Data Protection in Slovenia

Data protection laws in Slovenia

The General Data Protection Regulation (Regulation (EU) 2016/679) (GDPR) is a European Union law which entered into force in 2016 and, following a two-year transition period, became directly applicable in all Member States of the European Union on 25 May 2018, without requiring implementation by the EU Member States through national law.

A 'Regulation' (unlike the Directive which it replaced) is directly applicable and has consistent effect in all Member States. However, there remain more than 50 areas covered by the GDPR where Member States are permitted to legislate differently in their own domestic data protection laws, and there continues to be room for different interpretation and enforcement practices among the Member States.

The new Slovenian Data Protection Act (ZVOP-2) which implements certain aspects of the GDPR has been adopted in December 2022 and has entered into force on 26 January 2023. From thereon, data protection is regulated by three main legal acts: (i) ZVOP-2; (ii) GDPR and (iii) Slovenian Act on the Protection of Personal Data in the Area of Treatment of Criminal Offences (Zakon o varstvu osebnih podatkov na področju obravnavanja kaznivih dejanj, Official Gazette no. 177/20; ZVOPOKD), which has entered into force on 31 December 2020 and implements Directive 2016/680. In relation to ZVOP-2, ZVOPOKD is considered lex specialis, therefore provisions of ZVOP-2 will not be used for questions specifically provided for and regulated by ZVOPOKD.

ZVOP-2 also regulates certain areas of data processing, not regulated by GDPR, namely:

  • processing of personal data of deceased persons;
  • processing of personal data in relation to carrying out activities outside of EU-law scope; and
  • processing of personal data by the authorities of Slovenia when acting in areas of security and defence policy and carrying out intelligence and security activities.

Certain other Slovenian acts also regulate personal data processing, which is not set forth by GDPR, i.e.:

  • Defence Act (Zakon o obrambi, Official Gazette no. 103/04 as amended from time to time and in force);
  • Slovenian Intelligence and Security Agency Act (Zakon o Slovenski obveščevalno-varnostni agenciji; Official Gazette no. 81/06 as in force);
  • Attorneys Act (Zakon o odvetništvu, Official Gazette no. 18/93 as amended from time to time and in force);
  • Classified Information Act (Zakon o tajnih podatkih; Official Gazette no. 50/06 as amended from time to time and in force);
  • Electronic Communications Act (Zakon o elektronskih komunikacijah, Official Gazette no. 130/22 as in force);
  • Minor Offences Act (Zakon o prekrških; Official Gazette no. 29/11 as amended from time to time and in force);
  • Patients’ Rights Act (Zakon o pacientovih pravicah; Official Gazette no. 15/08 as amended from time to time and in force);
  • Mass Media Act (Zakon o medijih; Official Gazette no. 110/06 as amended from time to time and in force);
  • Banking Act (Zakon o bančništvu; Official Gazette no. 92/21 and 123/21 as in force);
  • Public Procurement Act (Zakon o javnem naročanju; Official Gazette no. 91/15 as amended from time to time and in force); 
  • Employment Relationship Act (Zakon o delovnih razmerjih; Official Gazette no. 21/13 as amended from time to time and in force); and
  • Law on Auditing (Zakon o revidiranju; Official Gazette no. 65/08 as amended from time to time and in force).

In accordance with Article 3(3) ZVOP-2, the above-listed acts are considered lex specialis in relation to ZVOP-2, meaning that provisions of ZVOP-2 will be applicable subsidiarily, when certain questions are not covered by the above-mentioned acts. Despite that, provisions of Articles 4-7 and 9-23 of GDPR would still apply mutatis mutandis, when such applicability is possible and appropriate (for instance in matters of threat to national security national legal provisions would prevail over the provisions of GDPR).

Territorial Scope

Primarily, the application of the GDPR turns on whether an organization is established in the EU. An 'establishment' may take a wide variety of forms and is not necessarily a legal entity registered in an EU Member State.

However, the GDPR also has extra-territorial effect. An organization that is not established within the EU will still be subject to the GDPR if it processes personal data of data subjects who are in the Union where the processing activities are related "to the offering of goods or services" (Article 3(2)(a)) (no payment is required) to such data subjects in the EU or "the monitoring of their behaviour" (Article 3(2)(b)) as far as their behaviour takes place within the EU.

In addition to the above, provisions of ZVOP-2 (together with GDPR) will apply when:

  • processing of personal data is carried out within the public sector of Slovenia (Article 4(1) ZVOP-2); or
  • processing of personal data is carried out within private sector when the following conditions are met:
    • the processor and / or controller is established in Slovenia, even if the processing of personal data does not take place in Slovenian territory (Article 4(1) ZVOP-2); or
    • the processor and / or controller is established outside EU but carries out activities of “offering services and goods” to persons domiciled in Slovenia in relation to person data processing, irrespective of whether a payment of data subject is required or are in relation to monitoring of data subjects’ behaviour (Article 4(2) ZVOP-2).

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