The UK’s advertising regulator has banned a high-profile marketing campaign by Coinbase, ruling that the ads irresponsibly implied cryptocurrency could help addressThe UK’s advertising regulator has banned a high-profile marketing campaign by Coinbase, ruling that the ads irresponsibly implied cryptocurrency could help address

UK Watchdog Bans Coinbase Ads for Linking Crypto to Cost-of-Living Crisis

2026/01/29 03:35
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The UK’s advertising regulator has banned a high-profile marketing campaign by Coinbase, ruling that the ads irresponsibly implied cryptocurrency could help address the country’s cost-of-living pressures.

The Advertising Standards Authority (ASA) concluded that the campaign breached social responsibility rules by trivializing financial risk at a time of widespread economic strain.

The ruling follows 35 public complaints and applies to Coinbase’s “Everything Is Fine” campaign, which the watchdog said must not reappear in its current form.

Inside the “Everything Is Fine” campaign

The campaign was created by the advertising agency Mother and launched in July 2025. It centered on a two-minute musical-style video and three prominent posters placed in high-traffic locations, including the London Underground.

The ads used satire to depict what the campaign framed as “Broken Britain.” Characters sang cheerfully about severe economic problems—such as being unable to afford housing or rising grocery costs, including a line about eggs being “out of budget”, while visual chaos unfolded in the background, including a burst sewage pipe. The campaign closed with the tagline: “If everything’s fine, don’t change anything.”

Why the ASA intervened

In its decision, the ASA said the campaign crossed a regulatory line by using humor to present high-risk financial products in a way that could mislead vulnerable audiences.

The watchdog argued that the ads trivialized financial risk, making complex and volatile products appear like a simple or obvious response to economic hardship. It also found that the materials lacked sufficient risk warnings, a requirement under UK advertising rules for crypto promotions, which must clearly communicate volatility and potential losses.

Crucially, the ASA noted the context in which the ads appeared. With many consumers experiencing financial stress, the implication that crypto might offer relief was deemed particularly problematic. The regulator said this risked exploiting vulnerability by suggesting an unproven solution to real-world economic pressures.

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Coinbase disputes the ruling

Coinbase rejected the ASA’s characterization, defending the campaign as intentionally satirical and “thought-provoking.” The company argued that the exaggerated musical format made it clear the message was not literal and that the ads did not include a direct call to action to buy cryptocurrency.

Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong has previously criticized UK advertising restrictions after the campaign was blocked from television broadcast by Clearcast, the UK’s TV ad regulator. At the time, Armstrong described the decision as “censorship,” suggesting that the pushback reflected discomfort with the campaign’s critique of the existing financial system.

What the ruling means going forward

The ASA has ordered that the “Everything Is Fine” ads must not appear again in their current form. It also instructed CB Payments Ltd, Coinbase’s UK entity, to ensure future marketing does not imply that cryptocurrency is a remedy for widespread financial difficulties.

The decision underscores the UK’s increasingly strict stance on crypto advertising, particularly where messaging intersects with consumer vulnerability. While satire remains permissible, regulators are drawing a clear boundary: crypto promotions must not frame digital assets as an answer to economic hardship, and must clearly communicate risk at all times.

The post UK Watchdog Bans Coinbase Ads for Linking Crypto to Cost-of-Living Crisis appeared first on ETHNews.

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