For agricultural suppliers operating in Tipperary, data protection isn’t just paperwork — it’s a legal requirement that protects both your customers and your business. From farmer names, home addresses, and phone numbers to herd numbers and farm enterprise details linked to individuals, you’re processing personal data that falls squarely under GDPR. Here’s your complete compliance guide.
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Absolutely. Under the GDPR and the Irish Data Protection Act 2018, all agricultural suppliers in Tipperary that collect, store, or process personal data must be fully compliant. This covers everything from booking details and payment information to CCTV footage and staff records. The DPC can impose fines of up to €20 million for non-compliance, and Irish businesses of all sizes are subject to enforcement.
RISK ASSESSMENT
Maintaining legacy customer databases with decades of farmer personal data, credit records, and account histories without any data review
Operating credit accounts that hold farmer personal financial data without adequate security or access controls
Sharing customer data with manufacturers, credit reference agencies, and delivery partners without data processing agreements
Using customer purchase history data for targeted marketing without consent
Collecting and retaining more personal data on credit application forms than is necessary for the credit decision
DATA INVENTORY
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REQUIRED DOCUMENTS
Every Agricultural Supplier in Ireland needs these documents to demonstrate GDPR compliance.
STEP BY STEP
Provide a privacy notice to all customers — including long-standing account holders — explaining what personal data you hold and how you use it.
Audit your customer database and identify records that are no longer needed — many agri-suppliers hold data for customers who have not traded in 10 or more years.
Implement access controls so that counter staff cannot access customer credit records and financial information that is only relevant to accounts personnel.
Put data processing agreements in place with credit reference agencies, manufacturers who receive customer data for warranty purposes, and delivery contractors.
Review credit application forms and remove any fields that collect data beyond what is necessary for the credit decision.
Set clear retention periods: delete closed credit account records after 6 years, and remove inactive customer records after 3 years of no transactions.
Ensure that customer purchase history data is not used for marketing or profiling purposes without consent.
COMMON PITFALLS
Operating a customer database that has never been audited or cleaned, containing personal data for thousands of farmers going back decades.
Keeping credit application forms with PPS numbers, bank details, and personal references in filing cabinets accessible to all staff.
Not having data processing agreements with credit reference agencies despite sharing customer personal and financial data with them regularly.
Allowing all counter staff to access the full customer account system, including credit balances and payment history, when they only need basic contact details.
FAQ
Everything you need to know about GDPR compliance for your business.
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Every day your Agricultural Supplier in Tipperary operates without proper GDPR compliance is a risk. The DPC is increasing enforcement across Ireland — get ahead of it today.
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