AI in clinical decision support, diagnostics, patient scheduling, or billing. Here is what Connecticut businesses need to know in 2026.
Connecticut has enacted SB 2 — AI Accountability. Developers and deployers of high-risk AI must conduct impact assessments and disclose usage.
State law does not replace federal law — you must comply with both. These federal rules apply to healthcare ai nationwide:
Connecticut's SB 2 — AI Accountability applies to most businesses with limited exemptions. Even businesses with under 50 employees should review requirements. Always review the specific statute for employee count and revenue thresholds.
The key deadline in Connecticut is October 1, 2026. The law is enacted and compliance is required by the deadline above.
Connecticut penalties for AI non-compliance: Up to $25,000 per violation. Enforcement is active. The state AG has authority to investigate and fine without prior warning.
Federal law does not currently preempt state AI laws. Connecticut's SB 2 — AI Accountability applies independently of federal rules. Federal laws like ECOA, FCRA, and HIPAA also apply alongside state law — so you must comply with both.
Best practice: document all AI systems used, conduct an internal audit, implement required disclosures, and keep records for at least 3 years. For very high-risk uses like healthcare ai, consider hiring an independent third-party auditor to validate compliance.
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