Federal Administrative Court revokes fines totaling CHF 364,000 imposed on SWISS International Air Lines, ruling the carrier fulfilled its obligations in checking passenger documentation between 2016-2018.

"SWISS cannot be accused of any fundamental shortcomings."
"SWISS has fulfilled its obligations to sort passengers."
SWISS International Air Lines has scored a decisive legal victory, shattering a punitive financial crackdown by federal authorities. The Federal Administrative Court has emphatically revoked fines totaling nearly CHF 368,000, ruling that the national carrier cannot be held liable for specific breaches of passenger documentation checks between 2016 and 2018. This ruling marks a humiliating reversal for the State Secretariat for Migration (SEM), which had aggressively pursued the airline for alleged failures in its duty of care.
The stakes were high. In a protracted legal tussle that saw fines levied in 2017, 2019, and re-imposed in 2023, the SEM demanded CHF 200,000 and CHF 168,000 for separate infractions, plus a staggering CHF 60,000 in procedural costs. The authorities argued that SWISS had failed to prevent the entry of undocumented travelers into the Schengen zone. However, the court's latest decision, published this Friday, dismantles that narrative entirely. The judges declared that SWISS had, in fact, fulfilled its obligations, effectively wiping the slate clean and relieving the airline of a significant financial and reputational burden.
At the heart of this high-altitude legal dispute lies a security lapse involving nearly 150 passengers. These travelers arrived at Zurich Airport without the valid documentation required to breach the Schengen area's borders, triggering immediate alarm within the SEM. The infractions were not isolated to a single route but spanned major intercontinental hubs. The undocumented passengers originated from the Brazilian metropolis of São Paulo and key United States gateways: Boston, Los Angeles, Miami, and San Francisco.
The SEM's crackdown was severe, predicated on the belief that SWISS had been negligent in its pre-flight screening processes. The agency argued that the arrival of these 150 individuals represented a systemic failure in the airline's "duty of care." For years, the airline grappled with these accusations, facing financial penalties that surged into the hundreds of thousands of francs. This specific timeline—spanning 2016 to 2018—became the battleground for a wider debate on where an airline's responsibility ends and where the complexities of international travel begin.
In a striking defense of the airline's operations, the court found that SWISS had executed its responsibilities with precision. The judges categorically stated that "SWISS cannot be accused of any fundamental shortcomings," directly refuting the SEM's claims of negligence. The ruling highlighted that the airline had ensured its personnel were rigorously trained in document control, a critical component of international air travel compliance.
Crucially, the court acknowledged the reliability of infrastructure in the United States. The verdict emphasized that SWISS was entitled to assume that the advanced technical equipment and organization at modern US airports allowed for reliable check-in and boarding procedures. By entrusting these tasks to airport personnel in these regions, SWISS was not abdicating responsibility but relying on a robust system. This distinction is vital: the court ruled that the airline successfully refuted any breach of its duty of care, validating its operational protocols at the airports in question.
While SWISS celebrates this courtroom triumph, the saga may not be definitively over. The decision is not yet final, leaving a window open for the SEM to launch an appeal to the Federal Court. This legal tug-of-war underscores the immense pressure on carriers to act as the first line of defense for Switzerland's borders. As Switzerland continues to adopt strict EU rules to curb illegal air entry into the Schengen zone, the friction between rigid state migration policies and the operational realities of global aviation remains intense.
For now, however, the message is clear: airlines cannot be treated as scapegoats when they have adhered to established protocols. SWISS has successfully defended its reputation against significant government sanctions, setting a potential precedent for how duty of care is interpreted in the aviation sector. As the industry watches closely, the ball is now back in the court of federal migration authorities, who must decide whether to prolong this costly legal battle or accept the judiciary's rebuke.