Last Updated: January 2026
If you post sponsored content, affiliate promotions, or reviews connected to a brand, the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) expects you to clearly disclose that relationship.
The standard is simple: the disclosure must be clear and conspicuous: meaning it is difficult to miss and easy to understand for ordinary consumers.
This guide explains what the FTC requires, where disclosures should appear across major platforms, and what brands and influencers should do to reduce enforcement risk.
The FTC requires disclosure when an endorsement is connected to a brand relationship that could affect how the audience evaluates the endorsement.
In practice, you should disclose when your content involves:
The FTC’s own influencer resource (“Disclosures 101 for Social Media Influencers”) is a strong baseline reference for when and how to disclose. For a quick overview, see: FTC Guidelines for Influencers: Stay Compliant and Build Trust.
A “material connection” is anything that could influence an endorsement—and anything that a reasonable consumer would want to know before relying on the recommendation.
Payment: cash, flat fee, or ongoing sponsorship
Free products: gifted items, PR packages, “free trial,” or services
Affiliate earnings: commissions, revenue share, referral payouts
Perks: brand trips, tickets, hotel stays, experiences
Business relationships: employment, ownership, partnership
Personal relationships: family/friend relationships tied to promotion
Practical rule:
If you’d answer “yes” to “Would my audience care that I received something of value?” you should disclose.
Disclosures must be immediately noticeable and understandable. The FTC’s emphasis is not on technical compliance, but on whether an ordinary consumer would actually see and understand the disclosure.
Use plain-language statements like:
These often fail because they’re vague, confusing, or easy to miss:
Placement matters. A disclosure is not effective if audiences have to hunt for it.
Best practice for compliance:
Disclose on the same frame as the endorsement. Make sure it is:
Fix: Put “Ad” / “Sponsored” at the beginning of the caption or within the first moments of the video.
Fix: Use plain language (“Ad,” “Sponsored,” “I earn commission,” “Gifted”).
Fix: Disclose on every sponsored post, story, video, and live segment.
Fix: If you received value and the product is featured, disclose.
Fix: Brands can be responsible too (see next section).
Brands and agencies should treat disclosure compliance as a system, not a suggestion.
Brands should:
Influencers should:
In the current environment, brands and influencers should pay close attention to:
This trend is especially relevant as more creators and brands use AI to generate scripts, testimonials, and “review-like” content. See: What the FTC’s Crackdown on AI-Generated Reviews Means for Influencers and Brands.
For an individual consultation on disclosure regulations for your brand, contact our team.
Yes—often. If you received something of value and your content could reasonably be influenced by that benefit, a disclosure is typically required.
Yes. If you earn a commission (or other benefit) from a link, your audience must be informed in plain language.
It can help, but it is not always sufficient on its own. A clear written or verbal disclosure is still recommended to ensure the disclosure is noticeable.
It is risky. Disclosures should appear where consumers will see them before engaging with the endorsement—ideally at the beginning.
Noncompliance can lead to FTC enforcement actions, reputational damage, contract disputes, and platform consequences—especially for repeat violations.
Yes. Brands can be responsible if they fail to instruct, monitor, or correct influencer disclosure issues.
Use this checklist before posting:
✅ Did I receive money, product, perks, commission, or any benefit?
✅ Would an ordinary consumer want to know about that relationship?
✅ Is the disclosure clear (plain language like “Ad” or “Sponsored”)?
✅ Is it conspicuous (easy to see/hear, not buried)?
✅ Is it close to the endorsement (not hidden at the end)?
✅ Did I disclose on every post/story/video in the campaign?
Author
Ethan Wall, Esq.
Founding Attorney, The Social Media Law Firm l Nationally Recognized Social Media Lawyer
Legal Disclaimer: This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice.
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