Lithuanian LOEC

Law on Electronic Communications (Elektroninių ryšių įstatymas)

Key Facts

Effective Date
January 1, 2004
Enacted
January 1, 2004
Enforcing Authority
VDAI (Valstybinė duomenų apsaugos inspekcija — State Data Protection Inspectorate)
Consent Model
Opt-in
Applies To
Any entity storing or accessing information on terminal equipment of users in Lithuania

Overview

Lithuania implements the ePrivacy Directive through the Law on Electronic Communications. While national cookie penalties are among the lowest in the EU, the VDAI has been increasingly active in monitoring compliance, with 2023 enforcement focusing specifically on cookie implementation.

What This Means for Your Website

  • Prior informed consent is required before placing non-essential cookies on Lithuanian visitors
  • Clear information about processing purposes must be provided before consent
  • The VDAI has published detailed recommendations with examples of correct and incorrect consent practices
  • While national cookie fines are low, GDPR penalties can apply when personal data is involved

Key Requirements

The VDAI enforces cookie requirements through both proactive audits and complaint-based investigations. National cookie-specific penalties are notably low at EUR 150-580 for individuals and EUR 300-1,150 for company managers. However, GDPR penalties of up to EUR 20 million or 4% of global turnover apply for personal data violations. The 2023 monitoring cycle specifically targeted cookie compliance.

How ConsentStack Handles This

ConsentStack detects Lithuanian visitors and presents an opt-in consent banner that meets both national requirements and GDPR standards. The platform's consent practices align with VDAI's published recommendations.

Penalties

EUR 150-580 for individuals; EUR 300-1,150 for managers of legal entities under Code of Administrative Offences. GDPR penalties also apply.

Maximum Fine
EUR1,150 per violation

Key Requirements

  • Prior informed consent before placing non-essential cookies
  • Clear and comprehensive information about processing purposes
  • Strictly necessary exemption for transmission or explicitly requested services
  • Consent must adhere to GDPR standards
  • VDAI recommendations provide specific guidance on consent methods

Notable Provisions

  • Very low national cookie fines (EUR 150-1,150) but GDPR penalties apply
  • VDAI published recommendations with correct/incorrect consent examples
  • 2023 monitoring focused specifically on cookie compliance

Other ePrivacy Directive Related Regulations

Loi Informatique et LibertésFrance
France has the most actively enforced cookie regime in Europe. CNIL issued 259 corrective decisions in 2025, with cookie-specific fines totaling EUR 486.8 million including EUR 325M against Google. A Refuse all button or Continue without accepting must appear on the first layer.
SI 336/2011Ireland
Ireland implements the ePrivacy Directive through SI 336/2011. The DPC is the lead supervisory authority for major tech companies headquartered in Ireland including Meta, Google, Apple, and Microsoft. Uniquely, cookie consent is limited to 6 months and must then be refreshed.
TDDDGGermany
Germany implements the ePrivacy Directive through Section 25 of TDDDG (renamed from TTDSG in May 2024). A Consent Management Ordinance (EinwV) became effective April 2025, establishing a voluntary framework for recognized consent management services. Cookie banners must not obscure website content.
Dutch Telecom ActNetherlands
The Netherlands implements the ePrivacy Directive through Article 11.7a of the Telecommunications Act. The AP launched a major enforcement sweep in April 2025, warning 50 organizations for misleading cookie banners or placing tracking cookies without consent. Cookie walls are not permitted.
Italian Privacy CodeItaly
Italy implements the ePrivacy Directive through Article 122 of the Privacy Code with detailed Garante cookie guidelines effective January 2022. Only technically necessary cookies may load by default. Scrolling is not valid consent, and closing a banner with "X" closes it without granting consent.
LSSISpain
Spain implements the ePrivacy Directive through Article 22 of the LSSI. Cookie violations are classified as slight offenses with EUR 30,000 fines per URL, but multiple URLs multiply penalties. AEPD allows consent-exempt analytics under privacy-friendly configurations, similar to CNIL.
Danish Cookie OrderDenmark
Denmark implements the ePrivacy Directive through the Cookie Order (Cookiebekendtgørelsen), administered by the Danish Business Authority. Cookie consent is a declared 2026 enforcement priority for Datatilsynet, which will examine whether Danish websites give users a genuine choice.
Portuguese ePrivacy LawPortugal
Portugal implements the ePrivacy Directive through Law 41/2004, with a distinctive tiered penalty structure distinguishing between large companies, SMEs, and natural persons. The CNPD issued 90 fines totaling EUR 559,950 in 2023, demonstrating active enforcement.
Polish Telecommunications LawPoland
Poland implements the ePrivacy Directive through Articles 173-174 of the Telecommunications Law. While Article 173(2) technically permits consent via browser settings, PUODO recommends active consent. Since 2019, Article 174 requires cookie consent to meet full GDPR standards.
Norwegian E-Com ActNorway
Norway's January 2025 amendment to Ekomloven marked a major shift from tolerating passive consent to strict opt-in. Pre-ticked boxes and browser settings are now explicitly invalid. Accept and reject options must have equal prominence. Datatilsynet sanctioned 6 websites for tracking pixel violations.
Belgian E-Communications ActBelgium
Belgium enforces strict cookie consent with one of the EU's most active DPAs. Cookie walls are prohibited, and a Reject all button must appear on the first layer with equal prominence to Accept all. Dark patterns in cookie banners are actively enforced against.
LEKSweden
Sweden implements the ePrivacy Directive through Chapter 9 Section 28 of LEK. In April 2025, IMY issued a landmark reprimand against Aller Media for dark patterns in cookie banners. Less than 25% of Swedish users accept cookies, reflecting strong privacy awareness.

Other Europe Regulations

GDPREuropean Union + EEA
The GDPR sets the global standard for data protection, requiring explicit opt-in consent before processing personal data of EU/EEA residents. For websites, non-essential cookies must be blocked until visitors actively consent. Pre-ticked boxes and implied consent are invalid.
PECRUnited Kingdom
PECR is the UK's cookie-specific law, requiring consent before storing or accessing cookies. The DUAA 2025 significantly increased penalties from GBP 500,000 to GBP 17.5 million and introduced analytics exceptions on an opt-out basis. Only strictly necessary cookies are exempt.
ePrivacy DirectiveEuropean Union + EEA
Article 5(3) of the ePrivacy Directive is the primary EU legal basis requiring cookie consent. It mandates prior informed consent before storing or accessing any information on a user's device, with narrow exceptions only for transmission necessity and explicitly requested services.
Loi Informatique et LibertésFrance
France has the most actively enforced cookie regime in Europe. CNIL issued 259 corrective decisions in 2025, with cookie-specific fines totaling EUR 486.8 million including EUR 325M against Google. A Refuse all button or Continue without accepting must appear on the first layer.
UK GDPRUnited Kingdom
The UK GDPR is the retained EU GDPR post-Brexit, with consent standards identical to the EU version. The UK adequacy decision was renewed December 2025, valid until December 2031. Combined with PECR, it forms the legal framework for cookie consent in the UK.
TDDDGGermany
Germany implements the ePrivacy Directive through Section 25 of TDDDG (renamed from TTDSG in May 2024). A Consent Management Ordinance (EinwV) became effective April 2025, establishing a voluntary framework for recognized consent management services. Cookie banners must not obscure website content.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does Lithuania require cookie consent?

Yes. Lithuania requires prior informed consent before placing non-essential cookies under the Law on Electronic Communications. ConsentStack handles this automatically.

What are the cookie penalties in Lithuania?

National cookie fines are low (EUR 150-1,150), but GDPR penalties of up to EUR 20 million or 4% of global turnover apply when personal data is involved.

Is Lithuania actively enforcing cookie laws?

Yes. The VDAI focused its 2023 monitoring specifically on cookie compliance, conducting both proactive audits and complaint-based investigations.

Stay compliant with Lithuanian LOEC

ConsentStack helps you implement Opt-in consent for Lithuania automatically.