Cookie Consent Rates Across Europe: 2026 Data from 12,000 Websites
New research on how cookie consent rates vary by country, industry, and banner design — with actionable insights for improving your own consent rate.
We analyzed anonymous, aggregated consent data from 12,000 websites across 18 European countries to understand how consent rates vary and what drives the differences. The results challenge several common assumptions.
Key findings
Overall consent rate: 64% — Across all sites, 64% of visitors accept at least one non-essential cookie category. This has remained remarkably stable since 2024, despite increased awareness of cookie tracking. Country variation is significant — Consent rates range from 52% (Germany) to 78% (Romania). Countries with more privacy-aware populations and stricter enforcement show lower rates. Banner design matters more than you think — Sites with clear, symmetrical accept/reject buttons see 8-12% higher consent rates than those with asymmetric designs. Counterintuitively, giving users genuine control increases consent.
Consent rates by country
- Germany: 52%
- France: 58%
- Netherlands: 61%
- UK: 65%
- Spain: 67%
- Italy: 69%
- Poland: 72%
- Romania: 78%
Consent rates by industry
- Finance/Banking: 54%
- Healthcare: 57%
- SaaS/Technology: 63%
- E-commerce: 68%
- Media/Publishing: 71%
- Travel/Hospitality: 73%
What drives higher consent rates
- Transparency — Banners that clearly explain what each category does see +6% consent vs. vague descriptions
- Design symmetry — Equal prominence for accept and reject options increases overall consent (people trust the interface more)
- Speed — Banners that load in under 200ms see +4% consent vs. those that take over 1 second (slow banners frustrate users into rejecting)
The analytics gap
With a 64% average consent rate, companies relying on analytics are missing data from more than a third of their visitors. This has significant implications for marketing attribution, A/B testing, and business intelligence. Companies need to plan for a world where 30-50% of their traffic will never be tracked.
Methodology
Data was collected from anonymized, aggregated consent records across 12,000 websites using ShieldPage and comparable consent platforms between January and March 2026. No individual user data was accessed. Country classification is based on the website's primary market, not individual user geolocation.