Romania Defamation Laws: Civil Liability & Defences

In Romania, defamation is a civil matter only. There is no general crime of defamation or insult in the current Penal Code, and reputation is protected through the Civil Code (Law No. 287/2009), which guards the right to dignity under article 72 and provides civil remedies, including monetary damages, under articles 252 and 253.
Is defamation civil, criminal, or both in Romania?
It is civil only. The current Penal Code (Law No. 286/2009, in force since 1 February 2014) contains no general crime of defamation or insult, and reputation is protected through the Civil Code (Law No. 287/2009, in force since 1 October 2011). The path to decriminalization was contested. Law No. 278/2006 repealed the former offences of insult and defamation in the 1968 Penal Code, the Constitutional Court then questioned that repeal, and the High Court of Cassation and Justice held in Decision No. 8/2010 that the offences were no longer in force. A later Constitutional Court decision disputed that reasoning as to the old code, but the point became academic when the new Penal Code took effect in 2014 without any defamation or insult offence, and a 2013 attempt to re-criminalize defamation failed. The clean result is that defamation today is purely a civil wrong.
What counts as defamation in Romania?
Because defamation is civil, it is analysed as an unlawful interference with personality rights and as a tort. The Civil Code protects the right to dignity in article 72, which states that everyone is entitled to respect for their dignity and forbids any harm to a person's honour and reputation without consent or outside the limits set by article 75. Article 252 lists the intrinsic values protected, including life, health, physical and mental integrity, dignity, and private life. Related rights include free expression (article 70), private life (article 71), one's own image and voice (article 73), and the right to a name (article 254). A defamation claim typically rests on these provisions read together with the general tort liability rules in articles 1349 and 1357, which require damage, an unlawful act, causation, and fault.

How does civil liability work?
Civil liability rests on the protection of personality rights and on general tort law. Under article 253 of the Civil Code, a person whose non-patrimonial rights are violated or threatened may ask the court to prohibit an imminent unlawful act, to order the cessation of an ongoing violation, and to declare the unlawful nature of the act where the disturbance persists. The court may also compel restorative measures, including publication of the judgment at the wrongdoer's expense, and may award damages, including for non-patrimonial (moral) harm, where the harm is attributable to the author. To recover, the claimant must establish the tort elements in articles 1349 and 1357: damage to honour or reputation, an unlawful act, a causal link, and fault. The Civil Code sets no statutory cap, so courts assess moral damages case by case, weighing the gravity of the harm, its duration, and how widely the statement spread.
Watch out: Where defamation arises from the exercise of freedom of expression, article 253 limits the court to ordering cessation and a declaration of unlawfulness and does not allow a prohibition of the act, which restricts prior restraint on speech.
What defences and privileges apply?
The defences operate mainly through article 75 of the Civil Code, which provides that conduct permitted by law, and the good-faith exercise of constitutional rights and of the international human-rights treaties Romania has ratified, does not constitute a violation of personality rights. Truth, good faith, and public-interest reporting are channeled through this provision together with the unlawfulness and fault analysis, rather than being listed as named statutory defences. Romanian courts apply article 30 of the Constitution on freedom of expression and Article 10 of the European Convention, distinguishing statements of fact, which can be tested for truth, from value judgments, which require only a sufficient factual basis. The European Court of Human Rights has repeatedly found in cases against Romania, such as Cumpana and Mazare v. Romania, that public figures must tolerate wider criticism and that disproportionate sanctions on journalists breach Article 10.
| Civil remedy (article 253) | What it does |
|---|---|
| Cessation | Orders an ongoing violation to stop |
| Declaration of unlawfulness | Recognises the act as unlawful where the disturbance persists |
| Publication of judgment | Publishes the ruling at the wrongdoer's expense |
| Damages | Compensates patrimonial and non-patrimonial (moral) harm |
What is the limitation period?
Claims for damages follow the general three-year extinctive prescription under the Civil Code (article 2517), running from when the claimant knew or should have known of the harm and the person responsible. Article 253 confirms that the action for damages for non-patrimonial harm is subject to that prescription. The protective claims for cessation and for a declaration of unlawfulness address an ongoing or persisting interference and are aimed at stopping the conduct rather than recovering money. Anyone considering a claim should confirm the period and start date that apply to the specific remedy they intend to pursue.

How is online defamation treated?
The civil rules in articles 72, 252, and 253, read with general tort liability, apply to online statements in the same way as to offline ones, so a defamatory post on a website or social media can support a civil claim. Intermediary liability is governed by Law No. 365/2002 on electronic commerce, which implements the European Union e-Commerce Directive and provides conditional safe harbours for mere conduit (article 12), caching (article 13), and hosting (article 14), and extends protection to providers of links and search tools (article 15), with no general monitoring obligation. A hosting provider is generally not liable for stored content unless it has actual knowledge of unlawful content and fails to act expeditiously to remove it. The European Union Digital Services Act now layers further notice-and-action duties on top of this framework.
Watch out: Because Romanian defamation is civil, the usual response to an online statement is a civil action and a takedown or correction request, not a criminal complaint, since there is no general crime of defamation to report.
How do you bring a defamation claim in Romania?
A defamation claim is brought as a civil tort action (actiune in raspundere civila delictuala) before the civil courts, founded on the personality-rights provisions in articles 72, 252, and 253 read with the general tort liability rules in articles 1349 and 1357. The claimant must prove the four cumulative tort conditions: damage to honour, reputation, or dignity; an unlawful act, namely the defamatory statement; a causal link; and fault. The remedies sought typically include cessation, a declaration that the statement was unlawful, publication of the judgment, removal or correction of the content, and moral damages. The competent first-instance court depends on the nature and value of the claim, so a claimant should confirm the proper court before filing. This is general information about Romanian law, not legal advice for any specific dispute.

Frequently Asked Questions
Is defamation a crime in Romania?
No. There is no general crime of defamation or insult in the current Penal Code (Law No. 286/2009), in force since 1 February 2014. The former offences in the 1968 Penal Code were repealed, and after a contested period the new code omitted them, so defamation is now a civil matter only.
When did Romania decriminalize defamation?
Insult and defamation in the 1968 Penal Code were repealed by Law No. 278/2006. After litigation over that repeal, the issue was settled when the new Penal Code took effect on 1 February 2014 with no defamation or insult offence, and a 2013 attempt to re-criminalize defamation failed.
Can you sue for defamation in Romania, and how much can you recover?
Yes. The Civil Code protects dignity and reputation under article 72 and allows cessation, a declaration of unlawfulness, publication of the judgment, and damages under article 253, including moral damages. There is no statutory cap, so courts assess the amount case by case based on the gravity and reach of the harm.
What law governs defamation in Romania?
The Civil Code (Law No. 287/2009) governs defamation. Article 72 protects the right to dignity, article 252 lists the protected personality values, and article 253 sets out the remedies. These are read with the general tort liability rules in articles 1349 and 1357.
Is truth a defence to defamation in Romania?
Effectively yes. Truth, good faith, and public-interest reporting operate through article 75 of the Civil Code, which provides that lawful conduct and the good-faith exercise of constitutional and treaty rights do not violate personality rights. Courts also protect value judgments that rest on a sufficient factual basis.
What is the time limit for a defamation claim in Romania?
Claims for damages follow the general three-year extinctive prescription under article 2517 of the Civil Code, running from when the claimant knew or should have known of the harm and the person responsible. The start date can depend on the facts, so it is worth confirming for a specific claim.
How is online defamation handled in Romania?
The civil rules apply to online statements the same way as offline. Hosting providers have safe harbours under Law No. 365/2002 on electronic commerce and are generally not liable for stored content unless they have actual knowledge of it and fail to act expeditiously to remove it once notified.
Does Romanian defamation law treat public figures differently?
Yes. Romanian courts apply article 30 of the Constitution and Article 10 of the European Convention, allowing wider criticism of public figures and distinguishing factual statements from value judgments, consistent with European Court of Human Rights rulings against Romania such as Cumpana and Mazare.
Sources and References
- High Court of Cassation and Justice, Decision No. 8/2010 (insult and defamation not in force)(iccj.ro).gov
- Constitutional Court Decision No. 206/2013 (Ministry of Justice legislation portal)(legislatie.just.ro).gov
- Civil Code (Law No. 287/2009), article 252 (protection of human personality)(codulcivil.ro)
- Civil Code (Law No. 287/2009), article 253 (means of defence and remedies)(codulcivil.ro)
- Constitution of Romania, article 30 (freedom of expression and its limits)(wipo.int).gov
- Law No. 365/2002 on electronic commerce (intermediary safe harbours, articles 12 to 15)(legi-internet.ro)
- U.S. Helsinki Commission on the decriminalization of defamation in Romania(csce.gov).gov
- Cumpana and Mazare v. Romania (ECtHR Grand Chamber) on Article 10 and defamation(hudoc.echr.coe.int).gov