Poshmark expanded and reorganized its privacy policy on March 25, 2026, adding 249 sentences of new content that detail what data the company collects, how it uses that data, and user rights. The updated policy now explicitly describes collection of information you provide directly (name, address, phone, email, sizing preferences), data generated when using the service (listings, photos, videos, purchase history, interactions with other users), and payment information for transactions. This represents a shift from the previous version toward more granular disclosure of data collection practices, though the actual data handling practices may not have changed.
Poshmark's updated privacy policy provides more explicit detail about what categories of personal data the company collects through the platform, including user-generated content (photos, videos, listings), interaction data (likes, comments, offers), and payment information. The expanded disclosure does not necessarily indicate new data collection practices, but gives users clearer visibility into what information Poshmark holds. You can review the full policy at Poshmark's website to understand which data collection practices apply to your account activity and, if you are a California resident, consult the supplementary California Privacy Notice referenced in the policy.
The expanded policy provides users with clearer visibility into what personal data Poshmark collects and processes, including user-generated content, transaction history, and behavioral data. For users subject to state privacy laws (particularly California), the explicit disclosure supports understanding of rights to access, delete, and opt out of certain data uses, though exercising those rights requires understanding the full updated policy language.
→ Review the full updated Poshmark privacy policy and the California Privacy Notice (if you are a California resident) to understand what data categories Poshmark collects about you.
→ If you are a California resident, review your rights under the California Privacy Notice, which may include rights to access, delete, and opt out of data sales or sharing.
→ You may not understand the full scope of personal data Poshmark collects through your account activity, including user-generated content, interaction logs, and payment information.
→ If you are entitled to state privacy law rights (such as CCPA access, deletion, or opt-out rights), you may not exercise them effectively without understanding what data Poshmark holds.
Policy now explicitly applies to personal data collected through websites, mobile apps, and other access points that reference this policy.
Added explicit enumeration of personal data types collected directly from users (name, address, phone, email, sizing, social media accounts, gender, age, education) and data generated through service use (photos, videos, listings, search terms, purchase history, interaction data, payment information).
Policy now references a separate California Privacy Notice available to California residents, indicating compliance with state-specific privacy law requirements.
This change record describes what was added, removed, or modified in the document. Analysis reflects what the updated agreement states or permits. It does not constitute a legal determination about enforceability. Applicability may vary by jurisdiction. Methodology
Poshmark restructured its privacy policy to add granular disclosures of personal data collection categories and sources. The change adds approximately 249 sentences of clarifying language covering data collection scope, data types, processing legal basis, and user rights. This appears driven by evolving privacy compliance best practices and transparency requirements under CCPA and similar state-level privacy laws, as evidenced by the explicit reference to a separate California Privacy Notice supplement. Organizations with Poshmark in their vendor stack should confirm whether the clarified data collection and use categories align with their own privacy notices and data processing agreements. No new material data practices appear to be asserted, but the increased specificity may require corresponding updates to dependent privacy documentation.
CCPA (California Consumer Privacy Act), CPRA (California Privacy Rights Act), state privacy laws (Virginia VCDPA, Colorado CPA, Utah UCPA, Connecticut CTDPA), GDPR (EU General Data Protection Regulation)
Full compliance analysis
Obligation analysis, escalation trigger, board language, and recommended action.
Watcher: regulatory citations + obligations. Professional: full compliance memo.
ConductAtlas provides verified policy intelligence sourced directly from platform documents. All analysis is intended to support, not replace, legal and compliance review. Record CA-C-001166.
See the full side-by-side comparison of every sentence added, removed, and modified.
🔒 Full diff — WatcherPoshmark significantly expanded and restructured its Privacy Policy on April 19, 2026, adding 249 sentences to provide detailed disclosure of …
Poshmark published a substantially expanded Privacy Policy on March 25, 2026, replacing version 8.1 with version 8.2. The new policy …
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