X Launches Native ‘Paid Partnership’ Labels to Clean Up Your Timeline

For years, the disclosure of a “brand deal” on X (formerly Twitter) felt like a clumsy after-thought. Creators were forced to wedge #ad or #sponsored into their limited character counts, often disrupting the flow of a post just to stay on the right side of federal law. On March 1, 2026, X officially moved to professionalize this experience. Following a brief beta period, the platform has rolled out a built-in Paid Partnership label, a native tool designed to bring transparency to the “global public square” and give creators a cleaner way to monetize their influence.

Announced by X’s Head of Product, Nikita Bierthe feature is more than just a UI update; it is a strategic move to align X with industry giants like Instagram and YouTube, while addressing the “wild west” of undisclosed promotions that have recently flooded the platform.

The new feature is remarkably simple but structurally significant. For the first time, X has introduced a dedicated content disclosure” toggle within the post composer.

Here is how it works for creators:

  • The Flag Icon: When drafting a post, creators can now tap a new flag icon located at the bottom of the text field.

  • The Toggle: Enabling the “Paid Partnership” setting automatically attaches a standardized label directly below the post content, separate from the body text.

  • Retroactive Transparency: In a win for compliance-conscious influencers, the label can also be added to existing posts. By tapping the three-dot menu on a published post and selecting “Add content disclosure,” creators can fix a missed disclosure without having to delete and repost.

By moving the disclosure into a standardized label, X is transforming a loose text string (a hashtag) into structured data. This allows the platform to better track sponsored content performance and, potentially, offer brands more granular analytics on how “partnership” posts compare to standard organic reach.

The FTC Shadow: Why Now?

The timing of this release isn’t accidental. The U.S. Federal Trade Commission (FTC) has been cracking down on social media “endorsements” since 2017, requiring that any material connection between a creator and a brand be “clear and conspicuous.”

While hashtags like #ad theoretically met the requirement, they were easily buried in a sea of other tags or hidden behind the “Show More” button. X’s native label ensures that the disclosure is unavoidable. As Nikita Bier noted in his announcement, undisclosed promotions “hurt the integrity of the product” and lead users to distrust their timelines. By providing a native tool, X is making it easier for its 290 million users to distinguish between a genuine recommendation and a paid testimonial.

The Forbidden Categories: Where You Won’t See the Label

Despite the new flexibility, X is keeping a tight leash on what can be promoted via these partnerships. The platform has released a list of “ineligible” industries that are barred from using the new labeling system. Unless given a specific case-by-case exemption, the Paid Partnership label cannot be used for:

  • Regulated Substances: Alcohol, tobacco, drugs, and weapons.

  • Sensitive Services: Dating and marriage services, sexual products, or weight-loss supplements.

  • Societal Impact: Political or social issue campaigns are currently excluded to prevent the “commercialization” of political discourse.

The Crypto Caveat and Regional Borders

Perhaps the most complex part of this rollout involves Cryptocurrency. While X has recently loosened its stance on crypto promotions in many regions, the new Paid Partnership rules come with heavy geographic caveats.

In markets with strict financial promotion laws specifically the United Kingdom, the European Union, and Australia sponsored crypto posts remain highly restricted or outright banned. The burden of compliance rests squarely on the influencer: if a creator takes a deal from a crypto project, they must use X’s visibility controls to ensure the post is hidden from users in those restricted regions. This “bifurcated” experience shows that while X wants to be a “multi-purpose digital platform,” it isn’t ready to fight the world’s most powerful financial regulators just yet.

A Battle for the ‘Creator Class’

This update is the latest salvo in Elon Musk’s war to lure creators away from Meta and Google. Over the past year, X has increased its ad-revenue sharing payouts and introduced long-form “Articles” with cash prizes. However, many creators still viewed X as a place for “news” rather than “business.”

By introducing a professional partnership tool, X is telling the influencer community that it is ready to be a primary revenue driver. It turns a platform once known for its chaotic “real-time pulse” into a structured creative playground where brand deals look as polished as they do on a curated Instagram feed.

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