Data Protection in Switzerland

Data protection laws in Switzerland

The processing of personal data is mainly regulated by the Federal Act on Data Protection of 25 September 2020 (FADP) and its ordinances, i.e., the Ordinance on Data Protection (ODP) and the Ordinance on Data Protection Certification. The FADP (including its ordinances) has entered into force on 1 September 2023 and become effective without any transition period.

The FADP has recently been revised with the aim to strengthen data protection in general and to align it with the requirements of the EU General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) in order to facilitate compliance of Swiss companies with those aspects of the GDPR that are applicable to controllers or processors outside of the EU, and to ensure that the EU will continue to consider Switzerland as providing an adequate level of data protection. However, the FADP continues to provide for certain deviations from the GDPR, thus requiring certain “Swiss Add-Ons” in a number of areas.

The processing of personal data is further restricted by provisions in other laws, mainly with regard to the public sector and regulated markets.

Key differences between the former and the new FADP

  • Scope of “personal data”: The former FADP was applicable to personal data pertaining to both natural persons and legal persons. In contrast, the new FADP only protects personal data of natural persons.
  • Data processing principles: While the data processing principles have essentially remained the same, the new FADP, in addition, explicitly provides for the principles of “privacy by design” and “privacy by default”.
  • Information obligation: With the new FADP, an extended duty to inform data subjects has been introduced.
  • Additional obligations: The new FADP imposes a number of additional obligations. In particular, the controller and/or processor must, under certain circumstances, maintain records of processing activities, perform data protection impact assessments and notify data security breaches.
  • Data subject rights: With the new FADP, certain data subject rights have been extended and a new right to data portability has been introduced.
  • Supervisory authority: The new FADP grants the supervisory authority expanded powers, in particular to issue administrative measures in the event that data protection provisions have been violated.

Sanctions: While the new FADP continues to provide for criminal sanctions that are (primarily) directed against the responsible individual, the catalogue of punishable offences has been extended and the fines have been significantly increased.

Territorial scope

The FADP, like the GDPR, has an extraterritorial scope and is applicable to circumstances that have an effect in Switzerland, even if they were initiated abroad. This includes, for instance, international companies with group entities in Switzerland or, under certain circumstances, international companies even without such subsidiary in Switzerland based on their doing business in Switzerland. For civil claims, the Swiss conflict of law rules apply.

In addition, the FADP provides that private controllers domiciled abroad must designate a representative in Switzerland if they process personal data of data subjects in Switzerland and if the data processing fulfils all of the following requirements:

The processing is connected to offering goods or services in Switzerland or to monitoring the behaviour of data subjects in Switzerland;

  • the processing is extensive;
  • the processing is carried out regularly;
  • the processing involves a high risk for the personality of the data subjects.

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