Influencer marketing in the United States is no longer the wild west it once was. The Federal Trade Commission has spent the last several years sharpening its enforcement posture — updating its endorsement guides in 2023, sending warning letters to brands and creators alike, and making clear that non-disclosure is not a technicality but a legal liability. For US brands running influencer campaigns in 2025, FTC influencer marketing compliance is not optional infrastructure — it is the foundation every campaign must be built on.

This guide breaks down exactly what the FTC requires, who is responsible when things go wrong, how disclosure works across each major platform, and how to build a compliance workflow into your influencer program from day one.

Important note: This guide is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. For specific compliance questions related to your brand, consult a qualified attorney familiar with FTC regulations and advertising law.

Why FTC Compliance Matters More Than Ever in 2025

The FTC’s updated Endorsement Guides, which took effect in 2023, represented the most significant overhaul of influencer marketing rules in over a decade. The revisions closed loopholes that brands and creators had quietly exploited — vague disclosures buried in hashtag lists, undisclosed gifting arrangements, and affiliate links presented as organic recommendations.

Several forces are making FTC influencer marketing compliance a higher-stakes issue heading into 2025:

  • Increased enforcement activity. The FTC has escalated from sending warning letters to pursuing civil penalties. Brands — not just creators — are now named in actions.
  • Consumer awareness. Audiences are more sophisticated. Undisclosed promotions damage brand trust in ways that are difficult and expensive to repair.
  • Platform policy alignment. Instagram, TikTok, and YouTube have tightened their own branded content policies to mirror FTC requirements, meaning non-compliant posts risk being removed or demonetized entirely.
  • Scale of campaigns. As brands activate hundreds of micro and nano influencers simultaneously, the compliance surface area grows — one non-disclosing creator in a 50-person campaign can expose the brand to regulatory scrutiny.

The bottom line: the cost of building compliance into your workflow is a fraction of the cost of an FTC investigation, a civil penalty, or a public brand safety incident.

What Is the FTC and What Does It Regulate?

The Federal Trade Commission is the US government agency responsible for protecting consumers from deceptive business practices. Under Section 5 of the FTC Act, any commercial communication that is deceptive or misleading — including undisclosed paid endorsements — is an unfair or deceptive act.

The FTC’s specific framework for influencer marketing is contained in its Guides Concerning the Use of Endorsements and Testimonials in Advertising, commonly called the Endorsement Guides. These are not statutes — they are agency guidance — but violations of the Guides are treated as violations of Section 5 and can result in civil penalties of up to $51,744 per violation as of 2024 figures (adjusted annually for inflation).

The Guides apply to:

  • Paid sponsored posts and brand deals
  • Gifted products or services (even without payment)
  • Affiliate and commission-based promotions
  • Brand ambassador relationships
  • Employee reviews and endorsements
  • Sweepstakes or contest entries that require social sharing
  • Any relationship between a brand and an endorser that could affect the credibility of a recommendation
Key 2023 update: The revised Endorsement Guides explicitly address tags, likes, reposts, and virtual influencers for the first time — areas that were previously grey zones. If a brand pays a creator to tag them in a post, that tag requires disclosure. If a brand has an ongoing relationship with a virtual AI influencer, audiences must know it is not a real person.

Understanding “Material Connection” — The Core Rule

The entire FTC compliance framework for influencer marketing rests on one concept: material connection. A material connection is any relationship between a brand and an endorser that a reasonable consumer would want to know about when evaluating the endorsement.

A material connection exists when:

Relationship TypeExampleDisclosure Required?
Paid sponsorshipBrand pays creator $500 for a postYes
Free product / giftingBrand sends creator free skincareYes
Affiliate / commissionCreator earns % on each sale via linkYes
Brand ambassadorCreator is ongoing paid repYes
EmploymentCreator is a company employeeYes
Family / close relationshipCreator reviews a friend’s businessYes
Organic, unpaid reviewCreator buys product and posts about it independentlyNo

The test is not whether money changed hands — it is whether the relationship could affect the weight a consumer gives to the recommendation. A $0 gifting arrangement where the creator received $300 worth of product is a material connection and requires disclosure just as a paid post does.

The Disclosure Rules Every US Brand Must Know

The FTC does not prescribe exact language, but it sets clear standards for what makes a disclosure valid. A compliant disclosure must be:

  • Clear and conspicuous. It must be impossible to miss — not buried in hashtags, not hidden in a scrollable caption, not shown only briefly in a fast-cut video.
  • Close to the endorsement. The disclosure must appear near the claim it qualifies — not at the end of a long caption if the promotional content is at the beginning.
  • In plain language. Terms like “Thank you [Brand]” or “collab” or “sp” are not sufficient. The FTC requires language that is understandable to an average consumer.
  • Unavoidable in the medium. For video content, the disclosure must appear on screen long enough to be read and must also be stated verbally in the audio. A text overlay that appears for 1 second in a 3-minute video does not meet the standard.

Approved Disclosure Language

Disclosure PhraseFTC Compliant?Notes
#ad✅ YesMust appear prominently, not buried in hashtags
#sponsored✅ YesClear and widely understood
“Paid partnership with [Brand]”✅ YesPlatform-native label on Instagram/TikTok
“[Brand] gave me this product to try”✅ YesClear for gifted content
#gifted⚠️ BorderlineFTC considers it potentially unclear; pair with #ad
#partner⚠️ BorderlineAmbiguous — does not clearly signal commercial relationship
#collab❌ NoToo vague for average consumer to understand
#sp❌ NoAbbreviation not clearly understood
“Thank you [Brand]!”❌ NoDoes not disclose a commercial relationship
Disclosure only in bio or link-in-bio❌ NoMust appear within the specific post

Platform-by-Platform Disclosure Requirements

Each platform has its own branded content tools that work alongside — but do not replace — FTC requirements. Using a platform’s paid partnership label satisfies the platform’s policy but brands should verify it also meets the FTC’s clear-and-conspicuous standard on a post-by-post basis.

PlatformNative Disclosure ToolPlacement Best PracticeVideo Rule
InstagramPaid Partnership label (required for branded content)#ad or #sponsored in first line of caption before “more” truncationState verbally within first 30 seconds; on-screen text throughout
TikTokBranded Content toggle (required)#ad in video text overlay and captionVerbal disclosure in audio; on-screen throughout video duration
YouTubePaid promotion checkbox in upload settingsVerbal disclosure within first 30 seconds; pinned disclosure commentOn-screen card at video start; YouTube’s own disclosure banner activates
PinterestNo dedicated tool — use pin description#ad or #sponsored in pin title or first line of descriptionN/A (static format)
LinkedInNo dedicated tool#ad or “Paid partnership” at top of post textState verbally in video; on-screen text
X (Twitter)No dedicated tool#ad at start of tweet textState verbally; on-screen text in video tweets
PodcastsNo dedicated toolVerbal disclosure at start of ad read: “This episode is sponsored by…”Audio disclosure required; show notes reinforcement recommended
Instagram Stories and Reels: The platform’s paid partnership label must be toggled on AND the creator should include a visible #ad text overlay. The label alone may not be sufficient under FTC’s clear-and-conspicuous standard since it appears only briefly at the top of the screen.

Brand Liability: You Are Responsible Too

One of the most important — and most misunderstood — aspects of FTC influencer marketing compliance is that brands share legal responsibility for disclosure failures, not just the creator.

The FTC’s 2023 updated Guides make this explicit: an advertiser is liable for deceptive endorsements made by influencers it has engaged, if the advertiser knew or should have known of the deception. This means:

  • If your brief does not instruct creators to disclose, and they don’t — you are liable.
  • If you review and approve creator content before it goes live and miss a missing disclosure — you are liable.
  • If you run a gifting campaign without telling recipients they must disclose — you are liable.
  • If you repost or amplify a creator’s non-disclosing post via your brand channels — you are liable for that amplification.
Critical point for gifting campaigns: Many brands mistakenly believe that because no payment was made, gifting requires no disclosure. The FTC explicitly states that receiving free products creates a material connection that must be disclosed. If you send PR packages without instructing recipients to disclose, every non-disclosing post created from that package is a potential FTC violation that your brand shares responsibility for.

The practical implication is that compliance must be built into your influencer outreach workflow — not left to the creator’s discretion.

FTC Penalties and Real Enforcement Cases

The FTC’s enforcement history gives US brands a clear picture of the real-world consequences of non-compliance.

Case / BrandViolationOutcome
Lord & TaylorPaid 50 influencers to post about a dress without disclosing payment; also paid a magazine for a native ad without disclosureFTC settlement; consent order prohibiting future deceptive endorsement practices
Warner Bros. (Shadow of Mordor)Paid YouTubers for positive reviews without required disclosure; prohibited creators from mentioning game bugsFTC consent order; required disclosures in all future influencer campaigns
Sunday RileyInstructed employees to post fake reviews on Sephora without disclosureFTC consent order; prohibition on incentivizing undisclosed reviews
Teami LLCUndisclosed Instagram influencer posts for tea detox products; also made unsubstantiated health claims$15.2 million judgment; consent order
Roca LabsPaid consumers for testimonials without disclosure; also included gag clauses preventing negative reviewsFTC action; banned from using non-disparagement clauses

The pattern is consistent: brands that treat disclosure as a creator responsibility rather than a campaign infrastructure issue are the ones who end up in enforcement actions. The FTC has also issued warning letters to individual influencers — over 700 in a single enforcement sweep — indicating that the creator, not just the brand, faces direct exposure.

How to Write FTC-Compliant Influencer Briefs

The influencer brief is your primary compliance document. A well-constructed brief eliminates ambiguity, sets legal expectations, and gives you documentation that you instructed the creator correctly in the event of an FTC inquiry.

Every brief for a US influencer campaign should include the following compliance elements:

FTC Compliance Checklist for Influencer Briefs

  • ✅ Explicit instruction to disclose the paid/gifted relationship in every piece of content
  • ✅ Approved disclosure language: #ad or #sponsored or “Paid partnership with [Brand]”
  • ✅ Placement instruction: disclosure must appear before the “more” fold in captions; verbally and on-screen for video
  • ✅ Prohibition on burying disclosure in a list of hashtags
  • ✅ Instruction to use the platform’s native branded content / paid partnership label where available
  • ✅ Statement that the creator’s opinions must be genuine — no false claims or exaggerated results
  • ✅ If health/supplement/financial product: explicit prohibition on unsubstantiated claims
  • ✅ Confirmation that the brand will review content for compliance before approval
  • ✅ Creator acknowledgment (signature or email confirmation) that they have read and will follow these requirements

One thing briefs must not include: any requirement for the creator to post only positive content, any prohibition on mentioning product downsides, or any clause that prevents them from disclosing the commercial relationship. These conditions — sometimes called non-disparagement or non-disclosure clauses — are themselves FTC violations when applied to endorsements.

Monitoring and Auditing Your Campaigns for Compliance

Writing a compliant brief is necessary but not sufficient. Brands must also monitor live content to verify that creators are following the disclosure requirements they agreed to. This is especially important at scale — when you are working with 20, 50, or 100 micro-influencers simultaneously, you cannot assume every creator will get it right.

Build the following steps into your campaign workflow:

  1. Pre-approval review. Require creators to submit draft content before publishing. Review every post for correct disclosure placement, approved language, and absence of unsubstantiated claims. A campaign management platform with a content approval workflow makes this scalable.
  2. Live monitoring. Check posts within 24 hours of going live to confirm the disclosure is present and has not been edited out. Some creators accidentally or deliberately remove disclosures after posting.
  3. Screenshot and archive. Document every compliant post at time of publication — platform, URL, screenshot, disclosure visible. This archive is your evidence in the event of an FTC inquiry.
  4. Non-compliance protocol. Have a clear contractual right to require the creator to edit or remove non-compliant posts, and a process to do so within 24 hours of discovery. Document every remediation action.
  5. Quarterly audit. For ongoing ambassador or affiliate programs, conduct a quarterly audit of all active creator content. Relationships evolve, disclosure habits drift, and a periodic review keeps compliance current.

The FTC has made clear that a brand’s willingness to monitor and correct violations is a mitigating factor in enforcement decisions. A documented compliance program — even if it catches some violations after the fact — demonstrates good faith that can reduce penalty exposure.

Most Common FTC Compliance Mistakes US Brands Make

Treating gifting as different from paid partnerships. Gifted product creates a material connection. Every creator who receives free product must disclose — whether or not you told them to. Include explicit disclosure instructions in every gifting outreach message.

Assuming the platform label is enough. Instagram’s “Paid Partnership” label and TikTok’s Branded Content toggle are required by those platforms, but they do not automatically satisfy the FTC’s clear-and-conspicuous standard. Pair them with in-caption or in-video disclosure.

Approving content without checking disclosure placement. A creator might include #ad at the very end of a 300-word caption after 15 other hashtags. That does not meet the FTC standard. Your review must check placement, not just presence.

Using vague relationship language in contracts. Contracts that describe the creator as a “brand partner” or “ambassador” without explicitly referencing FTC disclosure obligations leave you exposed. Spell out the requirements in plain language with a creator signature.

Reposting non-disclosing creator content. If a creator posts without disclosure and you repost it to your brand account, you have amplified a non-compliant endorsement. Always verify disclosure before reposting UGC or creator content.

No documentation trail. In the event of an FTC inquiry, your ability to demonstrate that you provided disclosure instructions, reviewed content, and corrected violations is your primary defense. If it is not documented, it did not happen.


Frequently Asked Questions
Does FTC influencer marketing compliance apply to micro-influencers?

 

Yes, without exception. The FTC’s disclosure rules apply to all endorsers regardless of follower count — nano, micro, macro, or celebrity. A 5,000-follower creator who receives a free product and posts about it is subject to the same disclosure requirements as a 5 million-follower celebrity. The size of the audience does not change the legal obligation.

 

Is #gifted a sufficient FTC disclosure?

 

The FTC considers #gifted borderline — it may not be clearly understood by all consumers as signaling a commercial relationship. The safest approach is to pair it with #ad or use the explicit phrase “gifted by [Brand]” in the caption body. Relying on #gifted alone is a compliance risk your brand should avoid.

 

What happens if an influencer forgets to disclose even though we instructed them to?

 

Your documentation of the disclosure instruction is your first line of defense. However, the FTC may still hold the brand responsible if the non-disclosure was not corrected promptly. This is why a post-live monitoring process and a contractual right to require edits or removal are essential. Correct violations within 24 hours and document every remediation action.

 

Do affiliate links need to be disclosed?

 

Yes. An affiliate commission arrangement is a material connection. Any creator who earns a percentage of sales through a link must disclose that arrangement clearly and conspicuously in every post containing that link. Saying “use my link for a discount” without disclosing that you earn a commission from that link is a violation.

 

Does FTC compliance apply to international influencers posting to US audiences?

 

Yes. The FTC’s jurisdiction extends to content directed at US consumers, regardless of where the creator is based. If a UK-based creator posts content that is targeted at or reaches a significant US audience for a US brand, FTC disclosure rules apply. This is particularly relevant for US brands running campaigns through global creator platforms.

 

Can we prohibit a creator from saying negative things about our product?

 

No. Requiring a creator to post only positive content or prohibiting them from mentioning product flaws undermines the authenticity of the endorsement and may itself constitute a deceptive practice. You can approve or reject content before it is published, but you cannot contractually require false or misleadingly one-sided endorsements.

 

How does FTC compliance work for long-term brand ambassador programs?

 

Ongoing ambassador relationships require disclosure on every single piece of content — not just the first post or the first month. The material connection persists as long as the relationship does. Brief your ambassadors on this explicitly, conduct quarterly audits of their content, and renew disclosure reminders at the start of each campaign cycle.

 

What is the best way to manage FTC compliance across a large influencer roster?

 

The most reliable approach combines three things: a standardized brief template with explicit disclosure requirements, a content approval workflow that reviews posts before they go live, and a monitoring process that checks live content within 24 hours of publication. A dedicated influencer marketing platform with built-in campaign management and content approval tools makes this scalable across 50–200+ creators without requiring a large compliance team.

 

The Bottom Line

FTC influencer marketing compliance in 2025 is not a niche legal concern — it is a core operational requirement for any US brand running influencer campaigns. The rules are clear, the enforcement is active, and the liability extends directly to brands, not just creators. Gifting programs, affiliate arrangements, paid posts, and ambassador relationships all require disclosure. Platform labels help but do not fully substitute for explicit in-content disclosure. And brands that do not monitor, correct, and document their compliance posture are one enforcement action away from a very expensive lesson.

The good news is that building a compliant influencer program is not complicated. It requires the right brief template, a pre-approval content review process, post-live monitoring and a documentation habit. For US brands running Instagram creator programs, Flinque’s Instagram influencer marketing platform includes brief templates with FTC disclosure fields built in, timestamped content approvals and deliverable tracking — so compliance documentation is generated automatically as part of the normal campaign workflow rather than assembled manually after the fact. Done well, compliance also improves campaign quality — creators who are properly briefed produce better, more authentic content that audiences trust.

Run compliant influencer campaigns from day one. Flinque gives US brands the outreach tools, content approval workflows, and campaign management infrastructure to keep every creator partnership FTC-compliant — at any scale.