New Jersey S 1826

Issue: Age Verification

Latest Action: Introduced, referred to Judiciary committee on January 13, 2026

Extends New Jersey’s existing law against distributing obscenity to minors to apply to websites. The bill defines failing to age-verify a user as “promoting obscene material” to a minor, which is subject to criminal prosecution (third-degree crime, punishable by 3–5 years in prison and/or up to $15,000 fine) and an additional fine of up to $50,000.

Other relevant features:

  • Enforcement: criminal charges, fines
  • Age verification mechanisms allowed:
    • State-run digital ID systems (e.g., NJ MVC driver’s license ID verification).
    • Commercial third-party age verification services (websites responsible for ensuring that the provider does not retain, sell, or share user data).
    • Proprietary systems developed by the website itself, under the same data restrictions.
  • Applies to “obscene material” for minors, which is roughly analogous to what other states call “material harmful to minors.”
  • Applies to websites where more than one-third of the:
    • revenue comes from obscene content,
    • user accounts show such content, or
    • content on any single account is obscene.

The same legislators introduced an identical bill in 2025. It failed.

 

 

More Info

NJ S 1826

 

 


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Bill Status
  • Introduced
  • Passed First Committee
  • Passed First Chamber
  • Passed Both Committees
  • Passed Both Chambers
  • Enacted
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