Key Dimensions and Scopes of FTC

The Federal Trade Commission operates across a broad and sometimes contested jurisdictional landscape, enforcing consumer protection and competition law against the majority of the American private sector. Understanding the precise boundaries of FTC authority—what falls within its mandate, what sits outside it, and how scope disputes are resolved—is essential for any entity subject to federal commercial regulation. This page maps those dimensions in detail, drawing on the Commission's statutory foundations and enforcement record.


Service delivery boundaries

The FTC's operational perimeter is defined primarily by two statutory pillars: the Federal Trade Commission Act (15 U.S.C. §§ 41–58) and a series of specific enabling statutes that delegate enforcement authority over particular industries, practices, and data types. The FTC Act grants the Commission authority to prevent "unfair methods of competition" and "unfair or deceptive acts or practices" in or affecting commerce—a standard addressed in depth on the FTC Section 5 Unfair Deceptive Acts page.

The Commission delivers its mandate through four functional channels:

  1. Law enforcement actions — administrative litigation and federal court proceedings
  2. Rulemaking — binding regulations under the Magnuson-Moss Warranty Act and the FTC Act itself
  3. Guidance and policy — non-binding but operationally significant statements, guides, and reports
  4. Consumer education and complaint intake — the Consumer Sentinel Network and public-facing reporting tools

Each channel has distinct procedural prerequisites. Rulemaking under the Magnuson-Moss framework requires a formal notice-and-comment process that can span years. Enforcement actions require an investigative predicate, typically a Civil Investigative Demand or voluntary access agreement, before any formal complaint issues.


How scope is determined

FTC scope is determined by three interlocking tests applied to any potential subject of regulation.

The "in or affecting commerce" test — The FTC Act applies only where the respondent's conduct touches interstate or foreign commerce. Purely intrastate transactions with no cross-border nexus fall outside this threshold, though in practice the internet and national supply chains make purely local commerce rare.

The "person, partnership, or corporation" definition — Section 4 of the FTC Act defines which entities can be regulated. The statute explicitly excludes certain entity classes (detailed below). All others—sole proprietors, limited liability companies, publicly traded corporations, and nonprofit entities engaged in commercial activity—fall within the definition.

Sector-specific delegation — Congress has granted the FTC specific authority over particular domains. The Children's Online Privacy Protection Act (COPPA) grants enforcement authority over operators of websites directed at children under 13. The Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act Safeguards Rule governs financial institutions. The FTC Enabling Legislation page catalogs the full set of delegating statutes.

A structured scope-determination sequence operates as follows:


Common scope disputes

Scope disputes arise most frequently at three fault lines.

Common carrier exemption — Section 5 of the FTC Act historically exempted common carriers subject to the Communications Act. Telecommunications companies challenged FTC jurisdiction on these grounds for years. The Ninth Circuit's 2018 decision in FTC v. AT&T Mobility clarified that the exemption is activity-based rather than status-based, meaning a carrier loses the exemption only for non-common-carrier services. The FCC's own jurisdiction over broadband classification intersects with this boundary in ways that remain contested.

Nonprofit status — The FTC Act exempts corporations "not organized to carry on business for their own profit or that of their members." Courts have found, however, that nonprofit organizations engaging in substantial commercial activity on behalf of for-profit affiliates can lose this protection. The scope of this doctrine is fact-intensive and litigated case by case.

Section 13(b) monetary relief authority — The Supreme Court's 2021 decision in AMC v. FTC (addressed in detail here) held that Section 13(b) does not authorize the FTC to seek equitable monetary relief in federal court. This ruling fundamentally altered the Commission's remedial scope, eliminating what had been the primary mechanism for obtaining consumer redress in excess of civil penalty ceilings.


Scope of coverage

The FTC's coverage reaches an estimated 46 million businesses operating in U.S. commerce, according to figures the Commission has cited in budget justification documents submitted to Congress. The functional scope spans:

Domain Primary Authority Key Instrument
Consumer protection (general) FTC Act § 5 Enforcement actions, rules
Advertising and marketing FTC Act § 5; Endorsement Guides Guidance, enforcement
Data security FTC Act § 5; GLB Safeguards Rule Consent orders
Children's privacy COPPA (15 U.S.C. §§ 6501–6506) Civil penalties up to $51,744 per violation (2023 adjusted)
Telemarketing Telemarketing Sales Rule Do Not Call Registry
Merger review Clayton Act § 7; HSR Act Premerger Notification
Antitrust (general) FTC Act § 5; Clayton Act Bureau of Competition actions
Health claims FTC Act § 5 Health Claims Regulations

What is included

The FTC's subject-matter coverage encompasses the following practice categories without exhaustive limitation:


What falls outside the scope

Statutory and judicial doctrine carves out substantial portions of the U.S. economy from FTC jurisdiction.

Banks, savings institutions, and federal credit unions — Prudential banking regulators (OCC, Federal Reserve, FDIC, NCUA) retain primary jurisdiction. The FTC can share consumer protection enforcement responsibility in some overlapping areas but cannot bring standalone FTC Act actions against chartered depository institutions.

Common carriers (to the extent of carrier services) — As noted above, activity-based limits apply. The FCC retains primary authority over carrier-specific practices.

Air carriers — The Department of Transportation holds consumer protection jurisdiction over airlines under 49 U.S.C. § 41712, which mirrors Section 5 language but sits with DOT, not the FTC.

Meat packers, poultry dealers, and livestock operations — The Packers and Stockyards Act places these entities within USDA jurisdiction.

Securities and commodities — The SEC and CFTC hold primary fraud and disclosure jurisdiction in their respective markets. The FTC does not regulate securities fraud or investment adviser conduct.

State and local governments — Governmental entities, as opposed to commercial actors, are not "corporations" within the FTC Act's definitional scope.

The FTC's homepage resource at /index provides navigational orientation across the Commission's full functional divisions for those assessing whether a specific activity falls within an active enforcement program.


Geographic and jurisdictional dimensions

The FTC exercises nationwide jurisdiction within the United States and, under specific statutory grants and international agreements, reaches conduct occurring outside U.S. borders where that conduct has a direct, substantial, and reasonably foreseeable effect on U.S. consumers or competition.

The U.S. SAFE WEB Act of 2006 explicitly authorizes the FTC to share information with foreign consumer protection agencies and to provide investigative assistance to foreign counterparts. The FTC maintains bilateral cooperation agreements with enforcement authorities in the European Union, Canada, Australia, and more than a dozen other jurisdictions through the Office of International Affairs.

Domestic geographic reach operates through 7 regional offices spread across the country, enabling the Commission to pursue matters with local market impact that may not rise to Washington-based case prioritization thresholds. The FTC Regional Offices page details each office's geographic mandate.

Federal preemption dynamics also define the geographic dimension. In areas where the FTC has promulgated binding rules, state laws imposing lesser or inconsistent requirements may be preempted, while state laws providing stronger consumer protection are typically preserved under "no less stringent" savings clauses.


Scale and operational range

The Commission employs approximately 1,100 full-time staff across its three bureaus—Consumer Protection, Competition, and Economics—and its Office of the General Counsel. The FTC Budget and Funding page tracks annual appropriations, which for fiscal year 2023 stood at approximately $430 million as reflected in the Commission's congressional budget justification.

Enforcement scale can be measured along several axes:

The operational range of the Commission also extends to competition policy research, market studies, and workshops and hearings that shape regulatory expectations across emerging sectors, including artificial intelligence and facial recognition and biometrics, where formal rulemaking has not yet produced binding rules but enforcement signals carry significant market weight.