Our Expert in Slovenia
No results available
The Anti‑SLAPP Act Slovenia adopted on 28 January 2026 gives defendants in strategic lawsuits against public participation a dedicated procedural shield for the first time in this jurisdiction. The legislation transposes the EU Anti‑SLAPP Directive (adopted April 2024) into Slovenian law, creating an accelerated motion‑to‑dismiss mechanism, burden‑shifting rules and cost sanctions designed to deter abusive litigation aimed at silencing public debate. For general counsel, communications directors, publishers and SMEs operating in or reporting on Slovenia, the Act demands immediate attention, both as a compliance obligation and as a powerful new defence tool. This guide sets out who is protected, how the new procedures work in practice, and the concrete steps every organisation should take now.
Slovenia’s Anti‑SLAPP Act provides defendants targeted by abusive civil claims with a fast‑track dismissal procedure, reversed burden of proof and enforceable cost sanctions, marking the country’s first dedicated anti‑SLAPP law.
| Date | Event | Practical effect |
|---|---|---|
| April 2024 | EU Anti‑SLAPP Directive adopted | Sets minimum transposition obligations for all EU Member States, including Slovenia. |
| 28 January 2026 | Slovenian National Assembly adopts the Act | Legislative adoption confirmed; triggers publication in the Official Gazette and implementation timeline. |
| Following Official Gazette publication | Act enters into force | Procedural regime becomes operational, defendants may file Anti‑SLAPP motions under the new rules. |
The Act was adopted by the Slovenian Parliament on 28 January 2026, as reported by EAPIL and confirmed by national press coverage in The Slovenia Times. Industry observers expect the procedural provisions to become available to litigants shortly after Official Gazette publication.
The Act extends protection to a deliberately broad category of defendants engaged in public participation. This mirrors the scope required by the EU Anti‑SLAPP Directive and addresses the types of SLAPP suits Slovenia has seen in recent years, particularly claims brought against journalists and civil‑society organisations.
Protected persons and entities under the Act include:
Consider these scenarios where the Act is likely to apply:
The Act does not protect purely commercial disputes with no public‑participation element, for example, a contractual claim between two businesses over unpaid invoices. The public‑participation nexus is the decisive threshold.
The most significant practical impact of the Anti‑SLAPP Act Slovenia is the suite of new procedural mechanisms it introduces into civil litigation. These tools are designed to resolve SLAPP claims quickly and shift the economic burden back onto abusive plaintiffs.
The Act creates a structured burden‑shifting process that fundamentally alters how courts evaluate claims with a public‑participation element:
This framework reverses the traditional dynamic where defendants bore the cost and time burden of meritless claims. Early indications suggest that courts will handle these motions in a compressed timeframe compared to standard civil proceedings.
While the Act mandates accelerated treatment of Anti‑SLAPP motions, precise court timelines will depend on judicial caseloads and implementing rules. The likely practical effect, based on the Directive’s requirements and comparable procedures in other EU Member States, is that initial rulings on Anti‑SLAPP motions will arrive significantly faster than standard interlocutory decisions, industry observers expect a window measured in weeks rather than months.
Key procedural features include:
| Feature | Pre‑Act procedure | Post‑Act procedure |
|---|---|---|
| Dismissal mechanism | General motion to dismiss; no SLAPP‑specific tool | Dedicated Anti‑SLAPP motion with accelerated review |
| Burden of proof | Defendant bears full burden of defending the claim | Burden shifts to plaintiff to show claim is not abusive |
| Cost allocation | Standard cost rules; loser‑pays principle applies generally | Mandatory cost‑shifting and potential sanctions against SLAPP plaintiffs |
| Timeline to initial ruling | Standard interlocutory timeline (months) | Expedited, compressed deadline for court decision on motion |
| Stay of main proceedings | No automatic stay | Motion filing may trigger a stay of underlying proceedings |
One of the most pressing questions for publishers and businesses is how the anti‑SLAPP law interacts with Slovenia’s existing defamation framework. The Act does not abolish defamation claims, it provides a procedural filter to screen out those brought primarily to silence public debate.
Key principles governing the interplay:
Understanding when reporting may still attract a valid suit is essential for media liability Slovenia compliance:
Speed matters. The Act’s accelerated procedures reward early, well‑prepared responses. Every organisation operating in Slovenia, and every publisher reporting on Slovenian matters, should have a response protocol in place before a claim arrives.
48–72 hour action checklist:
Sample email to external counsel (template):
“We have been served with a civil claim [attach documents] relating to [describe publication/activity]. We believe this may constitute a SLAPP targeting our public‑participation activities. Please review urgently and advise on: (1) eligibility for an Anti‑SLAPP motion under the 2026 Act; (2) recommended filing timeline; (3) any interim measures available. All relevant editorial records and source materials are preserved and available for your review.”
Internal triage checklist:
Once an Anti‑SLAPP motion is filed, the defence strategy should focus on maximising the procedural advantages the Act provides. Corporate reputation litigation under the old rules often succeeded simply by imposing unsustainable costs on defendants; the new framework is designed to prevent exactly that.
Settlement is not inherently incompatible with the Anti‑SLAPP Act, but organisations should weigh several factors. Consider settlement if defence costs risk exceeding the commercial value of the matter, if a swift retraction or correction achieves legitimate business objectives, or if prolonged litigation poses disproportionate reputational risk. However, settlements that suppress public‑interest information can undermine the Act’s purpose and may attract scrutiny. In every case, the decision should be informed by counsel familiar with the new procedural landscape.
Effective Anti‑SLAPP motions connect the defendant’s activity directly to recognised categories of public interest. Sample approaches for pleadings include framing statements as contributions to debate on government accountability, public health, environmental protection, corporate governance or consumer welfare. The motion should cite specific facts demonstrating the public‑interest nexus, for example, the subject’s public role, the regulatory context of the issue or the community impact of the information disclosed. When to use the Anti‑SLAPP motion, including sample pleading structures, is a topic that merits its own detailed treatment for litigators.
The Anti‑SLAPP Act Slovenia provides reactive protections, but proactive compliance reduces litigation risk from the outset. Publishers, media organisations and businesses that regularly comment on public affairs should update their internal governance frameworks now.
| Entity type | Pre‑publication obligation | Recommended policy action |
|---|---|---|
| News publishers and digital media | Fact‑check all public‑interest claims; document editorial process | Implement written fact‑checking protocols with sign‑off records; retain source materials for a minimum retention period |
| NGOs and advocacy organisations | Verify factual basis of public statements and campaigns | Create a pre‑publication review checklist and designate a senior officer responsible for legal sign‑off |
| Corporates issuing public commentary | Ensure public statements are grounded in verifiable facts | Route all public‑facing statements through legal review; maintain an escalation matrix for high‑risk topics |
| Researchers and academics | Adhere to institutional ethics and peer‑review standards | Document methodology and data sources; retain correspondence with subjects of research |
Additional governance steps include establishing retraction and correction protocols (a clear, documented process for addressing factual errors rapidly), training editorial and communications teams on the Anti‑SLAPP Act’s scope and the importance of preserving evidence, and maintaining an up‑to‑date media liability Slovenia risk register that flags high‑exposure topics.
Navigating the Anti‑SLAPP Act requires jurisdiction‑specific expertise in Slovenian civil procedure and media law. Organisations facing a potential SLAPP claim, or those seeking to strengthen their compliance posture, should engage experienced local counsel promptly.
Global Law Experts maintains a Slovenia lawyer directory, civil and commercial lawyers to help connect you with qualified practitioners. You can also browse our civil practice area page for specialists with litigation and advisory experience relevant to Anti‑SLAPP defence and compliance.
Early engagement with counsel is critical. The Act’s accelerated timelines reward preparedness, and having a litigation‑response protocol in place before a claim arrives is the single most effective step any organisation can take.
The Anti‑SLAPP Act Slovenia represents a structural shift in how civil litigation involving public participation will be conducted in this jurisdiction. For businesses, publishers and litigators, the message is clear: prepare now.
Practical checklist to act on today:
The organisations that move quickly to integrate these changes into their governance and litigation strategy will be best positioned to defend their rights under the new regime.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Marko Butinar at Marko Butinar – odvetnik, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
posted 18 minutes ago
posted 33 minutes ago
posted 33 minutes ago
posted 43 minutes ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
posted 3 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