
As the California Privacy Protection Agency (CPPA) prepares its next major round of regulations, the upcoming CPPA 2026 requirements will significantly reshape how organizations collect, govern, and protect personal data. These rules expand on the CPRA, establishing new obligations around transparency, automated decision-making, cybersecurity audits, and data minimization.
The requirements apply broadly to organizations processing personal information from California residents.
Industries Most Affected
Indicators of Applicability
Organizations must conduct regular privacy and data protection risk assessments, covering:
Example:
A retail app collecting geolocation data must justify real-time collection and implement controls limiting unauthorized use.
New CPPA rules introduce rigorous oversight of AI and algorithmic decision systems.
Requirements include:
Example:
An employer using AI resume-screening tools must allow employees or applicants to opt out and request manual review.
Businesses must offer:
Organizations meeting size or risk thresholds must complete annual cybersecurity audits.
Audits may include:
Organizations must:
They include updates to AI rules, cybersecurity audits, risk assessments, transparency standards, and data minimization obligations.
Final rulemaking is expected in 2025, with enforcement beginning in 2026.
Organizations that process high-risk or high-volume consumer data.
By requiring notices, opt-outs, algorithmic explanations, and proof of non-discriminatory outcomes.
Yes — if they handle personal data of California residents.
The CPPA 2026 requirements set a new standard for data protection in California. Businesses that act early—strengthening data governance, documenting AI use, updating privacy notices, and preparing for audits—will minimize compliance risk and improve overall operational resilience.