CRITICAL CONSENT CHANGES: The TCPA’s Express Consent Rules Are Evolving Rapidly– Here is What We Know Right Now - TCPAWorld
The TCPA's express consent rules are evolving, with new requirements for one-to-one consent and stricter revocation processes. This impacts telemarketing, SMS, and lead generation operations.
Aforeworn detected this change in the Telemarketing & TCPA Compliance space on July 6, 2026 and published this briefing so affected operators are forewarned rather than caught off guard. It is rated Critical. Contact centers, lead-gen/affiliates, SMS marketers, debt/insurance dialers should confirm how it applies to their specific situation before acting. There is a time constraint attached: Immediately; enforcement actions are ongoing.. Acting after that point can mean penalties, a lapsed licence, or lost eligibility — exactly the kind of surprise Aforeworn exists to prevent. Aforeworn monitors Telemarketing & TCPA Compliance continuously and turns every detected change into a plain-English briefing like this one, so you always know first. Forewarned is forearmed.
What changed
The FCC is tightening prior express consent rules, requiring one-to-one consent (no blanket consent from lead generators) and clearer revocation methods.
Who it affects
Contact centers, lead-gen/affiliates, SMS marketers, debt/insurance dialers
What you must do
Audit current consent collection processes to ensure one-to-one consent is obtained and implement easy revocation mechanisms.
Deadline
Immediately; enforcement actions are ongoing.
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Start your free trialRelated changes in Telemarketing & TCPA Compliance
- Elimination of the One-to-One Consent Rule Gives Companies Reprieve, Plus Other TCPA Updates - McGuireWoods
- FCC Extends Waiver That Would Require Callers To Apply a Revocation of Consent to All ‘Robocalls or Robotexts’ from the Caller - JD Supra
- WRITTEN CONSENT?: New Fifth Circuit Decision Says Congress Never Required It in the First Place! - TCPAWorld
- The Fifth Circuit Says You Can’t Write “Written” into the TCPA - The National Law Review
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