Nevada’s data broker requirements establish operational compliance obligations for certain organizations that purchase and sell covered information involving Nevada residents without maintaining a direct relationship with the consumer.
Nevada amended its online privacy framework through SB 220 (NRS Chapter 603A) to create consumer opt-out obligations applicable to qualifying data brokers engaged in covered data sale activities.
Unlike California’s data broker framework, Nevada’s law primarily focuses on operational opt-out rights, consumer request handling procedures, and compliance governance involving covered information sales activities. The Nevada Data Broker Act became effective October 1, 2021.
Operational Focus Areas.
Organizations evaluating Nevada data broker compliance obligations should pay particular attention to:
Applicability and direct relationship analysis,
Consumer opt-out request workflows,
Designated request mechanism requirements,
Verified request handling procedures,
Covered information sale practices,
Operational response timelines, and
Compliance documentation practices.
Organizations Commonly Use These Resources To:
Evaluate Nevada data broker applicability,
Operationalize consumer opt-out workflows,
Implement designated request mechanisms,
Coordinate internal compliance procedures,
Support audit and regulator response readiness, and
Maintain defensible data broker compliance operations.