• Amended regulations establish a national opt-out registry for direct marketing.
  • Direct marketers must register, cleanse databases and comply before contacting consumers.
  • Non-compliance may result in penalties of up to R1 million or 10% of annual turnover.

South African consumers who have long endured persistent, unwanted marketing calls are finally getting some relief.

The amendment of Regulation 4 under Section 11(3) of the Consumer Protection Act introduces a formal opt-out registry that transforms what was once a paper-thin right to refuse direct marketing into something practical and enforceable.

The National Consumer Commission (NCC) has welcomed the amendment, gazetted by Minister of Trade, Industry and Competition, Parks Tau on 15 April 2026. The NCC confirmed that the new framework lets consumers actively block unwanted communication, whether from a specific company or an entire industry.

The amendment does more than restate existing rights. Section 11 of the Act already allows consumers to refuse or stop direct marketing. What Regulation 4 now does is build the infrastructure to enforce that right at scale. It introduces a centralised registry that direct marketers must consult before making any contact, and it shifts the compliance burden squarely from the consumer to the business.

How the opt-out registry will work

The amended regulations formally recognise the NCC as the administrator of the opt-out registry. Managing the registry, overseeing compliance and guiding implementation all fall on the Commission.

Consumers will be able to register their preferences and block unwanted marketing. The system is flexible. You can opt out of contact from a specific company or go further and block all direct marketing activity altogether.

For businesses, the obligations are more demanding. All direct marketers must register with the system to comply with the Consumer Protection Act and regulations, and that is just the start. Ongoing duties include renewal and the cleansing or deduplication of marketing databases.

Database cleansing is a critical compliance step. Before any marketing communication goes out, a marketer must scrub their contact lists to remove anyone who has opted out. This obligation flows directly from Section 11(3) read together with Regulation 4, and must be satisfied before any consumer engagement takes place.

Registration for both consumers and direct marketers is expected to open in July 2026. The NCC has indicated that further details will be shared ahead of that date, giving businesses time to get their systems and internal processes in order.

A shift in responsibility and enforcement

The opt-out registry marks a decisive shift in how consumer protection is enforced. Previously, stopping unwanted calls meant contacting companies one by one and hoping they would actually comply.

Under the new system, that responsibility shifts to direct marketers. They must proactively check the registry and ensure their databases are clean before making contact. This pre-contact obligation changes the compliance landscape significantly and introduces a measurable standard against which conduct can be assessed.

Failure to comply is not a minor administrative issue. It constitutes a violation of the Consumer Protection Act and exposes direct marketers to enforcement action, with the regulations reinforcing that consequence.

Non-compliant entities may face fines of up to R1 million or 10% of their annual turnover, whichever is greater. That level of penalty signals that the opt-out registry is not merely a procedural tool but a core pillar of consumer rights enforcement.

NCC emphasises consumer protection

Welcoming the amended regulations, the National Consumer Commission’s Acting Commissioner Hardin Ratshisusu did not mince his words. “For too long, consumers have been exposed to intrusive and unwanted direct marketing communication,” he said.

“The Regulations provide for a robust mechanism to stem unwanted calls to ensure that consumers are protected.”

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Multiple award-winner with passion for news and training young journalists. Founder and editor of Conviction.co.za

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