One unresolved NAD case. One referral letter. One FTC file number that now sits in a public database forever. That’s the entire distance between a self-regulatory nudge and a federal investigation — and most brand legal teams still treat the NAD-to-FTC referral pipeline like a hypothetical instead of an operational risk with a documented track record.
The Kalshi undisclosed sponsorship case isn’t a one-off curiosity. It’s a template. And if your compliance function hasn’t already run a tabletop exercise against it, you’re behind.
What Actually Happened in the Kalshi Case
The National Advertising Division (NAD), the ad industry’s self-regulatory body run under BBB National Programs, opened an inquiry into sponsorship disclosures connected to Kalshi’s marketing activity. Without rehashing every procedural detail, the outcome matters more than the mechanics: when a company doesn’t participate in NAD’s process or declines to comply with its recommendations, NAD has one real option left. It refers the matter to a federal regulator, typically the FTC, for further review.
That referral is not a formality. It converts a private, cooperative, industry-run dispute resolution process into a matter of public record that a government agency can act on independently. Our earlier coverage of the Kalshi NAD referral broke down the disclosure specifics. This piece is about what the pipeline itself means for how legal teams should be structuring escalation policy.
NAD refers roughly a dozen non-compliant cases to federal or state regulators every year — a small number in absolute terms, but each one represents a company that either ignored the process or lost an internal bet that self-regulation had no teeth.
The Pipeline, Step by Step
Brand legal teams need to understand the mechanics because each stage is a different risk tier with different intervention points.
- Stage 1 — Challenge or monitoring: A competitor files a challenge, or NAD’s own monitoring program flags a campaign. This is low-risk and highly winnable if you respond fast and cooperatively.
- Stage 2 — Inquiry and response: NAD requests substantiation or asks the brand to address specific claims and disclosure practices. This is where most cases get resolved quietly.
- Stage 3 — Recommendation: NAD issues a decision, usually asking the company to modify or discontinue certain claims or disclosure practices.
- Stage 4 — Non-compliance: The company declines to comply, doesn’t respond, or refuses to participate at all.
- Stage 5 — Referral: NAD refers the matter to the FTC (or, in some cases, state attorneys general or the FCC, depending on subject matter).
Here’s the part that catches legal teams off guard: stage 4 is almost always a choice, not an accident. Companies that get referred usually made a conscious call that participating in NAD’s process wasn’t worth the resources, or believed the underlying advertising was defensible enough to ignore a self-regulatory body. Kalshi’s situation suggests that calculation is getting riskier, not safer.
Why This Matters More for Influencer and Creator Campaigns Specifically
Traditional ad claims disputes are relatively contained: a headline, a substantiation file, a fix. Creator marketing disputes are messier because disclosure compliance depends on dozens or hundreds of individual posts, each one a potential violation point. NAD has shown increasing willingness to scrutinize influencer disclosure practices as part of broader sponsorship inquiries, not just traditional ad copy.
That’s a structural problem for brands running distributed creator programs. If your influencer roster includes 150 creators across TikTok, Instagram, and YouTube, and even a fraction of them are inconsistent with #ad tags or platform-native disclosure tools, you have a pattern-of-practice problem, not an isolated incident. NAD referrals tend to happen when regulators see systemic issues, not one-off mistakes.
The FTC has been explicit about this expectation for years in its endorsement guidance, and enforcement priorities haven’t softened. Brands that assume “the creator is responsible for their own disclosure” are working from an outdated legal theory. Our FTC liability chain breakdown covers why brands remain on the hook even when the disclosure failure originates with a third-party creator.
Internal Audit Triggers Legal Teams Should Be Watching
Most legal departments only think about NAD/FTC risk reactively, after a complaint lands. That’s backwards. The Kalshi case is a good prompt to build proactive audit triggers into your compliance calendar instead of waiting for a challenge letter.
Here’s what should automatically kick off an internal review:
- Competitor activity spikes. If a direct competitor just got NAD-challenged, assume your category is next. NAD challenges often cluster by industry.
- New claim types entering campaign briefs. Performance claims, comparative claims, or “results not typical” categories (fintech, prediction markets, supplements, weight loss) carry disproportionately high referral rates.
- Platform disclosure tool inconsistency. If creators are mixing manual hashtag disclosure with platform-native paid partnership labels inconsistently, that’s a documentation gap waiting to be flagged.
- High creator turnover. New creators joining a program without updated contract language on disclosure obligations is a recurring root cause in referral cases.
- Any unresolved NAD inquiry sitting past 30 days. Silence is the single biggest risk factor. Non-response is what pushes cases into the referral stage.
The single biggest predictor of an NAD-to-FTC referral isn’t the severity of the original claim — it’s how the company responded once NAD made contact.
Legal teams that build a quarterly cadence around these triggers catch problems while they’re still cheap to fix. Our quarterly compliance audit framework lays out a workable cycle if you don’t already have one running.
Building the Escalation Plan Before You Need It
An escalation plan is not a PDF that sits in a shared drive. It’s a decision tree with named owners, response deadlines, and pre-approved messaging templates. If your legal team can’t answer “who signs off on a response to NAD within 48 hours of receipt” without a meeting, you don’t have a plan — you have a hope.
A workable escalation framework needs four components:
- A designated intake owner. Someone in legal or compliance who is the single point of contact for any NAD, BBB, or FTC correspondence. No forwarding chains, no “who has this.”
- A response SLA. Internal deadline (shorter than NAD’s own deadline) to draft a preliminary response and loop in outside counsel if needed.
- A decision threshold for participation vs. contest. Pre-agreed criteria for when the company complies quickly versus when it’s worth contesting NAD’s recommendation. This should be decided calmly, in advance, not under deadline pressure.
- A remediation playbook. If NAD’s recommendation is accepted, how fast can creator content actually be edited, re-tagged, or pulled? Test this. Most brands discover their creator contracts don’t even give them takedown rights fast enough to comply with NAD timelines.
Our earlier piece on the NAD-to-FTC escalation plan goes deeper into building the decision tree itself, including sample thresholds for contest-versus-comply calls.
The Contract Layer Nobody Fixes Until It’s Too Late
Every escalation plan eventually runs into the same wall: creator contracts that don’t give the brand enough control to remediate quickly. If a NAD recommendation says “modify or remove disclosure language across active campaign content” and your contracts don’t include a takedown clause with a defined turnaround time, you’re negotiating with creators mid-crisis instead of executing a plan.
This is fixable, but only before the fact. Build disclosure compliance obligations, audit rights, and remediation timelines directly into creator agreements. Reference platform-specific labeling requirements explicitly rather than vague “comply with applicable law” language, which courts and regulators increasingly view as insufficient. For platform-specific nuance, see our breakdowns on TikTok and Meta disclosure rules and the related Meta AI disclosure audit guide, both of which map directly onto NAD’s areas of recent focus.
It’s also worth benchmarking your internal practices against industry data. According to eMarketer research on influencer marketing spend growth, brands are increasing creator budgets faster than they’re scaling compliance headcount — a gap that regulators are clearly noticing. Sprout Social‘s own reporting on disclosure trends echoes the same pattern: growth is outpacing governance.
What Brand Legal Teams Should Do This Quarter
Don’t wait for a challenge letter to test your process. Run a tabletop simulation using the Kalshi case as the fact pattern: assume NAD contacts you tomorrow about an undisclosed sponsorship across your influencer roster. Time how long it takes to identify the intake owner, draft a response, and pull creator content if needed. If that exercise takes longer than NAD’s own response deadline, you’ve just found your first audit trigger.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the NAD-to-FTC referral pipeline?
It’s the escalation path that occurs when the National Advertising Division reviews an advertising or disclosure practice, issues a recommendation, and the company either declines to comply or doesn’t participate. NAD then refers the matter to the FTC or another relevant regulator for independent enforcement action.
Does NAD have legal authority to penalize brands directly?
No. NAD is a self-regulatory body and cannot impose fines or binding legal penalties. Its power comes from its referral relationship with the FTC and other regulators, plus the reputational cost of public non-compliance findings.
Why did the Kalshi case get referred instead of resolved internally?
Referrals typically happen when a company doesn’t participate in NAD’s process or declines to implement its recommendations. The specific dynamics in the Kalshi matter reflect this broader pattern rather than an isolated procedural failure.
How can brand legal teams reduce referral risk for influencer campaigns?
Build proactive audit triggers around competitor activity, high-risk claim categories, and creator disclosure consistency. Maintain a documented escalation plan with a named intake owner, internal response deadlines, and contract terms that allow rapid remediation of non-compliant creator content.
What should be in a creator contract to support faster NAD compliance?
Explicit disclosure obligations tied to platform-specific labeling tools, audit rights allowing the brand to review posted content, and a defined takedown or edit turnaround time. Vague “comply with applicable law” clauses are generally insufficient for fast remediation.
Is a NAD referral the same as an FTC investigation?
Not automatically. A referral means the FTC has been made aware of the matter and can choose to investigate. The FTC has independent discretion over whether and how to proceed, but a referral significantly raises the odds of formal scrutiny.
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