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Georgia Ends Its Legislative Session With 3 AI Bills on the Governor’s Desk, Including a Georgia AI Chatbot Bill for Child Safety

Dorian Batycka
Edited by
News
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Georgia’s legislature adjourns today, April 6, having sent three AI-related bills to Governor Brian Kemp’s desk, the most notable being a Georgia AI chatbot bill that mandates disclosure, child protections, and crisis response protocols for self-harm.

Summary
  • Georgia’s SB 540, a chatbot disclosure and child safety bill, requires operators to notify users they are interacting with AI, limit certain actions by minors, offer privacy tools, and follow protocols when users express suicidal ideation or intent to self-harm
  • Two additional bills also await the governor: SB 444, which bans AI-only health insurance coverage decisions, and SR 789, a resolution creating a study committee on AI’s broader societal impact
  • Georgia’s SB 540 stands out nationally because it contains no carve-out for chatbots embedded within larger platforms, meaning major tech companies including Meta and Google would need to comply

Georgia’s 2026 legislative session is closing today with three AI bills awaiting Governor Brian Kemp’s signature, including a Georgia AI chatbot bill that is drawing national attention for its breadth and lack of industry exemptions, according to the Transparency Coalition AI’s legislative tracker. The package arrives as more than 27 states advance chatbot safety legislation in 2026, creating a fast-moving patchwork of AI regulations that the White House has publicly warned against.

SB 540: The Bill That Leaves Big Tech No Exit

Georgia’s SB 540 passed the Senate on March 6, cleared the House on March 25, and received Senate agreement on the reconciliation version on March 27. The bill requires chatbot operators to notify users that they are interacting with AI, implement steps that limit certain interactions with minors, provide privacy tools, and establish response protocols when users express suicidal ideation or self-harm intent.

What makes the bill unusual nationally is that it does not include a carve-out for chatbots embedded within a broader service, an exemption that most similar bills include and that would otherwise shield platforms like Meta and Google from having to comply. As crypto.news reported, the global push for chatbot child safety regulation gained momentum earlier this year when UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer signalled plans to bring AI chatbots under stricter online safety rules, citing identical concerns around emotional dependency and unregulated AI-generated advice to minors.

The Other Two Bills on Kemp’s Desk

SB 444 prohibits health insurance coverage decisions from being based solely on AI systems or software tools, requiring human involvement in coverage determinations. It addresses a growing concern that automated denial systems are replacing clinical judgment without appropriate oversight.

SR 789 is a Senate resolution creating a Senate Study Committee on the Impact of Artificial Intelligence, a recognition that Georgia’s legislature intends to keep engaging on the issue after adjournment.

A State-Level Wave the White House Is Watching

As crypto.news has noted, the acceleration of AI safety regulation without clear standards risks creating a compliance landscape where enforcement is inconsistent and under-resourced. The Trump administration has explicitly warned states against “onerous” AI laws and is pushing for a national standard to preempt state-level patchworks. A 10-year moratorium on state AI laws was proposed in the One Big Beautiful Bill Act last summer but was removed from the final legislation in a 99-to-1 Senate vote.

Tennessee’s Governor Bill Lee recently signed an AI therapy bot ban into law. Idaho approved four AI bills before session end. With Georgia now adjourning, the 2026 state AI legislative wave has not peaked.

“SB 540 is a chatbot disclosure and child safety bill, requiring notification of AI nature, steps to limit certain actions by minors, provide privacy tools, and protocols for response to suicidal ideation or self-harm,” the Transparency Coalition AI wrote in its April 3 legislative update. Whether Governor Kemp signs or vetoes the bills will be one of the first signals of how Republican-led states will navigate Washington’s pressure to stand down on AI regulation.