Meta will ban all political ads across the EU starting October 2025

Meta will stop running political ads across the European Union starting October 2025. The Zuckerberg-led operator of Facebook and Instagram is citing what it calls overly complicated new regulations that make it too risky to continue.

The decision, disclosed on Friday, follows the implementation of the EU’s Transparency and Targeting of Political Advertising Regulation (TTPA). The law is part of the EU’s effort to clean up how politics plays out online, making sure voters know who’s behind the ads they see and why they were targeted.

The company argues that the regulation creates “significant operational challenges and legal uncertainties.” As a result, the company will no longer permit ads relating to “political, electoral and social issues” within EU jurisdictions from October onward.

“We continue to believe online political advertising is a vital part of modern politics,” Meta said in a statement.

Another knot in Meta’s fraught relationship with Brussels

EU lawmakers claim they have grown increasingly alarmed by how easily foreign actors and bad-faith campaigns can sway voters using targeted online ads.

The TTPA now requires platforms to publicly disclose who paid for a political ad, how much was spent, what demographics were targeted, and why. All of this information must be stored in a searchable database available to journalists, regulators, and the public.

Most of the law’s provisions kick in on October 10, 2025, just in time for campaigns ahead of the next European Parliament elections to either comply or sit it out.

Meta is already facing scrutiny under the Digital Services Act and Digital Markets Act, both laws aimed at reining in the power of Big Tech. Just this month, Meta also declined to sign the EU’s AI Code of Practice. Other tech firms, including OpenAI and Anthropic, have agreed to sign on.

Behind the scenes, insiders say Meta feels boxed in by what it sees as Europe’s increasingly aggressive digital agenda. The company has also found a more sympathetic ear in Washington, where policymakers, particularly under the Trump administration, have pushed back against Brussels’ growing influence in tech policy.

The impact on voters and campaigns

From October, political parties, NGOs, and advocacy groups across the EU will no longer be able to run paid ads on Facebook and Instagram. However, they can still post content and reach followers organically, but without paid targeting tools, their reach could be drastically reduced.

Analysts suggest that the TTPA will likely affect independent candidates and smaller parties that don’t have the pull or following of larger parties across social media platforms. These groups often tend to rely on low-cost and highly targeted digital ads to compete with the heavyweights who have deep pockets and can afford TV spots and massive billboards.

Google already made a similar move last year, stating that it was going to put an end to political ads across the EU ahead of the TTPA rollout.

KEY Difference Wire helps crypto brands break through and dominate headlines fast

Source: https://www.cryptopolitan.com/meta-eu-laws-embargo-on-political-ads/