One crucial element we want to zone in on is buttons.
Because their placement, color, or wording, can significantly impact users’ engagement, decisions, and ultimately, your cookie compliance. But many businesses still struggle with getting them right.
Additionally, a lot has happened in the regulatory landscape within the last six months: Regulatory bodies across Europe have issued formal warnings, enforcement actions, and hefty fines targeting websites using non-compliant banners.
Particularly those based on deceptive design patterns – with buttons often being a subject of contention.
As data privacy regulations evolve, authorities are paying closer attention to the design elements of cookie banners and how they influence user choices.
To keep you up to speed with the current legal landscape, we prepared an overview of:
- The latest regulatory developments.
- How they might affect you.
- How to design a compliant, non-deceptive cookie banner (including a checklist).
Recent rulings on deceptive cookie banner designs
Regulatory bodies such as the UK’s Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO), France’s Commission Nationale de l’Informatique et des Libertés (CNIL), and the Belgian Data Protection Authority (DPA) have tightened their enforcement on misleading cookie banners, particularly those that use dark patterns to manipulate user choices.
Belgian DPA’s action against illegal cookies banners
On September 6th 2024, the Belgian DPA took action against Mediahuis for the unlawful use of cookie banners on four of its news websites: De Standaard, Het Belang van Limburg, Het Nieuwsblad, and Gazet van Antwerpen.
Cookie banner design violations found by the Belgian DPA:
- No “Reject All” button at the first layer: The websites did not provide an equally accessible option to reject all cookies at the first level of the banner, violating the principle of freely given and informed consent.
- Deceptive button colors: The “Accept All” button was highlighted in an eye-catching color, while the refusal options were less visible, nudging users toward acceptance in a manipulative way.
- Difficulties in withdrawing consent: The process to withdraw consent required multiple steps, making it significantly harder than giving consent, which goes against the principles in the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR).
- Placing non-essential cookies without prior consent: Cookies that were not strictly necessary were placed on users’ devices before obtaining explicit consent, which is a direct violation of cookie consent rules.
CNIL's formal notice on misleading cookie banners
CNIL is the French National DPA. It has historically been quite strict in its interpretation and enforcement of the ePrivacy Directive and GDPR – which has resulted in a lot of hefty fines over the years.
In December 2024, CNIL issued formal warnings to websites using what they considered misleading cookie banners.
Cookie banner design violations found by CNIL:
- Unequal button presentation: “Accept” buttons are easily visible, while “Reject” options are obscured, often hidden in plain text or styled to be less prominent.
- Ambiguous wording: Certain phrasings, such as “I decline non-essential purposes,” creates confusion about the choices being made.
- Multiple “Accept” options: Banners present users with multiple “Accept” buttons, while the “Reject” option appears only once.
- Layered rejection options: Users must click through multiple layers or sub-menus to reject cookies, making it more difficult than accepting.
ICO’s position on cookie banners and online tracking
The ICO is the UK national DPA. In late 2023, the ICO began a compliance review of the UK’s top 100 websites. The process resulted in the ICO issuing formal warnings to 53 of them.
In January 2025, the ICO announced its plans to extend this review process to the UK’s top 1,000 websites, as part of its strategy for 2025, “Taking control: our online tracking strategy“.
The strategy aims to increase efforts to ensure that users are not pressured or tricked into sharing personal data, and to actively take enforcement action where harmful data collection practices persist.
As part of this strategy, ICO released updated guidance on how to manage consent in practice – including tightened cookie rules and specific guidelines for acceptable and non-acceptable design practices for cookie consent banners.
ICO’s updated cookie banner guidelines (2025):
- Make it as easy to refuse consent as it is to accept. For example with equally prominent options to “Accept All” or “Reject All” non-essential cookies, or to customize choices via a “More Options” button.
- Require a positive action from the user to indicate opt-in, before setting non-essential cookies.
- Include “More Options” tabs of consent mechanisms with toggles for all non-essential cookies turned off by default.
- Include granular options for different purposes or categories of cookies.
- Include a function that allows users to withdraw or edit their consent, inform users where to find it and how to use it.
Get a GDPR-compliant cookie consent banner today
How national DPAs influence EU-wide rules
If your business is neither French, Belgian, nor British, you might naturally think that their positions on the matter are irrelevant to you.
However, the regulatory decisions taken by CNIL, ICO, and the Belgian DPA are not just relevant to businesses operating in those specific countries.
Because these rulings often set the stage for broader interpretations by the European Data Protection Board (EDPB), influencing future EU-wide guidance.
What is the EDPB?
- Issuing guidance documents, recommendations, and best practices to clarify how data privacy laws should be applied.
- Ensuring that all DPAs interpret and enforce GDPR consistently, preventing discrepancies across different countries.
- Providing input on new privacy laws, policies, and international data transfer agreements to ensure they align with privacy principles.
- Settling cases of disputes between national DPAs, by issuing legally binding decisions that all European Union countries must follow.
What does the ePrivacy Directive and GDPR say about cookie banner design practices?
Design cues for a GDPR compliant cookie banner design:
- You must provide users with “the opportunity to refuse to have a cookie or similar device stored on their terminal equipment” (ePrivacy Directive, Article 5(3)).
- Your methods for “giving information, offering a right to refuse or requesting consent should be made as user-friendly as possible” (ePrivacy Directive, Recital 25).
- Your users “have the right to withdraw his or her consent at any time” (GDPR, Article 7(3)).
- For users it should “be as easy to withdraw as to give consent” (GDPR, Article 7(3)).
EDPBs Cookie Banner Taskforce
In January 2023, the Taskforce published a report on their work. In it, data protection authorities (DPAs) agreed on a shared understanding of key rules from the ePrivacy Directive and GDPR.
They covered things like reject buttons, pre-ticked boxes, cookie banner design, and how users can withdraw consent.
Problematic design practices identified in the Cookie Banner Taskforce's 2023 report
No reject button on the first layer
Deceptive link design
Deceptive button colors and contrast
No easy way to withdraw consent
How do the recent regulatory developments in data privacy affect you?
So even if a ruling originates in one country, businesses across the EU should anticipate similar enforcement trends.
Thus, the safest (and easiest) approach is to align your cookie banner with the strictest interpretations of the law to ensure full compliance.
What’s the best cookie banner design for 2025?
So what should you change in your cookie banner design?
Taking into account the GDPR, ePrivacy Directive, EDPB, and recent rulings from national DPAs, the key question is:
How can you design a user-friendly cookie banner that ensures compliance?
Compliant cookie banner checklist for marketers and designers in 2025
1. Equal prominence for consent choices
- If an “Accept All” button is present, make sure a “Reject All” button is equally visible, styled similarly, and placed on the same level.
- Buttons should have consistent size, font, and contrast to avoid nudging users toward one option.
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2. Clear and concise language – no unambiguous wording
✔️ Use explicit labels for buttons such as “Accept All” and “Reject All”.
❌ Avoid vague terms like “More Options” or “Customize” that obscure rejection options.
3. Granular consent options
- Users must be able to opt in or out of specific cookie categories (e.g., analytics, marketing, functional cookies) rather than facing an all-or-nothing choice.
- These options should be immediately accessible, not buried in multiple layers of settings.
4. Positive action for consent
- No implied consent: Simply continuing to browse the website must not be interpreted as consent.
- Give users the option to actively select their preferences before setting non-essential cookies.
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5. Easy way to change or withdraw consent
- Users must be able to change or revoke consent as easily as they gave it.
- Provide users with a persistent, easily accessible method for revisiting preferences (like a preference management widget).
6. No deceptive design practices
- Pre-ticked consent checkboxes (users must actively opt in).
- Hiding the reject button behind multiple clicks or in small, low-contrast text.
- Making the “Accept” button visually dominant (e.g., bright colors, larger size) while downplaying rejection options.
- Using misleading wording that pressures users into accepting cookies.
Looking for the best cookie banner design?
Try Cookie Information cookie compliance platform for free to design GDPR-compliant cookie banners that ensure compliance while enhancing user experience.
Frequently asked questions about compliant cookie consent banner design
Is it a legal requirement to have a cookie banner?
Does GDPR require a cookie banner?
How should a cookie banner look?
How to create a cookie consent banner?
The easiest way to create a cookie banner is to implement a Consent Management Platform (CMP) to ensure compliance with privacy laws. A good CMP, like Cookie Information, allows you to customize the banner’s appearance and settings while keeping a record of user consents.
What should your cookie banner say?
Does cookie banner affect SEO?
A cookie banner shouldn’t affect your SEO, as long as you use a responsive design, lightweight scripts, and maintain fast layout loading.
Do I need to store cookie consent?
Do I need a cookie banner for Google Analytics?
Do all websites need a cookie pop up?
What are the different types of cookie banners?
- Explicit opt-in banners (common in the EU) require users to actively accept cookies.
- Opt-out banners (used in some regions) assume consent unless users decline.
- Notice-only banners simply inform users about cookies but don’t seek consent. In most cases, these banners are not compliant.
Does Google consent mode v2 affect how your cookie banner should look?
Yes, Consent Mode v2 requires websites to collect explicit user consent for ad personalization and data processing. This means that your cookie banners should offer granular consent options for different categories or purposes. You should also include a link to Google’s Business Data Responsibility site in your cookie banner and privacy policy