These are legally enforceable rights under California law — exercising them can limit how widely your financial data is used for marketing and give you visibility into what Robinhood knows about you.
Consumer impact
Robinhood collects highly sensitive financial and identity data — including Social Security numbers, government-issued IDs, bank account details, trading history, and device geolocation — and shares this data with affiliated companies, service providers, and third-party marketing partners. Users have limited ability to restrict this sharing, and GLBA exemptions may prevent California residents from exercising full CCPA deletion rights over brokerage account data. You can opt out of data sharing for marketing purposes by contacting Robinhood at privacy@robinhood.com or by submitting a CCPA rights request at robinhood.com/us/en/support/articles/ccpa-privacy-rights/.
What you can do
⚠️ These actions may provide transparency or partial mitigation but may not fully address the underlying issue. Effectiveness varies by jurisdiction and individual circumstances.
Delete Your Data
Visit Robinhood's CCPA privacy rights page and submit your request type (Know, Delete, Correct, or Opt-Out). You will need to verify your identity. Robinhood must respond within 45 days.
Export Your Data
Submit a 'Right to Know' request to receive a copy of all personal information Robinhood has collected about you. Navigate to the CCPA rights portal and select 'Request to Know'.
Applicable agencies
State AG
California Privacy Protection Agency and California AG enforce CCPA/CPRA consumer rights including access, deletion, correction, and opt-out rights against companies like Robinhood.
FTC has concurrent authority to enforce against unfair or deceptive privacy practices related to CCPA-style opt-out mechanisms under FTC Act Section 5.