For nearly three decades, the third-party cookie was digital marketing’s invisible infrastructure. Advertisers could follow users across the web, build detailed behavioural profiles, retarget ads with uncanny precision, and attribute conversions across a fragmented customer journey — all without the consumer’s conscious knowledge or consent. That infrastructure is being dismantled, and the $600 billion digital advertising industry is rebuilding its foundations in real time.
Google, which controls roughly 90% of the search market and a dominant share of display advertising through its ad tech stack, announced plans to deprecate third-party cookies in Chrome as early as 2020. After multiple delays — driven partly by regulatory scrutiny and partly by the enormous complexity of rebuilding the ecosystem — the company began rolling out cookie deprecation to a subset of Chrome users in 2024. The full transition is ongoing. Safari and Firefox had already blocked third-party cookies by default years earlier. The direction is unambiguous, even if the timeline continues to slip.
Why Cookies Are Going Away
The third-party cookie’s demise is the result of three converging forces: regulatory pressure, browser competition, and shifting consumer expectations.
On the regulatory side, the EU’s General Data Protection Regulation, California’s CCPA, and a growing patchwork of state and national privacy laws have made the consent-free data collection that cookies enabled legally precarious in most major markets. Companies facing GDPR enforcement actions — including Google, Facebook, and Amazon — have all had their cookie practices scrutinised as part of broader data practice reviews.
On the browser side, Apple’s aggressive stance on privacy — first through Safari’s Intelligent Tracking Prevention, then through App Tracking Transparency requiring explicit opt-in for app tracking — has already collapsed mobile advertising attribution in the Apple ecosystem. Meta’s 2021 earnings call attributed a $10 billion annual revenue impact to ATT alone. The Safari precedent established that premium devices with high-value users could be closed to third-party tracking without catastrophic consequences for Apple — and the success of that positioning has influenced the competitive dynamics for all browsers.
On the consumer side, awareness of tracking has grown to the point where privacy is now a differentiating factor in technology product choices. The brand equity that Apple has built around privacy — ‘privacy is a fundamental human right’ — reflects market research showing it resonates with purchasing decisions, particularly among higher-income consumers.
What Actually Replaces Cookies
The marketing industry is not moving from a world with tracking to a world without it. It’s moving from cross-site behavioural tracking to a more fragmented set of approaches, each with different capabilities, costs, and limitations.
First-party data is the most durable and valuable replacement. First-party data is information collected directly by a brand from its own customers and consented relationships — email lists, purchase histories, loyalty programme memberships, CRM records, website behavioural data (within the brand’s own domain). Companies that have invested in building direct customer relationships — through email programmes, loyalty schemes, and owned digital communities — are discovering that first-party data assets have become strategic competitive advantages.
Retail media networks are the most commercially significant structural change in digital advertising. When Amazon, Walmart, Target, Kroger, and Home Depot sell advertising against their logged-in customer data, they are offering what third-party cookies once provided — purchase intent data tied to specific users — but within a first-party consent framework. Retail media is projected to reach $150 billion globally by 2026, making it one of the fastest-growing advertising categories in history.
Contextual targeting — serving ads based on the content of the page being viewed rather than the behavioural history of the viewer — has experienced a significant renaissance. It never went away, but it was deprioritised in the cookie era because behavioural targeting outperformed it on short-term ROI metrics. New contextual technology, often AI-assisted, can now deliver targeting relevance that was not achievable with the keyword-matching approaches of the 2000s.
Data clean rooms are a more technically sophisticated solution. They allow brands and media owners to match their respective customer data in a privacy-preserving environment where neither party can see the other’s raw data, only the insights derived from the match. LiveRamp’s Safe Haven, Google’s Ads Data Hub, and InfoSum are the leading clean room platforms. The technical complexity is high, but for large advertisers with significant first-party data assets, clean rooms enable the kind of cross-channel audience matching that cookies once provided.
The Winners and Losers
The deprecation of cookies is not a level playing field. The companies best positioned to absorb the transition are those with the largest first-party data moats.
Google, despite being the author of cookie deprecation, is among the least vulnerable. Its signed-in user base across Gmail, YouTube, Google Maps, Search, and Android gives it access to authenticated user data that survives cookie deprecation entirely. Its Privacy Sandbox initiative is an attempt to preserve advertising measurement and targeting functionality within the browser without third-party cookies.
Meta has adapted more aggressively than its 2021 ATT-driven stumble suggested it could. Conversions API, which passes conversion events directly from a brand’s server to Meta’s systems rather than via browser cookies, has partially recovered the attribution signal lost through ATT. Meta’s Advantage+ AI-driven creative and audience tools are compensating for targeting precision lost at the individual level with aggregate optimisation at the campaign level.
The losers are primarily the mid-tier ad tech companies whose entire business model depended on third-party cookies as the connective tissue between ad buyers and ad sellers. The $25 billion programmatic advertising stack — DSPs, SSPs, DMPs, attribution vendors — is undergoing consolidation and elimination. Companies without access to significant first-party data, or without the capability to provide clean room integrations, are finding their value propositions have evaporated.
What Marketers Must Do Now
The strategic response to cookie deprecation is not a technology problem. It’s an organisational and data strategy problem that technology enables.
The first priority is a first-party data audit. Brands need a clear inventory of what consented customer data they hold, how it is structured, how it can be activated for marketing use, and where the gaps are. Most companies discover this inventory is far less organised than assumed.
The second priority is consent architecture. The legal basis for data collection and use must be explicit and documented. Consent management platforms — OneTrust, Didomi, Cookiebot — are not optional for companies operating in regulated markets.
The third priority is measurement model rebuilding. Marketing mix modelling, which fell out of fashion in the cookie era because real-time attribution seemed more sophisticated, is experiencing a significant revival. Google, Meta, and Northbeam all offer MMM tools because the industry recognises that last-click attribution is no longer viable. Incrementality testing — running controlled experiments to measure the actual lift from specific marketing activities — is becoming the standard for serious advertisers.
The fourth priority is channel diversification away from pure performance marketing toward brand-building channels whose effectiveness does not depend on individual user tracking. Podcast advertising, connected TV, sponsorships, and content marketing are all experiencing renewed investment from advertisers who recognise that channels which work through recall and association rather than retargeting are structurally more durable.
The Privacy-First Future
The deprecation of third-party cookies is not the endpoint of the transition. It is the beginning of a regulatory and competitive environment that will continue to tighten the conditions under which consumer data can be collected, processed, and monetised.
The companies that thrive in this environment will be those that treat privacy as a product principle rather than a compliance burden. Apple has demonstrated that privacy can be a premium feature that commands pricing power. Brave Browser, DuckDuckGo, and Proton are building businesses explicitly on the premise that consumers will pay — in subscription fees or in attention to ethical advertising — for protection from surveillance capitalism.
For the digital marketing industry, the transition is ultimately healthy, even if it is painful. An industry that grew dependent on invisible, unconsented tracking was always building on borrowed time. The businesses being built on consented relationships, valuable content exchanges, and genuine customer value propositions are the ones that will still be standing when the next round of privacy regulation arrives — as it inevitably will.
