EU GDPR regime

The General Data Protection Regulation, Regulation (EU) 2016/679 (EU GDPR) regime became applicable across the EEA (which at the time included the UK) on 25 May 2018. The EU GDPR ceased to apply to the UK on 31 December 2020 at 11 pm.

This subtopic addresses key features of the EU GDPR at a supranational (ie EEA) level. Individual EEA states may exercise a number of national derogations and other discretions to put in place various additional or alternative data protection laws and the various supervisory authorities in each state may adopt different interpretation or approaches in practice. This topic does not consider the position under the laws of specific EEA states or the guidance of specific EEA supervisory authorities. You should refer to guidance from the relevant national supervisory authorities and national law regarding

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ICO publishes letter on progress against economic growth commitments and work planned for 2026

The Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO) has published a letter to the Prime Minister, the Chancellor of the Exchequer, and the Secretary of State for Business and Trade setting out a one-year update on its five economic growth commitments made in January 2025. These commitments are to: (1) give businesses regulatory certainty on artificial intelligence (AI); (2) cut costs for small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs); (3) enable greater innovation through its Regulatory Sandbox and Innovation Advice services; (4) unlock privacy-preserving online advertising; and (5) make it quicker and easier to transfer data internationally. The letter confirms that the ICO is working with the government on legislation to introduce a statutory code of practice on AI and automated decision-making, and that its expanded data essentials platform for SMEs is due to launch in spring 2026. It also states that the ICO has secured funding to design an experimentation regime to support the testing of emerging technologies, with research findings due by mid-February 2026. In addition, the ICO says it is assessing low-risk online advertising activities that could operate without consent under the Privacy and Electronic Communications Regulations (PECR) and will provide evidence to the government in the spring. The letter also highlights that the ICO published updated guidance on international data transfers in January 2026, aimed at simplifying requirements and supporting cross-border data flows, which underpin around 40% of UK exports. The ICO adds that it will continue to issue further guidance and improve regulatory clarity throughout 2026.

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