🔴Illinois HB 3773IN EFFECTUp to ~$70K/violation|🔴Texas TRAIGA (HB 149)IN EFFECTAG-enforced|🔴Utah AI Policy ActIN EFFECT$2,500/violation|⚠️Colorado AI Act (SB 205)Jan 1, 2027AG-enforced|⚠️California SB 942Aug 2, 2026$5K/day|⚠️EU AI Act Art. 50Aug 2, 2026€35M or 7% revenue|⚠️New York RAISE ActJan 1, 2027AG civil penalties|🔴Illinois HB 3773IN EFFECTUp to ~$70K/violation|🔴Texas TRAIGA (HB 149)IN EFFECTAG-enforced|🔴Utah AI Policy ActIN EFFECT$2,500/violation|⚠️Colorado AI Act (SB 205)Jan 1, 2027AG-enforced|⚠️California SB 942Aug 2, 2026$5K/day|⚠️EU AI Act Art. 50Aug 2, 2026€35M or 7% revenue|⚠️New York RAISE ActJan 1, 2027AG civil penalties|
Last verified · Jul 11, 2026Sourced from official primary sourceslegis.la.gov.
ProposedDeadline: August 1, 2026
Flag of Louisiana

AI Laws in Louisiana (LA)

Proposed mandatory disclosures when AI makes consequential decisions affecting Louisiana residents.

Map showing the location of Louisiana in the United States
Louisiana within the United States

What HB 312 requires

Louisiana has enacted HB 312 — AI Transparency. Proposed mandatory disclosures when AI makes consequential decisions affecting Louisiana residents. This page explains what the law requires in plain language, who is in scope, the penalty for non-compliance, and what your business needs to do before the August 1, 2026 deadline.

Who is in scope

The law covers businesses that use AI to interact with consumers, make consumer-facing decisions (credit, pricing, recommendations, content delivery), or generate AI content that is presented to the public. Company size does not determine whether you are in scope — a startup with ten employees using an off-the-shelf AI hiring tool has the same disclosure obligations as an enterprise running a custom-built model. What matters is whether the AI system makes or substantially informs a decision that affects a Louisiana resident in a consequential way. Notably, the obligation extends to vendors: if your company deploys an AI tool built by a third party, you — as the deployer — are responsible for ensuring it meets Louisiana's requirements, even if you did not build it.

Key compliance requirements

Louisiana's consumer AI transparency requirements focus on two baseline obligations: disclosure and opt-out. Businesses must inform consumers when an AI system is involved in a consequential decision — meaning a decision that meaningfully affects a consumer's access to services, pricing, credit, or opportunities. The opt-out requirement gives consumers a mechanism to request human review or to decline AI-driven processing entirely. Meeting this standard is not just a notice-posting exercise: companies need to map every consumer-facing AI touchpoint, verify that their disclosure language is accurate and readable, and build a functioning human-review pathway that responds to opt-out requests within a defined window.

Penalties for non-compliance

Louisiana's AI law gives the state attorney general authority to investigate violations and seek civil relief. While statutory penalty amounts are still being finalized by implementing regulations, enforcement precedent from early AI cases in other states suggests regulators will prioritize companies with the widest reach and the most significant consumer impact. Consumer AI violations in Louisiana may also attract federal coordination: the FTC's Operation AI Comply sweep (September 2024) demonstrated that state and federal enforcers share intelligence on companies with widespread AI disclosure failures.

What to do now

Build your AI inventory first. You cannot comply with Louisiana's requirements if you do not know which systems are in scope. Map every AI or automated decision system your company uses that touches Louisiana residents — including third-party vendor tools integrated into your product.

Draft accurate disclosure language. Work with legal counsel to produce disclosure statements that accurately describe what your AI does, what data it uses, and what the consumer can do if they want human review. Vague or boilerplate disclosures will not satisfy Louisiana's requirements.

Build the opt-out pathway. Implement a functioning process for consumers to request human review or opt out of AI-assisted processing. Test it before the deadline — regulators will look for live, working mechanisms, not documented promises.

Assign a compliance owner. Designate someone — legal counsel, a privacy officer, or a dedicated AI governance lead — to track regulatory developments, own the audit documentation, and respond if an enforcement inquiry arrives. The compliance deadline is August 1, 2026. Don't wait until the deadline to start.

Louisiana AI law in the broader regulatory landscape

Louisiana's law does not exist in isolation. The trend across the United States is toward more regulation, not less: at least 20 states enacted or proposed AI-specific legislation in 2025 alone, and federal enforcement agencies — the FTC, EEOC, CFPB, and HHS — have all issued guidance making clear that existing laws apply to AI systems even where no AI-specific statute exists. Companies doing business across state lines must track each state's requirements independently — there is no federal preemption that would allow a company to satisfy Louisiana's law and automatically comply with requirements in Illinois, Colorado, or New York.

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Recent AI law developments in Louisiana

Updated July 12, 2026

Recent news coverage of AI regulation and policy in Louisiana. Headlines are aggregated automatically; follow each link for the full story.

AI Law NewsFlag of Louisiana
Transparency Coalition
May 29, 2026
AI Legislative Update: May 29, 2026

Coverage from Transparency Coalition on AI legislation and regulation relevant to Louisiana.

Transparency Coalition·
Live · Legislature

AI bills moving through the Louisiana legislature

Updated July 11, 2026

AI-related bills currently tracked in the Louisiana legislature, updated automatically from Open States and the state legislature's own official record. Follow each link for the official bill text, sponsors, and status history.

HB 119CRIME: Provides relative to unlawful conduct involving images of another person created by artificial intelligence (EN SEE FISC NOTE GF EX)

Signed by the Governor. Becomes Act No. 782.

Open States·
SB 42CRIME/PUNISHMENT: Prohibits using artificial intelligence to create child sexual abuse materials. (8/1/26)

Signed by the Governor. Becomes Act No. 892.

Open States·
HB 459ELECTIONS/CANDIDATES: Provides relative to the use of artificial intelligence in political campaigns

Signed by the Governor. Becomes Act No. 806.

Open States·
HR 302TECHNOLOGY: Requests the Legislative Youth Advisory Council to discuss artificial intelligence issues that may affect young people in Louisiana

Taken by the Clerk of the House and presented to the Secretary of State in accordance with the Rules of the House.

Open States·
HB 639ELECTIONS/CAMPAIGNS: Requires disclosure of the use of artificial intelligence in telephone campaign communications

Signed by the Governor. Becomes Act No. 559.

Open States·
SB 346SCHOOLS: Prohibits the use of deepfake material against students enrolled in K-12. (8/1/26)

Signed by the Governor. Becomes Act No. 496.

Open States·
SB 347COLLEGES/UNIVERSITIES: Provides for the crime of "unlawful deepfake" to be added to the definition of power-based violence under the Campus Accountability and Safety Act. (gov sig)

Signed by the Governor. Becomes Act No. 497.

Open States·
SB 246HEALTH/ACC INSURANCE: Establishes requirements for health insurance issuers using artificial intelligence or automated decision systems. (8/1/26)

Rules suspended. Called from the Calendar.

Open States·
HR 249STUDENT/STANDARDS: Requests the State Board of Elementary and Secondary Education to incorporate artificial intelligence into content standards

Taken by the Clerk of the House and presented to the Secretary of State in accordance with the Rules of the House.

Open States·
SB 110CRIME/PUNISHMENT: Prohibits using a child's image to train artificial intelligence to produce child sexual abuse materials. (8/1/26)

Signed by the Governor. Becomes Act No. 211.

Open States·
SB 474INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY: Creates the Protecting Louisiana's Infrastructure from Artificial Intelligence Risk Act. (1/1/27)

Senate floor amendments read and adopted.

Open States·
HB 1188CONSUMERS/PROTECTION: Provides relative to protections for minors regarding use of chatbots

Read by title, under the rules, referred to the Committee on Commerce.

Open States·
HB 1149CURRICULA: Requires each public school to incorporate instruction on artificial intelligence into an existing course of study for each student in grades six through twelve (OR NO IMPACT See Note)

Read by title, under the rules, referred to the Committee on Education.

Open States·
HB 1184PUBLIC CONTRACTS: Prohibits public contracts with entities owned or controlled by foreign adversaries for the provision of artificial intelligence technology (OR NO IMPACT See Note)

Read by title, under the rules, referred to the Committee on Appropriations.

Open States·
HB 734COMMERCE: Creates a consumer bill of rights regarding artificial intelligence

Discharged from the Committee on Commerce.

Open States·
SB 5MENTAL HEALTH: Provides for the regulation of mental health chatbots that use artificial intelligence technology. (gov sig)

Introduced in the Senate; read by title. Rules suspended. Read second time and referred to the Committee on Health and Welfare.

Open States·
HB 157TRADEMARKS/TRADE NAMES: Establishes a cause of action for misuse of artificial intelligence

Read by title, under the rules, referred to the Committee on Civil Law and Procedure.

Open States·
HB 197HEALTH CARE/PROVIDERS: Provides for the use of artificial intelligence by healthcare providers

Read by title, under the rules, referred to the Committee on Health and Welfare.

Open States·
HB 230CONSUMERS/PROTECTION: Provides for disclosure of artificial intelligence-generated content (OR SEE FISC NOTE GF EX)

Read by title, under the rules, referred to the Committee on Commerce.

Open States·
HB 295TECHNOLOGY: Prohibits the development of artificial intelligence systems with certain capabilities involving interactions with minors (OR SEE FISC NOTE GF EX)

Read by title, under the rules, referred to the Committee on Commerce.

Open States·
HB 421LABOR: Provides relative to the use of automated decision systems with respect to employment decisions (OR INCREASE GF EX See Note)

Read by title, under the rules, referred to the Committee on Labor and Industrial Relations.

Open States·
HB 425CONSUMERS/PROTECTION: Provides for consumer protection practices for customers engaging with artificial intelligence (OR SEE FISC NOTE GF EX)

Read by title, under the rules, referred to the Committee on Commerce.

Open States·
HB 686CRIME/MISDEMEANOR: Provides for the unlawful use of artificial intelligence in telephone calls (OR SEE FISC NOTE LF EX)

Read by title, under the rules, referred to the Committee on Administration of Criminal Justice.

Open States·
HB 791COMMERCIAL REGULATIONS: Provides relative to the regulation of artificial intelligence (OR +$256,243 GF EX See Note)

Read by title, under the rules, referred to the Committee on Commerce.

Open States·
HB 880INSURANCE: Creates the Louisiana Artificial Intelligence Insurance Fairness Act (OR +$1,029,533 SG EX See Note)

Read by title, under the rules, referred to the Committee on Insurance.

Open States·

Applicable laws

HB 312 — AI TransparencyAugust 1, 2026

↗ Each law links to its primary government source. Full source list below.

Louisiana AI compliance by industry

Healthcare
Finance & Banking
HR & Recruiting
Tech & SaaS
Marketing & Advertising
Insurance
Education
Legal Services
Real Estate
Retail & E-Commerce
Manufacturing
Transportation
Media & Entertainment
Nonprofit
Government Contractor

AI compliance by company size

Jump to top-risk sectors for your company size

Startups (1-10)
🏥 Healthcare
Small (11-50)
🏦 Finance
Mid-Market (51-500)
👥 HR & Recruiting
Enterprise (500+)
💻 Tech & SaaS

Quick resources for Louisiana

✅ Compliance checklist
💰 Fines & penalties
📋 Requirements
📖 Compliance guide
⏰ Deadlines

Industry risk levels in Louisiana

Risk by sector
🏥 HealthcareVery High
🏦 Finance & BankingVery High
💻 Tech & SaaSHigh
🛒 Retail & E-CommerceMedium-High
👔 HR & RecruitingVery High
⚖️ Legal ServicesHigh
📢 Marketing & AdvertisingMedium
🎓 EducationMedium-High
Risk levels based on Louisiana AI law requirements and industry-specific regulations

Do you also serve EU customers?

The EU AI Act applies to any company serving EU customers, even if you're based in Louisiana. Penalties reach €35M or 7% of global revenue. Deadline: August 2, 2026.

Check EU compliance →·GermanyFranceIreland

Other states with active AI laws

California
$5,000 per violation; each day is a discrete violation
Colorado
AG-enforced (Colorado Consumer Protection Act); up to ~$20,000 per violation
Illinois
IDHR/IHRC make-whole relief + tiered civil penalties up to ~$16,000–$70,000 per act per aggrieved party
Indiana
N/A (state-government governance)
Maine
Enforced as a violation of the Maine Unfair Trade Practices Act
Minnesota
Up to $7,500 per violation
Check your state's risk →

Related resources

Free AssessmentHealthcare AI LawsHR & Hiring AI LawsEU AI Act
Editorial standards

Anchored to the primary government source (statute, bill text, or agency rule) and verified directly against it · Last verified Jul 11, 2026. See our methodology.

Primary sources · Louisiana