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CTAll-party (two-party) consentNo AI-specific statute yet

Connecticut voice AI call laws

Connecticut is an all-party (two-party) consent state for call recording, everyone on the call must be informed it's being recorded. No AI-specific call-disclosure statute has been identified here yet; the federal TCPA and FCC AI-voice rules still apply. Verify the current rule with counsel.

Educational, not legal adviceConsult your own counsel before relying on anything here.Last reviewed June 23, 2026 · PyAI Trace compliance team

What makes Connecticut different

Connecticut is an all-party consent state, and our dataset notes that its recording rule carries both criminal and civil exposure. It also borders New York, a one-party state, which makes the New York metro calling corridor a place where the wrong default gets applied constantly: a recording policy tuned for Manhattan is not a policy tuned for Stamford.

The consent rule

Every participant must be informed the call is being recorded. For AI agents that record by default, the disclosure goes in the first spoken turn of every Connecticut call. For traffic that crosses the state line, the safe practice is the strictest-state rule: if anyone on the call could be in Connecticut, disclose to everyone and move on.

The AI-disclosure angle

As of this writing, no Connecticut-specific AI call-disclosure statute appears in our tracker. The federal rules still bind every call: the FCC's February 2024 ruling treats AI-generated and cloned voices as an artificial or prerecorded voice under the TCPA, which generally means prior express written consent for marketing calls, identification, and a working opt-out.

Penalties

Our dataset flags Connecticut wiretap exposure as criminal plus civil but carries no specific figures as of this writing. Federal TCPA statutory damages of $500 per call, trebled to $1,500 for willful violations, apply on top with no cap. Verify current Connecticut penalties with counsel.

How PyAI Trace maps to Connecticut

PyAI Trace turns the strictest-state default into something you can verify: it checks every call for the recording disclosure, scores it PASS, WARN, or FAIL the moment the call ends, and writes a tamper-evident audit hash you can produce if a claim ever lands. On PyAI Omni agents, the consent_line field in the configure frame delivers the disclosure before the conversation starts.

Connecticut AI Call Compliance Checklist

  • Obtain all-party consent before recording any call
  • Keep a tamper-evident audit trail of consent and disclosures per call
Federal rules also apply

On top of Connecticutlaw, the federal TCPA and the FCC's 2024 ruling treating AI/cloned voices as an “artificial or prerecorded voice” apply to every call.

See the federal overlay

Primary sources

Seed entry, pending counsel verification. Treat as a starting point, not a legal conclusion.

Stay compliant on every Connecticut call.

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