Sweden Defamation Laws: Civil, Criminal & Defences

In Sweden, defamation is both a criminal offence and a civil wrong, and it is usually pursued through the criminal courts. The Criminal Code (Brottsbalken) Chapter 5 punishes fortal (defamation) and grovt fortal (gross defamation), while the Tort Liability Act (Skadestandslagen) lets the injured person claim damages for the violation (krankning).
Is defamation civil, criminal, or both in Sweden?
It is both, and Sweden is unusual in treating defamation primarily as a criminal matter with civil damages attached. The criminal offences sit in Chapter 5 of the Criminal Code (Brottsbalken), headed Om arekrankning (on defamation), and include fortal (section 1), grovt fortal (section 2), and forolampning (section 3). Civil damages for the violation (krankning) are available under Chapter 2, section 3 of the Tort Liability Act (Skadestandslagen). A separate constitutional layer governs statements in protected media: the Freedom of the Press Act (Tryckfrihetsforordningen) and the Fundamental Law on Freedom of Expression (Yttrandefrihetsgrundlagen), two of Sweden's four fundamental laws, set special rules and procedures for defamation committed in print, broadcast, and certain online publications.
What counts as criminal defamation under Chapter 5?
Swedish law separates communicating information about a person from insulting them directly. Section 1 (fortal) applies where a person points out another as criminal or as having a reprehensible way of life, or otherwise furnishes information liable to expose that person to the contempt of others; the basic offence carries a fine (boter). Section 2 (grovt fortal) covers the gross form, assessed on the content, the scope and manner of dissemination, and whether it was calculated to cause serious harm, and carries a fine or imprisonment for up to two years. Section 3 (forolampning, insult) covers an accusation, derogatory statement, or humiliating conduct directed at another person where it is liable to violate their self-esteem or dignity; it carries a fine, rising to a fine or imprisonment for up to six months if the offence is gross.

Watch out: Fortal and forolampning are different offences. Fortal is communicating damaging information about a person to third parties, while forolampning is directed at the victim themselves, so a remark made only to the target can still be a criminal insult.
How does civil liability work?
Civil damages flow from the criminal violation. Under Chapter 2, section 3 of the Tort Liability Act, a person who seriously violates another through a crime involving an attack on that person's person, liberty, peace, or honour (frid eller ara) must compensate the damage the violation causes. Defamation is an enumerated example of such a crime, so a successful fortal case supports a claim for krankningsersattning, compensation aimed at the negative feelings (such as humiliation and distress) the statement caused. In practice the damages claim is brought together with the criminal charge. There is no fixed statutory cap, and reported awards have tended to be modest, ranging from a few thousand to tens of thousands of Swedish kronor depending on the gravity and reach of the statement.
What defences and privileges apply?
The key feature is that truth alone is not a complete defence. The second paragraph of Chapter 5, section 1 provides that there is no liability if the person was duty-bound to make the statement or, considering the circumstances, it was justifiable (forsvarligt) to do so, and the person can show the information was true or that there were reasonable grounds to believe it. So a true but gratuitous, privacy-invading statement made with no legitimate purpose can still be defamation. The justifiability test absorbs considerations of public interest, duty to speak, and good faith. Swedish courts also weigh freedom of expression and, in protected-media cases, the constitutional free-expression laws, and they apply Article 10 of the European Convention on Human Rights, generally allowing more robust commentary on public figures and matters of public debate.
| Offence | Section | Maximum penalty |
|---|---|---|
| Fortal (defamation) | 5:1 | Fine (boter) |
| Grovt fortal (gross defamation) | 5:2 | Fine or 2 years |
| Forolampning (insult) | 5:3 | Fine; gross form, fine or 6 months |
How are statements in the media handled?
Protected media follow a separate constitutional regime. Where a defamatory statement appears in a medium covered by the Freedom of the Press Act (printed periodicals and books) or the Fundamental Law on Freedom of Expression (radio, television, film, and websites or databases that hold a publishing certificate, utgivningsbevis), the matter becomes a press or freedom-of-expression offence with special rules. A periodical must have a responsible publisher (ansvarig utgivare), and liability rests on that person alone, so the individual journalist generally cannot be prosecuted for content in the publication. The Chancellor of Justice (Justitiekanslern) is the sole prosecutor for these offences, and the question of whether an offence was committed is normally tried by a nine-member jury unless the parties agree otherwise.

What is the limitation period?
The limitation period is tied to the maximum penalty under Chapter 35 of the Criminal Code. Fortal under section 1 carries a fine, giving a two-year limitation period, while grovt fortal under section 2, with its two-year maximum prison term, carries a five-year limitation period. Forolampning under section 3 generally falls in the two-year band. Time runs from the day the offence was committed. Cases brought under the Freedom of the Press Act and the Fundamental Law on Freedom of Expression run on their own, shorter constitutional time limits for the Chancellor of Justice to act, so media cases should be assessed against those special deadlines rather than the general Chapter 35 periods.
How is online defamation treated?
The answer depends on whether the site is constitutionally protected. A website that holds a publishing certificate (utgivningsbevis) under the Fundamental Law on Freedom of Expression is treated like broadcast or print: the responsible publisher is solely liable, the Chancellor of Justice prosecutes, and the jury procedure applies. This is how major Swedish news sites operate. For ordinary websites and social media without that protection, the general Criminal Code Chapter 5 applies, and the person who posted the content is liable for fortal. Sweden's Electronic Bulletin Boards Act (lag 1998:112) also imposes a duty on the provider of a forum or message board to remove clearly criminal content, broadening rather than narrowing the usual intermediary safe harbours.
Watch out: Reposting or spreading someone else's defamatory statement can itself be fortal in Sweden, so liability is not limited to the person who first published the claim.
How do you bring a defamation claim in Sweden?
Most defamation cases are privately prosecuted. Under Chapter 5, section 5, fortal and forolampning are normally prosecuted by the injured party (malsagande), who files directly with the district court (tingsratt), usually combining the criminal charge with a civil claim for krankningsersattning. A public prosecutor may step in only in limited situations, such as where the victim is under 18 or where the victim reports the offence and prosecution is called for in the public interest in specified categories. Cases concerning protected media instead go through the Chancellor of Justice and the jury procedure. This is general information about Swedish law, not legal advice for a specific situation.

Frequently Asked Questions
Is defamation a crime in Sweden?
Yes. Chapter 5 of the Criminal Code (Brottsbalken) makes fortal, grovt fortal, and forolampning criminal offences. They are normally privately prosecuted under section 5, so the victim usually brings the case, with public prosecution reserved for limited situations.
What is the difference between fortal and forolampning?
Fortal (section 1) is communicating damaging information about a person to third parties, exposing them to contempt. Forolampning (section 3) is an insult directed at the person themselves, such as a derogatory statement or humiliating conduct liable to violate their dignity.
What are the penalties for defamation in Sweden?
Fortal under section 1 carries a fine. Grovt fortal (gross defamation) under section 2 carries a fine or imprisonment for up to two years. Forolampning under section 3 carries a fine, rising to a fine or up to six months for the gross form.
Can you sue for defamation in Sweden, and how much can you recover?
Yes. Damages for the violation (krankningsersattning) are available under Chapter 2, section 3 of the Tort Liability Act, usually claimed alongside the criminal case. There is no fixed cap, but awards have tended to be modest and depend on the gravity and reach of the statement.
Is truth a defence to defamation in Sweden?
Truth alone is not enough. Under section 1, there is no liability only if the speaker was duty-bound or otherwise justified (forsvarligt) in making the statement and it was true or there were reasonable grounds to believe it. A true but gratuitous, privacy-invading statement can still be defamation.
Who handles defamation in Swedish newspapers and broadcasts?
Statements in media protected by the Freedom of the Press Act or the Fundamental Law on Freedom of Expression follow a special regime. The responsible publisher (ansvarig utgivare) is solely liable, the Chancellor of Justice prosecutes, and a nine-member jury normally decides whether an offence was committed.
What is the time limit for a defamation claim in Sweden?
Under Chapter 35 of the Criminal Code, fortal carries a two-year limitation period and grovt fortal a five-year period, tied to the maximum penalty. Cases under the constitutional media laws run on their own shorter time limits for the Chancellor of Justice to act.
How is online defamation handled in Sweden?
Websites with a publishing certificate under the Fundamental Law on Freedom of Expression follow the responsible-publisher regime. Ordinary sites and social media fall under Criminal Code Chapter 5, where the person who posted the content is liable, and the Electronic Bulletin Boards Act requires forum providers to remove clearly criminal content.
Sources and References
- Brottsbalken (Swedish Criminal Code), Chapter 5 (fortal, grovt fortal, forolampning) and Chapter 35 (limitation)(riksdagen.se).gov
- The Swedish Criminal Code, official English translation (Government Offices of Sweden)(government.se).gov
- Skadestandslagen (Tort Liability Act), Chapter 2 section 3 (krankningsersattning)(riksdagen.se).gov
- Tryckfrihetsforordningen (Freedom of the Press Act), responsible publisher, jury, and Chancellor of Justice(riksdagen.se).gov
- Swedish Prosecution Authority guidance: Fortal och forolampning (RaV 2022:2)(aklagare.se).gov
- Swedish Crime Victim Authority: compensation for defamation offences (arekrankningsbrott)(brottsoffermyndigheten.se).gov
- Lag (1998:112) om ansvar for elektroniska anslagstavlor (Electronic Bulletin Boards Act)(riksdagen.se).gov