OVERVIEW
AI Disclosure Requirements: Complete SMB Guide
Three states have passed AI disclosure laws taking effect in 2026. Here's the complete picture for small business owners.
The three laws at a glance
- Colorado SB 24-205 — broadest. Effective June 30, 2026. $20K/violation. Applies to any consumer-facing AI.
- Illinois HB 3773 — narrowest. Effective Jan 1, 2026. $10K/violation. Employment AI only.
- California CPPA ADMT rules — most detailed. Effective Oct 1, 2025. $7.5K/violation. Significant decisions about consumers.
What ALL three require
- A clear notice before AI processes consumer data
- Plain-English description of what the AI does
- An opt-out or human-review path
- Documentation you can produce on request
Universal disclosure template
If you write one disclosure that satisfies all three laws, here's a starting point:
Copy-paste ready: This site uses artificial intelligence and automated decisionmaking technology, including [list your tools]. These systems may process your interactions and personal information to provide service, make recommendations, or assist with [hiring / customer service / pricing / etc.]. You have the right to opt out, request a human review, and access information about how decisions are made about you. To exercise these rights, contact us at [email].
Where to put the disclosure
- Above the fold on any page where AI processes data (chat widgets, hiring forms, pricing pages)
- In your privacy policy with a dedicated AI section
- Inside the AI tool itself — chat widgets should have an in-widget disclosure
- In job applications if you use AI screening
What you DON'T need to do
- You don't need to expose your proprietary algorithms
- You don't need to stop using AI
- You don't need a fancy AI ethics board (unless you're enterprise-sized)
- You don't need to translate to 12 languages — English is fine for most SMBs
Penalty exposure summary
Per affected consumer per violation:
- Colorado: up to $20,000
- Illinois: up to $10,000
- California: up to $7,500
For a small site with 100 affected consumers, total exposure could reach $3.75M. Most enforcement, though, will start with cease-and-desist letters and modest fines for clear non-compliance.
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Scan my site →This article provides educational information only, not legal advice. Consult a qualified attorney for compliance decisions specific to your business. Regulations change frequently and the information here may become outdated.