Federal Trade Commission (FTC)
The US watchdog for honest advertising. If a claim is deceptive, unsubstantiated, or an endorsement is undisclosed, the FTC is who acts. Know it before you write the claim.
- Term
- Federal Trade Commission (FTC)
- Type
- US federal regulator
- Founded
- 1914 (FTC Act)
- Marketing focus
- Truth in advertising, consumer protection
Parts of speech & senses
- The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) is the United States federal agency that enforces consumer-protection and antitrust law, including the truth-in-advertising rules that require marketing claims to be truthful, substantiated, and not misleading. "The FTC requires that a claim be substantiated before it runs, not after."
What the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) is
The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) is an independent US federal agency created in 1914 by the Federal Trade Commission Act. Its two broad jobs are protecting consumers and promoting competition. For marketers, the consumer-protection side is what matters most day to day: the FTC is the primary enforcer of truth-in-advertising law in the United States.
Its core standard is simple to state and far-reaching in effect — advertising must be truthful, not misleading, and claims (especially about health, performance, savings, or results) must be substantiated by evidence before they run. The FTC also polices unfair or deceptive practices, endorsement and testimonial disclosure, native advertising labeling, and increasingly data and privacy practices.
Why the FTC matters to marketers
The FTC sets the rules of the road for what a brand can claim and how. Its guidance — from the Endorsement Guides (which require clear disclosure of paid or incentivized endorsements, including by influencers) to rules on "free" offers, negative-option billing, and made-in-USA claims — shapes everyday marketing decisions. Getting a claim wrong isn't just a brand risk; it's a legal one, carrying investigations, consent orders, and civil penalties.
The practical discipline is to treat substantiation as a precondition, not an afterthought: have the evidence before the claim runs, disclose material connections clearly and conspicuously, and design offers and billing so a reasonable consumer isn't misled. Marketers who understand the FTC build claims that survive scrutiny; those who don't discover its standards the hard way.
FTC vs. self-regulation
The FTC is government enforcement, distinct from industry self-regulation. Bodies like the advertising industry's self-regulatory programs handle many disputes first, but the FTC has actual legal authority and can compel changes, impose penalties, and set binding precedent. The two work in layers: self-regulation resolves much at the front, while the FTC backs the system with enforcement power.
For a marketer, the takeaway is that "everyone does it" is not a defense. The FTC's standards apply regardless of industry norms, and its reach now extends well beyond classic ads into influencer content, dark patterns, subscription cancellation, and data claims — making FTC literacy part of basic marketing competence.
Synonyms & antonyms
Synonyms
Antonyms
Origin & history
The Federal Trade Commission was established by the Federal Trade Commission Act of 1914 to prevent unfair methods of competition; its consumer-protection mission, including truth-in-advertising enforcement, expanded through later law such as the Wheeler-Lea Act of 1938.
Etymology: source.
Usage trends
Search interest for this term over the last five years:
Common questions
- What is the Federal Trade Commission (FTC)?
- The US federal agency that enforces consumer-protection and antitrust law — and, for marketers, the chief enforcer of truth-in-advertising rules requiring claims to be truthful, substantiated, and not misleading.
- What does the FTC require of advertising?
- That it be truthful and not misleading, that objective claims be substantiated by evidence before they run, and that material connections (like paid endorsements) be disclosed clearly and conspicuously.
- Does the FTC regulate influencers?
- Yes. Under its Endorsement Guides, the FTC requires influencers and brands to clearly disclose paid or incentivized endorsements. Undisclosed material connections are a deceptive practice it actively enforces.
Resources & people to follow
- referenceRGM analysis — definitions, senses, and usage verified per term
Curated, non-competitor resources verified per term.
Related training
Disciplines
Areas of marketing where federal trade commission (ftc) is a core concern: