State Do Not Call lists: What you need to know
- Several states maintain their own Do Not Call (DNC) lists in addition to the national registry.
- Telemarketers may be required to purchase and suppress against these lists before calling into those states.
- Requirements, costs and exemptions vary by state, creating compliance risk for multistate outreach.
Most organizations are familiar with the National Do Not Call (DNC) Registry, which allows consumers across the United States to opt out of unwanted telemarketing calls. But fewer understand how state Do Not Call lists work — and how they impact compliance.
Several states maintain their own Do Not Call programs with separate requirements. For businesses conducting telemarketing across multiple states, this means compliance is not limited to the federal registry. In certain states, additional steps are required before outreach can begin.
For businesses conducting telemarketing across multiple states, understanding these differences is critical. Compliance is not limited to the federal registry. In certain states, additional steps are required before outreach can begin.
Which states maintain their own Do Not Call lists?
A number of states operate their own DNC programs separate from the national registry.
These currently include:
- Colorado
- Florida
- Indiana
- Louisiana
- Massachusetts
- Missouri
- Oklahoma
- Pennsylvania
- Tennessee
- Texas
- Wyoming
Requirements in these states may differ in terms of:
- List access and purchase requirements
- Update frequency
- Applicable exemptions
- Enforcement practices
Because these rules can change, organizations should validate requirements regularly.
How state DNC lists impact compliance
When placing non-exempt calls, telemarketers may be required to suppress numbers against both:
- The National Do Not Call Registry
- Applicable state Do Not Call lists
Failure to do so can result in:
- Consumer complaints
- Regulatory scrutiny
- Financial penalties
- Reputational risk
Many organizations assume that federal compliance is sufficient, but state-level requirements can create additional exposure.
Where companies run into problems
State DNC compliance issues are rarely intentional. They usually stem from operational gaps.
Common challenges include:
- Not realizing a state requires its own DNC list
- Failing to purchase or access the correct list
- Using outdated suppression data
- Misinterpreting exemptions
- Applying a single process across all states
These issues become more likely as outreach expands into new markets.
How this connects to telemarketing registration
State Do Not Call lists are often tied to broader telemarketing registration requirements.
In many cases, organizations must:
- Register as a telemarketer in a given state
- Obtain access to that state’s DNC list
- Maintain compliance with both registration and suppression rules
This means DNC compliance is not a standalone requirement — it is part of a larger regulatory framework.
What a defensible approach looks like
Managing DNC requirements across states requires structure and consistency.
Organizations should focus on:
- Identifying which states require separate DNC list access
- Ensuring proper list purchase and maintenance
- Aligning suppression processes across federal and state lists
- Validating exemptions by jurisdiction
- Monitoring both internal and third-party outreach
This approach helps reduce risk while maintaining operational efficiency.
How Wipfli can help
Wipfli helps organizations manage the complexity of multistate telemarketing compliance, including Do Not Call requirements.
Our services include:
- State DNC list access and compliance support
- Multistate telemarketing registration management
- Policy and process alignment
- Vendor oversight and monitoring
To simplify your registration and DNC compliance requirements, explore our telemarketing registration support services.