Is It Legal to Monitor Someone’s Phone? Laws by State

Is It Legal to Monitor Someone’s Phone? Laws by State

Phone monitoring laws determine what surveillance is legal in your state. Phone monitoring is legal in some situations and a federal crime in others. The difference comes down to three factors: who you’re monitoring, whether they consent, and which state you’re in.

This guide breaks down the phone monitoring laws by state, federal rules, consent requirements, and the specific scenarios where monitoring is legal — including parental monitoring, employee surveillance, and spousal tracking.


Generally legal: Monitoring your minor child’s phone. Monitoring company-owned devices with employee notice. Tracking your own device. Using monitoring apps with the other person’s written consent.

Generally illegal: Installing spyware on someone’s phone without consent. Intercepting calls or texts of another adult. Monitoring an ex-partner’s device. Tracking an adult’s location without their knowledge.

This article provides general legal information, not legal advice. Laws vary by jurisdiction and change frequently. Consult a licensed attorney in your state before monitoring anyone’s phone.

What Do Federal Laws Say About Phone Monitoring?

federal phone monitoring laws

Two federal laws govern phone monitoring in the United States: the Electronic Communications Privacy Act (ECPA) of 1986 and the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act (CFAA).

Together, they set the baseline that all states must follow.

Law What It Covers Penalties
ECPA / Wiretap Act (18 U.S.C. 2511) Intercepting calls, texts, emails in transit Up to 5 years prison + $250K fine
Stored Communications Act (18 U.S.C. 2701) Accessing stored electronic communications Up to 5 years prison + $250K fine
Computer Fraud and Abuse Act (18 U.S.C. 1030) Unauthorized access to computers/devices Up to 10 years prison + fines
Pen Register Act (18 U.S.C. 3121) Recording phone numbers dialed/received Up to 1 year prison per violation

The ECPA requires at least one-party consent for recording communications. This means you can legally record a conversation you’re part of, but you cannot intercept communications between two other people.

The ECPA was written in 1986 — before smartphones, GPS tracking, or cloud storage existed. Courts regularly interpret its outdated language to cover modern monitoring technology.

The CFAA makes it illegal to access any “protected computer” without authorization. Installing monitoring software on someone else’s phone without their knowledge qualifies as unauthorized access, even if you know their passcode.

How Do State Consent Laws Differ?

state consent laws map

States fall into two categories for recording consent: one-party consent and two-party (all-party) consent. This directly affects whether you can legally monitor phone calls and messages.


One-party consent (38 states): Only one person in the conversation needs to consent to recording. If you’re part of the conversation, you can record it without telling the other person. Most monitoring apps operate legally in these states when used on your own calls.

Two-party consent (12 states): ALL parties must consent to recording. Recording a call without everyone’s knowledge is illegal regardless of your participation. These states have stricter phone monitoring laws that affect even parental monitoring of older teens.

Two-Party Consent States Key Details
California Penal Code 632 — all parties must consent, $2,500 fine per violation
Florida Statute 934.03 — felony to intercept without all-party consent
Illinois 720 ILCS 5/14-2 — eavesdropping is a Class 4 felony
Maryland Courts & Judicial 10-402 — all parties must consent
Massachusetts Ch. 272 §99 — one of the strictest wiretapping laws in the US
Pennsylvania 18 Pa.C.S. 5703 — third-degree felony without all-party consent
Washington RCW 9.73.030 — consent of all parties required
Connecticut, Michigan, Montana, Nevada, New Hampshire Various statutes requiring all-party consent

Recording a call in a two-party consent state without everyone’s knowledge is a criminal offense — penalties range from misdemeanors to felonies.

“The biggest legal mistake I see is people assuming their state’s laws apply everywhere. If you’re in a one-party state but the person you’re recording is in a two-party state, the stricter law typically applies.”

Alex Rivera, CEH, OSCP

GPS tracking has separate rules in many states. Some states like California and Texas have specific anti-stalking laws that criminalize tracking someone’s location without consent, even when phone call recording might be legal under one-party consent.

Is It Legal for Parents to Monitor Their Child’s Phone?

parental phone monitoring laws

Yes — in most cases. Parents have broad legal authority to monitor their minor children’s devices and online activity. Federal law recognizes parental rights to protect children, and most state laws explicitly exempt parental monitoring.


What parents can legally do: Install monitoring apps on phones they own or provide. Read text messages and social media. Track GPS location in real time. Review call logs and app usage. Set screen time limits and content filters.

Legal gray areas: Monitoring a child’s conversations with other adults (varies by state). Continuing to monitor after the child turns 18. Reading communications with the child’s therapist or attorney. Monitoring when custody is shared with the other parent.

Parental monitoring apps like Hoverwatch are designed specifically for this legal use case. They provide GPS tracking, call logs, message monitoring, and app usage reports while operating within parental rights laws.

Best practice: tell your child you’re monitoring their phone. Courts look more favorably on transparent monitoring, and child psychologists agree it builds trust while maintaining safety.

Understanding phone monitoring laws is critical here — the legal picture changes at age 18. Once your child is a legal adult, monitoring their phone without consent violates the same federal and state laws that protect any other adult — even if you’re still paying for the phone.

Can Employers Legally Monitor Employee Phones?

employee phone monitoring workplace

Employers can monitor company-owned devices with proper notice. Monitoring personal devices is far more restricted and requires explicit employee consent in most states.

Scenario Legal? Requirements
Company phone, with written policy Yes Employee must acknowledge monitoring policy
Company phone, no notice Risky Legal in some states but invites lawsuits
Personal phone, with consent (BYOD) Yes, limited Only work-related apps and data
Personal phone, no consent No Violates ECPA and state privacy laws
GPS tracking company vehicles Yes Must notify employees in most states
GPS tracking personal vehicles No Illegal without consent or court order

States requiring monitoring notice: Connecticut and Delaware require employers to notify employees before monitoring electronic communications. New York requires notice before monitoring phone calls. California has strict privacy protections that limit even company device monitoring.

What employers typically monitor: Email on company accounts. Web browsing on company networks. GPS location of company vehicles and phones. App usage and screen time during work hours. Call duration and frequency — but not call content without consent.

Phone monitoring laws center on one key principle: reasonable expectation of privacy. On a company-owned device with a clear monitoring policy, employees have minimal privacy expectations. On a personal phone, even during work hours, privacy expectations remain high.

A 2024 survey by the American Management Association found that 78% of major companies monitor employee communications. Of those, only 62% provide clear written notice to employees.

If you’re an employer considering phone monitoring, consult an employment attorney in your state. The legal requirements for notice, consent, and scope vary significantly — and violations can result in expensive litigation.

What About Monitoring a Spouse or Partner?

spouse phone monitoring legal issues

Spousal monitoring is one of the most legally complex areas. Even married couples have privacy rights, and installing spyware on a spouse’s phone is illegal in most circumstances.


Generally legal: Monitoring shared family accounts you both have access to. GPS tracking a vehicle titled in your name. Viewing shared cloud accounts (iCloud, Google) where both have credentials. Recording calls you’re personally part of (in one-party states).

Generally illegal: Installing spy apps on a spouse’s personal phone. Accessing their email or social media without permission. Recording their conversations with other people. GPS tracking after a separation or divorce filing. Monitoring for purposes of harassment or control.

Installing spyware on a spouse’s phone — even during marriage — can result in federal felony charges under the CFAA and Wiretap Act.

“In divorce proceedings, evidence obtained through illegal phone monitoring is typically inadmissible and can result in criminal charges against the person who installed the spyware. It hurts your case, not helps it.”

Jennifer Walsh, Family Law Attorney, California State Bar

If you suspect a spouse of infidelity or hidden financial activity, hire a licensed private investigator instead. They know the legal boundaries and can gather evidence that’s actually admissible in court.

What Are the Penalties for Illegal Phone Monitoring?

penalties for illegal phone monitoring

Penalties depend on which laws were violated and whether the case is prosecuted at the federal or state level. Both criminal and civil penalties apply.

Beyond legal penalties, illegal monitoring can affect custody decisions, divorce settlements, and professional licensing. Several states now have specific anti-stalking laws that treat unauthorized phone monitoring as stalking behavior.

The legal consequences are severe enough that even suspecting illegal monitoring should prompt you to check your phone. Learn how to detect if someone is spying on your phone.

How Can You Monitor Legally and Stay Protected?

legal phone monitoring consent form

Phone monitoring laws allow surveillance when three principles are met: ownership, consent, and transparency. Follow these guidelines to stay within the law regardless of your state.

Monitoring Type Legal Requirements Best Practice
Parental (minor child) Legal in all states on parent-owned devices Inform the child, document your policy
Employee (company device) Written policy + employee acknowledgment Include in employee handbook, annual reminder
BYOD (personal device at work) Explicit written consent for specific apps Limit monitoring to work apps only
Spouse/partner Mutual consent required for personal devices Use shared accounts, not secret monitoring
Self-monitoring (your own device) Always legal Use for theft recovery, location tracking

Document everything: Keep written records of consent. Save signed monitoring policies. Screenshot notification settings that show monitoring is active. If monitoring a child, note their age and the parental justification. Documentation protects you if legality is ever questioned.

Use legitimate tools: Choose monitoring apps that operate transparently and are designed for legal use cases. Apps like Hoverwatch are built for parental monitoring and employee oversight — not covert surveillance of unsuspecting adults.

When in doubt, get consent in writing. A simple signed statement that the person agrees to monitoring eliminates almost all legal risk in every state.

The safest approach is always transparency. Tell the person you’re monitoring, get their written acknowledgment, and use the monitoring data only for its stated purpose.

Legal phone monitoring protects families and businesses — illegal surveillance destroys trust and invites prosecution.

Final Thoughts

Phone monitoring laws come down to consent and ownership. Parents monitoring minor children’s devices are protected in every state. Employers monitoring company phones need written policies. Everyone else needs explicit consent.

If you’re considering monitoring someone’s phone, check your state’s consent laws first. When in doubt, consult an attorney — the penalties for illegal monitoring are severe enough that getting legal advice first is always worth the cost.

Frequently Asked Questions


Yes, in all 50 states. Parents have legal authority to monitor minor children's devices, especially devices the parent owns or pays for. This includes reading texts, tracking location, monitoring apps, and reviewing call logs. The legal authority typically ends when the child turns 18, regardless of who pays for the phone. Best practice is to inform your child about the monitoring.


On company-owned devices, some states allow monitoring without notice, but it's legally risky and invites lawsuits. Connecticut and Delaware specifically require employers to notify employees before monitoring. On personal devices, monitoring without consent is illegal everywhere. Best practice: include monitoring disclosure in your employee handbook and require signed acknowledgment.


It depends on whether you're in a one-party or two-party consent state. In 38 states (one-party), you can record calls you're part of without telling the other person. In 12 states (California, Florida, Illinois, Maryland, Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, Washington, Connecticut, Michigan, Montana, Nevada, New Hampshire), all parties must consent. If the call crosses state lines, the stricter law typically applies.


No. Installing spyware on a spouse's personal phone without their consent violates federal law (CFAA and Wiretap Act) regardless of marital status. Evidence obtained this way is inadmissible in divorce court and can result in criminal charges against you. Instead, hire a licensed private investigator who can legally gather evidence, or consult a divorce attorney about legal discovery methods.


Check for signs of spyware: unusual battery drain, high data usage, phone running hot while idle. Run a security scan with Malwarebytes or Lookout. Check your installed apps for anything unfamiliar. If you confirm monitoring, document the evidence, change all passwords from a different device, and consult an attorney about your legal options — including filing a police report and civil lawsuit for damages.


Sarah Thompson

Sarah Thompson

Senior mobile app developer with 10+ years building tracking and monitoring solutions for Android and iOS.