Canadian Code of Advertising Standards
Canadian Code of Advertising Standards
Canadian Code of Advertising Standards
CANADIAN CODE OF
ADVERTISING STANDARDS
The Canadian Code of Advertising Standards, which has been developed to promote the professional practice of
advertising, was first published in 1963. Since that time it has been reviewed and revised periodically to keep it
contemporary. The Code is administered by Advertising Standards Canada. ASC is the industry body committed to
creating and maintaining community confidence in advertising.
www.adstandards.com
E-mail: [email protected]
Web: www.adstandards.com
TABLE OF CONTENTS
SELF-REGULATION OF ADVERTISING IN CANADA... 1
Overview 1
Definitions 1
Application 2
Exclusions 2
Political and Election Advertising 2
Excluded Media 2
Scope of the Code 2
Interpretation Guidelines 2
CODE PROVISIONS... 3
1. Accuracy and Clarity 3
2. Disguised Advertising Techniques 3
3. Price Claims 3
4. Bait and Switch 3
5. Guarantees 3
6. Comparative Advertising 4
7. Testimonials 4
8. Professional or Scientific Claims 4
9. Imitation 4
10. Safety 4
11. Superstition and Fears 4
12. Advertising to Children 4
13. Advertising to Minors 4
14. Unacceptable Depictions and Portrayals 4
THE PRECLEARANCE AND REGULATORY MOSAIC... 5
THE CONSUMER COMPLAINT PROCEDURE... 5
How to Submit Consumer Complaints to ASC 5
How Consumer Complaints are Received and Handled by ASC and Council 5
Non-Reviewable Complaints 6
Complaint Review Process 6
Complaints Involving Clauses 10 or 14 6
Complaints Involving All Other Code clauses 6
Administratively Resolved Complaints Involving Clauses 1 and 3... 6
Council Hearing and Decision 7
Appealing a Council Decision 7
Ad Complaints Reports 7
Identifying the Advertiser and its Advertising... 8
Re-Opening a Case 8
Advertisers Failure to Respond or Participate 8
Failure to Follow Procedure or Comply with Decision 8
FOR MORE INFORMATION 8
APPLICATION
The Code applies to advertising by (or for):
advertisers promoting the use of goods and services;
corporations, organizations or institutions seeking to
improve their public image or advance a point of view;
and
governments, government departments and crown
corporations.
INTERPRETATION GUIDELINES
The Code may be supplemented from time to time
by Interpretation Guidelines that enhance industry
and public understanding of the interpretation
and application of the Codes 14 clauses. The
Interpretation Guidelines can be found on ASCs
website (www.adstandards.com).
EXCLUSIONS
Political and Election Advertising
Canadians are entitled to expect that political
advertising and election advertising will respect
the standards articulated in the Code. However, it is
not intended that the Code govern or restrict the free
expression of public opinion or ideas through political
advertising or election advertising, which are
excluded from the application of this Code.
Excluded Media
The following are excluded from the definition of
medium and the application of the Code:
i) foreign media (namely media that originate outside
Canada and contain the advertising in question) unless
the advertiser is a Canadian person or entity; and
ii) packaging, wrappers and labels.
SCOPE OF THE CODE
The authority of the Code applies only to the content of
advertisements and does not prohibit the promotion
of legal products or services or their portrayal in
circumstances of normal use. The context and content
of the advertisement and the audience actually,
or likely to be, or intended to be, reached by the
advertisement, and the medium/media used to deliver
the advertisement, are relevant factors in assessing its
conformity with the Code. In the matter of consumer
complaints, Council will be encouraged to refer, when in
its judgment it would be helpful and appropriate to do
so, to the principles expressed in the Gender Portrayal
Guidelines respecting the representations of women and
men in advertisements.
CODE PROVISIONS
The Code is broadly supported by industry and is designed to help set and maintain
standards of honesty, truth, accuracy, fairness and propriety in advertising.
The provisions of the Code should be adhered to both in letter and in spirit. Advertisers
and their representatives must substantiate their advertised claims promptly when
requested to do so by Council.
1. ACCURACY AND CLARITY
In assessing the truthfulness and accuracy of a
message, advertising claim or representation under
Clause 1 of the Code the concern is not with the intent of
the sender or precise legality of the presentation. Rather
the focus is on the message, claim or representation
as received or perceived, i.e. the general impression
conveyed by the advertisement.
(a) Advertisements must not contain inaccurate, deceptive
or otherwise misleading claims, statements, illustrations
or representations, either direct or implied, with regard to
any identified or identifiable product(s) or service(s).
(b) Advertisements must not omit relevant information
in a manner that, in the result, is deceptive.
(c) All pertinent details of an advertised offer must be
clearly and understandably stated.
(d) Disclaimers and asterisked or footnoted information
must not contradict more prominent aspects of the
message and should be located and presented in such a
manner as to be clearly legible and/or audible.
(e) Both in principle and practice, all advertising claims
and representations must be supportable. If the support
on which an advertised claim or representation depends
is test or survey data, such data must be reasonably
competent and reliable, reflecting accepted principles
of research design and execution that characterize the
current state of the art. At the same time, however,
such research should be economically and technically
feasible, with due recognition of the various costs of
doing business.
(f) The advertiser must be clearly identified in an
advocacy advertisement.
2. DISGUISED ADVERTISING TECHNIQUES
No advertisement shall be presented in a format or style
that conceals its commercial intent.
3. PRICE CLAIMS
(a) No advertisement shall include deceptive price
claims or discounts, unrealistic price comparisons or
exaggerated claims as to worth or value. Regular Price,
Suggested Retail Price, Manufacturers List Price
and Fair Market Value are deceptive terms when
used by an advertiser to indicate a savings, unless they
represent prices at which, in the market place where the
advertisement appears, the advertiser actually sold a
substantial volume of the advertised product or service
within a reasonable period of time (such as six months)
immediately before or after making the representation in
the advertisement; or offered the product or service for
sale in good faith for a substantial period of time (such
as six months) immediately before or after making the
representation in the advertisement.
(b) Where price discounts are offered, qualifying
statements such as up to, XX off, etc., must be in
easily readable type, in close proximity to the prices
quoted and, where practical, legitimate regular prices
must be included.
(c) Prices quoted in advertisements in Canadian media,
other than in Canadian funds, must be so identified.
4. BAIT AND SWITCH
Advertisements must not misrepresent the consumers
opportunity to purchase the goods and services at the
terms presented. If supply of the sale item is limited, or
the seller can fulfil only limited demand, this must be
clearly stated in the advertisement.
5. GUARANTEES
No advertisement shall offer a guarantee or warranty,
unless the guarantee or warranty is fully explained as
to conditions and limits and the name of the guarantor
or warrantor is provided, or it is indicated where such
information may be obtained.
6. COMPARATIVE ADVERTISING
Advertisements must not, unfairly, discredit,
disparage or attack one or more products, services,
advertisements, companies or entities, or exaggerate
the nature or importance of competitive differences.
7. TESTIMONIALS
Testimonials, endorsements or representations of
opinion or preference, must reflect the genuine,
reasonably current opinion of the individual(s), group or
organization making such representations, and must be
based upon adequate information about or experience
with the product or service being advertised, and must
not otherwise be deceptive.
8. PROFESSIONAL OR SCIENTIFIC CLAIMS
Advertisements must not distort the true meaning
of statements made by professionals or scientific
authorities. Advertising claims must not imply that they
have a scientific basis that they do not truly possess.
Any scientific, professional or authoritative claims or
statements must be applicable to the Canadian context,
unless otherwise clearly stated.
9. IMITATION
No advertiser shall imitate the copy, slogans or
illustrations of another advertiser in such a manner as
to mislead the consumer.
10. SAFETY
Advertisements must not without reason, justifiable
on educational or social grounds, display a disregard
for safety by depicting situations that might reasonably
be interpreted as encouraging unsafe or dangerous
practices, or acts.
11. SUPERSTITION AND FEARS
Advertisements must not exploit superstitions or play
upon fears to mislead the consumer.
NON-REVIEWABLE COMPLAINTS
If, upon review, it appears to ASC or Council that
a complaint is not a disguised complaint between
advertisers or special interest group complaint, and
that based on the provisions of the Code reasonable
grounds for the complaint appear to exist, then the
consumer complaint will be accepted for processing.
If at any time thereafter during the complaint review
process, but prior to the release of Councils decision on
the complaint, either ASC or Council concludes that, in
reality, the complaint is a complaint between advertisers
or a special interest group complaint, but not a
consumer complaint, the process will be discontinued
and the complainant notified accordingly. In these
cases, the complainant will be reminded that alternative
approaches should be considered by the complainant
for registering an advertising-related complaint, such
as under ASCs Advertising Dispute Procedure or Special
Interest Group Complaint Procedure.
ASC or Council shall decline to accept, or to proceed
further with, a complaint, or any part thereof, where it is
of the opinion that:
a) the specific advertisement(s) about which the
complainant alleges a Code violation has/have not
been identified;
b) based on the provisions of the Code, reasonable
grounds for the complaint do not appear to exist;
c) the advertising, or such part of the advertising to
which the complaint refers is, substantially, also the
subject of litigation or other legal action then actively
undertaken and pursued in Canada; or is under review,
or subject to an order, by a Canadian court, or an
agent or agency (or some other comparable entity) of
the Canadian Government; or that generally meets,
or exceeds, or is not inconsistent with, advertising
standards articulated in regulations, guidelines, or
otherwise by an agency (or some other comparable
entity) of the Canadian government or a provincial
government with respect to products or services that
are fundamentally comparable to the products or
services advertised in the advertising to which the
complaint refers; or has been, specifically, approved
by an agency (or some other comparable entity) of the
Canadian Government; or that
d) such advertising is not within the purview of the
Code or, if in ASCs opinion, the complaint is beyond
the resources or ability of ASC to resolve effectively,
reasonably or conclusively under this Procedure; or if
the matter to which such advertising refers has been
identified by a competent authority such as an agency
(or some other comparable entity) of the Canadian
RE-OPENING A CASE
ASC will have the discretionary right to reactivate the
Consumer Complaint Procedure, in whole or part, including
the imposition of sanctions provided in the Code, if an
advertiser fails to fulfil its undertaking to withdraw or
amend an advertisement; or if the matter underlying
the complaint is of a continuing or repetitive nature,
suggesting an avoidance of the provision(s) of the Code.
ADVERTISERS FAILURE TO RESPOND OR
PARTICIPATE
If an advertiser fails to respond in a timely manner to
ASCs request for a copy of the advertisement that is
the subject of a consumer complaint, ASC may ask the
carrying media to assist ASC by providing it with a copy
of the advertisement in question. If an advertiser fails to
respond to a complaint or participate in the Consumer
Complaint Procedure the complaint may be decided
in the advertisers absence based on the information
already in the possession of Council and on any further
pertinent information submitted by the complainant for
Councils review.
FAILURE TO FOLLOW PROCEDURE OR COMPLY WITH
DECISION
The Code is a reflection of advertising standards by
which industry wishes to be held accountable. Because
self-regulation is more than self-restraint on the part
of individual companies or entities, the Code would
be incomplete without effective sanctions to enforce
compliance.
If an advertiser fails to voluntarily comply with the
decision of Council, ASC:
will advise exhibiting media of the advertisers failure to
co-operate and request medias support in no longer
exhibiting the advertising in question; and
may publicly declare, in such manner as Council deems
appropriate, that the advertising in question, and the
advertiser who will be identified, have been found to
violate the Code.
FOR MORE INFORMATION
Questions regarding the interpretation and application of
the Code should be addressed to ASC:
Advertising Standards Canada
175 Bloor Street East
South Tower, Suite 1801
Toronto, ON M4W 3R8
Telephone: 416 961-6311
Fax: 416 961-7904
Advertising Standards Canada
2015 Peel Street, Suite 915
Montreal, Quebec H3A 1T8
Telephone: 514 931-8060
Fax: 877 956-8646
E-mail: [email protected]
Website: www.adstandards.com
ADVERTISING STANDARDS CANADA | 8