Type: Blog
Topic: Consent Mgmt
The Telephone Consumer Protection Act (TCPA) sets strict rules for how businesses can send marketing text messages and who they can be sent to. The financial and legal cost of non-compliance can be steep, including serious penalties and fines, class action lawsuits, and long-term damage to brand reputation. Compliance requires getting several elements right at once—from obtaining valid consent to honoring opt-outs within required timeframes—and everything must be documented in a way that can withstand regulatory review or litigation.
These obligations are enforced aggressively, and the regulatory landscape extends beyond the TCPA itself. The FTC’s Telemarketing Sales Rule (TSR) imposes its own disclosure and recordkeeping standards when texts serve a telemarketing purpose, and state-level mini-TCPA statutes may add stricter requirements and higher damages on top of federal law. PossibleNOW’s DNCSolution® and MyPreferences® platforms help enterprises manage these layered requirements across channels and business units, from consent capture and suppression enforcement to real-time scrubbing and audit-ready recordkeeping.
“TCPA compliance for text messaging requires coordination across consent, suppression, data hygiene, and vendor management—all backed by documentation that can hold up in court. Enterprises that centralize these processes through DNCSolution® and MyPreferences® are far better positioned to reduce exposure and maintain customer trust.”
Key areas covered in this guide:
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Multiple layers of regulation apply to businesses that send marketing texts. A compliant SMS operation must account for each of them.
Penalties for SMS violations can accumulate quickly because each individual text counts as a separate potential violation.
Federal and state regulations set specific requirements at every stage of an SMS marketing operation. The following steps outline what a compliant and defensible text messaging operation requires.
Federal law requires prior express written consent before sending marketing text messages. That consent must meet specific standards to hold up under regulatory or legal scrutiny.
Any time a consumer is presented with a consent form or opt-in mechanism, the following must be included:
Every consent must be documented in detail at the time it is collected. If a consumer files a complaint or a regulator requests records, the business needs to be able to show exactly what the consumer agreed to, when, and how.
Each consent record should capture:
Federal rules require retention of consent records for at least five years, though some states require 10 years, and many businesses choose to retain these records indefinitely as a best practice.
When a consumer revokes consent, federal rules require that marketing texts stop as soon as possible and no later than 10 business days after the request is received.
A one-time response is permitted after an opt-out request, but it must be sent within five minutes and contain no marketing or promotional content. If the consumer has opted into multiple message types, that response may ask which types they want to stop receiving. If the consumer does not reply, the revocation must be treated as applying to all messages from that sender.
Opt-out requests must be applied across every system involved in outbound texting, including dialers, SMS platforms, CRMs, and any third-party vendors sending on the brand’s behalf. When suppression data is siloed or delayed, consumers may continue receiving texts after revoking consent—one of the most common triggers for complaints and litigation.
Federal rules prohibit businesses from requiring a single exclusive opt-out method. Consumers may revoke consent through any reasonable means, including:
Learn more about how consumers can revoke consent.
Contact data should be reviewed and scrubbed regularly to remain compliant. For telemarketing campaigns, federal rules require sellers and telemarketers to update their lists against the National Do Not Call Registry at least every 31 days. Internal suppression files, however, should be checked far more frequently so opt-out requests are honored promptly across campaigns and systems. Some states, such as Florida and Louisiana, also maintain separate do-not-call registries with their own scrubbing requirements.
For a detailed breakdown of SMS-specific obligations, see PossibleNOW’s guide on Do Not Contact rules for SMS and text messaging.
Validate mobile numbers before texting. If a number collected through a web form is not actually a mobile number, using it for SMS can create unnecessary compliance risk and wasted outreach.
Reassigned numbers present another significant risk. When a phone number changes hands, the consent given by the previous owner does not transfer to the new owner. The FCC’s Reassigned Numbers Database helps businesses check whether a number has been disconnected or no longer belongs to the person who originally gave consent. Scrubbing against the RND helps prevent sending texts to unintended recipients.
The FCC’s RND safe harbor can protect a business that properly checks the database and receives an erroneous result. If the caller meets the rule’s conditions, that mistaken database response can provide a defense to TCPA liability for the contact.
Courts have consistently found that businesses can be held responsible for text messages sent by outside partners on their behalf. If a lead generator, vendor, or remarketer sends texts without valid consent or continues texting after an opt-out, your brand may be vulnerable to lawsuits or fines.
Before a third party is allowed to send texts for your brand, your business should review how that partner collects consent, stores consent records, and processes opt-outs. If the partner cannot show where consent came from, when it was collected, and which specific brand the consumer agreed to hear from, that partner should not be texting on your behalf.
Consent language that refers only to “marketing partners” or bundles several brands together can create risk. Contracts should spell out compliance duties clearly, but businesses should also audit vendor practices instead of relying on assurances alone.
If a regulator requests records or a consumer files a lawsuit, the business needs to be able to produce clear evidence that it followed the rules. Beyond consent records, organizations should maintain:
Without organized, accessible documentation, even a business that followed every rule may struggle to prove it when challenged.
PossibleNOW provides the technology and expertise enterprises need to manage every layer of SMS compliance, from consent capture through suppression enforcement and regulatory monitoring.
The penalties for non-compliant text marketing are steep and growing steeper, with class action filings surging and per-violation damages that can reach into the millions. PossibleNOW’s platforms and advisory teams give enterprises a clear path to managing TCPA compliance at scale, protecting revenue, customer trust, and brand reputation.
Ready to evaluate your SMS compliance practices? Contact a PossibleNOW expert today to learn how DNCSolution and MyPreferences can support defensible text marketing at enterprise scale.