HomeLegal DirectoryWashington HB 2225 (AI chatbot disclosure, minor protections, crisis protocols)

Enacted (not yet in effect) Moderate protection

Washington HB 2225 — AI Companion Chatbot Safety Act

Washington · Washington HB 2225 (2026), effective January 1, 2027

Washington's AI Companion Chatbot Safety Act (HB 2225), signed March 24, 2026, requires operators of AI companion chatbots to clearly disclose to all users that they are interacting with AI, not a human. The disclosure must be repeated every three hours for adult users and every one hour for minor users. Operators must implement suicide and self-harm crisis protocols for all users, protect minors from manipulative engagement mechanics, and restrict access to adult content. The law includes a private right of action, allowing affected individuals to sue operators. It takes effect January 1, 2027.

Technical detail

Washington HB 2225 (2026 session). Signed by Governor Ferguson March 24, 2026; effective January 1, 2027. Scope: AI-powered companion chatbot applications. Requirements: (1) clear AI disclosure at start of interaction; (2) recurring disclosure every 3 hours for adults, every 1 hour for minors; (3) mandatory crisis protocol for suicidal ideation/self-harm messages (referral to crisis services); (4) prohibition on features that use variable-ratio reinforcement or unpredictable rewards for minor users; (5) restrictions on adult content for minors. Enforcement: private right of action included. Governor Ferguson signed both HB 2225 (chatbot) and HB 1170 (AI content provenance) on the same date.

Who is protected: Washington residents interacting with AI companion chatbots, particularly minors

Who must comply: Operators of AI companion chatbot applications with users in Washington State

Key facts

JurisdictionWashington
LevelState
StatusEnacted (not yet in effect)
Protection strengthModerate protection
Effective date2027-01-01
Enacted2026-03-24
CitationWashington HB 2225 (2026), effective January 1, 2027
Enforced byWashington State Attorney General; private right of action
Private right of actionYes — individuals can sue
PenaltiesPrivate right of action (specific damages amounts not confirmed in secondary sources)
Topicsconsumer protection · children's online safety · automated decision-making
Last verified2026-07-10
Official sourceWashington State Enacts Law Regulating AI Companion Chatbots with Private Right of Action (Hunton Andrews Kurth) ↗

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