
SB 26-189
Colorado Senate Bill 26-189 signed mid-May 2026, replacing the AI Act with a notice-and-adverse-action-only framework effective 1 January 2027.
Last refreshed: 24 May 2026 · Appears in 1 active topic
Does a notice-only AI law protect workers, or just confirm they are being replaced?
Timeline for SB 26-189
Signed into law by Colorado governor, replacing SB 24-205 with notice-only framework
AI: Jobs, Power & Money: Colorado guts its AI hiring law- What does Colorado SB 26-189 actually require of employers?
- SB 26-189 requires employers to give workers pre-use notice when AI is used in a consequential employment decision, and to provide an adverse-action process to challenge the outcome. It does not require risk assessments, anti-bias audits, or impact disclosures.Source: AI Laws By State
- How is SB 26-189 different from the Colorado AI Act?
- SB 24-205 (the AI Act) required risk-management programmes, annual impact assessments, and anti-discrimination duties. SB 26-189 keeps only a notice obligation and an adverse-action process, removing all substantive employer obligations.Source: AI Laws By State
- When does Colorado SB 26-189 take effect?
- SB 26-189 was signed in mid-May 2026 and takes effect on 1 January 2027.Source: AI Laws By State
Background
SB 26-189 is the Colorado Senate Bill signed by the governor in mid-May 2026 to replace the stayed Colorado AI Act (SB 24-205). It takes effect on 1 January 2027. The replacement law preserves only a notice obligation: employers must inform workers before using an AI system in a consequential employment decision, and must provide an adverse-action process. The risk-management programmes, annual algorithmic-impact assessments, and anti-discrimination duties of SB 24-205 were removed entirely.
The bill was drafted and passed rapidly after a federal magistrate stayed SB 24-205 on 27 April 2026, in response to a joint constitutional challenge from xAI and the US Department of Justice. Rather than defend the original statute, the Colorado legislature chose to replace it with a framework the federal challengers could not credibly attack: a notice duty imposes no algorithmic obligations and carries no discrimination liability. The legislative calculus was survival over substance.
SB 26-189 is now the realistic ceiling for US state AI employment law, at least until a federal statute or appellate decision changes the constitutional landscape. It signals to other state legislatures that notice-only is the form that survives a federal-executive challenge; anything stronger faces the same dismantling Colorado endured.