The amended regulations from the California Privacy Protection Agency (CalPrivacy) recently went into effect on January 1, 2026. The amended regulations introduce three major new components: (1) requirements for automated decision-making technology (ADMT), (2) cybersecurity audits, and (3) risk assessments for high-risk processing. Together, these changes represent one of the most consequential expansions of the California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA) to date, and for many businesses, compliance may require substantial new operational, technical, and governance work.
Businesses may need to consider taking the following actions, all on compressed timelines:
What follows is a practical guide to these new requirements, their implications, and some potential steps businesses can consider taking now to help mitigate regulatory and enforcement risk.
The amended regulations add requirements for businesses that use ADMT to make “significant decisions.” ADMT, which includes profiling, is defined as any technology that processes personal information and uses computation to replace human decision-making or substantially replace human decision-making. To avoid the ADMT decision substantially replacing human decision-making, the human reviewer must:
These requirements apply if a business uses ADMT to make a “significant decision,” which includes the provision or denial of any of the following:
Businesses that use ADMT to make significant decisions must provide California residents: (1) a notice before using ADMT; (2) an opportunity to opt-out of ADMT decisions (subject to exceptions); and (3) a right to access information about the ADMT use. A business that uses ADMT for a significant decision prior to January 1, 2027, must be in compliance with these requirements by January 1, 2027. A business that uses ADMT on or after January 1, 2027, must be in compliance with these requirements any time it is using ADMT for a significant decision.
The amended regulations require businesses that process a sufficient volume of personal information of Californians to complete thorough and independent audits of their cybersecurity program. Specifically, the audit requirements apply if a business meets one of the following below:
The regulations require the business to allow the auditor to determine which portions of a business’s cybersecurity program—ranging from access controls to secure coding practices—will be subject to the audit and to provide access to all of the information that the auditor requests as relevant to the cybersecurity audit. The audit must be independent and thorough, covering 18 separate cyber components that are detailed in the regulations. Relevant companies must complete the required audits annually and submit a certification of compliance to CalPrivacy that is signed, under penalty of perjury, by a member of the business’s executive management team who is directly responsible for the business’s cyber-audit compliance, has sufficient knowledge to provide accurate information, and has authority to submit the certification. This certification must, among other statements, represent that “the business has not made any attempt to influence the auditor’s decisions or assessments regarding the cybersecurity audit.”Businesses required to complete cybersecurity audits must submit certifications to CalPrivacy by: (1) April 1, 2028, if the business makes over $100 million; (2) April 1, 2029, if the business makes between $50 million and $100 million; or (3) April 1, 2030, if the business makes less than $50 million.
The cybersecurity audit regulations establish a new obligation to conduct thorough and independent audits of the business’s cybersecurity program for protecting personal information. These new requirements may create significant questions for businesses, including to the extent that they require:
For further insight into the cybersecurity audit requirements, please join our webinar, CCPA Cyber Audits, on Wednesday, January 28, where we will cover the updated cyber audit requirements and key steps businesses can take to mitigate associated legal risks.
The amended regulations require businesses to conduct a risk assessment that evaluates whether the risks to California residents’ privacy from high-risk processing of personal information outweigh the benefits to the individuals, the business, other stakeholders, and the public. A business must conduct a risk assessment if it engages in certain high-risk processing, including “selling” or “sharing” personal information, processing sensitive personal information, using automated processing to make a significant decision or to infer or extrapolate about a California resident, or processing personal information that the business intends to use to train an ADMT for a significant decision concerning an individual or a facial-recognition, emotion-recognition, or other technology that verifies an individual’s identity, or conducts physical or biological identification or profiling of an individual.
A business must review and update the risk assessment at least once every three years or within 45 calendar days of a material change to the processing activity. The business must retain its risk assessments, including originals and updated versions, for as long as the processing continues or for five years after completing the risk assessment, whichever is later.
Businesses subject to the risk assessment requirements were required to begin compliance by January 1, 2026. For risk assessments conducted in 2026 and 2027, the business must submit the information and attestation to CalPrivacy no later than April 1, 2028.
For risk assessments conducted after 2027, the business must submit the information to CalPrivacy no later than April 1 following any year during which the business conducted the risk assessment. For example, if the risk assessment was conducted in 2028, the business must submit the information to CalPrivacy no later than April 1, 2029.
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A redlined version reflecting the amendments to the CCPA regulations can be found here. As reflected therein, CalPrivacy made additional textual edits to pre-existing requirements under the CCPA, including to some of the definitions, consumer rights, and requirements regarding children’s data. CalPrivacy’s publication, 7 Things to Know Before 2026 CCPA Updates Take Effect, provides a helpful overview of other changes under the CCPA that went into effect on January 1, 2026, along with the above-mentioned three new major additions.
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