Section 01

What Is Age Verification for Adult Websites and Which Sites Must Comply?

US state age verification laws require commercial websites that publish a "substantial portion" of sexually explicit or harmful-to-minors content to verify that every visitor is 18 or older before granting access. A click-through "I am 18+" disclaimer is no longer legally sufficient in the 26 states with active laws.

The One-Third Threshold

Most state laws trigger when one-third or more of a website's content is sexually explicit — meaning adult directories, review sites, tube sites, and creator platforms all fall squarely within scope if they host or predominantly link to adult content. Some states use the phrase "substantial portion" rather than a specific percentage, giving enforcement authorities discretion in borderline cases.

Sites that function as adult content hubs but technically host mostly non-explicit pages — for example, a directory site where most pages are category indexes rather than direct video hosts — may attempt to argue they fall below the threshold. The safer and increasingly adopted approach is to comply regardless, since enforcement trends show broad interpretation of the threshold.

What Counts as Age Verification

A simple date-of-birth entry form or an "I confirm I am 18" checkbox is explicitly insufficient under every active state law. Laws require one or more of the following: a government-issued ID scan, a digitized ID card, a commercial age verification system based on transaction data (mortgage records, employment records, educational records), facial estimation technology, digital ID wallets, or zero-knowledge proof systems.

Florida's law goes further — it requires adult sites to offer at least one anonymized age verification option, meaning users must be able to prove their age without the site retaining their identifying data. Several other states are moving in this direction as privacy concerns mount alongside compliance requirements.

⚠️ Data Retention Rules

Most state laws explicitly prohibit websites from retaining age verification data after the verification is complete. Tennessee's law makes violations of data retention requirements a Class C felony — one of the strictest penalties of any state. Webmasters must ensure their chosen verification vendor does not store user data beyond what is needed for the verification transaction itself. This is not just a best practice — it is a statutory requirement in multiple states.

Section 02

What Did the Supreme Court Rule in Free Speech Coalition v. Paxton?

On June 27, 2025, the US Supreme Court ruled 6–3 in Free Speech Coalition v. Paxton that Texas's age verification law (HB 1181) is constitutional, resolving the central legal challenge that had blocked or slowed enforcement in several states and removing the primary barrier to nationwide expansion of these laws.

The Constitutional Question Settled

The ruling, authored by Justice Clarence Thomas, held that state age verification laws survive intermediate scrutiny rather than strict scrutiny — a critical legal distinction. Strict scrutiny would have required states to show their laws were the least restrictive means of achieving a compelling interest, a very high bar. Under intermediate scrutiny, states only need to show the law is substantially related to an important government interest (protecting minors), which the Court found Texas had demonstrated.

The Free Speech Coalition, the industry association representing adult content producers, had argued the laws imposed an unconstitutional burden on adults' First Amendment right to access legal content. The Court's 6–3 majority rejected that argument — finding that the burden on adult access was limited relative to the state's interest in protecting minors from explicit content.

The Practical Impact of the Ruling

Before the SCOTUS ruling, several active state laws were partially blocked by federal injunctions pending the constitutional question. After June 27, 2025, those injunctions were lifted or became moot, and state legislatures accelerated their own age verification bills. Nine states' age verification laws became effective in 2025 alone — a direct result of the ruling removing the litigation uncertainty that had slowed legislative action.

The ruling also established that any future state age verification laws tied narrowly to protecting minors will face a lower bar to constitutional survival, accelerating the national rollout. Industry observers project that the majority of remaining states will enact laws within the next 12–24 months, consistent with the pattern seen after the initial Louisiana model was upheld.

Bottom Line for Webmasters

The constitutional question is over. No federal court challenge to a narrowly-drawn state age verification law tied to minor protection is likely to succeed after Free Speech Coalition v. Paxton. The decision framework for adult website operators is no longer "will this law survive legal challenge?" — it is "which states are in force, what exactly do they require, and what verification vendor is right for my traffic profile?" For the full legal compliance framework, see our guide to adult site legal compliance in the US 2026.

Section 03

What Is the Full Timeline of US Age Verification Laws from 2022 to 2026?

Louisiana passed the first modern US age verification law in 2022, effective January 1, 2023. What followed was a three-wave expansion: a 2023 wave of early adopters, a 2024 wave driven by Southern and Midwestern states, and a 2025 post-SCOTUS wave that added nine states in a single year.

Age Verification Laws by Year of Enactment — States Cumulative
2022–2023 (Wave 1)
Louisiana, Arkansas, Texas, Virginia, Montana, Utah, NC
7 states
2024 (Wave 2)
Idaho, Kansas, Mississippi, KY, NE, AL, OK, IN, SC, SD
10 states
2025 (Wave 3 — post-SCOTUS)
FL, TN, GA, AZ, OH, ND, MO — 9 effective in 2025
9 states
2026 (Ongoing)
West Virginia (June 12, 2026) + ~10 pending
1 so far + ~10 pending
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Section 04

Which US States Have Active Age Verification Laws for Adult Websites — Complete List

The following table lists all 26 states with active age verification laws for adult websites as of June 2026, with the governing bill reference and the effective date of enforcement. States are listed alphabetically.

State Bill / Law Effective Date Status
Alabama HB 164 October 1, 2024 Active
Arkansas SB 66 July 31, 2023 Active
Arizona HB 2112 September 26, 2025 Active
Florida HB 3 January 1, 2025 Active
Georgia SB 351 July 1, 2025 Active
Idaho H 498 July 1, 2024 Active
Indiana SB 17 August 16, 2024 Active
Kansas SB 394 July 1, 2024 Active
Kentucky HB 278 July 15, 2024 Active
Louisiana Act 440 (HB 142) January 1, 2023 Active — First US Law
Mississippi HB 1126 / SB 2346 July 1, 2024 Active
Missouri 15 CSR 60-18 November 30, 2025 Active
Montana SB 544 January 1, 2024 Active
Nebraska LB 1092 July 18, 2024 Active
North Carolina HB 8 2023 Active
North Dakota HB 1561 August 2025 Active
Ohio HB 96 September 30, 2025 Active
Oklahoma SB 1959 November 1, 2024 Active
South Carolina HB 3424 January 1, 2025 Active
South Dakota H 3424 January 1, 2025 Active
Tennessee HB 1642 / SB 1792 January 13, 2025 Active — Class C Felony
Texas HB 1181 2023 (SCOTUS upheld June 2025) Active — SCOTUS Affirmed
Utah SB 287 2023 Active
Virginia SB 1515 July 1, 2023 Active
West Virginia June 12, 2026 Active — Most Recent
Wisconsin AB 105 2026 (pending Senate vote) Pending

Source: Free Speech Coalition tracker, AVPA (Age Verification Providers Association), Tom's Guide, Daily Citizen — as of June 2026. Effective dates are the enforcement commencement dates, not the bill signing dates.

Section 05

Which States Are Pursuing Age Verification Laws in 2026 — and Which Have No Law?

Approximately ten additional states are actively pursuing age verification legislation in 2026 following the SCOTUS ruling. Several of the largest US states by population — California, Illinois, New York, Pennsylvania — currently have no active adult content age verification law, though some have enacted related social media or device-level requirements.

State Current Status Notes
California Enacted — 2027 AB 1043 signed Oct 2025. Device-level age self-report only (no ID required). Effective January 1, 2027. Does not require adult site ID verification.
Hawaii Pending HB 1212 and HB 1198 carried over to 2026 legislative session. Active pursuit.
Iowa Pending HF 864 in Senate Technology Committee. SF 443 referred to Senate Technology Committee June 2025.
Michigan Pending SB 901 in committee January 2026. SB 284 / HB 4429 referred to multiple committees during 2025.
Minnesota Social Media Only HF 4138 enacted for social media age estimation (platforms with 10K+ users or $1B+ revenue). Effective July 1, 2027. Adult content bills did not pass this session.
Illinois None No active adult content age verification law. No actively advancing legislation as of June 2026.
Massachusetts None No enacted or actively advanced legislation as of June 2026.
Nevada None No adult content age verification law in effect.
New York None No active adult content age verification law. Bills have been introduced but not advanced.
Pennsylvania None No active adult content age verification law as of June 2026.
Oregon None No adult content age verification requirement currently in force.
Colorado None No active adult content age verification law.
🌍 International Context

The US is not legislating in isolation. The UK's Online Safety Act drove Aylo (Pornhub parent) to block new UK registrations in February 2026, resulting in a reported ~77% drop in UK traffic to non-compliant platforms. France and Australia have enforced similar requirements, producing comparable exits from major platforms. The EU advanced a proposal for a digital minimum age of 16 for social media in late 2025. The global direction is toward stronger enforcement, tighter data-retention rules, and a preference for privacy-preserving verification methods.

Section 06

What Do Adult Website Operators Need to Do to Comply with US Age Verification Laws?

Adult website operators with US traffic from any of the 26 active states must implement compliant age verification before granting access to explicit content. The minimum compliant solution is a commercial age verification system that uses government-issued ID, transaction-based data, or a privacy-preserving equivalent — deployed at the site entry point for all visitors, not just those from specific states.

Does Your Site Meet the Threshold?

If one-third or more of your website's content is sexually explicit, every active state law applies to your site. This includes: adult video tube sites, adult director and listing sites, creator subscription platforms (if the site itself hosts explicit content), and adult content review sites with substantial embedded or linked explicit media. Sites that provide primarily written editorial coverage of the adult industry — without hosting explicit content — may fall below the threshold.

The safest approach for borderline sites is to consult a specialist internet lawyer about your specific content proportion. The Free Speech Coalition maintains resources for members, and several law firms specializing in internet law publish updated state-by-state compliance guides.

Compliant Verification Methods

The most widely deployed commercially available solutions fall into four categories. First, government-issued ID scan vendors (Yoti, Veriff, Incode) — the user photographs their ID, the vendor confirms it is genuine and checks the birth date. Second, transaction-data verification — the system cross-references the user's financial history (mortgage, credit, employment records) to estimate age without requiring a direct ID scan. Third, facial age estimation — AI systems estimate age from a face scan without storing the image. Fourth, digital wallet and zero-knowledge proof systems — the user's age is attested by a trusted third party without the site ever seeing the underlying data.

Florida's requirement to offer at least one anonymized option means sites with significant Florida traffic must implement at least one privacy-preserving method alongside any ID-scan option. Several other states are moving toward mandatory privacy preservation as the second-generation of these laws is drafted.

The Pornhub Blocking Strategy — and Why It May Not Work for You

Aylo (Pornhub's parent company) chose to block access entirely in several US states rather than implement age verification — starting with Louisiana in 2023 and extending to other states as their laws became effective. This strategy avoids compliance overhead but sacrifices the entire traffic and revenue from affected states. It also requires accurate geolocation, which sophisticated users can bypass with VPNs — a point that some state legislators have responded to by adding VPN-blocking requirements to their bills (notably Wisconsin's proposed law).

For smaller operators who cannot afford to lose significant state-level traffic, the blocking strategy is often economically worse than implementing a compliant verification layer. Third-party verification vendors have significantly reduced the cost and friction of implementation since 2023, with several offering white-label solutions designed specifically for adult site integration. For data on how traffic loss from state blocking has impacted platform-level creator earnings and audience behaviour, see our OnlyFans 2025 creator economy statistics.

⚖️ Enforcement and Liability

Most state laws create a private right of action — meaning individual users (or their parents, in the case of minor access) can sue the website directly for damages without waiting for state enforcement action. Louisiana's law allows users to sue for actual damages plus attorney fees. Texas allows $10,000 statutory damages per violation. Tennessee makes violations a Class C felony. The liability exposure is not theoretical — class action litigation against non-compliant sites is a documented risk, particularly for operators with large US traffic volumes from active states. Non-compliance is not a viable long-term strategy for any adult site with meaningful US traffic.

US Adult Site Age Verification Coverage — June 2026
States with active AV laws
Enforcement in effect, compliance required
26 states (52%)
States actively pursuing laws
Bills in committee or Senate, 2026 session
~10 states (20%)
States with no law or no active bill
No compliance required as of June 2026
~14 states (28%)
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