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HB518 • 2026

Streaming advertisement volume control; definitions, volume of advertisements, civil penalties.

An Act to amend the Code of Virginia by adding in Title 59.1 a chapter numbered 60, consisting of sections numbered 59.1-614, 59.1-615, and 59.1-616, relating to streaming advertisement volume control; civil penalty.

Enacted

This bill passed the Legislature and reached final enactment based on the latest official action.

Sponsor
Martinez
Last action
2026-04-22
Official status
Acts of Assembly Chapter
Effective date
Not listed

Plain English Breakdown

Using official source text because the generated explanation was unavailable or could not be confirmed against the official bill text.

Streaming advertisement volume control; definitions, volume of advertisements, civil penalties.

Streaming advertisement volume control; civil penalty.

What This Bill Does

  • Streaming advertisement volume control; civil penalty.
  • Requires a video streaming service, social media video service, or third-party advertising manager, as defined in the bill, that serves consumers residing in the Commonwealth to exercise reasonable care to normalize the audio of short-form content, as defined in the bill, so that such audio is not transmitted at a louder volume than the long-form content, also defined in the bill, it accompanies, consistent with the regulations adopted by the Federal Communications Commission pursuant to the federal Commercial Advertisement Loudness Mitigation (CALM) Act for television broadcast stations, cable operators, and other multichannel video programming distributors.
  • The bill provides that the Office of the Attorney General shall enforce the provisions of the bill.
  • The bill has a delayed effective date of July 1, 2027.

Limits and Unknowns

  • This entry is temporarily using official source text because the generated explanation could not be confirmed against the official bill text during the last sync.

Amendments

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

HB518G

2026-04-11 • Governor

Governor's Recommendation

Plain English: (HB518) GOVERNOR'S RECOMMENDATION 1.

  • (HB518) GOVERNOR'S RECOMMENDATION 1.
  • Line 30, enrolled, after means programming insert provided 2.
  • Line 40, enrolled, after to strike normalize insert engage in normalization of

Bill History

  1. 2026-04-22 Governor

    Governor's recommendation adopted

  2. 2026-04-22 House

    Signed by Speaker

  3. 2026-04-22 Senate

    Signed by President

  4. 2026-04-22 Governor

    Approved by Governor-Chapter 1057 (Effective 7/1/2027)

  5. 2026-04-22 Governor

    Acts of Assembly Chapter text (CHAP1057)

  6. 2026-04-22 House

    House concurred in Governor's recommendation Block Vote (99-Y 0-N 0-A)

  7. 2026-04-22 Senate

    Senate concurred in Governor's recommendation (39-Y 0-N 0-A)

  8. 2026-04-11 Governor

    Governor's recommendation received by House

  9. 2026-03-14 House

    Enrolled Bill communicated to Governor on March 14, 2026

  10. 2026-03-14 Governor

    Governor's Action Deadline 11:59 p.m., April 13, 2026

  11. 2026-03-12 House

    Signed by Speaker

  12. 2026-03-11 Senate

    Signed by President

  13. 2026-03-11 House

    Enrolled

  14. 2026-03-11 House

    Bill text as passed House and Senate (HB518ER)

  15. 2026-03-11 House

    Fiscal Impact Statement from Department of Planning and Budget (HB518)

  16. 2026-03-04 House

    Senate substitute agreed to by House (85-Y 11-N 0-A)

  17. 2026-03-02 Senate

    Read third time

  18. 2026-03-02 Senate

    Engrossed by Senate - committee substitute

  19. 2026-03-02 General Laws and Technology

    Committee substitute agreed to (Voice Vote)

  20. 2026-03-02 Senate

    Passed Senate with substitute Block Vote (40-Y 0-N 0-A)

  21. 2026-02-27 Senate

    Rules suspended

  22. 2026-02-27 Senate

    Passed by for the day

  23. 2026-02-27 Senate

    Constitutional reading dispensed Block Vote (on 2nd reading) (37-Y 0-N 0-A)

  24. 2026-02-27 Senate

    Passed by for the day Block Vote (Voice Vote)

  25. 2026-02-26 General Laws and Technology

    Committee substitute printed 26108571D-S1

  26. 2026-02-26 General Laws and Technology

    Fiscal Impact Statement from Department of Planning and Budget (HB518)

  27. 2026-02-25 General Laws and Technology

    Reported from General Laws and Technology with substitute (15-Y 0-N)

  28. 2026-02-25 Senate

    Senate committee offered

  29. 2026-02-17 Senate

    Constitutional reading dispensed (on 1st reading)

  30. 2026-02-17 General Laws and Technology

    Referred to Committee on General Laws and Technology

  31. 2026-02-16 House

    Read third time and passed House Block Vote (96-Y 0-N 0-A)

  32. 2026-02-16 House

    Reconsideration of passage agreed to by House

  33. 2026-02-16 House

    Passed House Block Vote (97-Y 0-N 0-A)

  34. 2026-02-13 House

    Read second time

  35. 2026-02-13 House

    committee substitute agreed to

  36. 2026-02-13 House

    Engrossed by House - committee substitute

  37. 2026-02-12 House

    Read first time

  38. 2026-02-10 General Laws

    Reported from General Laws with substitute (21-Y 0-N)

  39. 2026-02-10 General Laws

    Committee substitute printed 26105873D-H1

  40. 2026-02-05 Housing/Consumer Protection

    Subcommittee recommends reporting with substitute (10-Y 0-N)

  41. 2026-02-05 Housing/Consumer Protection

    House subcommittee offered

  42. 2026-02-03 House

    Fiscal Impact Statement from Department of Planning and Budget (HB518)

  43. 2026-01-19 Housing/Consumer Protection

    Assigned HGL sub: Housing/Consumer Protection

  44. 2026-01-13 House

    Prefiled and ordered printed; Offered 01-14-2026 26101108D

  45. 2026-01-13 General Laws

    Referred to Committee on General Laws

Official Summary Text

Streaming advertisement volume control; civil penalty.
Requires a video streaming service, social media video service, or third-party advertising manager, as defined in the bill, that serves consumers residing in the Commonwealth to exercise reasonable care to normalize the audio of short-form content, as defined in the bill, so that such audio is not transmitted at a louder volume than the long-form content, also defined in the bill, it accompanies, consistent with the regulations adopted by the Federal Communications Commission pursuant to the federal Commercial Advertisement Loudness Mitigation (CALM) Act for television broadcast stations, cable operators, and other multichannel video programming distributors. The bill provides that the Office of the Attorney General shall enforce the provisions of the bill. The bill has a delayed effective date of July 1, 2027.

Current Bill Text

Read the full stored bill text
An Act to amend the Code of Virginia by adding in Title 59.1 a chapter numbered 60, consisting of sections numbered
59.1-614
,
59.1-615
, and
59.1-616
, relating to streaming advertisement volume control; civil penalty.
Be it enacted by the General Assembly of Virginia:
1. That the Code of Virginia is amended by adding in Title 59.1 a chapter numbered 60, consisting of sections numbered
59.1-614
,
59.1-615
, and
59.1-616
, as follows:
CHAPTER 60.
STREAMING ADVERTISEMENT VOLUME CONTROL.
§
59.1-614
. Definitions.
As used in this chapter, unless the context requires a different meaning:
"Long-form content" means a film, show, or other video programming or video content that is the primary material a user of a video streaming service or social media video service consumes while using such service.
"Normalization" means adjusting the audio of short-form content by measuring and scaling the average loudness to match the target loudness of the accompanying long-form content distributed by a video streaming service, social media video service, or third-party advertising manager consistent with established industry standards such as Advanced Television Systems Committee Recommended Practice A/85, Techniques for Establishing and Maintaining Audio Loudness for Digital Television.
"Short-form content" means commercial advertising, promotional, and public service-related video programming or video content that is interspersed in long-form content on a video streaming service or social media video service.
"Social media video service" means an online platform that (i) is open to the public; (ii) allows a user to create an account; (iii) consists primarily of content that is user-generated and not preselected by the provider; and (iv) provides a landing page, main feed, or search function that presents the user with video content generated by other users.
"Third-party advertising manager" means an entity that manages the distribution of short-form content on a video streaming service or social media video service and can adjust the loudness of such content.
"Video programming" means programming provided by, or generally considered comparable to programming provided by, a television broadcast station. "Video programming" does not include user-generated media.
"Video streaming service" means an online platform the primary purpose of which is to make video programming available directly to consumers. "Video streaming service" does not include a television broadcast station, cable operator, or other multichannel video programming distributor, an internet service provider, a service that makes available video programming or video content without commercial advertisements, or a website or application that does not make video programming available to consumers as its primary purpose.
§
59.1-615
. Video streaming services; volume of commercial advertisements.
A. A video streaming service, social media video service, or third-party advertising manager that serves consumers residing in the Commonwealth shall exercise reasonable care to engage in normalization of the audio of short-form content so that such audio is not transmitted at a louder volume than the long-form content it accompanies, consistent with the regulations adopted by the Federal Communications Commission pursuant to the federal Commercial Advertisement Loudness Mitigation (CALM) Act (47 U.S.C. § 621) for television broadcast stations, cable operators, and other multichannel video programming distributors. There shall be a rebuttable presumption that a video streaming service, social media video service, or third-party advertising manager that maintains processes to require that short-form content not be louder than the long-form content it accompanies that are similar to those processes employed to comply with the CALM Act is exercising reasonable care.
B. A video streaming service, social media video service, or third-party advertising manager that engages in normalization shall be deemed in compliance with this chapter.
C. A video streaming service or social media video service that engages a third-party advertising manager that solely controls the loudness of short-form content on such service shall not be liable under subsection A for short-form content distributed by the third-party advertising manager on such service, provided that such service enters into a written agreement with the third-party advertising manager that requires the audio of short-form content distributed by the third-party advertising manager to be no louder than the target loudness of the accompanying long-form content distributed by the video streaming service or social media video service, consistent with established industry standards.
§
59.1-616
. Enforcement; civil penalties.
A. For purposes of this chapter, the distribution of a single identifiable segment of short-form content within a 30-day period constitutes a violation of this chapter, regardless of how many individual consumers receive a transmission of such content.
B. The Attorney General shall have exclusive authority to enforce the provisions of this chapter.
C. Whenever the Attorney General has reasonable cause to believe that any person has engaged in, is engaging in, or is about to engage in any violation of this chapter, the Attorney General is empowered to issue a civil investigative demand. The provisions of §
59.1-9.10
shall apply mutatis mutandis to civil investigative demands issued pursuant to this section.
D. The Attorney General may initiate an action in the name of the Commonwealth and may seek an injunction to restrain any violations of this chapter and civil penalties of up to $2,500 for each violation under this chapter.
E. The Attorney General may recover reasonable expenses incurred in investigating and preparing the case, including attorney fees, in any action initiated under this section.
F. Nothing in this chapter shall be construed as providing the basis for, or be subject to, a private right of action for violations of this chapter or under any other law.
2. That the provisions of this act shall become effective on July 1, 2027.