The compliance landscape for UK marketers

Marketing in the UK is governed by a patchwork of rules. The good news is that the underlying principles are consistent: be honest, be transparent, respect privacy and do not mislead. In 2026, enforcement around data, environmental claims and influencer content is particularly active.

Core rules every marketer should know

1. Advertising must not mislead

The CAP Code requires that advertising is legal, decent, honest and truthful. Claims about products, pricing, performance and availability must be accurate and not omit material information. This sounds obvious, but it trips up businesses regularly, especially around discounts and limited-time offers.

2. Data protection and PECR

The GDPR and the Privacy and Electronic Communications Regulations (PECR) set the rules for personal data and direct marketing. Key requirements include:

  • A lawful basis for processing personal data
  • Clear, specific consent for most marketing emails
  • Easy opt-out mechanisms in every communication
  • Accurate and limited data collection

3. Influencer and affiliate disclosure

If someone is paid, given a free product or has any commercial relationship with a brand, their content must be clearly labelled as advertising. Hidden or ambiguous disclosures are a common ASA complaint area.

4. Environmental and social claims

Green claims are under scrutiny. Marketers should avoid vague terms like "eco-friendly" without evidence, and should not overstate recycling, carbon neutrality or sustainability credentials. The Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) and ASA have both published guidance on this.

5. Financial promotions

Advertising financial products, investments or credit comes with extra rules. Unauthorised promotions can be illegal, and even authorised firms must ensure claims are fair, clear and not misleading.

Practical compliance checklist

  • Check every claim against available evidence
  • Include clear pricing, including compulsory fees
  • Use honest labels for promotional content
  • Keep consent records and honour opt-outs promptly
  • Review environmental claims with a sceptical eye
  • Train staff who create or approve marketing
  • Keep up with ASA rulings in your sector

What happens if you get it wrong

The ASA can require ads to be withdrawn or amended. Serious breaches can be referred to the CMA or ICO, which can issue fines. Reputational damage is often the biggest cost, especially when misleading claims are highlighted on social media.

The bottom line

UK marketing compliance in 2026 is about building trust with your audience while staying within clear rules. The businesses that do this well treat compliance as a brand advantage: clear claims, honest promotions and respectful data use tend to perform better over time than short-term tactics that attract regulatory attention.