The Safeguards Rule File GLB-314 · Automotive Risk Management Partners
Brief · No. 016 15 U.S.C. § 6801 · 16 CFR Part 314

The FTC Safeguards Rule, in plain English.

Under the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act, auto dealers are treated as financial institutions — which means the information in every credit application falls under a federal data-security rule. This is a high-level walk-through of what that rule is and what it asks of a dealership.

Read the brief ↓ Reference only · not legal advice
Fig. 01 · Customer information, secured
NPI · ENCRYPTED
DOC · GLB-0016 REV · 2026.06 CLASS · NPI

The FTC Safeguards Rule is the part of the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act¹ that tells "financial institutions" how to protect the customer information they hold. For an auto dealer, that information is the credit application — and the rule asks for a written security program built around a named owner, a risk assessment, and a short list of concrete safeguards². This brief lays out what the rule is, who it covers, and what it requires — no product, no pitch.

A dealer is a
financial institution.

GLBA defines a financial institution broadly: any business significantly engaged in a financial activity. Because dealers routinely take credit applications and arrange financing, the FTC treats them as financial institutions — and the data in those applications is nonpublic personal information the Safeguards Rule is written to protect.

15 U.S.C. § 6801
1999 GLBA
Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act enacted
FTC
314 16 CFR
The Safeguards Rule itself
Jun 2023
2023 amend.
Expanded requirements in force
May 2024
500 + people
Triggers FTC breach notice

What the rule
requires.

01
16 CFR 314.3

A written information security program.

The rule requires an actual written program (a WISP) — reasonably designed for the size and complexity of the dealership and the sensitivity of the information it holds. Everything below lives inside that document.

02
16 CFR 314.4(a)

A designated Qualified Individual.

One named person must be responsible for overseeing, implementing, and enforcing the program. It can be an employee or an outside provider, but the dealership keeps ultimate responsibility either way.

03
16 CFR 314.4(b)

A written risk assessment.

The program has to be built on a documented assessment of the reasonably foreseeable internal and external risks to customer information — and refreshed when the business or the threats change.

04
16 CFR 314.4(c)(1)

Access controls.

Access to customer information is limited to those who need it. That means authentication, periodic review of who has access, and removing it when a role changes or an employee leaves.

05
16 CFR 314.4(c)(3)

Encryption of customer information.

Nonpublic personal information must be encrypted both at rest and in transit. Where encryption is infeasible, the Qualified Individual may approve an equivalent control in writing.

06
16 CFR 314.4(c)(5)

Multi-factor authentication.

MFA is required for anyone accessing systems that hold customer information — unless the Qualified Individual approves a reasonably equivalent control in writing.

07
16 CFR 314.4(c)(6)

Secure disposal.

Customer information must be securely disposed of no later than two years after it was last needed, unless a legitimate business reason or a legal hold requires keeping it longer.

08
16 CFR 314.4(f)

Service-provider oversight.

Vendors that touch customer data have to be selected for their safeguards, bound by contract to maintain them, and reassessed over time. The credit-app pipeline runs through a lot of third parties.

09
16 CFR 314.4(h)

A written incident response plan.

The program must include a written plan for responding to a security event — roles, internal processes, communications, and how the plan is evaluated and revised after an incident.

The program also has to be tested or monitored over time, supported by security-awareness training for staff, kept current as risks change, and reported on in writing — at least annually — to a board or senior officer.

§ 04 · Notice
30 DAYS · MAX

The breach-notification clause.

A 2024 amendment added a reporting duty. If a security event involves the unencrypted nonpublic personal information of 500 or more consumers, the dealer must notify the FTC as soon as possible — and no later than 30 days after discovering it — through the FTC's online portal.

That federal notice is separate from any obligation a state breach-notification law may impose, which can carry its own timeline and its own audience.

It doesn't stand alone.

The Safeguards Rule is one obligation among several that touch the same customer data. These sit alongside it — they don't replace it.

16 CFR Part 681

Red Flags Rule

A separate FTC rule that requires an identity-theft prevention program. It overlaps with Safeguards at the dealership but is its own obligation — protecting against identity theft, not just securing the data.

16 CFR Part 313

Privacy Rule (GLBA)

GLBA's other half. The Privacy Rule governs the notices you give customers about how their information is shared; the Safeguards Rule governs how you protect it. Most dealers owe both.

CCPA / CPRA & others

State privacy laws

A growing number of states impose their own data-security and consumer-privacy duties. They sit on top of the federal rule — they don't replace it — so a dealer can owe both at once.

Frequently filed questions.

01. Why is a car dealership a “financial institution”? +

Because dealers regularly arrange or extend financing. Under the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act, any business “significantly engaged” in financial activities is a financial institution for the FTC's purposes. Taking credit applications and arranging vehicle financing puts most franchise and independent dealers squarely within the Safeguards Rule.

02. What counts as the information being protected? +

Nonpublic personal information (NPI) — the customer data a dealer collects in connection with a financial product or service. In a store, that's the contents of a credit application: name, address, Social Security number, driver's license, income, bank and account details, and the like.

03. Who is the “Qualified Individual”? +

The single person designated to oversee and enforce the information security program. The rule doesn't require a specific certification, and the role can be filled by an employee or an outside service provider — but the dealership remains responsible for the program regardless of who holds the title.

04. What did the 2023 amendments change? +

The FTC expanded the rule with specific, prescriptive requirements — a named Qualified Individual, a written risk assessment, encryption, MFA, an incident response plan, and more — most of which took effect in June 2023. A later amendment added a breach-notification duty that took effect in May 2024.

05. When does a dealer have to notify the FTC of a breach? +

Under the notification amendment, a dealer must notify the FTC as soon as possible, and no later than 30 days after discovering a security event involving the unencrypted nonpublic personal information of 500 or more consumers. The notice is filed through the FTC's online portal.

06. Does the Safeguards Rule replace state data-security laws? +

No. It's a federal floor. State privacy and data-breach laws can impose additional notice timelines and consumer rights that apply on top of the federal rule, so a dealership often has to satisfy both at the same time.

§ 07 · Also on file

Part of a wider compliance desk.

This brief is published by Automotive Risk Management Partners, which works across the full range of dealership obligations — OSHA, EPA, the FTC Safeguards Rule, F&I, and data security. A few companion references:

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