Utah AI Regulations
Regulatory Status
Utah Artificial Intelligence Policy Act (UAIPA)
Utah's Artificial Intelligence Policy Act (SB 149, signed March 13, 2024; effective May 1, 2024) was the first US state law regulating private-sector generative AI. It requires any entity using consumer-facing generative AI to disclose AI involvement when clearly and unambiguously asked by the consumer. Entities operating in "regulated occupations" (those requiring a Utah Department of Commerce license or state certification — including attorneys, insurance producers, healthcare providers, and other licensed professionals) must proactively disclose AI use at the start of each interaction, without waiting to be asked. The law establishes that using AI is not a defense to violations of existing consumer protection statutes. It also creates the Office of Artificial Intelligence Policy and an AI Learning Laboratory regulatory sandbox. Amended by SB 226 (effective May 7, 2025), which narrowed the disclosure trigger to require a "clear and unambiguous" consumer request, added a "high-risk AI interaction" category requiring proactive disclosure for regulated occupations in sensitive decision contexts, narrowed the GenAI definition to systems "designed to simulate human conversation," and established a statutory safe harbor for compliant disclosures. SB 332 extended the UAIPA's sunset date from May 2025 to July 1, 2027.
Key Requirements
Insurance Implications
Industry-Specific Compliance
See how Utah AI regulations apply to specific industries: