United Kingdom
Recording Phone Calls in the UK: The Law

Recording a phone call you take part in is lawful in the UK for your own personal use, and you do not have to tell the other person. The picture changes sharply once a business records callers, once you share the recording, or once you capture a call you are not part of, which is a criminal offence under the Investigatory Powers Act 2016.
For the full UK overview, see UK recording laws.
Recording Your Own Calls: Lawful, No Consent Needed
If you are on the call, you can record it for your own use without telling anyone. The interception offence in section 3 of the Investigatory Powers Act 2016 targets intercepting a communication "in the course of its transmission" without lawful authority. As a participant, you are the sender or the intended recipient of the communication, so recording what is said to you is not the kind of third-party interception the Act criminalises. Section 44 reinforces this by treating interception as authorised where the relevant party has consented. UK government bodies describe the same position in their own privacy notices: an individual may record a call for personal purposes without being obliged to inform the other party (legislation.gov.uk; gov.uk customer call-recording privacy notice).
Watch out: "Personal use" is the boundary, not a loophole. The protection covers keeping the recording for your own notes, your own dispute, or your own potential evidence. It does not stretch to passing the audio to anyone who was not on the call.
Business Call Recording: A Two-Layer Test
Businesses face a far stricter regime than individuals, and recording lawfully means clearing two separate hurdles at the same time.

The first layer is interception law. A company intercepting calls on its own system needs authority. That comes from the Telecommunications (Lawful Business Practice) (Interception of Communications) Regulations 2000, which authorise recording for set purposes such as establishing facts, demonstrating regulatory compliance, maintaining quality and training standards, preventing or detecting crime, investigating unauthorised use, and ensuring effective system operation (reg. 3). Regulation 3(2)(c) requires the system controller to have "made all reasonable efforts to inform every person who may use the telecommunication system" that calls may be intercepted. The Investigatory Powers (Interception by Businesses etc. for Monitoring and Record-keeping Purposes) Regulations 2018, made under section 46 of the 2016 Act, carry the same notification condition forward for monitoring and record-keeping.
The second layer is data protection. The recording is personal data, so the business needs a lawful basis under Article 6 of the UK GDPR and the Data Protection Act 2018.
Lawful Basis and the ICO
Most businesses rely on legitimate interests (Article 6(1)(f)) for quality and training recording, which the ICO requires be backed by a documented legitimate interests assessment. Legal obligation (Article 6(1)(c)) applies where a regulator mandates recording, for example FCA conduct rules for relevant financial firms. Consent (Article 6(1)(a)) is rarely the right basis because callers cannot freely refuse and still get served. The ICO guidance stresses transparency: callers must be told who is recording, why, and how long the audio is kept, usually through a recorded announcement and a privacy notice.
| Recording scenario | Interception authority | Data protection duty |
|---|---|---|
| Your own call, personal use | Not engaged (you are a party) | Personal/household exemption |
| Business quality or training | LBP Regs 2000 / IPA business regs 2018 | UK GDPR lawful basis + notice |
| Marketing or sales call | LBP Regs 2000 + PECR rules on calls | UK GDPR + transparency |
| Recording a call you are not on | None: criminal interception | UK GDPR breach on top |
Watch out: Satisfying the interception rules does not satisfy UK GDPR. A business with a valid recorded-line announcement still breaches data law if it has no lawful basis, ignores retention limits, or cannot answer a subject access request for the audio.
Intercepting a Call You Are Not Part Of
This is the bright line, and crossing it is a crime. Section 3 of the Investigatory Powers Act 2016 makes it an offence to intentionally intercept a communication in transmission, by means of a public or private telecommunication system, without lawful authority. The classic example is listening in on, or recording, a conversation between two other people, or accessing someone else's voicemail. On conviction on indictment the maximum is two years' imprisonment, a fine, or both. Prosecutions in England and Wales may be brought only by, or with the consent of, the Director of Public Prosecutions.
There is also a civil route. Under section 7, where the Investigatory Powers Commissioner considers a person intercepted a communication on a public system without lawful authority but does not treat it as a section 3 offence, the Commissioner may impose a monetary penalty of up to GBP 50,000. The News of the World voicemail-interception scandal, which led to convictions for intercepting communications, shows how seriously UK courts treat eavesdropping on others' communications.
Sharing or Publishing a Recording
Making a lawful recording is one thing; releasing it is another, and the personal-use protection does not travel with the file. Once you share a recording beyond friends and family or publish it, the ICO treats the activity as no longer purely personal or household, so the UK GDPR applies and you become responsible for that other person's data. Publishing private call audio can also support a civil claim for misuse of private information, the tort English courts have developed under Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights, where the person had a reasonable expectation of privacy in the conversation.

Broadcasters face a further, specific rule. The Ofcom Broadcasting Code (section 8, practice 8.12) generally expects a broadcaster recording a call for possible broadcast to identify itself, explain the call's purpose, and say it is being recorded, from the outset, unless not doing so is warranted; if that was not done, consent is normally needed before broadcast.
Watch out: Posting a call recording online to "prove a point" can convert a lawful personal recording into a data-protection breach and expose you to a privacy claim, even though making the recording was fine.
Using a Recording as Evidence
A covert recording of your own call is often useful evidence, but admission is never automatic. In civil cases the court has a discretion under the Civil Procedure Rules to admit or exclude evidence, weighing relevance, authenticity, and fairness, and may penalise a party in costs for the manner of obtaining it. In criminal cases the court may exclude evidence under section 78 of the Police and Criminal Evidence Act 1984 if admitting it would have an unfair effect on the proceedings. Courts have generally been willing to consider authentic recordings, but you should keep the original unedited file and be ready to prove how and when it was made.

Frequently Asked Questions
Can I record a phone call in the UK without telling the other person?
Yes, if you are on the call and the recording is for your own personal use. You are a party to the communication, so the interception offence in the Investigatory Powers Act 2016 is not engaged, and there is no legal duty to warn the other person. The protection ends if you share the recording with someone who was not on the call.
Is it illegal to record a call I am not part of?
Yes. Recording or listening in on a communication you are not a party to, without lawful authority, is unlawful interception under section 3 of the Investigatory Powers Act 2016. The maximum penalty on indictment is two years' imprisonment and/or a fine, and the Investigatory Powers Commissioner can separately impose a civil penalty of up to GBP 50,000 under section 7.
Do businesses have to tell callers that calls are recorded?
In practice, yes. The Telecommunications (Lawful Business Practice) Regulations 2000 require the system controller to make all reasonable efforts to inform users that communications may be intercepted, and the UK GDPR requires transparency with the people recorded. A recorded announcement plus a privacy notice is the usual way to meet both duties.
What lawful basis do businesses use to record calls under UK GDPR?
Most rely on legitimate interests under Article 6(1)(f) for quality and training, supported by a documented legitimate interests assessment, or on legal obligation under Article 6(1)(c) where a regulator such as the FCA requires recording. Consent is rarely suitable for customer calls because callers cannot freely refuse.
Can I share or post a recording of a call I lawfully made?
Sharing or publishing it can remove the personal-use protection. The ICO treats publication beyond friends and family as no longer purely personal, so the UK GDPR applies, and the other person may bring a claim for misuse of private information if they had a reasonable expectation of privacy in the conversation.
Can a recorded phone call be used as evidence in UK courts?
Often, but not automatically. A covert recording of your own call may be admitted, yet the court keeps a discretion to exclude it under the Civil Procedure Rules in civil cases or under section 78 of the Police and Criminal Evidence Act 1984 in criminal cases. Keep the original unedited file and be able to show how it was made.
Is accessing someone else's voicemail a crime?
Yes. Intercepting voicemail messages intended for someone else is treated as unlawful interception of communications. Convictions arising from the News of the World voicemail-interception scandal show that UK courts treat eavesdropping on others' communications as serious criminality.
Do the rules differ for in-person recordings versus phone calls?
The interception offence in the Investigatory Powers Act 2016 is built around a telecommunication system, so it focuses on calls and electronic messages rather than face-to-face audio. Recording an in-person conversation you take part in is generally not a criminal offence, though sharing it can still raise data protection and privacy issues.
Sources and References
- Investigatory Powers Act 2016, s.3 (offence of unlawful interception; up to 2 years on indictment; DPP consent to prosecute)(legislation.gov.uk).gov
- Investigatory Powers Act 2016, s.44 (interception with the consent of the sender or recipient)(legislation.gov.uk).gov
- Investigatory Powers Act 2016, s.7 (monetary penalty up to GBP 50,000 for unlawful interception of a public system)(legislation.gov.uk).gov
- Telecommunications (Lawful Business Practice) (Interception of Communications) Regulations 2000, reg.3 (authorised purposes and notification condition)(legislation.gov.uk).gov
- Investigatory Powers (Interception by Businesses etc. for Monitoring and Record-keeping Purposes) Regulations 2018(legislation.gov.uk).gov
- ICO guidance: legitimate interests lawful basis under UK GDPR(ico.org.uk).gov
- GOV.UK customer registration and call recording privacy notice (illustrating transparency and lawful basis for call recording)(gov.uk).gov
- Ofcom Broadcasting Code, Section 8 (Privacy), practice 8.12 on recording calls for broadcast(ofcom.org.uk).gov