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The Advertising Standards Council of India (ASCI) is a self-regulatory, voluntary organisation of the advertising industry in India. Established in 1985, it is headquartered in Mumbai. ASCI works to promote responsible advertising and to maintain public confidence in the practice of advertising through its Code for Self-Regulation in Advertising, popularly known as the ASCI Code.
| Name | Advertising Standards Council of India |
|---|---|
| Abbreviation | ASCI |
| Type | Self-regulatory body (non-profit) |
| Founded | 1985 |
| Headquarters | Mumbai, Maharashtra, India |
| Industry | Advertising |
| Key instrument | ASCI Code for Self-Regulation in Advertising |
| Principal mechanism | Consumer Complaints Council (CCC) |
ASCI was set up by representatives of the advertising ecosystem in India, including advertisers, advertising agencies, media owners and allied professional and ancillary services. Its membership is drawn from these constituencies. The Council frames and administers a voluntary code that requires advertisements to be truthful and honest, non-offensive, not to promote products that are hazardous or harmful to society, and to observe fairness in competition.
The four core principles of the ASCI Code address:
Although ASCI is a voluntary body, its standards have been given regulatory backing through the Cable Television Networks (Amendment) Rules, 2006, which require that no advertisement carried on cable television in India shall violate the ASCI Code for Self-Regulation in Advertising. This effectively grants the ASCI Code statutory recognition for cable television advertising. ASCI also works with central ministries and statutory regulators on advertising-related matters, including the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting, the Ministry of Consumer Affairs, the Ministry of AYUSH and the Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI).
Complaints against advertisements are processed by the Consumer Complaints Council (CCC), an independent body within ASCI comprising members from civil society and industry. Complaints can be lodged by consumers, government departments, or competitors. Where the CCC finds an advertisement to be in contravention of the Code, the advertiser is asked to modify or withdraw the advertisement. Decisions are published periodically in ASCI's complaint reports.
ASCI has issued guidelines for influencer advertising on digital media, requiring clear and prominent disclosure of material connections between influencers and advertisers. Subsequent updates have extended these requirements to specialised sectors such as health, finance and virtual digital assets.
ASCI is one of the principal institutions shaping advertising practice in India. By combining industry self-regulation with statutory recognition under cable television rules, it occupies a unique position between voluntary trade bodies and statutory regulators. Its rulings influence creative practice, media planning, and compliance functions across consumer-facing industries.