English

Refusal Direction is Universal Across Safety-Aligned Languages

Computation and Language 2026-02-26 v2

Abstract

Refusal mechanisms in large language models (LLMs) are essential for ensuring safety. Recent research has revealed that refusal behavior can be mediated by a single direction in activation space, enabling targeted interventions to bypass refusals. While this is primarily demonstrated in an English-centric context, appropriate refusal behavior is important for any language, but poorly understood. In this paper, we investigate the refusal behavior in LLMs across 14 languages using PolyRefuse, a multilingual safety dataset created by translating malicious and benign English prompts into these languages. We uncover the surprising cross-lingual universality of the refusal direction: a vector extracted from English can bypass refusals in other languages with near-perfect effectiveness, without any additional fine-tuning. Even more remarkably, refusal directions derived from any safety-aligned language transfer seamlessly to others. We attribute this transferability to the parallelism of refusal vectors across languages in the embedding space and identify the underlying mechanism behind cross-lingual jailbreaks. These findings provide actionable insights for building more robust multilingual safety defenses and pave the way for a deeper mechanistic understanding of cross-lingual vulnerabilities in LLMs.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2505.17306,
  title  = {Refusal Direction is Universal Across Safety-Aligned Languages},
  author = {Xinpeng Wang and Mingyang Wang and Yihong Liu and Hinrich Schütze and Barbara Plank},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2505.17306},
  year   = {2026}
}
R2 v1 2026-07-01T02:32:49.909Z