Disclaimer Examples › Cookie Disclaimer Examples › CCPA Cookie Notice Examples
CCPA Cookie Notice Examples
The California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA), as amended by the CPRA, requires businesses to disclose their data collection practices and provide opt-out mechanisms for the sale or sharing of personal information. These templates cover the required cookie and privacy notices for California compliance.
5 CCPA Notice Disclaimer Examples
Cookie and tracking notices compliant with California Consumer Privacy Act.
CCPA Do Not Sell Notice
Best for: websites with California visitors subject to CCPA
CCPA Cookie Disclosure
Best for: ad-supported websites with California users
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Combined CCPA and Privacy Notice
Best for: comprehensive CCPA compliance for larger organizations
CPRA-Updated Privacy Notice
Best for: businesses needing updated CPRA (amended CCPA) compliance language
Global Privacy Control Notice
Best for: websites that support browser-based privacy signals
Frequently Asked Questions
Does CCPA require a cookie banner?+
CCPA does not require a traditional cookie consent banner like GDPR. However, it does require a clear and conspicuous 'Do Not Sell or Share My Personal Information' link on your website. If your cookies facilitate the sale or sharing of personal information (such as advertising cookies), you must provide a mechanism for California residents to opt out. Many businesses combine this with a cookie notice for clarity.
What is the difference between CCPA and GDPR cookie requirements?+
GDPR requires opt-in consent before placing non-essential cookies. CCPA uses an opt-out model — you can place cookies but must allow consumers to opt out of the sale or sharing of their data. GDPR applies to all EU residents regardless of business size. CCPA applies to businesses meeting specific thresholds (revenue, data volume). Most businesses serving both markets implement GDPR-level consent as it is the stricter standard.
What is Global Privacy Control and do I need to support it?+
Global Privacy Control (GPC) is a browser-based signal that indicates a user's intent to opt out of data selling and sharing. Under CCPA/CPRA, businesses must treat a GPC signal as a valid opt-out request from California residents. The California Attorney General has enforced this requirement. Supporting GPC is a legal obligation for CCPA-covered businesses, not just a best practice.