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HB1723 • 2026

Child Labor

AN ACT to amend Tennessee Code Annotated, Title 29; Title 39; Title 47 and Title 50, relative to minors appearing in online content.

Children Parental Rights
Active

The official status still shows this bill as active or still awaiting another formal step.

Sponsor
Travis, Walley
Last action
2026-04-02
Official status
Sponsor(s) Added.
Effective date
Not listed

Plain English Breakdown

The bill summary text does not specify exact details on penalties or enforcement mechanisms.

Rules for Minors Creating Online Video Content

This bill sets rules about minors creating and sharing video content online, prohibiting those under 14 from engaging in such activities and requiring trust accounts for compensation of minors aged 14-18.

What This Bill Does

  • Prohibits minors under 14 from making money by sharing videos online.
  • Requires parents or guardians to set up a trust account if they let their minor child (ages 14-18) make money through video content, with the funds going into this account until the child turns 18.
  • Specifies that minors aged 14-17 must receive all proceeds from their own video content creation.

Who It Names or Affects

  • Minors aged 14-18 who create video content online
  • Parents or guardians of minors under 14 creating video content
  • Content creators working with minors

Terms To Know

content creation
Sharing videos on the internet for money.
trust account
A special bank account where money is kept until a minor turns 18.

Limits and Unknowns

  • The bill does not specify what happens if a minor under 14 accidentally creates content that meets the criteria for compensation.
  • It's unclear how this will be enforced or who will check to make sure everyone follows these rules.
  • There are no details on penalties for content creators who do not set up trust accounts as required.

Amendments

These notes stay tied to the official amendment files and metadata from the legislature.

Amendment 1-0 to HB1723

Plain English: The amendment adds new rules about minors creating and sharing videos online for money.

  • Defines key terms such as 'content creation', 'minor', and 'online platform'.
  • Sets criteria to determine if a minor is working in content creation, including the percentage of video time featuring the minor and compensation received.
  • Requires content creators who work with minors aged 14-18 to keep detailed records until the minor turns 21.
  • Specifies that minors aged 14-17 must receive all proceeds from their own content.
  • The text is truncated and does not provide full details on how compensation for minors will be managed in trust accounts.
Amendment 1-0 to SB1469

Plain English: The amendment adds new definitions and requirements for minors involved in online content creation, including compensation rules and record-keeping.

  • Defines key terms such as 'content creator', 'minor', and 'online platform'.
  • Establishes criteria to determine if a minor is engaged in compensated video content creation.
  • Requires content creators to maintain detailed records of minors' involvement and compensation for seven years after the minor turns 21.
  • Specifies that minors aged 14-18 must receive full proceeds from their own content.
  • The text is truncated, so some details about trust accounts are missing.

Bill History

  1. 2026-04-07 Tennessee General Assembly

    Transmitted to Governor for action.

  2. 2026-04-06 Tennessee General Assembly

    Signed by H. Speaker

  3. 2026-04-06 Tennessee General Assembly

    Signed by Senate Speaker

  4. 2026-04-02 Tennessee General Assembly

    Sponsor(s) Added.

  5. 2026-04-02 Tennessee General Assembly

    Comp. SB subst.

  6. 2026-04-02 Tennessee General Assembly

    Enrolled and ready for signatures

  7. 2026-04-02 Tennessee General Assembly

    Passed H., Ayes 92, Nays 0, PNV 1

  8. 2026-04-02 Tennessee General Assembly

    Am. withdrawn. (Amendment 1 - HA0858)

  9. 2026-04-02 Tennessee General Assembly

    Subst. for comp. HB.

  10. 2026-03-26 Tennessee General Assembly

    H. Placed on Regular Calendar for 4/2/2026

  11. 2026-03-25 Tennessee General Assembly

    Placed on cal. Calendar & Rules Committee for 3/26/2026

  12. 2026-03-25 Tennessee General Assembly

    Rec. for pass. if am., ref. to Calendar & Rules Committee

  13. 2026-03-23 Tennessee General Assembly

    Rcvd. from S., held on H. desk.

  14. 2026-03-19 Tennessee General Assembly

    Engrossed; ready for transmission to House

  15. 2026-03-19 Tennessee General Assembly

    Sponsor(s) Added.

  16. 2026-03-19 Tennessee General Assembly

    Passed Senate as amended, Ayes 29, Nays 2, PNV 2

  17. 2026-03-19 Tennessee General Assembly

    Senate adopted Amendment (Amendment 1 - SA0566)

  18. 2026-03-18 Tennessee General Assembly

    Placed on cal. Commerce Committee for 3/25/2026

  19. 2026-03-18 Tennessee General Assembly

    Rec for pass if am by s/c ref. to Commerce Committee

  20. 2026-03-17 Tennessee General Assembly

    Placed on Senate Regular Calendar for 3/19/2026

  21. 2026-03-11 Tennessee General Assembly

    Placed on s/c cal Banking & Consumer Affairs Subcommittee for 3/18/2026

  22. 2026-03-11 Tennessee General Assembly

    Sponsor(s) Added.

  23. 2026-03-11 Tennessee General Assembly

    Action Def. in s/c Banking & Consumer Affairs Subcommittee to 3/18/2026

  24. 2026-03-09 Tennessee General Assembly

    Senate Reset on calendar for 3/19/2026

  25. 2026-03-06 Tennessee General Assembly

    Placed on Senate Regular Calendar for 3/9/2026

  26. 2026-03-04 Tennessee General Assembly

    Placed on s/c cal Banking & Consumer Affairs Subcommittee for 3/11/2026

  27. 2026-03-03 Tennessee General Assembly

    Recommended for passage with amendment/s, refer to Senate Calendar Committee Ayes 8, Nays 1 PNV 0

  28. 2026-02-25 Tennessee General Assembly

    Placed on Senate Judiciary Committee calendar for 3/3/2026

  29. 2026-02-17 Tennessee General Assembly

    Action deferred in Senate Judiciary Committee to 3/3/2026

  30. 2026-02-11 Tennessee General Assembly

    Placed on Senate Judiciary Committee calendar for 2/17/2026

  31. 2026-01-22 Tennessee General Assembly

    Assigned to s/c Banking & Consumer Affairs Subcommittee

  32. 2026-01-22 Tennessee General Assembly

    P2C, ref. to Commerce Committee

  33. 2026-01-21 Tennessee General Assembly

    Intro., P1C.

  34. 2026-01-20 Tennessee General Assembly

    Filed for introduction

  35. 2026-01-14 Tennessee General Assembly

    Passed on Second Consideration, refer to Senate Judiciary Committee

  36. 2026-01-13 Tennessee General Assembly

    Introduced, Passed on First Consideration

  37. 2025-10-30 Tennessee General Assembly

    Filed for introduction

Official Summary Text

This bill provides that a minor is engaged in the work of content creation if the following criteria are met at any time during the previous 12-month period:



At least 30% of a content creator's compensated video content produced within a 30-day period included the likeness, name, or photograph of the minor. Content percentage is measured by the percentage of time the likeness, name, or photograph of the minor or if more than one minor regularly appears in the content creator's content, any of the minors, visually appears or is the subject of an oral narrative in a video segment as compared to the total length of the segment.



The number of views received per video segment on an online platform met the platform's threshold for generating compensation or the content creator received actual compensation for video content equal to or greater than 1¢ per view.

As used in this bill, a "minor" means an individual who is under 18, is not emancipated, and is a resident of this state.

PROHIBITION AGAINST CERTAIN MINORS ENGAGING IN CONTENT CREATION

This bill prohibits a minor under 14 from engaging in the work of content creation. A content creator who features a minor working in violation of this prohibition, or a parent who permits a minor under the parent's control or custody to engage in the m
inor's own content creation in violation of this prohibition, is subject to a civil penalty of $2,000 per violation. As used in this bill, a "parent" means a parent, guardian, or individual who has custody of, or caregiving authority over, a minor.

This bill requires the content creator to also compensate the minor by creating a trust account, as described below. Each instance of a minor working in violation of this prohibition is considered a separate violation. All civil penalties owed must be
paid to the commissioner of labor and workforce development, to be used for the administration of this bill.

Proceeds

This bill requires a minor who is 14 or older, but under 18, to produce, create, and publish the minor's own video content and to receive 100% of the proceeds of the minor's compensation for the minor's own content creation.

Exemption

This bill clarifies that a minor who appears incidentally in a video that depicts a public event that a reasonable person would know to be broadcast, including a concert, competition, or sporting event, and is published by a content creator is not engage
d in the work of content creation.

RECORDKEEPING

This bill requires a content creator whose video
content features a minor who is 14 or older, but under 18, engaged in the work of content creation to maintain all of the following records and retain the records until the minor reaches 21:



The name and documentary proof of the age of the minor engaged in the work of content creation.


The amount of content creation that generated compensation during the reporting period.


The total number of minutes of content creation for which the content creator received compensation during the reporting period.


The total number of minutes a minor was featured in content creation during the reporting period.


The total compensation generated from content creation featuring a minor during the reporting period.


The amount deposited into the trust account for the benefit of the minor engaged in the work of content creation as required below.

This bill requires the content creator to provide notice to the minor of the existence of the records and the records to be readily accessible to the minor for review.

TRUST ACCOUNT

This bill requires a content creator to set aside gross earnings on the video content that includes the likeness, name, or photograph of the minor in a trust account to be preserved for the benefit of the minor until the minor reaches 18, according to on
e of the following distributions:



If only one minor meets the content threshold described above, the percentage of total gross earnings on a video segment including the likeness, name, or photograph of the minor that is equal to or greater than half of the content percentage that includes the minor.



If two or more minors meet the content threshold described above, and a video segment includes two or more of those minors, the percentage for all minors in a segment must be equally divided between the minors regardless of differences in percentage of content provided by the individual minors.

Account Criteria

This bill requires a trust account to meet all of the following criteria:



The money in the account is available only to the minor engaged in the work of content creation.


The account is held by a state or national bank, savings and loan association, credit union, or trust company.


The money in the account becomes available to the minor engaged in the work of content creation upon the minor attaining 18 or upon a declaration that the minor is emancipated.


The account meets the requirements of the Tennessee Uniform Transfers to Minors Act.

Civil Action - Other Relief

If a content creator violates the provisions of this bill relative to the trust account, then this bill authorizes the minor to commence a civil action to enforce such provisions. In such an action, the court may award actual damages, including any comp
ensation owed, punitive damages, and the costs of the action, including attorney fees and court costs. However, the provisions of this bill relative to the trust account do not have an effect on a party that is neither the content creator nor the minor w
ho
engaged in the work of content creation.

In addition to the civil action described above, this bill authorizes the minor to commence a civil action against a content creator for injunctive relief or other relief the court finds just and equitable. The powers and remedies provided in this bill
are cumulative and supplementary to all other powers and remedies otherwise provided by law. The invocation of one power or remedy does not exclude or prohibit the use of another available remedy.

This bill provides that a waiver or limitation, or a purported waiver or limitation, of a protection or requirement provided under this bill is void as unlawful and against public policy. A court, arbitrator, or tribunal must not enforce or give effect
to a waiver or limitation, notwithstanding a contract or choice of law provision in a contract.

DELETION OF CONTENT

This bill requires video content containing the likeness of a minor to be deleted and removed from an online
platform by the person who shared the content, the account holder, or another person who has control over the account when the request is made by a minor who is 14 or older whose likeness appears in the content, or by an adult who was under 18 when the pe
rson's likeness was used in the content.

"ONLINE PLATFORM" DEFINED

As used in this bill, an "online platform" does not include any of the following:



A broadband internet access service.


An email service.


An internet service, internet application, or website (i) that consists primarily of content that is not generated by account holders or users, but rather is preselected by the service, application, or website provider; and (ii) for which interactive functionality is incidental to, directly related to, or dependent upon, such preselected content.


Online shopping, if the interaction with other account holders or users is predominantly limited to the ability to send, receive, request, or settle funds, comment on transactions, display goods for sale, engage as consumers about products and reviews, or share a wish list.


An internet service, internet application, or website that primarily provides career development opportunities.


A cloud storage or cloud computing service.


An online service, application, or website in which interaction between users is predominately used for technical support, or limited to reviewing products offered for sale by electronic commerce or commenting on such reviews shared by other users.


Peer-to-peer payment platforms, if the interaction with other users or account holders is generally limited to the ability to send, receive, or request funds and to like or comment on such transactions, or other functions that are focused on sending, receiving, requesting, or settling payments between users or account holders.

ON MARCH 19, 2026, THE SENATE ADOPTED AMENDMENT #1 AND PASSED SENATE BILL 1469, AS AMENDED.

AMENDMENT #1 makes the following revisions:



Increases from 1¢ per view to 10¢ per view the actual compensation the content creator
must
receive
in the prior
12
-month period

for video content
in order to
meet one of the bill's elements for a minor engaging in the work of content creation.



Requires, additionally, for a
minor
to be
engaged in the work of content creation
,
the content creator
to
receive actual compensation for video content of at least $15,000 in the prior
12
-month period.



Removes the prohibition on
a minor under 14 from engaging in the work of content creation
and removes such related penalties.



Clarifies that a
minor who appears incidentally in a video that is published by a content creator is not engaged in the work of content creation.



Creates penalties for not deleting video content as required in the bill. If the responsible content creator fails to take action after a reasonable period of time, but no longer than 30 days, the minor may commence an action to enforce the requirement to delete the content. The court may award a minor who prevails in such an action
i
njunctive relief
, a
ctual damages
, p
unitive damages
,
and
r
easonable costs of bringing the action, including attorney's fees and court costs.

VISUAL DEPICTIONS OF MINORS



Prohibits a person from knowingly producing or distributing publicly a visual depiction of a minor with the intent to sexually gratify or elicit a sexual response in the viewer or any other person and benefit financially from doing so.
L
iability
for a violation must be consistent with federal law.



Creates a penalty for a person who violates the above
prohibition
or attempts or conspires to do so. The depicted minor may bring an action to recover
a
ctual damages
, p
unitive damages
,
and
r
easonable costs of litigation, including attorney's fees.



Exempts the following from the prohibition above (i) a
lawfully authorized investigative, protective, or intelligence activity of a law enforcement or intelligence agency
; (ii) a
n individual acting in good faith to report unlawful activity to law enforcement or in pursuance of a legal or professional or other lawful obligation
; (iii) a
document produced or filed as part of a legal proceeding
; and (iv) a
n online platform, with regard to content provided by creators, unless the online platform intentionally solicits, or knowingly and predominantly distributes, such content.

REQUIRED
RISK-BASED STRATEGY



Requires a
social media platform
that engages
in content creation by persons
known by the platform
to be a minor
to
develop and implement a risk-based strategy to help mitigate risks related to monetization of the intentional sexualization of known minors. The strategy must be documented and reassessed on a reasonable recurring basis
.



Requires s
ocial media platforms
to
ensure that information about the social media's content policies, settings, and best practices for content featuring minors are publicly available, understandable to both adults and minors, and informed by research and outside expertise. The information must inform content creators that content may be subject to various legal requirements, and explain risks and steps to protect minors appearing in posts from exploitation.

Current Bill Text

Read the full stored bill text
SENATE BILL 1469
By Walley

HOUSE BILL 1723
By Travis
HB1723
009076
- 1 -

AN ACT to amend Tennessee Code Annotated, Title 29;
Title 39; Title 47 and Title 50, relative to minors
appearing in online content.

BE IT ENACTED BY THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF TENNESSEE:
SECTION 1. Tennessee Code Annotated, Title 50, Chapter 5, is amended by adding
the following as a new part:
50-5-301. As used in this part:
(1) "Account holder" means a person who has an account or profile to use an
online platform;
(2) "Content creation" means the act of sharing video content filmed in this state
on an online platform in exchange for compensation;
(3) "Content creator":
(A) Means an individual who is eighteen (18) years of age or older who is
engaged in content creation; and
(B) Includes:
(i) A parent; or
(ii) An entity assuming the name or identity of an individual or
individuals or family, for the purposes of the content creator;
(4) "Family" means:
(A) The members of a household living, on a full-time or a part-time
basis, in one (1) house, condominium, apartment, or other dwelling;
(B) Individuals related by blood or ancestry, marriage, or adoption; or

- 2 - 009076

(C) An individual who is held out to the public as being a family member
of a minor;
(5) "Internet" means the combination of computer facilities and electromagnetic
transmission media, and related equipment and software, comprising the interconnected
worldwide network of computer networks that employ the Transmission Control
Protocol/Internet Protocol or any successor protocol to transmit information;
(6) "Minor" means an individual who is under eighteen (18) years of age, is not
emancipated, and is a resident of this state;
(7) "Online platform":
(A) Means an internet website or application that allows a person to
create an account or profile and that enables an account holder to communicate
or share posts, or both, with other account holders and users; and
(B) Does not include:
(i) A broadband internet access service, as defined in 47 CFR §
8.1(b);
(ii) An email service;
(iii) An internet service, internet application, or website:
(a) That consists primarily of content that is not generated
by account holders or users, but rather is preselected by the
service, application, or website provider; and
(b) For which interactive functionality is incidental to,
directly related to, or dependent upon, the preselected content
described in subdivision (7)(B)(iii)(a);
(iv) Online shopping, if the interaction with other account holders
or users is predominantly limited to the ability to send, receive, request, or

- 3 - 009076

settle funds, comment on transactions, display goods for sale, engage as
consumers about products and reviews, or share a wish list;
(v) An internet service, internet application, or website that
primarily provides career development opportunities;
(vi) A cloud storage or cloud computing service;
(vii) An online service, application, or website in which interaction
between users is predominately used for technical support, or limited to
reviewing products offered for sale by electronic commerce or
commenting on such reviews shared by other users; or
(viii) Peer-to-peer payment platforms, if the interaction with other
users or account holders is generally limited to the ability to send, receive,
or request funds and to like or comment on such transactions, or other
functions that are focused on sending, receiving, requesting, or settling
payments between users or account holders;
(8) "Parent" means a parent, guardian, or individual who has custody of, or
caregiving authority over, a minor;
(9) "Person" means an individual or entity;
(10) "Post" means content that an account holder makes available on an online
platform for other account holders and users to consume, and includes information,
ideas, news, stories, opinions, images, and videos; and
(11) "User" means a person who consumes posts on an online platform, but is
not an account holder.
50-5-302.
(a) A minor is engaged in the work of content creation if the following criteria are
met at any time during the previous twelve-month period:

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(1) At least thirty percent (30%) of a content creator's compensated video
content produced within a thirty-day period included the likeness, name, or
photograph of the minor. Content percentage is measured by the percentage of
time the likeness, name, or photograph of the minor or if more than one (1) minor
regularly appears in the content creator's content, any of the minors, visually
appears or is the subject of an oral narrative in a video segment as compared to
the total length of the segment; and
(2) The number of views received per video segment on an online
platform met the platform's threshold for generating compensation or the content
creator received actual compensation for video content equal to or greater than
one cent (1¢) per view.
(b)
(1) A minor under fourteen (14) years of age shall not engage in the work
of content creation as described in subsection (a).
(2) A content creator who features a minor working in violation of
subdivision (b)(1), or a parent who permits a minor under the parent's control or
custody to engage in the minor's own content creation in violation of subdivision
(b)(1), is subject to a civil penalty of two thousand dollars ($2,000) per violation.
The content creator shall also compensate the minor in accordance with § 50-5-
304.
(3) Each instance of a minor working in violation of subdivision (b)(1) is
considered a separate violation.
(4) All civil penalties owed under this subsection (b) must be paid to the
commissioner of labor and workforce development, to be used for the
administration of this section.

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(c) A minor who is fourteen (14) years of age or older, but under eighteen (18)
years of age, may produce, create, and publish the minor's own video content and must
receive one hundred percent (100%) of the proceeds of the minor's compensation for the
minor's own content creation.
(d) A minor who appears incidentally in a video that depicts a public event that a
reasonable person would know to be broadcast, including a concert, competition, or
sporting event, and is published by a content creator is not engaged in the work of
content creation.
50-5-303.
(a) A content creator whose video content features a minor who is fourteen (14)
years of age or older, but under eighteen (18) years of age, engaged in the work of
content creation as described in § 50-5-302(a) shall maintain the following records and
retain the records until the minor reaches twenty-one (21) years of age:
(1) The name and documentary proof of the age of the minor engaged in
the work of content creation;
(2) The amount of content creation that generated compensation as
described in § 50-5-302(a) during the reporting period;
(3) The total number of minutes of content creation for which the content
creator received compensation during the reporting period;
(4) The total number of minutes a minor was featured in content creation
during the reporting period;
(5) The total compensation generated from content creation featuring a
minor during the reporting period; and
(6) The amount deposited into the trust account for the benefit of the
minor engaged in the work of content creation as required by § 50-5-304.

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(b) The content creator shall provide notice to the minor of the existence of the
records required by subsection (a) and the records must be readily accessible to the
minor for review.
50-5-304.
(a) A content creator shall compensate a minor who is engaged in the work of
content creation under § 50-5-302(a) in accordance with this section. The content
creator shall set aside gross earnings on the video content that includes the likeness,
name, or photograph of the minor in a trust account to be preserved for the benefit of the
minor until the minor reaches eighteen (18) years of age, according to the following
distribution:
(1) If only one (1) minor meets the content threshold described in § 50-5-
302(a)(1), the percentage of total gross earnings on a video segment including
the likeness, name, or photograph of the minor that is equal to or greater than
half of the content percentage that includes the minor as described in § 50-5-
302(a)(1); or
(2) If two (2) or more minors meet the content threshold described in §
50-5-302(a)(1), and a video segment includes two (2) or more of those minors,
the percentage described in subdivision (a)(1) for all minors in a segment must
be equally divided between the minors regardless of differences in percentage of
content provided by the individual minors.
(b) A trust account required by subsection (a) must provide that:
(1) The money in the account is available only to the minor engaged in
the work of content creation;
(2) The account is held by a state or national bank, savings and loan
association, credit union, or trust company;

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(3) The money in the account becomes available to the minor engaged in
the work of content creation upon the minor attaining eighteen (18) years of age
or upon a declaration that the minor is emancipated; and
(4) The account meets the requirements of the Tennessee Uniform
Transfers to Minors Act, compiled in title 35, chapter 7.
(c) If a content creator violates this section, then the minor may commence a
civil action to enforce this section regarding the trust account. In an action brought in
accordance with this subsection (c), the court may award the following damages:
(1) Actual damages, including any compensation owed under subsection
(a);
(2) Punitive damages; and
(3) The costs of the action, including attorney fees and court costs.
(d) This section does not have an effect on a party that is neither the content
creator nor the minor who engaged in the work of content creation.
50-5-305.
(a) In addition to the civil action provided in § 50-5-304(c), the minor may
commence a civil action against a content creator for injunctive relief or other relief the
court finds just and equitable to enforce this part.
(b) The powers and remedies provided in this part are cumulative and
supplementary to all other powers and remedies otherwise provided by law. The
invocation of one (1) power or remedy in this part does not exclude or prohibit the use of
another available remedy.
50-5-306.
(a) A waiver or limitation, or a purported waiver or limitation, of a protection or
requirement provided under this part is void as unlawful and against public policy.

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(b) A court, arbitrator, or tribunal shall not enforce or give effect to a waiver or
limitation described in subsection (a), notwithstanding a contract or choice of law
provision in a contract.
50-5-307.
Video content containing the likeness of a minor must be deleted and removed
from an online platform by the person who shared the content, the account holder, or
another person who has control over the account when the request is made by a minor
who is fourteen (14) years of age or older whose likeness appears in the content, or by
an adult who was under eighteen (18) years of age when the person's likeness was used
in the content.
SECTION 2. This act takes effect July 1, 2026, the public welfare requiring it.