Connecticut
Connecticut GPS Tracking Laws: Is It Legal to Put a Tracker on a Car? (2026)
Maybe you found a strange device under your bumper. Maybe you are tempted to slip a tracker onto a car to see where someone really goes. Either way, Connecticut law has a lot to say about it, and the answer depends less on the device and more on whose car it is and why you are tracking it.
Connecticut has no statute that specifically bans placing a GPS device on a vehicle. Instead, prosecutors reach for two powerful criminal laws: electronic stalking, which is a felony, and second-degree stalking, which expressly covers monitoring and surveilling a person by any device or means.
This guide explains when GPS tracking is legal in Connecticut, when it becomes a crime, the state's unusual written-notice rule for employers, and what to do if you find a tracker on your car.
Is It Legal to Put a GPS Tracker on a Car in Connecticut?
The short answer: it is legal to put a GPS tracker on a vehicle you own or lease. It is a crime to use a tracker to monitor another person without their consent when the tracking amounts to stalking, harassment, or intimidation.
Unlike some states, Connecticut never passed a law that makes the physical act of attaching a tracking device to someone else's car a standalone offense. That does not mean you are in the clear. Connecticut's stalking statutes were written broadly enough to cover GPS trackers, AirTags, phone location apps, and any other monitoring technology.
In practice, the legal line runs through three questions. Do you own the vehicle? Did the person being tracked consent? And what is your intent? Tracking your own delivery van is business as usual. Tracking an ex-girlfriend's sedan to learn where she sleeps is a felony.
Electronic Stalking Is a Felony in Connecticut (CGS 53a-181f)
Connecticut's most direct weapon against secret GPS tracking is the electronic stalking statute, CGS 53a-181f.
A person commits electronic stalking when, with intent to kill, injure, harass, or intimidate, they use any interactive computer service, electronic communication service or system, or electronic monitoring system to place another person under surveillance, or to engage in a course of conduct that does either of two things.
First, conduct that places the person in reasonable fear of death or serious bodily injury to themselves, an immediate family member, or an intimate partner. Second, conduct that causes, attempts to cause, or would reasonably be expected to cause substantial emotional distress to any of those people.
A GPS tracker stuck to a car is a textbook "electronic monitoring system." So is an AirTag in a purse, spyware on a phone, or a location-sharing app left running without the owner's knowledge.
Electronic stalking is a Class D felony. That means up to five years in prison and a fine of up to $5,000. There is no requirement that the stalker ever physically follow the victim. The tracking itself, combined with the intent and the fear or distress it causes, completes the crime.
Stalking by Monitoring or Surveilling (CGS 53a-181d)
Connecticut has broadened its second-degree stalking law repeatedly, most recently in 2021 through Public Act 21-56, and the current language reads like it was drafted with GPS trackers in mind.
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Under CGS 53a-181d, a person is guilty of stalking in the second degree when they knowingly engage in a course of conduct directed at or concerning a specific person that would cause a reasonable person to fear for their physical safety or suffer emotional distress.
A "course of conduct" means two or more acts in which a person, directly or indirectly, and by any action, method, device or means, follows, lies in wait for, monitors, observes, surveils, threatens, harasses, or communicates with or about another person. Checking a hidden tracker's location feed day after day fits comfortably inside that definition.
Stalking in the second degree is a Class A misdemeanor, punishable by up to 364 days in jail and a $2,000 fine.
It escalates fast. Under CGS 53a-181c, stalking becomes first degree, a Class D felony, when the person has a prior second-degree stalking conviction, commits the act while violating a court order, is 22 or older and targets a victim under 16, or directs the conduct at the victim because of traits such as race, religion, sex, disability, or sexual orientation.
These statutes do not reach constitutionally protected activity, such as lawful protest or newsgathering, and tracking done with genuine consent does not satisfy their elements. Neither point helps someone secretly tracking a former partner.
Who Can Legally Track a Vehicle in Connecticut
GPS tracking is lawful in Connecticut in a fairly narrow set of situations:
- Your own vehicle. If your name is on the title or lease and no court order says otherwise, you can install a tracker on it.
- Fleet and business vehicles. Companies can track vehicles they own, though employee monitoring triggers the written-notice rule covered below.
- Parents of minors. A parent or legal guardian can track a vehicle their minor child drives, whether for safety or curfew enforcement.
- Consent. Tracking an adult who has genuinely agreed to it, such as family members voluntarily sharing locations, is legal.
- Lenders and repossession agents. Many auto loan contracts include consent to GPS devices installed by the lender.
- Law enforcement with a warrant. In United States v. Jones (2012), the U.S. Supreme Court held that attaching a GPS device to a car and monitoring it is a Fourth Amendment search, so police generally need a warrant.
The gray zone is the jointly owned car. If both spouses are on the title, placing a tracker is not automatically illegal. But intent still controls. Courts and prosecutors look past the title when a tracker on a shared car is used to monitor, intimidate, or control an estranged spouse. In a separation or divorce, a tracker can convert a property argument into a stalking charge and hand the other side powerful evidence for a protective order.
Can My Employer Track My Car in Connecticut?
Here Connecticut stands out. Under CGS 31-48d, every employer that engages in any type of electronic monitoring, including the state and its political subdivisions, must give employees prior written notice describing the types of monitoring that may occur. Posting the notice in a conspicuous place visible to affected employees satisfies the requirement.
Electronic monitoring under the statute means collecting information on an employer's premises about employees' activities or communications by any means other than direct observation, including computer, telephone, wire, radio, camera, electromagnetic, photoelectronic, or photo-optical systems. The premises wording leaves GPS tracking of vehicles out on public roads in a gray area the statute never squarely answers, so careful Connecticut employers treat company vehicles as covered and give written notice of GPS tracking anyway.
There is one exception. If an employer has reasonable grounds to believe employees are breaking the law, violating the employer's or coworkers' legal rights, or creating a hostile workplace, and monitoring may produce evidence of it, the employer may monitor without prior notice.
Violations carry civil penalties imposed by the Labor Commissioner: $500 for a first offense, $1,000 for a second, and $3,000 for a third and each one after that. Connecticut courts have held there is no private lawsuit under 31-48d, so the route for workers is a complaint to the Department of Labor.
Your personal car is a different story. An employer who hides a tracker on an employee's private vehicle without consent is outside anything 31-48d authorizes and risks the same stalking statutes as anyone else, plus an invasion of privacy lawsuit.
AirTags and Item Trackers
Apple AirTags, Tile trackers, Samsung SmartTags, and similar devices get the same legal treatment as a hardwired GPS unit. The stalking statutes care about conduct, not brand names. An AirTag dropped into a bag or magnet-mounted under a fender is an electronic monitoring system under CGS 53a-181f.
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Connecticut prosecutors have charged AirTag tracking under both the stalking and electronic stalking statutes since the devices appeared. Apple and Google now push unknown-tracker alerts to both iPhone and Android, which is how many victims first discover they are being followed.
Federal law backs this up. Under 18 U.S.C. 2261A, using any electronic device to surveil someone with intent to harass or intimidate, in a way that causes substantial emotional distress or fear of serious injury, is a federal felony when interstate elements are present.
Penalties for Illegal GPS Tracking in Connecticut
| Offense | Statute | Classification | Maximum Penalty |
|---|---|---|---|
| Electronic stalking | CGS 53a-181f | Class D felony | 5 years prison, $5,000 fine |
| Stalking, first degree | CGS 53a-181c | Class D felony | 5 years prison, $5,000 fine |
| Stalking, second degree | CGS 53a-181d | Class A misdemeanor | 364 days jail, $2,000 fine |
| Employer monitoring without notice | CGS 31-48d | Civil penalty | $500 / $1,000 / $3,000 per offense |
| Federal stalking | 18 U.S.C. 2261A | Federal felony | 5 years prison, more if injury results |
A stalking conviction also commonly brings a standing criminal protective order, probation conditions banning contact, and immigration or firearm consequences.
Civil Protection Orders and Lawsuits
Connecticut does not have a civil statute specific to GPS tracking, but victims still have strong civil tools.
Under CGS 46b-16a, a victim of stalking can apply to Superior Court for a civil protection order even without a family relationship to the stalker. The statute's definition of stalking explicitly includes surveilling and monitoring another person "by any method, device or other means." A judge can order the respondent to stop all surveillance and stay away, with violations charged as a crime. Orders last up to one year and can be extended. Our guide to Connecticut restraining order laws walks through the process.
Victims can also sue for invasion of privacy. Connecticut courts recognize the tort of intrusion upon seclusion, and secretly tracking someone's movements is the kind of highly offensive intrusion the tort was built for. Damages can cover emotional distress, and egregious conduct can support punitive damages.
What to Do If You Find a GPS Tracker on Your Car
- Do not destroy it. The device is evidence, and it may carry fingerprints or a registered owner account.
- Photograph it in place. Capture where it was mounted before anyone moves it.
- Call the police. Tracking you without consent may be electronic stalking, a felony. Ask for an incident report number.
- Let police or a mechanic remove it. Removal by someone neutral preserves the chain of custody.
- Write down the pattern. Note moments when someone seemed to know your location. Courts look for a course of conduct, so dates matter.
- Consider a protection order. A 46b-16a civil protection order or a family-court restraining order can legally bar further tracking.
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If the tracker turns out to be from a lender or a previous owner's subscription service, document that too. Innocent explanations exist, but you are entitled to find out.
Connecticut GPS Tracking FAQ
For rules on audio and video rather than location, see our guide to Connecticut recording laws, and for camera placement rules see surveillance camera laws by state. To compare how other states treat trackers, start with GPS Tracking Laws by State.
Sources
- Connecticut General Statutes, Chapter 952: Secs. 53a-181c, 53a-181d, 53a-181f (Penal Code)
- Connecticut General Statutes, Chapter 557: Sec. 31-48d (Employer Electronic Monitoring Notice)
- Connecticut General Statutes, Chapter 815a: Sec. 46b-16a (Civil Protection Orders)
- 18 U.S.C. 2261A, Stalking (Cornell Legal Information Institute)
- United States v. Jones, 565 U.S. 400 (2012) (Cornell Legal Information Institute)
Disclaimer: This article is for general informational purposes only and is not legal advice. Laws change, and how they apply depends on your specific facts. If you are facing a stalking situation or a criminal charge, talk to a licensed Connecticut attorney, and call 911 if you are in immediate danger.
Sources and References
- Connecticut General Statutes Chapter 952: Secs. 53a-181c, 53a-181d, 53a-181f(cga.ct.gov)
- Connecticut General Statutes Chapter 557: Sec. 31-48d(cga.ct.gov)
- Connecticut General Statutes Chapter 815a: Sec. 46b-16a(cga.ct.gov)
- 18 U.S.C. 2261A, Stalking(law.cornell.edu)
- United States v. Jones, 565 U.S. 400 (2012)(law.cornell.edu)