Skip to content
TrustYourWebsite
What We CheckFree ToolsLearnPricingAbout
Menu
What We CheckFree ToolsLearnPricingAboutSample ReportNews

Settings

Country

Language

NederlandsEnglish
Scan Free
TrustYourWebsite

Intelligent scanner for European websites.

Resources

  • Learning Hub
  • Guides
  • By Industry
  • By Country
  • News
  • Cookie Checker
  • Privacy Policy Generator

Product

  • Pricing
  • Sample Report
  • About
  • Open source

Legal

  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service
  • Cookie Policy
  • Imprint
  • Report accessibility issue

© 2026 TrustYourWebsite. Built in the Netherlands. Chamber of Commerce (NL): 42030553 · VAT: NL005443213B36

Supervisory authority: Autoriteit Persoonsgegevens (AP)

Digital service, available immediately after payment. No shipping costs.

Home/News/EDPB 2026-2027 Work Programme: New GDPR Guidelines & Tools
GDPR

EDPB 2026-2027 Work Programme: New GDPR Guidelines & Tools

By TrustYourWebsite Editorial14 April 20262 min read

Source: EDPB

What is happening?

The European Data Protection Board (EDPB) adopted its work programme for 2026 and 2027 on 12 February 2026, according to the EDPB. The programme sets out what the board plans to work on over the next two years, with a focus on making GDPR compliance easier and improving cooperation between data protection authorities across Europe.

What will the EDPB actually produce?

According to the EDPB, the board plans to develop guidelines on a range of topics that affect how businesses handle personal data. These include:

  • Consent or Pay models (where websites ask users to either accept tracking or pay a fee)
  • Anonymisation and pseudonymisation (how to properly strip or protect personal data)
  • Children's data (rules around collecting information from younger users)
  • Generative AI and data scraping (how AI tools interact with personal data)
  • The relationship between the AI Act and GDPR
  • Political advertising

Alongside these guidelines, the EDPB also plans to produce practical tools aimed at non-experts, including templates, checklists, FAQs and step-by-step guides. This is a notable shift toward making compliance resources more accessible to people without a legal background.

Why does this matter?

For small business owners, GDPR can feel like a maze of legal language. The EDPB's stated goal of producing plain-language tools is a practical development worth watching. If you run a website that uses cookie consent banners, collects customer data or uses any AI-powered tools, several of the planned guidelines are directly relevant to you.

The guidelines on Consent or Pay are particularly worth following. This model has become more common as businesses look for alternatives to straightforward cookie consent, and clearer rules will help you understand what is and is not acceptable. Similarly, if your website or marketing tools use any form of AI, the planned guidance on generative AI and the AI Act will be useful reading once published.

For now, it is worth making sure your existing data practices are in good shape. Our GDPR compliance checklist and privacy policy requirements guide are good starting points.

What does this mean for your website?

The EDPB's 2026 and 2027 work programme signals that clearer, more practical guidance is on the way for topics like cookie consent models, AI tools and children's data. While none of these guidelines are published yet, keeping an eye on EDPB updates will help you stay ahead of any new expectations. In the meantime, reviewing your current privacy setup against existing rules is the most useful step you can take today.

Share this article

Check your website now

Free website scan covering GDPR, copyright, accessibility, security, and more.

Start free check

Related articles

GDPR

Belgian Tech Firm Fined 176k for Keeping Ex-Employee Mailbox

A large Belgian tech company received a total fine of 176,000 euro from the Belgian Data Protection Authority for failing to timely delete the mailbox of a former female employee.

17 May 20262 min read
GDPR

GDPR Consent Rules: Why Terms of Service Fail

Dutch legal blog Ius Mentis explains that GDPR makes it legally impossible to obtain valid consent for personal data use through terms of service or general conditions, and that Article 7(2) GDPR…

16 May 20262 min read
GDPR

CJEU Ruling: First-Time DSAR Refusal Allowed

On 19 March 2026, the CJEU ruled in Case C-526/24 (Brillen Rottler) that a data subject's first DSAR can be refused as 'excessive' under Article 12(5) GDPR if the controller can demonstrate abusive…

14 May 20262 min read