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When the Italian Competition Authority, the Autorità Garante della Concorrenza e del Mercato (AGCM), contacts your business about an advertising complaint, the clock starts immediately. Understanding how to respond to an AGCM advertising complaint in Italy is critical for any advertiser, sponsor, agency, or brand legal team that operates in the Italian market. With enforcement activity rising sharply in 2026, driven by ambush-marketing investigations linked to the Milano-Cortina 2026 Winter Games and the mandatory roll-out of CONSOB’s DePub platform for financial advertising, the procedural stakes have never been higher.
This guide sets out the complete advertising complaint procedure in Italy: who is affected, what documents you need, the deadlines that matter, likely costs, and the 2026 rule changes every advertiser should factor into their response strategy.
The AGCM is the independent administrative body responsible for enforcing Italy’s rules on unfair commercial practices, misleading advertising, and, since D.L. 16/2020, ambush marketing. An AGCM complaint can be triggered by consumers, competitor businesses, trade associations, or the Authority itself acting on its own initiative (d’ufficio). Institutional triggers have become more common in 2026, particularly around major sporting events.
Any entity whose advertising reaches Italian consumers may receive a complaint. This includes domestic companies, foreign brands targeting Italy through digital channels, media agencies, influencers with Italian audiences, and event sponsors. Complaints are typically filed through the AGCM’s online portal or via certified email (PEC) to protocollo.agcm@pec.agcm.it. The AGCM complaint may arrive as a formal notice requesting information, or as a preliminary communication ahead of a possible investigation. In either case, the advertiser must treat the matter with urgency.
Not every consumer grievance reaches the AGCM, and not every AGCM inquiry proceeds to a formal investigation. Understanding the legal tests the Authority applies helps advertisers assess risk and calibrate their response.
Under the Italian Consumer Code (Legislative Decree 206/2005, Articles 20–27bis), advertising is considered misleading if it distorts the economic behaviour of the average consumer. The AGCM evaluates whether claims are verifiable and substantiated, whether material information has been omitted, and whether the overall presentation, including images, disclaimers, and fine print, creates a false impression in the mind of the target audience. Comparative advertising that denigrates competitors or creates confusion with a rival’s trademarks also falls within scope.
D.L. 16/2020 introduced specific prohibitions on ambush marketing in connection with major events in Italy. The legislation targets unauthorised commercial exploitation of event symbols, names, or reputations. In February 2026, the AGCM opened investigations into alleged ambush-marketing conduct connected to the Milano-Cortina 2026 Winter Games, signalling that enforcement under these provisions is now a live risk. Advertisers running campaigns that reference, allude to, or visually associate with major sporting or cultural events should treat any AGCM inquiry as potentially falling under these heightened provisions.
The following numbered steps cover the complete response process, from the moment a complaint or inquiry arrives to a final appeal. The timeline table below summarises responsibilities and typical durations.
| Step | Who Does It | Typical Duration |
|---|---|---|
| Acknowledge receipt & preserve evidence | In-house legal + marketing + compliance | 0–48 hours |
| Internal triage & risk assessment | Legal lead + marketing + external counsel (if retained) | 1–7 days |
| Collect and collate documentary evidence (index) | Marketing / IT / Agency / Legal | 3–14 days |
| Prepare & submit formal AGCM response (PEC/form) | Legal (internal or external) | 7–21 days (dependent on AGCM notice) |
| Negotiation / remedial undertakings | Legal + PR + external counsel | 7–60 days |
| Formal AGCM investigation / decision | AGCM (authority) | 60–180 days typical; may extend if formal investigation opened |
| Appeal (TAR / Consiglio di Stato) | External counsel (administrative law) | Several months to years |
As soon as a complaint or AGCM inquiry is received, the advertiser should take the following actions without delay:
Once the immediate triage is complete, the legal lead should conduct a substantive assessment of the complaint. This involves reviewing the specific claims the AGCM has raised (or that the complainant has alleged), mapping those claims against the actual advertisement, and identifying whether the advertiser has substantiation evidence for every factual assertion made in the ad.
During this phase, assemble the documents needed for the AGCM response (see the full documents checklist below in the Required Documents section). Pay particular attention to gathering:
Industry observers expect the AGCM to scrutinise the completeness of evidence submissions more closely in 2026, particularly for campaigns connected to major events.
The formal response is the most consequential document in the advertising complaint procedure in Italy. It should be structured clearly, typically following this format:
Submit the response via PEC to the address specified in the AGCM notice, or through the AGCM’s online portal if directed to do so. Keep certified delivery receipts.
After receiving the advertiser’s response, the AGCM may take several paths. It may close the matter without action if satisfied that the advertising was lawful. Alternatively, it may request further information, propose that the advertiser offer formal undertakings (impegni), or escalate to a full investigation. Undertakings, voluntary commitments to modify or withdraw the advertising, are a powerful tool. If accepted by the AGCM, they typically result in no fine being imposed. Negotiate undertakings carefully: they become binding once accepted and are published on the AGCM’s website.
If the AGCM opens a formal investigation, the procedure becomes adversarial. The Authority may issue detailed information requests, conduct inspections, and take testimony. The advertiser has the right to present written and oral arguments before the AGCM board issues its final decision. Investigations typically last 60–180 days, though complex cases can take longer. The evidentiary standard is administrative, not criminal, the AGCM must establish on the balance of evidence that the practice was unfair or misleading.
An AGCM decision imposing sanctions can be appealed to the Tribunale Amministrativo Regionale del Lazio (TAR Lazio), and subsequently to the Consiglio di Stato. The appeal must typically be filed within 60 days of notification of the decision. Administrative law counsel with specific experience in AGCM appeals should be instructed promptly if an appeal is contemplated. Post-decision, the advertiser should also consider reputational remediation, issuing corrective communications, updating advertising materials, and briefing commercial partners.
Assembling the correct documentation is essential. The table below lists the documents needed for an AGCM complaint response, together with format and sourcing guidance.
| Document | Notes |
|---|---|
| Exact ad creative (all asset files) | JPG/PNG/MP4/PDF, include final live landing-page URLs, timestamps, and ad platform IDs; produced by marketing or agency. |
| Media buy & targeting data | Campaign manager export (Google Ads, Meta, programmatic DSP) showing dates, impressions, targeting parameters, and clicks; produced by media agency or in-house team. |
| Landing page server logs / archive | HTML snapshot + server access logs or Wayback Machine timestamp; format: PDF + log extract (CSV). |
| Influencer / agency contracts & approval records | Signed contracts, briefs, influencer post IDs, timestamps, fee invoices; produced by commercial team. |
| Substantiation evidence for claims | Test reports, clinical studies, internal test data, third-party certifications, PDF copies with chain-of-custody note. |
| Sponsorship / event agreements | Signed sponsorship agreements and rights schedules; critical where ambush marketing is alleged. |
| Consumer / competitor complaint copies | If the original complaint was shared with you, include emails, screenshots, correspondence. |
| Internal sign-off & compliance trail | Email approvals, legal sign-off records, compliance review notes, demonstrates due diligence. |
| Response index & executive summary | 1-page executive summary + indexed annex cross-reference (recommended format for PEC submission). |
All annexes submitted via PEC should be clearly numbered, labelled with descriptive file names, and referenced in the body of the formal response. The AGCM’s filing guidance specifies that submissions should describe the issue “as clearly and accurately as possible” and include all relevant supporting documents.
The timeline for an AGCM advertising complaint varies depending on whether the matter is resolved at the preliminary stage or escalates to a formal investigation and appeal. The table below consolidates the key deadlines an advertiser must track.
| Action | Typical Deadline / Window | Source / Note |
|---|---|---|
| Acknowledge receipt and preserve evidence | 0–48 hours | Best practice / internal SLA. |
| Submit initial formal response (if requested) | 7–21 days (or as specified in AGCM notice) | AGCM sets tailored deadlines; always comply with the date stated in the notice. |
| Provide additional documents on AGCM request | 7–30 days (as per AGCM deadline) | Information requests during investigation carry their own deadline. |
| AGCM preliminary assessment / undertakings decision | 30–90 days from submission | Varies by case complexity; no fixed statutory window. |
| Formal investigation duration | 60–180 days (may extend) | Complex or multi-party cases can exceed 180 days. |
| Appeal AGCM decision to TAR Lazio | 60 days from notification of decision | Administrative appeal; verify exact window in each case with counsel. |
| CONSOB DePub compliance (financial ads) | Mandatory from 1 January 2026 | Financial marketing material must be submitted via DePub. |
Missing an AGCM deadline, particularly the deadline for a formal response, can result in the Authority proceeding on the basis of available evidence alone, without the benefit of the advertiser’s arguments. In the worst case, it may also be treated as a failure to cooperate, which can aggravate sanctions.
Understanding the potential financial exposure helps advertisers make informed decisions about legal representation, settlement strategy, and risk tolerance. The table below sets out indicative cost ranges based on publicly reported AGCM decisions and typical market rates for Italian advertising law counsel.
| Item | Typical Amount | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| External counsel, initial response & evidence collation | €2,000–€10,000 | Depends on complexity, urgency, and volume of evidence. |
| External counsel, formal AGCM investigation & appeal | €10,000–€60,000+ | Administrative litigation and Consiglio di Stato appeals increase costs substantially. |
| AGCM pecuniary fines, misleading / unfair advertising | €5,000–€5,000,000 | Minor cases attract lower fines; serious, repeated, or ambush-marketing violations can reach the statutory maximum. The AGCM has imposed the maximum €5 million fine in high-gravity cases. |
| Operational remediation (withdrawal, re-run, refunds) | Variable, thousands to hundreds of thousands of euros | Costs of withdrawing a campaign, producing compliant replacements, and compensating partners. |
| Reputational / PR remediation | Variable | Corrective public statements, media monitoring, communications advisory. |
These are indicative ranges. The actual fines for misleading advertising imposed by the AGCM depend on the gravity and duration of the infringement, the breadth of consumer impact, and whether the advertiser cooperated during the investigation.
Two developments in 2026 have material implications for how advertisers should prepare and respond to AGCM complaints.
The AGCM’s enforcement of D.L. 16/2020, the ambush-marketing legislation introduced ahead of major international events hosted in Italy, has moved from theoretical to operational. In February 2026, the Authority opened two investigations into alleged ambush-marketing conduct in connection with the Milano-Cortina 2026 Winter Games. Early indications suggest the AGCM is applying the statutory provisions broadly, covering not only blatant use of event logos but also more subtle associative marketing that creates a false impression of official sponsorship. Advertisers running campaigns around major events should now include a specific ambush-marketing risk assessment as part of their pre-launch compliance checks, and include evidence of that assessment in any AGCM complaint response.
From 1 January 2026, certain financial advertising materials must be submitted to CONSOB (Italy’s securities market regulator) via the DePub electronic platform. This mandatory filing requirement applies to marketing material related to offers, admissions to trading, and related financial products. For financial advertisers, DePub submission evidence is now a critical component of any AGCM complaint response, it demonstrates regulatory compliance and good-faith adherence to sectoral filing obligations.
The likely practical effect of these 2026 changes is twofold. First, advertisers in all sectors should add an ambush-marketing clause to their campaign compliance checklists, verifying that no unauthorised association with protected events is created. Second, financial-sector advertisers should attach DePub submission confirmations as standard evidence in any AGCM response, demonstrating that the advertisement was properly filed with CONSOB before publication.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Giuliano De Rubertis at Lexalia Studio Legale e Tributario, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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