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Data Act 2025: New Rules, New Opportunities for Businesses

Data Act 2025: Nuove Regole

Edited by Paola Furiosi, Giulia Iozzia, Andrea Strippoli, Edoardo di Maggio and Francesco Gaggioli

September 12, 2025 marked a major milestone in the EU Digital Strategy, as Regulation (EU) 2023/2854 – the Data Act – became fully applicable.

The Data Act establishes uniform rules governing the access, use, and circulation of data generated by connected products (Internet of Things – IoT) and related services placed on the European Union market. The range of products and services covered is extensive, encompassing, for example, connected vehicles and appliances, smart electricity meters, and industrial IoT solutions. The broad scope of this legislation, both in terms of the number of economic operators involved and the cross-sectoral nature of the data subject to the new requirements, makes the Data Act a fundamental piece of compliance for many European companies (and beyond).

The Data Act grants end users and businesses the right to access data generated by their IoT products and related services, as well as to share such data with other operators. This aims to address the common issue of vendor lock-in and to unlock the significant economic potential of data, which is increasingly recognized as a strategic asset.

The ability for users to access data generated by their IoT products means that manufacturers, sellers, lessors, and service providers are required to:

Despite the broad nature of the obligations introduced by the Data Act, the Regulation also provides important safeguards to protect data holders:

While these safeguards are significant, they do not exempt companies from the required obligations under the Data Act. Full compliance requires businesses to take a number of practical steps, including:

Additionally, Data Processing Service providers (such as cloud service providers) will need to remove, under Chapter VI of the Regulation, any barriers that make it difficult for customers to switch providers – whether technical, by improving interoperability between platforms, or contractual and commercial. They must also ensure that customers can terminate contracts with minimal notice and make it easy to migrate data and applications to other platforms.

Despite ongoing uncertainty around the designation of a national supervisory authority and the current lack of an internal enforcement mechanism, the Data Act marks a new chapter in digital transformation.

In this landscape, having a deep understanding of the Data Act is not only crucial for regulatory compliance, but also serves as a strategic advantage to fully capitalize on the opportunities offered by this new regulatory framework and to gain a competitive edge.

For a deeper discussion:

Contact Andrea Lensi Orlandi – Partner, PwC TLS

Contact Paola Furiosi – Partner, PwC TLS

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