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SB1412 • 2026

Creates provisions relating to age verification on adult websites

Creates provisions relating to age verification on adult websites

Passed Legislature

This bill passed both chambers and reached final enrollment, even if later executive action is not shown here.

Sponsor
Schroer, Nick; House handler: N/A
Last action
2026-02-05
Official status
Second Read and Referred S General Laws Committee
Effective date
2026-08-28

Plain English Breakdown

The plain English breakdown is still being put together. The official documents below are already here.

Bill History

  1. 2026-02-05 S304

    Second Read and Referred S General Laws Committee

  2. 2026-01-07 S89

    S First Read

  3. 2025-12-05 Missouri House of Representatives and Missouri Senate

    Prefiled

Official Summary Text

The following summaries of this bill are available:

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Introduced

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SB 1412 - The act creates provisions relating to age verification on adult websites.

Under the act, a commercial entity that publishes or distributes material on its website, including a social media platform, more than 1/3 of which is sexual material harmful to minors, as defined in the act, shall use reasonable age verification methods to verify that an individual attempting to access the material is 18 years of age or older.

A commercial entity or a third party that performs age verification shall not retain any identifying information of the individual.

A commercial entity that is required to perform age verification under the act shall post certain notices on its website, as described in the act.

The act shall not apply to bona fide news or public interest broadcasts or other media and shall not affect the rights of a news-gathering organization.

An internet service provider or subsidiary, search engine, or cloud service shall not be held liable for violating provisions of the act solely for providing internet access to any content not under the provider’s control.

The Attorney General shall enforce provisions of the act. If the Attorney General believes that a violation occurred and an action is in the public interest, the Attorney General may commence an action. If the court finds that a violation occurred, the court may grant relief, as described in the act.

This act is identical to SB 901 (2026).
JULIA SHEVELEVA