As retailers embrace AI to improve digital shopping, virtual try-on tech blends convenience with personalisation. Yet, in the race for seamless experiences, critical data protection concerns are often overlooked.

Published  17 September 2025

As retailers increasingly adopt artificial intelligence (“AI”) to enhance digital shopping journeys, virtual try-on (“VTO”) technology offers a compelling combination of convenience, personalisation, and engagement. Whether helping customers see how a lipstick shade suits their complexion or visualising furniture in their living room, VTO aims to reduce product returns and increase buyer confidence.

However, this innovation also raises complex data protection questions that are too often overlooked in the pursuit of frictionless consumer experiences. VTO solutions rely on processing a wide range of personal data, often including biometric data raising complex compliance issues under the UK GDPR and related data protection laws.

How VTO technology works

Retailers are integrating VTO tools across a variety of product categories, including:

These technologies enable rich, personalised consumer experiences, while also generating valuable data for retailers’ marketing, analytics, and product development teams.

What personal data is collected?

VTO solutions may collect and process the following categories of personal data:

Key compliance risks

Best practice recommendations

To align VTO deployments with data protection compliance obligations, retailers should adopt the following best practices:

Privacy by design and default

Informed, granular consent

Tailored and just-in-time privacy notices

Use contextual notices at the point of data capture, explaining:

Data security and retention controls

Conclusion

VTO technology presents significant commercial opportunities but also heightened data protection responsibilities. With the processing of biometric and other sensitive personal data, compliance with the UK GDPR is not optional. Retailers must ensure that VTO platforms are designed with privacy in mind, informed by data protection principles such as purpose limitation, data minimisation, and accountability.

The retailers that proactively implement strong data governance, user transparency, and ethical AI practices will not only mitigate regulatory and reputational risk—they will also build deeper consumer trust in an increasingly privacy-conscious marketplace.