On April 22, 2026, the House Energy & Commerce Committee released the “Securing and Establishing Consumer Uniform Rights and Enforcement over Data Act” (the “SECURE Data Act”). The SECURE Data Act seeks to establish a comprehensive federal framework for consumer privacy rights and the protection of personal data. Subject to certain exemptions, the SECURE Data Act applies to businesses subject to the FTC Act or common carriers subject to title II of the Communications Act of 1934 that either (a) collect and process personal data of more than 200,000 consumers annually and have an annual gross revenue of $25 million or more, or (b) collect and process personal data of 100,000 consumers annually and “derive[] 25 percent or more of the[ir] annual gross revenue . . . from the sale of such personal data.” The SECURE Data Act’s framework will require operational changes for many businesses, including those already complying with state privacy laws. Below is an overview of several material provisions of the SECURE Data Act.
Consumer Privacy Rights
Section 2 of the SECURE Data Act grants consumers the right to access, correct, delete, and obtain a copy of their personal data. It further grants consumers the right to opt out of the processing of their personal data for the purposes of targeted advertising, the sale of their personal data, and “[r]eliance on profiling to make a decision that had a legal or similarly significant effect on the consumer.” Controllers must establish and disclose in a privacy notice the means by which a consumer may submit a request to exercise these rights.
Further, the SECURE Data Act prohibits controllers from processing sensitive data of a consumer without first obtaining the consumer’s consent.
Controller Data Use and Minimization Obligations
Section 3 of the SECURE Data Act requires controllers to provide a privacy notice to consumers that identifies, among other things, “[e]ach category of personal data processed by the controller,” “[e]ach purpose for processing personal data,” and “[e]ach category of personal data the controller shares with any other controller or any governmental entity.” Controllers also are required to disclose to consumers the sale of their personal data.
Section 3 further requires controllers to limit the collection of personal data to what is “adequate, relevant, and reasonably necessary” in relation to the controller’s disclosed data processing purposes. The SECURE Data Act also restricts the processing of personal data for purposes beyond those originally disclosed unless the controller first obtains the consumer’s consent.
State Preemption
The SECURE Data Act preempts all state laws that “relate[] to the provisions of this Act.” The SECURE Data Act, however, permits state attorneys general to bring civil actions on behalf of their residents in federal court to enjoin violations of the act, enforce compliance with the act, and seek damages and equitable relief.
Key Takeaways
The SECURE Data Act, if enacted, would represent a significant shift in the U.S. data privacy landscape by establishing a single federal standard that preempts the current patchwork of state privacy laws. If enacted, businesses that have already invested in compliance with state frameworks such as the California Consumer Privacy Act, as amended by the California Privacy Rights Act, should evaluate whether their existing programs satisfy the SECURE Data Act’s requirements, particularly with respect to data broker registration requirement, data use and minimization obligations, and the consumer rights provisions.








