the Federal Supreme Court have progressively clarified the scope and application of Article 102 SCC through a series of landmark decisions. Early indications from rulings in 2025 and early 2026 suggest that courts are interpreting organisational obligations more strictly, examining whether compliance programmes were genuinely implemented rather than merely documented. Industry observers expect this trend to continue as the Anti‑Corruption Strategy 2026–29 explicitly calls for enhanced enforcement rigour.
The inadequate organisation test is the linchpin of corporate criminal liability under Article 102 paragraph 1. A court assesses whether the company had taken all reasonably required organisational precautions, proportionate to its size, industry, risk profile and complexity, to prevent the type of offence that occurred. The inquiry is objective: the question is not whether the company intended to comply but whether its actual organisational arrangements were sufficient.
In practice, Swiss courts and prosecutors examine several concrete elements:
A company that can demonstrate a robust, genuinely implemented compliance framework has a strong basis to argue that its organisation was adequate, potentially defeating liability under paragraph 1. For catalogue offences under paragraph 2, however, the organisational adequacy of the company is relevant only to mitigation of penalty, not to the existence of liability itself.
| Date | Source / Event | Effect on Corporate Liability |
|---|---|---|
| 1 October 2003 | Article 102 SCC enters into force | Creates dual‑track corporate criminal liability for Swiss enterprises for the first time |
| 2015–2022 | Federal Criminal Court enforcement proceedings (multiple cases) | Establishes that “inadequate organisation” is assessed on an objective, risk‑proportionate basis; first significant fines imposed on companies |
| 2023–2025 | Office of the Attorney General, increased enforcement activity | Growing number of corporate investigations, including in commodities trading and financial services sectors |
| Early 2026 | Federal Criminal Court decisions | Likely practical effect: stricter scrutiny of whether compliance programmes were genuinely implemented versus merely documented |
| 2026 | Federal Council adopts Anti‑Corruption Strategy 2026–29 | Signals political commitment to stronger enforcement, inter‑agency coordination and legislative follow‑up on corporate liability |
White‑collar crime in Switzerland spans a broad range of economic offences, but certain categories are particularly likely to result in company‑level prosecution. The catalogue offences listed in Article 102 paragraph 2 SCC carry the highest risk because they trigger automatic corporate liability. Beyond those, any felony or misdemeanour committed in the course of business can lead to liability under paragraph 1 if organisational deficiencies are found. Companies operating in financial services, commodities, pharmaceuticals, construction and international trade face the greatest exposure.
Bribery of Swiss public officials (Article 322ter SCC) and bribery of foreign public officials (Article 322septies SCC) are catalogue offences that directly trigger corporate liability. The Federal Council’s Anti‑Corruption Strategy 2026–29, announced in early 2026, reinforces this priority area. The strategy calls for strengthened inter‑agency coordination between the Office of the Attorney General, cantonal prosecutors and regulatory bodies; enhanced international cooperation; and a review of existing anti‑corruption legal instruments. For companies, the practical implication is clear: anti‑corruption programmes must be demonstrably effective, not merely documented, and third‑party due diligence on intermediaries operating in high‑risk jurisdictions must be intensified.
Money laundering (Article 305bis SCC) is the second major catalogue offence. Financial intermediaries supervised by FINMA bear particularly heavy obligations under the Anti‑Money Laundering Act (AMLA), including client due diligence, transaction monitoring and suspicious activity reporting to the Money Laundering Reporting Office Switzerland (MROS). However, non‑financial companies are not exempt: any enterprise that facilitates or negligently fails to prevent money laundering through its operations risks corporate prosecution. Recent enforcement trends show prosecutors examining corporate treasury functions, trade finance arrangements and real estate transactions with increased scrutiny.
Swiss companies found criminally liable under Article 102 SCC face fines of up to CHF 5 million. Courts may also order confiscation of proceeds and compensation claims. Beyond the direct financial penalty, a criminal conviction has severe collateral consequences: exclusion from public procurement, loss of regulatory licences, damage to banking relationships and profound reputational harm in a jurisdiction that prizes corporate integrity.
Executive liability in Switzerland adds a further layer of risk. Individual directors, officers and managers can face criminal prosecution for their personal involvement in or failure to prevent economic crime. Penalties for individuals include custodial sentences (imprisonment), substantial fines and professional disqualifications. In bribery and money laundering cases, prosecutors routinely investigate both the company and the responsible individuals in parallel.
Enforcement activity in 2025 and early 2026 has demonstrated a willingness by the Office of the Attorney General to pursue high‑profile cases. Industry observers expect the pace of investigations to accelerate further under the Anti‑Corruption Strategy 2026–29, which explicitly targets improved enforcement outcomes.
Companies operating in the Swiss financial sector face a dual enforcement risk: parallel FINMA investigations and criminal proceedings. While their legal bases and procedures differ, the practical impact on companies can be compounding. Understanding the distinction is essential for any economic crime compliance strategy.
| Authority | Powers | What It Means for Companies |
|---|---|---|
| Office of the Attorney General / Federal Criminal Court | Criminal investigation and prosecution under the SCC; power to impose fines up to CHF 5 million, order confiscation and pursue individual executives | Criminal conviction on company record; potential imprisonment for individuals; collateral debarment and reputational consequences |
| FINMA | Administrative enforcement under FINMASA and AMLA; power to impose licence conditions, restrict business activities, appoint investigatory agents or monitors, and order disgorgement of profits | Operational restrictions may be imposed quickly; monitorship costs can be substantial; licence revocation is an existential threat for regulated entities |
| Cantonal prosecutors | Prosecution of cantonal‑level economic offences (tax fraud, environmental crimes); coordination with federal authorities on cross‑jurisdictional matters | Adds a third enforcement track; companies must manage multiple parallel proceedings with consistent legal strategy |
When a Swiss economic‑crime investigation begins, whether triggered by a dawn raid, a FINMA inquiry letter, a whistleblower report or media scrutiny, the company’s response in the first 72 hours and 30 days will significantly shape the outcome. The following prioritised playbook provides a structured framework for corporate criminal liability response in Switzerland.
Immediately engage experienced Swiss criminal defence counsel with specific expertise in white‑collar crime and corporate liability proceedings. Simultaneously assemble an internal crisis response team comprising the general counsel, chief compliance officer, CFO, head of HR and, where relevant, external forensic accountants and IT forensics specialists. Ensure that external counsel, rather than in‑house staff, directs all privileged communications to preserve attorney‑client privilege.
Issue a company‑wide litigation hold notice within hours. This must cover all electronic data (emails, messaging platforms, cloud storage), physical documents, access logs and financial records. Engage digital forensics specialists to create forensic images of key custodians’ devices. Do not allow any routine data deletion, device wiping or document destruction, even under existing retention policies, until counsel confirms it is permissible. A credible evidence preservation protocol is one of the most important factors prosecutors and courts evaluate when assessing corporate cooperation.
Where specific individuals are suspected of involvement, consider precautionary suspension from duties, balanced against employment law protections and the presumption of innocence. Document the decision‑making process carefully. Restrict the suspended individual’s access to systems, data and premises, but ensure all measures are proportionate and legally defensible under Swiss employment law.
Prepare a brief, factual internal communication to staff acknowledging the situation without prejudging outcomes. Externally, coordinate all communications through legal counsel and a designated media spokesperson. Do not issue public statements that admit liability, speculate about findings or criticise the authorities. For listed companies, consider disclosure obligations under SIX Exchange Regulation (ad hoc publicity rules) and coordinate timing with counsel.
Swiss law does not provide a formal corporate leniency programme comparable to those in the US or EU, but prosecutors and courts consistently treat genuine, proactive cooperation as a significant mitigating factor. Discuss with counsel whether voluntary disclosure to the Office of the Attorney General, FINMA or MROS is strategically appropriate. Where FINMA investigations are involved, early and transparent engagement with the regulator can reduce the risk of the most severe sanctions, including licence revocation. Cooperation must be genuine: selective disclosure or strategic withholding can backfire severely.
Do not wait for the conclusion of the investigation to begin fixing identified weaknesses. Demonstrable, real‑time remediation, closing control gaps, enhancing monitoring, retraining staff, terminating problematic third‑party relationships, is among the strongest evidence a company can present to prosecutors and courts. For FINMA‑supervised entities, proactive remediation may reduce the likelihood of an externally appointed monitor. Document every remedial step with dates, responsible persons and outcomes.
Maintain a detailed, privileged record of all investigation‑related decisions, communications and remedial actions from day one. This contemporaneous record will be critical in any settlement negotiation, court proceeding or regulatory hearing. Work with counsel to develop a settlement or resolution strategy early, including the financial parameters, the scope of cooperation being offered and the target timeline. In parallel cases involving both criminal and FINMA proceedings, coordinate strategy across both tracks to avoid contradictory positions.
The 2026 enforcement environment demands that every Swiss company reassess its compliance programme against current standards. A risk‑based approach, proportionate to the company’s size, sector, geographical exposure and transaction complexity, is the expectation of both prosecutors and FINMA. The following checklist captures the core upgrades that companies should prioritise to demonstrate adequate organisation under Article 102 SCC and reduce exposure to corporate criminal liability in Switzerland.
FINMA‑supervised institutions, banks, securities dealers, asset managers, insurance companies and other financial intermediaries, face the highest compliance bar. FINMA expects a fully documented, tested and independently audited AML/CFT compliance framework. Regulated entities must also demonstrate effective suspicious activity reporting to MROS, robust internal controls over client onboarding and periodic reviews of existing client relationships. Failure to meet these expectations can result in enforcement proceedings, appointment of external monitors, activity restrictions and, in the most serious cases, licence revocation. The cost of an externally imposed monitorship alone can run into millions of Swiss francs, making proactive investment in compliance far more cost‑effective.
Smaller enterprises are not exempt from corporate criminal liability, but the standard of “adequate organisation” is scaled to their resources and risk profile. An SME operating in domestic services faces different expectations than a mid‑size commodities trader with international counterparties. At a minimum, every SME should maintain a written code of conduct, a basic anti‑corruption and fraud policy, documented approval authorities for payments and contracts, and a clear procedure for employees to raise concerns. Where the business involves any form of cross‑border activity, government contracting or financial intermediation, proportionate third‑party due diligence and AML measures become essential.
| Entity Type | Reporting / Compliance Obligation | Practical Implication |
|---|---|---|
| Listed bank (FINMA supervised) | Strict AML / CFT framework; suspicious activity reporting to MROS; FINMA may impose enforcement orders, appoint monitors and restrict activities | High compliance resource requirement; monitorship risk; licence revocation as ultimate sanction |
| Non‑financial SME | Statutory obligations (beneficial ownership reporting, AML if applicable); general duty of adequate organisation under Article 102 SCC | Proportionate programme required; focus on third‑party due diligence, written policies and internal reporting |
| Multinational company (Swiss HQ or operations) | Cross‑border anti‑corruption reporting; enhanced due diligence on foreign agents and public officials; coordination with foreign regulatory regimes | Must coordinate global compliance policies with Swiss law; manage parallel investigations across jurisdictions |
Individual criminal exposure is one of the most powerful motivators for compliance investment. Under Swiss law, directors, officers and managers can be personally prosecuted for economic crimes committed within the enterprise, whether through direct involvement, instruction, approval or culpable failure to supervise. Executive liability in Switzerland carries penalties including custodial sentences, personal fines and disqualification from holding corporate offices. In practice, prosecutors frequently investigate individuals alongside the company, creating significant personal and professional risk for anyone in a senior leadership position.
Common lines of defence for executives include:
Switzerland does not have a formalised deferred prosecution agreement (DPA) regime for companies or individuals. However, the procedural framework allows for negotiated resolutions, including summary penalty orders (Strafbefehl) and reduced penalties in exchange for cooperation. For executives facing personal exposure, early engagement with defence counsel to explore these options, while preserving the individual’s rights, is critical. Coordination between the company’s defence strategy and the individual’s personal defence must be carefully managed to avoid conflicts of interest, particularly where the company may be cooperating with authorities and the individual’s interests diverge.
Many corporate criminal investigations in Switzerland involve cross‑border elements, foreign counterparties, overseas bank accounts, international intermediary chains or parallel investigations by foreign authorities. Swiss mutual legal assistance (MLA) in criminal matters is governed by the Federal Act on International Mutual Assistance in Criminal Matters (IMAC) and applicable bilateral and multilateral treaties. Companies must understand that Swiss authorities can both request and provide evidence across borders, and that data transferred under MLA may be used in foreign proceedings.
Key practical steps for companies facing cross‑border investigations include:
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Vincent Spira at Spira + Associes, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
Companies preparing for, or responding to, a corporate criminal liability situation in Switzerland should develop and maintain the following internal resources as part of their economic crime compliance infrastructure:
For a directory of qualified Swiss practitioners who advise on economic crime and corporate criminal defence matters, visit the Global Law Experts Switzerland lawyer directory.
Corporate criminal liability in Switzerland is no longer a theoretical risk, it is an active, expanding area of enforcement that demands concrete action from every company operating in or through Switzerland. The 2026 reforms and enforcement signals make this the moment to audit compliance programmes, strengthen organisational defences and prepare incident response capabilities. Companies and executives that invest in genuine, proportionate and well‑documented economic crime compliance now will be in the strongest position to defend themselves if an investigation arises. Those who delay face escalating legal, financial and reputational consequences. To connect with experienced Swiss economic‑crime practitioners who can advise on corporate criminal liability, compliance programme design and investigation response, visit the Global Law Experts Switzerland lawyer directory.
posted 13 minutes ago
posted 17 minutes ago
posted 35 minutes ago
posted 38 minutes ago
posted 58 minutes ago
posted 1 hour ago
posted 1 hour ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 2 hours ago
No results available
Find the right Advisory Expert for your business
Sign up for the latest advisor briefings and news within Global Advisory Experts’ community, as well as a whole host of features, editorial and conference updates direct to your email inbox.
Naturally you can unsubscribe at any time.
Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.
Global Advisory Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional advisory services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced advisors, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.
Send welcome message