Oklahoma became the 21st state to enact a comprehensive consumer privacy law when Governor Kevin Stitt signed Senate Bill 546 in March 2026. If you live in Oklahoma, you now have legal rights to demand data brokers stop selling your personal information—but you need to know how to exercise them.
Why Oklahomans Should Care About Data Brokers
Data brokers collect and sell your personal information—name, home address, phone number, email, income estimates, property records, political donations, and more—to anyone willing to pay. In Oklahoma, county assessor records, court filings, and voter registrations are all publicly accessible, creating a rich supply of data that brokers scrape, package, and monetize.
The consequences are real. Your information fuels robocalls, spam, targeted scams, and identity theft. For professionals like law enforcement officers, judges, educators, and domestic violence survivors, the stakes are even higher—public exposure of a home address can become a genuine safety threat.
Oklahoma's New Privacy Law: What It Gives You
The Oklahoma Consumer Data Privacy Act takes effect January 1, 2027, but you don't have to wait to start protecting yourself. Here's what the law provides once it's active:
- Right to access the personal data a business holds about you
- Right to correct inaccurate personal data
- Right to delete your personal data
- Right to data portability—get a copy of your data in a usable format
- Right to opt out of the sale of personal data, targeted advertising, and certain profiling
Key Detail: "Sale" Means Money Only
Oklahoma defines "sale" as an exchange of personal data for monetary consideration only. This is narrower than laws in states like California or Colorado, which also cover exchanges for "other valuable consideration." Some data-sharing arrangements between brokers and advertising partners may fall outside this definition, limiting your opt-out rights in certain scenarios.
Who Enforces the Law?
The Oklahoma Attorney General has exclusive enforcement authority. There is no private right of action—you cannot sue a data broker directly. However, you can file complaints with the AG's office. Civil penalties reach up to $7,500 per violation, and there is a permanent cure period allowing businesses to fix violations before facing penalties.
No Universal Opt-Out Signal Required
Unlike California and Colorado, Oklahoma does not require businesses to recognize universal opt-out preference signals like Global Privacy Control. You'll need to submit individual opt-out requests to each data broker rather than relying on a browser-level signal.
Step 1: Discover Where Your Information Appears
Search for yourself on Google, Bing, and DuckDuckGo using variations of your name, city, and zip code. Common sites that list Oklahomans include:
- TruePeopleSearch
- Spokeo
- WhitePages
- BeenVerified
- PeopleFinders
- FastPeopleSearch
- Radaris
- Nuwber
- Intelius
- MyLife
Make a list of every site showing your personal information. You may be surprised by how many results appear.
Step 2: Submit Opt-Out Requests
For each data broker site, follow these steps:
- Look for a "Do Not Sell My Info" or "Privacy" link in the site footer
- Locate the opt-out or removal request form
- Submit your name, address, and any identifying details they request
- Check your email and verify the request through the confirmation link
- Wait 7–30 days and re-check to confirm removal
Some brokers will also accept emailed requests citing the Oklahoma Consumer Data Privacy Act (once effective) or other applicable federal and state laws.
Step 3: Address Oklahoma Public Records
Much of the data that brokers collect about Oklahomans comes from public records. Key sources include:
- County assessor records—property ownership, home values, and addresses are published online
- Oklahoma voter registration—name, address, party affiliation, and voting history are searchable through the State Election Board
- Court records—Oklahoma's OSCN system makes many court filings available online
- Professional licenses—licensing boards publish names and sometimes addresses
While you generally cannot remove yourself from these government databases, you can take steps to limit exposure. Consider using a P.O. Box for voter registration if permitted, and request that professional licensing boards display minimal personal details.
Step 4: Stay Vigilant
Opt-outs are not permanent. Data brokers routinely re-add your information from new data sources within weeks or months. You'll need to repeat the process regularly—typically every 3 to 6 months—to keep your data off these sites.
The Easier Way: Let PrivacyOn Handle It
Manually opting out of 100+ data brokers is a time-consuming, repetitive process that most people eventually abandon. PrivacyOn automates the entire workflow. We submit opt-out requests to more than 100 data broker sites on your behalf, continuously monitor for re-listings, and scan the dark web for leaks of your personal information.
For Oklahoma residents, PrivacyOn covers both the major national brokers and the regional sites that scrape Oklahoma public records. Plans start at $8.33/month and include family coverage for up to 5 people—ideal for protecting your entire household.
Oklahoma Privacy Resources
- Oklahoma Attorney General Consumer Protection: File complaints about data privacy violations
- Oklahoma State Election Board: Manage your voter registration details
- OSCN (Oklahoma State Courts Network): Search and monitor court records
Start Protecting Your Privacy Now
You don't have to wait until January 2027 for the new law to take effect. Most data brokers already offer opt-out mechanisms to comply with laws in other states. Start submitting removal requests today, or let PrivacyOn automate the process so you never have to worry about your personal information being sold again.