The €650 Croissant Fine That Shocked Switzerland—and Europe
What Happened?
In early May 2025, a customer at an Aldi supermarket in Baden, Switzerland, inadvertently failed to scan a pistachio-filled croissant costing 0.90 CHF (~€0.90) at a self-checkout kiosk. The store alerted security, and the incident escalated dramatically:
- The customer was accused of shoplifting.
- Despite paying for the croissant and expressing regret, she was subjected to escalating legal actions.
- Ultimately, she was fined nearly 600 CHF, equivalent to about €650, after legal and procedural costs were added.
The Legal Breakdown
Through official reports:
| Charge Type | Amount (CHF) |
|---|---|
| Initial Shoplifting Fine | 200 |
| Minor Theft Penalty | 100 |
| Court Fees & Administrative | 300 |
| Total | 600 CHF (~€650) |
- The prosecution deemed it “minor theft,” triggering criminal penalties under Swiss law.
- Repeated attempts to contest the ruling were dismissed, reinforcing the full fine.
Outrage and Reaction
Public response was swift and vocal:
- Many described the situation as a gross overreaction to a minor mistake, noting the croissant’s low value.
- Critics slammed the disproportionate nature of the punishment relative to the alleged offense.
- Commentary also questioned the zero-tolerance policies of large retail chains and the chilling effects of automated surveillance paired with strict legal enforcement.
Systemic Issues Exposed

This case cast a spotlight on broader concerns:
- Automated checkout pitfalls – Machines and surveillance can misidentify simple errors as intentional theft.
- Rigid store policies – Many supermarkets pursue legal action vigorously even in ambiguous cases, as claimed by the store’s “tolerance zero” stance.
- Legal inflexibility – Swiss courts—even for minor infractions—enforce fines and fees robustly, seemingly leaving little room for nuance.
Human Cost
The customer—believed to be in her 50s—described feeling humiliated and distraught, having been treated like a thief despite her immediate willingness to pay and correct the error. She also faced exclusion from all Aldi outlets in Switzerland.
Broader Implications
This incident highlights troubling trends:
- Technological Efficiency vs. Human Error
As self-service systems proliferate, innocent human forgetfulness can trigger serious consequences. - Legal Overreach
Enforcement systems risk criminalizing everyday mistakes, especially under policies that prioritize liability over intent. - Rethinking Consumer Rights
Can legal systems and retailers develop fair mechanisms that distinguish intentional theft from honest oversight? - Retail Surveillance Debate
Should supermarket chains carry the power of legal prosecution for common checkout mishaps?
Final Thoughts
A simple oversight—forgetting to scan a 90-cent croissant—snowballed into a €650 legal ordeal, revealing tensions in the digital checkout era. With technology replacing human oversight, this case acts as a stark warning of disproportionate responses.
As the world adapts to automated retail, it’s essential to ensure fair, context-sensitive policies accompany efficiency. Otherwise, something as small as a croissant could cost consumers far more than its weight in pastries.
