Responding to a Subject Access Request (SAR) should be a routine GDPR process.
In reality, it is one of the most anxiety‑inducing compliance tasks organisations face.
Disclose too little, and you risk an ICO complaint.
Disclose too much, and you may expose confidential information, third‑party data, or legal risk.
This balancing act leads many organisations to ask:
“How do we respond to a Subject Access Request properly: without accidentally disclosing something we shouldn’t?”
This article explains where organisations go wrong, what the law actually requires, and how to strike the right balance when responding to SARs.
A common instinct when handling SARs is to take an overly cautious approach:
Ironically, this approach is a major cause of Subject Access Request complaints.
The ICO has consistently made it clear that:
A response that looks safe internally can easily appear non‑transparent or obstructive to a data subject, increasing regulatory risk rather than reducing it.
Before deciding what to redact or withhold, organisations must understand what they are legally required to disclose.
Personal data includes:
This means SAR scope often includes:
Misclassifying information is one of the most common causes of incomplete SAR responses.
Internal opinions are still personal data if they relate to the individual, even if they are uncomfortable or informal.
SARs are not limited to positive or finalised information.
Redacting names alone may still leave individuals identifiable through:
Redaction must be meaningful, not cosmetic.
There is no blanket exemption for “internal discussions”.
If an email:
…it is likely disclosable.
Third‑party data does not automatically exempt disclosure.
The correct approach is:
A complete refusal is rarely justified.
UK GDPR does allow organisations to restrict disclosure in specific situations, but these must be applied narrowly and evidentially.
Common lawful bases include:
What matters is not whether an exemption exists, but:
Vague or unexplained withholding is a frequent ICO criticism.
A compliant SAR response is not just a document dump.
Organisations must also explain:
Failing to include this information is a technical breach, even if all personal data has been disclosed.
While under‑disclosure attracts regulatory complaints, over‑disclosure creates different risks:
Poor redaction decisions can quickly become secondary data breaches.
This is why SAR responses should be treated as governance decisions, not administrative tasks.
Handled correctly, SARs become routine.
Handled poorly, they expose wider compliance gaps.
If you are handling:
GRC Hub can help you respond confidently, proportionately, and defensibly.
👉 Speak to us about SAR support