Offentlighetsprincipen and personal privacy
The Swedish principle of public access makes official documents available so that residents, journalists, researchers, and political opponents can scrutinize public power. Its core purpose is democratic accountability, not the publication of private lives.
That institutional purpose does not eliminate privacy effects. Population, tax, property, vehicle, company, and court records can contain attributes about identifiable people. When separate records are acquired, indexed, and joined through Swedish personal identity number, the result can be a personal dossier that no single authority deliberately created.
What the principle covers
Chapter 2 of the Freedom of the Press Act (TF) generally covers a document that is held by an authority and has been received or drawn up there. Drafts, internal working material, and documents that do not satisfy those conditions are not automatically public official documents.
Nor does public status mean unrestricted release. The Public Access to Information and Secrecy Act (OSL) contains secrecy rules for interests including national security, crime prevention, public finances, and individuals’ personal and economic circumstances. The authority must test applicable secrecy when a document is requested.
TF also protects anonymous access. An authority normally may not investigate who the requester is or why they want the document beyond what is needed to apply a secrecy rule. That reduces the risk of official retaliation and is important to investigative reporting. It also makes purpose-based screening of ordinary requests an ill-fitting privacy safeguard.
Access is not the same as mass republication
Three operations are often collapsed into one:
- an authority holds an official document;
- a requester obtains it under TF and OSL; and
- a private service indexes, enriches, and republishes its personal data to the public.
The first two are the constitutional access system. The third is a new processing operation with its own scale, purpose, and risks. A publication certificate does not create access to authority records. It changes the constitutional regime under which an eligible database publishes information and assigns responsibility to an editor. Utgivningsbevis and people-search services explains that separate layer.
The distinction permits a more exact reform question. Sweden can preserve document access for scrutiny while regulating indiscriminate name-searchable dossiers, bulk acquisition, automated correlation, and non-journalistic republication. The 2026 judgment in Legal Newsdesk Sweden C-199 24 makes this separation central to the EU-law analysis.
The loss of practical obscurity
A paper record available after a request to one authority is legally public but operationally obscure. Finding it takes knowledge, time, and effort. A search engine removes those costs; a joined database removes the need to know which record exists.
This change matters even if every source record was lawfully disclosed. Privacy depends partly on context: the fact relevant to a property transaction, a court file, and a population register does not necessarily need to become one general-purpose profile. Digital aggregation converts transparency about an institution into observability of a person.
The cumulative system is mapped in Swedish public-record privacy.