Thought Leadership

Young people drive increase in trust in advertising

The Advertising Association’s Trust Tracker reveals a significant increase in trust in advertising amongst 18 to 34 year-olds.

Nicola Kemp

Editorial Director Creativebrief

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The latest data from the Advertising Association’s Credos Trust Tracker presents good news to advertisers with a significant uptick in trust in advertising.

The 2024 data reveals a continued positive trajectory for trust in advertising, which rose from 36% to 39% over the past 12 months. This is up from 30% in 2022. The increase was largely driven by young people.

While there were trust increases across the board, trust amongst 18-34 year-olds has increased by 16 percentage points since 2022, compared to just three percentage points for over 55s. 

The research, from the UK’s advertising think tank, Credos, reveals that, for the second year running, trust in all advertising media channels also increased. TV and cinema remain the most trusted channels (trusted by 43% of people) followed closely by radio, news and magazine media, and out-of-home. Trust in online advertising channels remains lower but continues to rise, particularly amongst the young.

People aged 18-34 are almost three times more likely to trust advertising than over 55s. The research points to a ‘generational digital divide’, whereby younger people’s trust in online advertising has been growing rapidly year-on-year, whilst older people’s trust in online ads has remained low. 

Dan Wilks, Director of Credos, explained: “There are a number of factors that drove the overall increase in trust in 2024, including a strong festive ad season and more enjoyable advertising, with humour definitely making a comeback post-pandemic. Our qualitative research has also shown an improved ad experience in some channels, with BVOD and influencers in particular being highlighted. Also having significant impact over this period is the Advertising Standards Authority (ASA) ad campaign, which ran for the third time in 2024. We know that increased public awareness of our co and self-regulatory system has a positive effect on people’s trust in advertising.”

The latest burst of the ASA’s multi-channel, national ad awareness campaign ran for eight weeks from early September 2024. The campaign research in October 2024 showed that 36% of UK adults recalled seeing or hearing the ASA ads and those who saw or heard the ads are more than twice as likely to trust the industry than those who did not. 

The campaign is the result of cross media expertise with media owners donating advertising space and Leith and EssenceMediacom donating creative and media expertise respectively. The result is a rising tide of trust which lifts all advertising boats.

Stephen Woodford, CEO, Advertising Association, said: “We are really pleased with these latest tracker results showing increases in trust in advertising across a number of our key metrics. The ASA campaign is clearly a key lever we can pull and we are again incredibly grateful to the brands who lend us their famous assets and straplines, to Leith and EssenceMediacom who are so generous with their creative and media expertise, and to the media owners who donate. We want to do more and plan to build on this in 2025.”  

Guy Parker, CEO, Advertising Standards Authority, added: “It’s really good to see continued rises in trust in advertising, underpinned by our own UK-wide ad campaign. At the ASA, we love responsible advertising, we want it to be trusted, and we want it to be deserving of that trust. If we all keep working towards that goal, including with an even bigger and better burst of ASA ads later in 2025, we’ll see even greater benefits to people, to brands, to media and, of course, to the economy.”

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