The privacy commissioner has launched their first-ever compliance sweep in January 2026.
" />The privacy commissioner has launched their first-ever compliance sweep in January 2026.

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Privacy policies of selected businesses are under the microscope, and businesses with non-compliant policies could receive significant penalties. This article explains the privacy compliance sweep, who is being targeted, and how you can ensure your privacy policy is compliant.
Australian businesses should be transparent about the personal information they collect and how they handle it. The privacy commissioner has identified that customers are especially vulnerable when asked for information face-to-face. This is because, unlike online forms where customers can review privacy policies in their own time, in-person requests often pressure people to respond quickly without having full information about how their data will be used. Therefore, the sweep will initially target businesses that collect information during in-person interactions.
Here is a common scenario:
Your gym offers free trials and collects information from potential members. Customers fill out forms with their contact details, health information and preferences. They hand over this information quickly without fully understanding how it will be used. Then they receive persistent marketing calls and emails for weeks.
When customers can not properly review privacy policies, you may over-collect personal information and use it in ways customers did not expect or agree to. The privacy commissioner’s goal is to ensure you are transparent about how you use personal information.
All businesses covered by Australian privacy laws must have a compliant privacy policy. However, this initial sweep is targeting six specific sectors.
The privacy commissioner has selected these sectors because they commonly collect personal information in person, including identification documents, and these sectors have experienced many privacy breaches.
The six sectors under review are:
The privacy commissioner will review approximately 60 businesses from these sectors for compliance with privacy policy requirements. This is the first compliance sweep of its kind, and more targeted reviews are likely to follow.
If you do not have a privacy policy, you need to have one prepared. If you already have one, now is the time to review it and make sure it is compliant.
Australian privacy laws set out the minimum requirements that a privacy policy must include. This includes that your privacy policy must explain:
Your privacy policy must be clearly expressed and up to date. This means the privacy policy:
The privacy commissioner can issue compliance notices requiring you to fix issues with your policy.
The first privacy compliance sweep is underway as of January 2026, targeting businesses that collect personal information in person. More sweeps are likely to follow as privacy regulation strengthens across Australia. To be compliant, you need to make sure you have a robust and clear privacy policy in place for your business that meets the requirements. Good privacy practices build customer trust by demonstrating you protect their personal information.
Lauren McKee
Updated on January 27, 2026
legalvision.com.au