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Ambush marketing in Italy has moved from a theoretical risk to an active enforcement priority as the country prepares to host the Milano‑Cortina 2026 Winter Olympic and Paralympic Games. On 19 February 2026 the Italian Competition Authority (AGCM) announced the opening of multiple investigations into companies suspected of exploiting the Games’ imagery and reputation without authorisation. The convergence of Italy’s dedicated national ambush‑marketing discipline, IOC Rule‑40 restrictions on athlete commercial activity, and heightened AGCM scrutiny creates a compliance landscape that every club, official sponsor, retailer and sports agent must navigate carefully. This guide sets out the legal framework, maps enforcement routes, and provides practical checklists so that brands and practitioners can act before, not after, an investigation letter arrives.
Before diving into the detail, these are the essential points that every stakeholder should understand right now:
Ambush marketing is the practice by which a business seeks to associate itself with a major event, its imagery, goodwill or audience, without paying for or being granted official sponsorship rights. In Italy, the legal framework addressing this practice operates across three overlapping layers: dedicated statutory provisions, intellectual property law, and sports governance rules.
Italy’s national ambush‑marketing discipline was introduced through Decree‑Law 16/2020 (subsequently converted into law), which established specific prohibitions on commercial activities that create an unauthorised association with major sporting events hosted on Italian territory. The provisions go further than the general unfair‑commercial‑practices regime in the Italian Consumer Code (D.Lgs. 206/2005) by explicitly defining categories of prohibited conduct, including:
The Ministry of Enterprises and Made in Italy (MIMIT), through Italy’s Patent and Trademark Office (UIBM), has published guidance on protecting marks from parasitic advertising, reinforcing that the ambush‑marketing framework applies to both registered and unregistered indicia associated with official events.
The Milano‑Cortina 2026 name, emblem, mascots and associated marks are registered trademarks. Unauthorised commercial use of these marks, or of confusingly similar signs, constitutes trademark infringement under the Italian Industrial Property Code (D.Lgs. 30/2005). Even where a brand avoids reproducing a protected mark verbatim, it may still face liability for passing‑off (concorrenza sleale) under Article 2598 of the Italian Civil Code if its campaign creates the impression of an official link to the Games. The interaction between these IP provisions and the dedicated ambush‑marketing discipline means that enforcement can proceed on multiple legal bases simultaneously.
The AGCM (Autorità Garante della Concorrenza e del Mercato) is the primary administrative enforcer of ambush marketing rules in Italy. Its February 2026 actions demonstrate that enforcement is not hypothetical, it is underway.
On 19 February 2026 the AGCM published a press release confirming the launch of investigations (referenced as cases PV26, PV27 and PV28) into businesses suspected of engaging in ambush marketing linked to the Milano‑Cortina 2026 Games. The investigations were triggered by complaints from rights holders and the AGCM’s own market monitoring. Industry observers note that the investigations reportedly targeted commercial operators, including at least one large retail chain, that had launched promotions evoking Olympic imagery, terminology or competitive themes without holding official sponsorship or licensing rights.
The significance of these cases extends well beyond the individual targets. They signal that the AGCM intends to use the full range of its enforcement powers in the build‑up to the Games, creating a deterrent effect across the market. The likely practical effect will be to push brands and retailers into pre‑clearance routines and conservative campaign design.
AGCM investigations into unfair commercial practices, including ambush marketing, follow a structured procedure. The typical enforcement timeline is as follows:
| Phase | Typical duration | Key actions |
|---|---|---|
| Preliminary inquiry | 30–90 days | AGCM gathers evidence, requests information from the target, and may conduct dawn raids or request documents from third parties. |
| Formal investigation | 120–180 days (extendable) | Target is notified, given access to the file, and invited to submit a defence. Hearings may be scheduled. AGCM assesses whether conduct constitutes an unfair commercial practice. |
| Interim measures | At any point | AGCM may order immediate suspension of the campaign if there is a risk of serious and irreparable harm, particularly relevant for time‑limited event promotions. |
| Decision | At close of investigation | AGCM issues a binding decision: either closing the case or finding a violation and imposing remedies and fines. |
| Appeal | 60 days from notification | Decisions may be appealed to the TAR Lazio (administrative court), then to the Council of State. |
When assessing market harm, the AGCM examines whether consumers could reasonably be misled into believing the business is an official sponsor or partner, whether the event organiser’s commercial rights programme is undermined, and whether the conduct distorts competitive conditions in the relevant market. Past decisions under the general unfair‑practices regime have produced fines ranging from tens of thousands to several million euros depending on turnover and gravity. Under the dedicated ambush‑marketing discipline, the penalties regime reinforces that substantial fines are available, making early legal review a cost‑effective precaution.
The regulatory framework for ambush marketing in Italy does not end with administrative enforcement. The sports governance system, comprising the IOC, CONI and individual national federations, imposes its own parallel set of rules that can catch athletes, clubs, agents and personal sponsors.
Rule 40 of the Olympic Charter restricts the ability of competitors, coaches, trainers and officials to allow their person, name, picture or sports performances to be used for advertising purposes during the Olympic Games. For Milano‑Cortina 2026, this restriction applies during a defined “Games period” that typically extends from several days before the Opening Ceremony to several days after the Closing Ceremony. During this window:
CONI, as the Italian National Olympic Committee, implements Rule 40 at national level and has the authority to enforce compliance through its internal disciplinary bodies, including the Collegio di Garanzia dello Sport. Unlike AGCM proceedings, sports‑justice sanctions may include suspension from competition, withdrawal of accreditation, or disqualification, consequences that carry career‑ending weight for athletes and significant reputational cost for agents.
Sports agents, clubs and brands working with athletes participating in Milano‑Cortina 2026 should ensure the following:
The official IOC partners page for Milano‑Cortina 2026 lists all entities holding worldwide and domestic sponsorship rights, only these brands may use Olympic intellectual property in their advertising.
One of the most practically important areas of ambush marketing risk in Italy concerns retailers, particularly supermarket chains and FMCG operators, that run promotional campaigns timed to coincide with major sporting events. The AGCM’s February 2026 investigations brought this sector into sharp focus.
According to the AGCM’s 19 February 2026 press release, at least one investigation targeted a retail operator whose in‑store and digital promotional materials created an association with the Milano‑Cortina 2026 Games. Industry observers expect that the problematic conduct included some combination of the following tactics, which recur in ambush‑marketing enforcement globally:
The core legal issue is whether the retailer’s campaign would lead a reasonably attentive consumer to believe the brand is an official partner or supporter of the Games, even if the campaign never uses the Milano‑Cortina 2026 name or logo.
Retailers can still engage with the excitement of a major sporting event without crossing into ambush marketing territory. The key is to ensure campaigns are genuinely generic and do not evoke any specific protected event. The following do/don’t checklist provides practical guidance:
| Do | Don’t |
|---|---|
| Run general “winter sports” or “healthy living” promotions with original creative assets. | Use imagery, colour combinations or design elements that mirror the Games’ official branding. |
| Feature store‑own brand imagery and generic athletic themes. | Reference specific dates, host cities or medal events in a way that implies an Olympic link. |
| Include a clear disclaimer: “This promotion is not affiliated with, sponsored by, or endorsed by the IOC, CONI, or the Milano‑Cortina 2026 Organising Committee.” | Omit disclaimers or use ambiguous language that could be read as implying official status. |
| Obtain legal sign‑off on all creative materials before launch. | Assume that avoiding the use of the official name or logo is sufficient protection, implied association can be enough. |
| Train in‑store staff on what they can and cannot say about event links. | Allow store‑level staff to improvise messaging that connects products to the Games. |
A well‑drafted disclaimer is not a complete defence against an AGCM investigation, but it is a material factor in demonstrating good faith and reducing the risk of a finding of misleading conduct.
Official sponsors invest significant sums to secure exclusivity. Protecting that investment requires more than relying on the AGCM or event organisers, it demands robust contractual architecture. For sponsors, clubs, federations and agencies, the following drafting checklist addresses the critical anti‑ambush provisions that should appear in any sponsorship or rights agreement connected to a major sporting event in Italy.
Even the best contract is only as effective as the monitoring behind it. Industry observers expect that official sponsors for Milano‑Cortina 2026 are implementing the following escalation protocol:
Receiving an AGCM investigation notice or a cease‑and‑desist letter from a rights holder requires immediate, structured action. Delay increases both legal exposure and reputational damage.
The question of who to inform, and when, depends on the respondent’s position in the supply chain:
The following step‑by‑step response protocol should be activated upon receipt of any formal notice related to ambush marketing allegations:
Ambush marketing penalties in Italy vary according to the entity involved and the enforcement route taken. The following table summarises the primary risks and typical remedies for each stakeholder category:
| Entity | Primary legal and sports risk | Typical remedies and obligations |
|---|---|---|
| Official Sponsors / Rights Holders | Contractual breach by third parties eroding exclusivity value; reputational damage from association with inadequate enforcement | Injunctions against infringers, contractual indemnities from organisers, coordinated enforcement with AGCM and event organiser, civil damages claims |
| Non‑sponsor brands / retailers (e.g., supermarkets) | AGCM investigation for unfair commercial practices; trademark infringement; misleading advertising under the Consumer Code | AGCM fines (potentially up to millions of euros based on turnover), cease‑and‑desist orders, corrective advertising obligations, civil claims by rights holders |
| Clubs, federations, agents and athletes | Rule‑40 breaches; image rights misuse; contractual conflicts with event organisers and official sponsors | Sports‑justice sanctions (CONI disciplinary proceedings), suspension of athlete marketing rights, withdrawal of accreditation, contractual damages |
The critical point for all entities is that these enforcement routes are not mutually exclusive. A single campaign can trigger parallel proceedings before the AGCM, the civil courts and CONI’s disciplinary bodies, each with its own procedural timeline, evidentiary standards and sanctions.
Ambush marketing in Italy is no longer a grey area, it is a clearly defined legal risk backed by active AGCM investigations, dedicated statutory provisions and sports‑governance sanctions. With Milano‑Cortina 2026 approaching, the enforcement window is narrowing and the consequences of non‑compliance are material. Every club, sponsor, retailer and agent with exposure to the Italian market should take three immediate steps:
The cost of compliance preparation is a fraction of the cost of an investigation, a fine or the loss of a sponsor’s trust. For tailored guidance on ambush marketing in Italy and sports sponsorship law, consult a specialist in Italian competition and sports law.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Stefano Bastianon at Studio Legale Bastianon Garavaglia, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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