Hazra Patel, 17 June 2026
A significant and broadly welcome change came into force on 5 February 2026 when the Data (Use and Access) Act 2025 introduced a new charitable purposes soft opt-in for electronic marketing.
The Information Commissioner's Office (ICO) published its final guidance on the provision on 28 April 2026, giving charities the detailed framework they need to use this option within their marketing and fundraising campaigns.
Previously, charities could only send marketing emails, texts and direct messages to supporters if those supporters had specifically consented to receive them.
Commercial businesses were already permitted to use a soft opt-in, where they can contact customers who had purchased from them without explicit consent, but charities were excluded from this route.
However, the ICO's new guidance addresses that disparity and provides charities with their own soft opt-in approach.
Under the charitable purposes soft opt-in, charities can now send direct electronic marketing to individuals without obtaining prior consent, provided all of the following conditions are met:
The ICO's guidance contains several important practical constraints that charities will need to navigate carefully:
Charities that wish to take advantage of the new provision should take the following practical steps:
The Fundraising Regulator is developing complementary guidance, which charities should also review once published.
The charitable purposes soft opt-in is a genuinely useful new tool for many charities, but it comes with meaningful compliance obligations.
An opt-out buried in a privacy policy is not sufficient. Charities should review the ICO's latest guidance carefully and, where needed, seek advice on implementation.
Implementing the new soft opt-in correctly involves coordinated changes across marketing, governance and compliance processes, and getting the detail wrong can undermine supporter trust.
If you would like to discuss how the new soft opt-in guidance affects your charity, our team would be happy to help.
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The charitable purposes soft opt-in is a provision introduced under the Data (Use and Access) Act 2025, which came into force on 5 February 2026. It allows charities to send electronic marketing to individuals without prior consent, provided certain conditions around how and when the data was collected are met.
No. The soft opt-in cannot be applied retrospectively. It only applies to contact details collected directly by the charity on or after 5 February 2026; pre-existing supporter lists still require explicit consent.
No. Contact details must be obtained directly by the charity itself. Third-party lists, including those from closely connected organisations such as trading subsidiaries, cannot be relied on under the charitable soft opt-in.
No. The soft opt-in can only be used for marketing that furthers the charity's own charitable purposes, such as fundraising appeals, event invitations and volunteer recruitment. It cannot be used to promote third parties or other charities, or to sell products.
Charities should add clear, prominent opt-out statements to web forms, donation platforms and sign-up pages, update privacy notices and email templates accordingly, and set up separate preference management for the charitable soft opt-in versus the commercial soft opt-in.