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Engaging experienced sports lawyers in Switzerland has never been more consequential than in 2026, as the newly enacted Swiss Sports Governance Standard reshapes disciplinary proceedings, CAS arbitration strategy, and the narrow but critical window for judicial review before the Swiss Federal Supreme Court (FSC). This pillar guide is written for athletes, clubs, national federations, and their counsel who need to understand exactly when and how a Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) award can be challenged under current Swiss law.
It covers the legal framework anchored in Article 190 of the Swiss Private International Law Act (PILA), walks through key FSC precedents, and provides a step-by-step playbook, complete with timelines, sample grounds, and a governance compliance checklist, designed for immediate practical use.
The short answer: yes, CAS awards can be challenged before the Swiss Federal Supreme Court, but only on very narrow grounds. The FSC does not re-hear the merits; it reviews for jurisdictional defects, serious procedural unfairness, and violations of substantive public policy. What has changed in 2026 is the factual landscape: the Swiss Sports Governance Standard 2026 introduces binding governance and due-process obligations for federations that, when breached, may generate fresh public-policy arguments on review.
Whether you are preparing to mount a challenge or defending an award, this guide equips you with the procedural detail, precedent analysis, and compliance tools to act decisively. Read on for the full playbook, or jump directly to the governance compliance checklist and the FAQ section at the end.
The Swiss Sports Governance Standard 2026 imposes explicit obligations on international and national sports federations headquartered or operating in Switzerland. These obligations span three core areas: institutional governance, disciplinary procedure, and athlete-welfare safeguards. Industry observers expect the Standard to become a recurring reference point in CAS proceedings and subsequent FSC challenges, because non-compliance with its requirements may be characterised as a breach of the procedural fairness or public-policy norms that the FSC is mandated to protect.
From a litigation perspective, the Standard creates several actionable hooks:
The practical effect is that sports arbitration in Switzerland now operates within a governance ecosystem that is more prescriptive than at any point in the past decade. For counsel advising athletes or federations, the Standard should be treated as a compliance baseline and, where breached, as a potential ground of challenge. A detailed breakdown of these obligations is available in our Swiss Sports Governance Standard 2026 analysis.
CAS awards rendered in Lausanne, the seat of nearly all sports arbitration worldwide, qualify as international arbitral awards under Swiss law. They can be challenged before the Swiss Federal Supreme Court exclusively on the grounds enumerated in Article 190(2) of the Private International Law Act (PILA). The FSC does not function as an appellate body: it will not re-examine the facts, re-weigh evidence, or substitute its own view of the applicable rules. Its review is limited to safeguarding the structural integrity of the arbitral process and preventing outcomes that offend Swiss public policy.
Article 190(2) PILA sets out five exhaustive grounds on which an international arbitral award may be challenged:
In practice, the public-policy ground under Article 190(2)(e) is the most frequently invoked, and the most difficult to establish. The FSC has consistently held that “public policy” means the fundamental principles of the legal order, not merely mandatory provisions of Swiss domestic law. An award violates public policy only if it disregards essential and widely recognised values which, according to prevailing conceptions in Switzerland, should form the basis of every legal order.
Challenges under Article 190(2)(a)–(d) tend to be more procedural in character. The most common involve claims that the arbitral tribunal denied a party the right to be heard, for example, by ignoring a critical piece of evidence or refusing to allow witness testimony on a dispositive issue. The FSC applies a high threshold: the procedural defect must have actually influenced the outcome or at least have been capable of doing so. Minor procedural irregularities that do not affect the result are insufficient.
The Swiss Sports Governance Standard 2026 has added a new dimension. Where a federation’s underlying disciplinary process fails to meet the Standard’s mandatory safeguards, and the CAS panel either overlooks or endorses that failure, the aggrieved party may argue before the FSC that the resulting award violates the right to be heard or, in egregious cases, substantive public policy. Early indications suggest that this line of argument is likely to feature prominently in forthcoming challenges.
| Issue / Ground | CAS Stage (Arbitral) | Swiss Federal Supreme Court (Review) |
|---|---|---|
| Jurisdiction of tribunal | Decided by arbitrators based on jurisdictional objections raised by parties | Review limited to gross excess of power or complete lack of jurisdiction |
| Procedural fairness | Fully considered during CAS hearings; evidence heard and weighed | FSC examines only serious breaches of due process that influenced the outcome |
| Public policy | Not generally a standalone ground at CAS; merits decided on applicable rules | Principal ground for annulment under PILA Art. 190(2)(e), narrow but evolving |
| Proportionality of sanctions | Reviewed on the merits by CAS panel | FSC will not reassess proportionality unless the sanction shocks the conscience (public-policy threshold) |
| Standard 2026 compliance | May be raised as part of the substantive defence or procedural objection | Relevant only insofar as non-compliance constitutes a procedural or public-policy defect |
The FSC’s sports-related case law defines the practical boundaries of what Swiss sports lawyers can achieve on review. Three lines of precedent are especially significant heading into 2026.
The European Court of Human Rights’ engagement with the Semenya matter prompted widespread analysis of whether the FSC should apply a more rigorous review standard when fundamental human rights are at stake. Commentary from practitioners and analysts has noted that the FSC acknowledged the tension between deferential arbitral review and the protection of human rights, but ultimately maintained its position that Article 190 PILA sets the outer boundary of judicial intervention. The likely practical effect of this line of authority is that athletes raising human-rights arguments, whether grounded in discrimination, privacy, or bodily integrity, must frame those arguments squarely within the public-policy exception to have any realistic prospect of success before the FSC.
This matters for the 2026 Standard because the Standard’s non-discrimination and proportionality benchmarks give counsel a more concrete textual foundation for public-policy arguments. Where a federation’s disciplinary sanction contravenes the Standard’s anti-discrimination provisions, industry observers expect the FSC to be more receptive to reviewing whether the resulting CAS award offends public policy, even if the Court continues to apply a high threshold.
Several recent FSC decisions offer practical guidance for parties considering a challenge to a CAS award in Switzerland:
For sports lawyers in Switzerland advising on potential challenges, these rulings underscore the importance of framing arguments precisely. A challenge that merely re-argues the merits under the label of public policy will be dismissed; a challenge that identifies a specific structural defect, such as a hearing-rights violation traceable to a Standard 2026 breach, has a materially better prospect.
Challenging a CAS award before the Swiss Federal Supreme Court is a tightly regulated process with strict deadlines and procedural requirements. The following playbook outlines the essential steps.
The FSC does not conduct a de novo review. It works from the procedural record established before the CAS panel. New evidence is generally inadmissible unless the challenge is brought as a revision proceeding on the basis of subsequently discovered facts. The standard of review varies by ground:
This narrow evidentiary scope means that preparation before and during the CAS proceedings is critical. Counsel should ensure that every procedural objection is raised, documented, and preserved in the CAS record, because the FSC will not entertain arguments that a party failed to raise at the arbitral stage.
The following step-by-step process reflects current best practice for sports arbitration in Switzerland:
Federations and governing bodies are not merely passive respondents. A proactive compliance and documentation strategy materially strengthens the defensibility of disciplinary decisions, both at CAS and on subsequent FSC review.
Once the 30-day challenge period expires without a filing, or after the FSC upholds the award, a CAS award is final and enforceable in Switzerland. Enforcement is typically straightforward under Swiss domestic law: the award can be submitted to the competent cantonal court for recognition and enforcement under the Swiss Debt Enforcement and Bankruptcy Act.
CAS awards benefit from international enforceability under the 1958 New York Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards, to which over 170 states are party. An FSC decision upholding a CAS award effectively confirms its validity under the law of the seat, which in turn strengthens enforcement proceedings in foreign jurisdictions. Conversely, if the FSC annuls an award, the practical consequence is that enforcement abroad becomes significantly more difficult, although certain jurisdictions have, in rare cases, enforced awards annulled at the seat.
For athletes and federations operating across multiple jurisdictions, the enforcement landscape requires a coordinated strategy. The likely practical effect of an FSC annulment is that enforcement proceedings in other Convention states will be stayed or dismissed, though this outcome depends on the procedural law of the enforcing jurisdiction. Counsel should map the enforcement of CAS awards across all relevant jurisdictions before commencing or defending a challenge.
The following checklist is designed to help national federations, clubs, and event organisers align their disciplinary and governance procedures with the Swiss Sports Governance Standard 2026. Compliance reduces litigation risk and strengthens the defensibility of decisions at CAS and before the FSC.
| Entity | Key Compliance Documentation | Immediate Steps on Receiving a Complaint |
|---|---|---|
| National federation | Updated disciplinary code; hearing minutes and transcripts; witness statements; conflict-of-interest declarations; sanction-proportionality assessments | Freeze enforcement of any provisional sanction; preserve all records; notify the accused party of charges and evidence; appoint an independent disciplinary panel; review all procedural steps against the Standard |
| Club | Player and staff contract discipline clauses aligned with the Standard; internal investigation reports; evidence logs | Notify the relevant federation; secure and preserve all evidence; consider provisional measures; engage counsel with sports arbitration experience |
| Regional / local association | Selection and eligibility records; adherence certification to the Standard; training records for disciplinary panel members | Audit compliance with the Standard; update internal processes where gaps are identified; obtain independent legal review before imposing any sanction |
The governance compliance checklist can be summarised in twelve action points applicable across all entity types:
The following annexes consolidate the key procedural steps and tactical options discussed throughout this guide.
Dispute resolution flowchart:
Sample grounds of challenge (illustrative templates, adapt to case-specific facts):
The landscape for challenging CAS awards in Switzerland has become more nuanced in 2026. The Swiss Sports Governance Standard introduces enforceable governance obligations that create new hooks for disciplinary proceedings sports federations must address, while the FSC’s case law continues to define, and occasionally expand, the boundaries of judicial review. For athletes, clubs, and federations alike, the combination of the Standard’s procedural requirements and the FSC’s narrow but potent review powers demands a strategic, precedent-informed approach from the earliest stage of any dispute.
Whether you need to challenge an award, defend one, or simply ensure your organisation’s governance structures will withstand scrutiny, qualified guidance from specialists in sports arbitration Switzerland is essential. Explore the Switzerland lawyer directory to connect with experienced practitioners, or consult the international arbitration guide for broader context on dispute resolution across jurisdictions.
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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