Jordan Defamation Laws: Criminal, Cyber & Civil

Defamation in Jordan is mainly a criminal matter, with a more limited civil route for compensation. The Penal Code No. 16 of 1960 criminalises defamation, slander, and insult, and the Cybercrime Law No. 17 of 2023, widely criticised by press-freedom monitors, adds harsh penalties for the same conduct committed online.
What counts as defamation in Jordan
Jordanian law distinguishes between several reputation offences, principally defamation (thamm), slander or vilification (qadh), and insult (zamm). In broad terms, defamation involves attributing to a person specific facts that harm their honour or expose them to public contempt, while insult covers attacks on dignity that do not allege a specific fact. The Penal Code No. 16 of 1960 treats defamation that is written, printed, or otherwise published more seriously than a private spoken insult, and it provides enhanced protection for public officials and state institutions. Where the same conduct occurs online, the Cybercrime Law No. 17 of 2023 applies and is significantly harsher. Courts have generally held that publication to a third party is required for the statement to be actionable.
Criminal defamation and penalties
The Penal Code No. 16 of 1960 criminalises defamation, slander, and insult, with imprisonment terms commonly running from a short period up to about one year together with fines, and heavier treatment where the target is a public official or where the statement is published. The Cybercrime Law No. 17 of 2023 layers on much tougher penalties for online conduct. Its provisions on defamation, contempt, character assassination, and false news carry imprisonment and fines that, depending on the offence, range from at least three months in prison up to three years, with fines reported to reach tens of thousands of Jordanian dinars. The 2023 law expanded the previous cybercrime statute from 17 to 41 articles and has been described by human-rights organisations as among the harshest in the region.

Watch out: Online defamation in Jordan is punished far more harshly than offline defamation. A post that might draw a Penal Code fine can, under the 2023 Cybercrime Law, lead to months or years in prison and very large fines.
Penalties at a glance
| Conduct | Governing law | Indicative penalty |
|---|---|---|
| Defamation or slander, offline | Penal Code No. 16 of 1960 | Imprisonment up to about one year and/or fine |
| Insult of a public official | Penal Code No. 16 of 1960 | Enhanced imprisonment and/or fine |
| Online defamation / contempt | Cybercrime Law No. 17 of 2023 | Imprisonment from three months and/or large fine |
| Character assassination / false news online | Cybercrime Law No. 17 of 2023 | Imprisonment up to about three years and/or fine |
Defences
Defences to defamation in Jordan are narrower than in common-law systems. The most important is the limited truth defence: an accused may seek to prove the truth of allegations where they concern a public official's official conduct, a protection introduced through amendments to the law. Outside that context, proving truth is not always a complete answer, and good-faith or public-interest arguments are applied cautiously. There is no broad public-figure or actual-malice standard that shields critical reporting, and insulting state institutions or officials is treated as more serious rather than as protected speech. Privileged communications, such as statements made in formal proceedings, may also reduce exposure.
Remedies and damages
The dominant remedy for defamation in Jordan is criminal punishment under the Penal Code or, for online conduct, the Cybercrime Law: imprisonment, fines, and, in cyber cases, orders to remove content. A separate civil claim for compensation for moral and material harm can be pursued through the civil courts under general tort principles, but this route is used less than the criminal complaint and produces awards set at the court's discretion rather than under a fixed tariff. Because criminal liability and large statutory fines dominate the landscape, the criminal process is usually the centre of any defamation dispute in Jordan.

Limitation period
The Penal Code sets a short window for defamation and slander complaints. A complaint must generally be brought within three months from the date the victim becomes aware of the offence and of the offender. Missing that window can bar the criminal complaint. This short period reflects the complaint-based nature of these offences, where prosecution typically depends on the victim coming forward. Any associated civil claim follows the separate civil limitation rules, so a person who has lost the criminal route may still be able to pursue civil compensation within the longer civil period.
Online defamation
Online defamation is the most heavily penalised form in Jordan and is governed by the Cybercrime Law No. 17 of 2023. The law criminalises defamation, contempt, and character assassination committed through information networks, alongside offences such as spreading false news. Penalties are substantially higher than under the Penal Code, with imprisonment and large fines, and the law allows prosecution of some offences without a private complaint. Amnesty International, Reporters Without Borders, the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, and others have warned that the law's vague terms enable prosecution of journalists, activists, and ordinary social-media users, and have documented its use one year after enactment.
Watch out: Some offences under the 2023 Cybercrime Law can be prosecuted without the victim filing a complaint, so the usual three-month complaint deadline does not always protect a speaker once authorities decide to act.
How a defamation claim is brought
A defamation case in Jordan usually starts with a complaint to the police or the Public Prosecution, which investigates and refers the matter to the criminal court if warranted. Offline defamation and slander proceed under the Penal Code, while online conduct is handled under the Cybercrime Law, often through a dedicated cybercrime unit. The victim must generally file within the three-month complaint window for the relevant offences. A civil claim for compensation can be brought separately in the civil courts. Given the severity of the penalties, especially online, retraction, apology, or settlement is a common way to resolve disputes before judgment.

Frequently Asked Questions
Is defamation a crime in Jordan?
Yes. Defamation in Jordan is primarily a criminal offence under the Penal Code No. 16 of 1960, and online defamation is criminalised under the Cybercrime Law No. 17 of 2023. A more limited civil route for compensation also exists through the courts.
What is Jordan's 2023 Cybercrime Law?
The Cybercrime Law No. 17 of 2023, approved in August 2023 and in force from September 2023, replaced the 2015 cybercrime statute and expanded it to 41 articles. It criminalises online defamation, contempt, character assassination, and false news with heavy penalties, and has been widely criticised by press-freedom monitors.
What is the penalty for online defamation in Jordan?
Under the Cybercrime Law No. 17 of 2023, online defamation and contempt can carry imprisonment from at least three months and large fines, while character assassination and related offences can be punishable by up to about three years in prison, with fines reported to reach tens of thousands of dinars.
Is truth a defence to defamation in Jordan?
Only in part. An accused may seek to prove the truth of allegations where they concern a public official's official duties, a defence introduced by amendment. Outside that context, truth is not always a complete defence, and good-faith or public-interest arguments are applied narrowly.
What is the time limit to file a defamation case in Jordan?
The Penal Code generally requires a defamation or slander complaint to be filed within three months from when the victim becomes aware of the offence and the offender. Some cybercrime offences can be prosecuted without a private complaint, and civil claims follow separate civil limitation rules.
Can you sue for defamation damages in Jordan?
Yes, through a separate civil claim for moral and material harm in the civil courts under general tort principles. This route is used less than the criminal complaint, and any award is set at the court's discretion rather than under a fixed statutory tariff.
Why has Jordan's Cybercrime Law been criticised?
Press-freedom and human-rights organisations including Amnesty International, Reporters Without Borders, and the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights have warned that the 2023 law's vague terms allow prosecution of journalists, activists, and social-media users, documenting a chilling effect on free expression after its enactment.
Jordan libel law: what is the difference between defamation and insult?
Defamation involves attributing specific facts that harm a person's honour or expose them to contempt, while insult attacks dignity without alleging a specific fact. The Penal Code treats published or written defamation more seriously than spoken insult, with enhanced penalties for offences against officials and institutions.
Sources and References
- Penal Code No. 16 of 1960 (as amended), Jordan, WIPO Lex official record(wipo.int).gov
- Cybercrime Law No. 17 of 2023 (articles and penalties overview)(en.wikipedia.org)
- Amnesty International: Jordan's 2023 Cybercrimes Law stifling free expression one year on(amnesty.org)
- Tahrir Institute: Jordan's new cybercrime law passes (articles 14-20, penalties)(timep.org)
- Reporters Without Borders: Jordan's cybercrime law a tool for repressing journalists(rsf.org)
- Freedom House: Jordan Freedom on the Net 2024 (cybercrime law and online speech)(freedomhouse.org)
- ICNL: Guide to the right to freedom of expression online in Jordan(icnl.org)