State notification register
Kansas data breach notification law: in the most expedient time possible and without unreasonable delay.
Kansas's breach-notification obligations are set by K.S.A. 50-7a01 et seq.. This page summarises the deadline to notify affected residents, the attorney general notification threshold, whether a private right of action exists, and the penalties for late or missing notification. Every provision is cited to its source statute and was verified in June 2026.
Individual deadline
No fixed day
Without unreasonable delay
AG notification
1,000
No general AG requirement (reporting agencies at more than 1,000 residents)
Private action
No
Only the Kansas Attorney General may enforce
Statute
KS
K.S.A. 50-7a01 et seq.
Section KS.1
What the statute requires
Under K.S.A. 50-7a01 et seq., a business that owns or licenses computerized personal information of Kansas residents must notify affected individuals in the most expedient time possible and without unreasonable delay.
Attorney general notification: no general ag requirement (reporting agencies at more than 1,000 residents).
Section KS.2
What triggers notification
Like most US state statutes, notification is triggered by the unauthorized acquisition of unencrypted, unredacted computerized personal information that compromises its security, confidentiality, or integrity. Two concepts recur across the states and apply here.
Encryption safe harbor
Personal information that was encrypted, and where the encryption key was not also acquired, generally does not trigger notification. A stolen device with full-disk encryption is typically a non-event; an unencrypted record, or an encrypted record where the key was exposed alongside it, is a reportable breach.
Who must be notified
- [1] Affected Kansas residents: without unreasonable delay
- [2] Attorney general / state agency: no general ag requirement (reporting agencies at more than 1,000 residents)
- [3] Consumer reporting agencies where the breach is large-scale
Section KS.3
Penalties and enforcement
Deceptive trade practice; up to $10,000 per violation (up to $20,000 for willful order violations).
Private right of action: No. Only the Kansas Attorney General may enforce.
Primary source:Kansas statute K.S.A. 50-7a01 et seq.; verified June 2026 against state statutory summaries and the underlying statute text.
Section KS.4
How this compares to the strictest states
The strictest US deadlines are 30 days (California, Florida, Washington, Colorado, Maine, New York, New Jersey). The majority of states use a qualitative "without unreasonable delay" standard with no fixed day cap. Here is where Kansas sits.
Kansas does not set a numeric deadline. It uses a "without unreasonable delay" standard, which regulators interpret as days to weeks, not months. Organizations operating across multiple states should default to the strictest applicable clock, which can be as short as 30 days in states such as California, Colorado, Florida.
Cross-references
Index / All 50 states + DC
→The full register: deadline and AG threshold for every state.
Schedule 09 / Notification laws
→Global frameworks and the cost of notification.
01 / Breach cost calculator
→Estimate your Kansas breach exposure, including notification cost.
Regulation / GDPR
→The 72-hour clock and 4%-of-revenue fine framework.
Cost / Notification
→Why notification is roughly 6% of total breach cost.
Schedule F / Reference Q&A
Frequently Asked Questions
Primary source:Kansas data breach notification statute (K.S.A. 50-7a01 et seq.). Provisions verified June 2026 against state statutory summaries (Recording Law US data-privacy series, 2026 edition), the IAPP US State Data Breach Notification Chart, Foley & Lardner's chart, and the underlying statute text.