Asking for Consent to be Recontacted in Surveys: Opt-in, Opt-out, or Choice?

Authors

  • Oliver Lipps Swiss Centre of Expertise in the Social Sciences (FORS)
  • Lukas Lauener
  • Anke Tresch

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.18148/srm/2025.v19i1.8366

Keywords:

(Informed) Consent, recontact, opt-out, opt-in, panel survey

Abstract

It may be necessary that survey respondents must be asked for consent to recontact for follow-up surveys. In this paper, we compare three options to ask for consent: choice (yes/no), opt-in, and opt-out. We analyse consent rates and compare consenters with non-consenters with respect to a comprehensive set of socio-demographic characteristics, political attitudes, and survey-related variables in a probability-based online panel survey. In a second step, we analyse consenters’ actual participation in the first follow-up survey. We find few differences between giving consent and actual participation in the first follow-up wave. For both, the opt-out option has higher response rates than the other two options. Both consenters and participants in the first follow-up wave are most similar to non-consenters in the opt-in design, closely followed by the opt-out design. Compared with opt-in and choice, there are more people in the opt-out design with low political interest, nonvoters, and who find the survey uninteresting; groups typically underrepresented in surveys. These findings speak in favour of the opt-out design.

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Published

2025-04-10

How to Cite

Lipps, O., Lauener, L., & Tresch, A. (2025). Asking for Consent to be Recontacted in Surveys: Opt-in, Opt-out, or Choice?. Survey Research Methods, 19(1), 43–53. https://doi.org/10.18148/srm/2025.v19i1.8366

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