Privacy and Data Protection

The US has no comprehensive federal privacy law. Instead, businesses navigate a patchwork: state comprehensive laws (CCPA/CPRA and growing list of others), federal sectoral laws (HIPAA, GLBA, COPPA), 50 separate state breach notification laws, FTC Act enforcement against unfair or deceptive practices, and extraterritorial reach of foreign laws (GDPR) on US businesses with EU users. This guide covers what actually applies to most US businesses.

The US privacy landscape

Four layers apply to a typical US business:

  1. State comprehensive privacy laws. California led with CCPA (2020) and CPRA (2023). Virginia, Colorado, Connecticut, Utah, Texas, Oregon, Montana, and many others have followed with their own laws. Each has its own scope, definitions, and rights.
  2. State breach notification laws. All 50 states require notification to affected residents (and often regulators) after security breaches. Each state's law differs in trigger, timeline, and content.
  3. Federal sectoral laws. HIPAA (healthcare), GLBA (financial), COPPA (children), FERPA (education), TCPA (telephone), CAN-SPAM (email), FCRA (consumer reporting).
  4. FTC enforcement. Section 5 of the FTC Act prohibits "unfair or deceptive acts or practices". The FTC has used this authority extensively to enforce against privacy policy violations, inadequate security, and unfair data practices — effectively functioning as a national privacy regulator absent a comprehensive federal law.

Plus, US businesses with EU/UK customers, employees, or website visitors face GDPR and UK GDPR; with Canadian, those countries' laws (PIPEDA); with Brazil, LGPD; and so on for any country where data subjects reside.

State comprehensive privacy laws

As of 2025, well over a dozen states have enacted comprehensive consumer privacy laws and more pass each year. While each law is distinct, common features have emerged:

Compliance practice for multi-state businesses: identify the most-stringent applicable law and build to that standard, with state-specific overlays where required (e.g., specific California financial incentive disclosures). The IAPP's state law tracker is a useful resource for current status.

CCPA/CPRA in detail

California's law applies to for-profit businesses that do business in California and meet at least one of:

Consumer rights:

Business obligations include privacy notice at collection, comprehensive privacy policy, response procedures for rights requests (with statutory deadlines), data minimization, purpose limitation, contracts with service providers and contractors that pass through obligations, and (under CPRA) reasonable security and certain cybersecurity audits / risk assessments for high-risk processing.

The California Privacy Protection Agency (CPPA) issues regulations and enforces alongside the Attorney General. Penalties: civil penalties for violations, with intentional violations and violations involving consumers under 16 carrying higher amounts; statutory damages per consumer per incident for certain data breaches under the private right of action.

GDPR reach into US businesses

The EU General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) applies to US businesses that either:

A US business with EU customers, EU employees, or EU-based website visitors tracked for advertising or analytics generally falls within GDPR scope. The UK GDPR (post-Brexit) applies similarly to UK data subjects.

Key obligations:

GDPR penalties: up to €20 million or 4% of annual global turnover, whichever is higher, for serious violations. Several US businesses have been subject to substantial GDPR fines.

Federal sectoral laws

HIPAA (Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act). Covers covered entities (healthcare providers, health plans, healthcare clearinghouses) and their business associates. Requires safeguards on protected health information (PHI), breach notification, written agreements with business associates. Enforced by HHS Office for Civil Rights with significant penalty exposure.

GLBA (Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act). Financial institutions broadly defined — banks, broker-dealers, insurance, but also tax preparers, mortgage brokers, debt collectors. Requires Safeguards Rule (information security program), Privacy Rule (privacy notices to consumers), Pretexting provisions.

COPPA (Children's Online Privacy Protection Act). Online services directed to children under 13, or those with actual knowledge of collecting personal information from children under 13. Requires verifiable parental consent, privacy notice, data minimization, deletion on request. FTC enforced; very high per-violation penalties.

FERPA (Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act). Educational institutions receiving federal funding; restricts disclosure of education records.

TCPA (Telephone Consumer Protection Act). Restrictions on robocalls, autodialers, prerecorded messages, and SMS marketing. Substantial statutory damages per violation; significant private litigation.

CAN-SPAM Act. Commercial email messages must include accurate header, identification as advertisement (if applicable), valid physical address, conspicuous opt-out, and honor opt-outs within 10 business days.

FCRA (Fair Credit Reporting Act). Use of consumer reports for employment, credit, insurance. Notice, consent, and adverse action requirements.

FTC Act enforcement

Section 5 of the FTC Act prohibits "unfair or deceptive acts or practices in or affecting commerce." The FTC applies this to privacy in two ways:

FTC consent orders often require 20 years of compliance commitments, third-party assessments, and significant penalty exposure for any subsequent violation.

Breach notification

All 50 states, DC, Puerto Rico, and several US territories have breach notification laws. Common elements:

For multistate breaches, response counsel typically uses a 50-state matrix to coordinate notifications across jurisdictions with different requirements. The differences between states' definitions of triggering data, timeline, and content make breach response a complex multi-jurisdiction exercise.

HIPAA, GLBA, and federal contractor regulations add federal breach notification overlays. The SEC requires disclosure of material cybersecurity incidents for public companies.

Privacy policy

A privacy policy is the primary public-facing privacy disclosure. Required by:

Practical contents:

Layered notices are common: a short, accessible summary linked to the full policy. "Notice at collection" required by CCPA is a separate, just-in-time disclosure of categories and purposes at the point of data collection.

Data processing agreements

Controllers and processors (in GDPR terms) or businesses and service providers (in CCPA terms) must have written contracts addressing data processing. Required elements:

Standard practice: a master Data Processing Agreement (or Addendum to the main services agreement) that incorporates the regulatory requirements. Many vendors publish a standard DPA on their websites that customers accept by reference; some negotiate custom terms with enterprise customers.

International data transfers

GDPR restricts transfers of personal data from the EEA to "third countries" (including the US, until adequacy). Permitted transfer mechanisms:

The Schrems II decision (2020) invalidated the prior Privacy Shield and required Transfer Impact Assessments for SCC-based transfers, considering whether the destination country's surveillance laws undermine the SCCs. The 2023 EU-US DPF was designed to address Schrems II concerns; it remains subject to challenge. Check current status before relying on a particular mechanism.

Privacy impact assessments

GDPR Article 35 requires Data Protection Impact Assessments (DPIAs) for processing likely to result in high risk to rights and freedoms — profiling, large-scale special category processing, large-scale monitoring of public areas. CPRA introduced "risk assessment" requirements for processing presenting significant risk. Other state laws (Connecticut, Colorado, others) have similar requirements.

A standard PIA/DPIA covers: description of the processing, necessity and proportionality assessment, risk assessment for data subjects, and mitigation measures. Many privacy programs use a standardized template and trigger PIA review before launching new products or significant processing changes.

Cookies and online tracking

Cookies and similar tracking technologies face overlapping requirements:

Standard implementation: a consent management platform (CMP) that surveys the cookies set, categorizes them (strictly necessary, functional, analytics, advertising), and presents a banner or notice with controls. Different regional rules require different consent flows — opt-in for the EU, opt-out for California sale/sharing.

Common mistakes

FAQ

Do small businesses need a privacy policy? Yes, in most cases. California's CalOPPA applies to any commercial website collecting personal information from Californians, regardless of size. GDPR has no small-business exemption. Industry-specific laws (HIPAA, GLBA, COPPA) don't depend on size.

Is there a federal privacy law? No comprehensive federal law as of writing. Multiple bills have been proposed; none has passed. Federal sectoral laws apply in specific contexts. Watch for developments — this changes.

What's the difference between controller and processor? Controller decides why and how data is processed; processor handles data on behalf of a controller. SaaS vendors are typically processors; the customer using the SaaS is the controller. CCPA uses "business" and "service provider" with similar meaning.

Do we need a Data Protection Officer? Required under GDPR for public authorities and businesses whose core activities involve large-scale monitoring or sensitive data processing. Not universally required for US-only businesses; optional but useful for privacy programs at any scale.

How long do we have to respond to a consumer rights request? 45 days under CCPA/CPRA (extendable by 45 more); one month under GDPR (extendable by two more in complex cases); other state laws have similar timelines.

Can we charge for handling privacy requests? Generally no, unless requests are manifestly unfounded or excessive. Don't condition service on waiver of privacy rights (CCPA non-discrimination provision).

What constitutes a breach? Differs by law. Generally: unauthorized acquisition or access to personal information. Some laws require a risk assessment before notification is triggered.

Is encryption mandatory? Often a safe harbor or mitigating factor rather than a strict requirement. CCPA private right of action requires unencrypted personal information. GLBA Safeguards Rule has specific encryption requirements.