Artificial Intelligence Policy Act
Utah AI Policy Act
Data last verified: March 23, 2026
- Effective Date
- May 1, 2024
- Enforcement Date
- Not specified in statute
- Sunset Date
- July 1, 2027
Summary
Utah AI Policy Act requires operators of generative AI to disclose AI use when asked. SB 226 (2025) narrowed scope to high-risk interactions only (health data, financial data, biometric data, significant personal decisions). SB 332 (2025) extended sunset to 7/1/2027. Proactive disclosure required for regulated professionals in high-risk interactions.
Who It Applies To
Not specified in statute
Penalties
- Penalty Range
- $0 – $5,000per violation
- Cure Period
- Not specified in statute
- Private Right of Action
- No private right of action
- Enforcement Body
- Utah Division of Consumer Protection; Utah Attorney General
- Notes
- Civil penalties of $5,000 per violation of court or administrative orders.
Requirements (2)
- DisclosureSB 226 § 13-75-103(1)
This law requires operators of generative AI to disclose that the consumer is interacting with AI (not a human) when directly asked.
- DisclosureSB 226 § 13-75-103(2)-(3)
This law requires regulated professionals (licensed practitioners) to proactively disclose AI use at the beginning of high-risk interactions.
Claire tracks 31 state and local AI laws across 23 US states. No prescriptive federal AI compliance statutes have been enacted. EU AI Act and sector-specific regulations are not covered.
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