The real cost of cookies: Why clinging to the past is holding back the future of advertising

By Pagel Colin, Director of Global Clients, Utiq
For years, third-party cookies were the duct tape of digital marketing – patched in to solve a problem they were never meant to fix. But now that the tape is peeling off, the cracks are widening. And yet, too much of the industry is still clinging on to them.
This is not just a technical issue. It’s a strategic one. And the longer advertisers and publishers delay moving on, the greater the cost – in lost reach, wasted spend, and diminished trust.
So let’s take a hard look at what’s broken, what it’s costing us, and how to move forward responsibly.
Cookies were never built for this
The original purpose of cookies was simple: to help websites identify and remember users from visit to visit. Somehow, that clunky mechanism became the default for targeting, tracking, and measuring across the open web.
But the cracks have been visible for years.
Browsers, such as Safari and Firefox, have progressively restricted or blocked third-party cookies altogether. What’s left is an unstable, inconsistent infrastructure that fails to deliver what advertisers need.
What are the practical implications of this?
- At least 50% of your audience is unreachable: If your targeting is based on cookies, you’ve already lost access to at least half of your audience. That’s not theoretical; it’s happening now. In other words, if your media plan still relies on third-party cookies, you’re speaking into a void.
- You can’t control frequency: Frequency capping is one of the core pillars of effective digital advertising. And yet, with cookies, it’s becoming impossible. Without a clean, stable identifier, you have no way of knowing whether a user has seen your ad once or twenty times. The result? Oversaturation, wasted impressions, annoyed consumers – and a tarnished brand.
- You’re flying blind on measurement: The goal of measurement is to understand what’s working and what’s not. But if cookies are literally crumbling, then so is your ability to link exposure to outcome. Third-party cookies no longer offer a coherent or consistent view of performance. This means your ability to optimise budgets, creatives or placements is severely compromised.
The real cost? You’re losing value every day
This is where it gets painful.
Lost revenue: With only half your audience reachable, you’re leaving value on the table – often without realising it.
Wasted spend: According to our internal benchmarks at Utiq, as much as 20% of media spend can be wasted due to frequency mismanagement alone.
Missed opportunities: Without accurate, transparent measurement, you can’t make confident decisions. And indecision is the enemy of growth.
This isn’t a small technical glitch. It’s a systemic inefficiency that advertisers are paying for every single day.
So, what’s the alternative?
We believe the answer isn’t to look backwards, but to start building a better, privacy-first future. Marketers need to implement technology that helps them 1. reach real people 2. respect their privacy and 3. perform both deterministically and at scale. This approach leverages authentic, user-consented identifiers, to enable better marketing performance and ROI.
By using secure signals like 3G, 4G, 5G and Wi-Fi – not third-party cookies – marketers can harness stable, cross-browser identifiers that embrace the clearest consent and most rigorous privacy standards – fostering trust, transparency, and accountability across the open internet.
By moving beyond cookies towards deterministic addressability and measurement of human audiences across all environments, including non-targetable browsers – marketers suddenly get access to unique and scalable value:
- Improved addressability across all browsers
- Better frequency control
- Reliable measurement
- Greater efficiency, less media waste
In short, you get privacy and performance, not either/or.
Stop waiting. Start rebuilding.
The truth is that cookies are already gone for much of your audience. Google’s inertia regarding deprecation might have bought some temporary comfort – but it doesn’t solve the problem. It just delays the inevitable.
The opportunity now is to lead. To build a tech stack that puts people first, not platforms. One that respects users while unlocking better performance for advertisers. As I often tell clients: the cost of doing nothing is far greater than the cost of doing something new.
So if you’re still relying on cookies, ask yourself: what would it take to rebuild with privacy, trust and effectiveness at the core? Let’s answer that question together, as an industry, and act on it.