No more social issue or political ads on Meta: What it means for you

On July 25, 2025, Meta announced it will no longer allow political, electoral, or social issue ads across its platforms (primarily Facebook and Instagram) within the EU. This will come into effect from October 2025.

We’re a UK focused charity…why should we care?

For UK focused charities a valid question might be, ‘So what?’ And indeed, since the decision only affects the 27 EU members, the answer is at this stage - ‘not a lot’.

But whilst we’re physically an Island in most other respects we find ourselves heavily influenced and impacted by what happens on the other side of the channel.


Too much like hard work

The driving force behind Meta’s decision is the EU’s new Transparency and Targeting of Political Advertising (TTPA) regulation. This legislation introduces tougher obligations for both platforms and advertisers when running political or issue-based content. Meta has described the requirements as “unworkable,” citing legal uncertainty and a level of complexity that makes continued compliance impractical. The company also trotted out a variety of other excuses including that new limits on ad targeting could compromise personalised advertising, reducing relevance for users and effectiveness for advertisers.

Essentially, its a commercial decision - the revenue is small and the effort is large, and the hassle when they get it wrong is too great.


What it includes

The scope of Meta’s ban is broad. It applies to all paid ads that fall under its “Social Issues, Elections or Politics” (SEP) category. This includes campaigns on climate change, housing, education reform, refugee rights, healthcare, and more — even if they aren't overtly political. Crucially, organic content remains unaffected; individuals and organisations can still post about these topics without paying to boost reach.

So what about the UK?

While the UK isn’t subject to the EU's TTPA, the implications are clear. Meta’s decision reflects a growing global trend toward stricter regulation of political and issue-based advertising online. It seems inevitable that similar pressures emerge in the UK — either from the UK Government, or Meta deciding that the UK market isn’t worth operating differently to the EU. The online safety bill finally brought into law by Keir Starmer’s government shows the direction of travel in the UK.

Nonprofits and advocacy groups in the UK, should take this as an early warning. Even though they can still promote social causes through paid Meta ads for now, the company’s tightening stance coupled with recent changes to data tracking and custom audience tools — means they should be considering alternative platforms, more organic engagement, and other ways of reaching their audiences.


Worried? Want help with diversifying your digital outreach? Get in touch.

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