Published on Jul 18, 2025
On 19 June 2025, the Data (Access and Use) Bill received Royal Assent, becoming the Data (Access and Use) Act 2025 - a major development in the UK’s evolving data regulation landscape. For anyone who works with data, this Act is far more than just a technical update; it is a set of clarifications and extensions to the law and a reshaping of responsibilities and business practices concerning data. Businesses will welcome some parts but not others.
The Act redefines legal obligations and operational realities for organisations handling personal data. For lawyers, mastering this Act is not optional - it’s critical to delivering informed, effective counsel in the digital economy. But this knowledge is not just for lawyers, understanding its provisions is essential for all those who use or possess personal data.
The Act’s primary objective is to unlock the value of data for economic growth and innovation, while modernising how data is accessed, shared and protected. But its significance goes further - it amends core data protection laws, including:
This makes the Act one of the most important legal reforms in UK data law in recent years.
Here’s what makes this legislation essential reading:
Amendments to UK GDPR, DPA 2018, and PECR:
New data access and digitisation measures:
Oversight and enforcement:
The Act presents sweeping changes that require legal and business professionals to:
Those using or possessing personal data must understand how the Act modifies UK GDPR, DPA 2018, and PECR - including:
The Act’s divergence from EU data law raises questions about the UK’s adequacy status under EU GDPR. It’s important to consider:
Organisations should consider:
M&A, outsourcing, data commercialisation and technology contracts must now consider:
· Review the Act’s clauses and their effect on your sector.
· Assess how amended UK GDPR, DPA 2018, and PECR provisions affect existing operations.
· Monitor EU adequacy discussions to pre-empt cross-border challenges.
· Prepare revised documentation, including consent forms, contracts and governance policies.
Join our expert trainer, Mark Weston, to be guided through:
Find out more about The New Data (Use and Access) Act training course here.
Published on Jul 18, 2025 by Angela Spall