The FCC has once again delayed the effective date of the “Revoke All” rule under the Telephone Consumer Protection Act, extending it to January 31, 2027.
The Revoke All rule requires that if a called party uses any reasonable method to revoke consent under the TCPA, that consent is considered fully revoked, meaning the caller may not send additional robocalls or robotexts unless an exemption applies.
The FCC adopted the Revoke All rule, along with other consent revocation provisions, in February 2024, with an initial effective date of April 11, 2025. However, just days before that date, the FCC issued an Order delaying the Revoke All rule for one year until April 11, 2026. This delay came in response to waiver requests from banking and financial entities that needed more time to implement revocation procedures to comply.
Importantly, other revocation rules took effect on April 11, 2025, and remain in force.
Why Another Delay?
In October 2025, the FCC launched a TCPA rulemaking seeking comments on whether to modify the requirement that a caller must treat an opt-out request made in response to one type of call to be an opt-out request for all types of calls. Comments were due January 5, 2026, and many stakeholders urged the FCC to delay or eliminate the Revoke All rule due to compliance burdens and resource constraints.
The FCC agreed, noting that another delay was necessary to avoid unnecessary compliance costs, especially since the FCC may modify the Revoke All rule through the ongoing rulemaking procedure. Businesses and interested parties can still submit reply comments by February 3, 2026.
What Should Businesses Do Now?
While the FCC sorts out these changes, businesses must comply with all other consent revocation rules, including the following requirements:
- Businesses must honor consumer consent revocations through any “reasonable method.”
- A consumer’s reply to a text with terms such as “stop,” “quit,” “end,” “revoke,” “opt out,” “cancel,” and “unsubscribe” is considered a reasonable method.
- If a consumer’s reply to an incoming text message uses words other than “stop,” “quit,” “end,” “revoke,” “opt out,” “cancel,” or “unsubscribe,” the caller must still treat that reply as a valid revocation request if a reasonable person would understand those words to convey a request to revoke consent.
- A consumer request submitted to a website or phone number specifically set up by the business to process opt-outs are also deemed reasonable.
- If a consumer can’t respond to texts due to technical limitations, the business must disclose this limitation and provide other opt-out instructions on each text message.
- Businesses must honor revocations and internal DNC requests ASAP, not to exceed 10 business days.
The Revoke All rule is on hold until January 31, 2027, but compliance obligations under the TCPA, including other revocation of consent rules, remain in force. Businesses should continue monitoring FCC developments and ensure all other revocation requirements are fully implemented. If your business wants to help shape the FCC’s decision on modifying the Revoke All rule, reply comments are due by February 3, 2026.