Iowa
Iowa GPS Tracking Laws: Is It Legal to Put a Tracker on a Car? (2026)
Hiding a GPS tracker on someone else's car in Iowa can be charged as a serious misdemeanor. Use that tracker as part of a pattern of stalking, and Iowa law treats it far more harshly: stalking with a technological device is a class C felony, punishable by up to 10 years in prison, even for a first offense.
That second part surprises people. In most states, tech-assisted stalking only bumps the penalty after a repeat offense or a protective order violation. Iowa flipped that in 2017. The moment a GPS device enters the picture, a first-time stalking charge jumps two felony classes.
This guide explains Iowa Code 708.11A (the GPS placement crime), Iowa Code 708.11 (the stalking felony), who is allowed to track a vehicle, and what to do if you find a tracker on your car. It is part of our GPS Tracking Laws by State series.
Is It Legal to Put a GPS Tracker on a Car in Iowa?
It is legal to put a GPS tracker on a car you own. It is generally illegal to put one on someone else's car without their consent if your goal is to follow their movements and you have no legitimate reason for doing so.
Iowa Code 708.11A makes it a crime to place a global positioning device on another person, or on an object, without the other person's consent, in order to track that person without a legitimate purpose. The crime is a serious misdemeanor.
Notice the two separate hurdles built into that sentence: no consent, and no legitimate purpose. Both matter, and the second one makes Iowa's law meaningfully different from the GPS statutes in many other states.
The bigger danger sits one section earlier in the code. If the tracking is part of a course of conduct that places someone in fear, the charge is no longer the misdemeanor under 708.11A. It is felony stalking under 708.11, and the GPS itself is what elevates it to a class C felony.
Iowa's GPS Placement Law (Iowa Code 708.11A) and Its Legitimate Purpose Element
The legislature added section 708.11A in 2017, in the same bill that rewrote the stalking statute. It covers placing a GPS device "on another person, or on an object" without consent in order to track the person.
The phrase "on an object" is what reaches vehicles, purses, and backpacks. You do not have to attach the device to the person's body. Sliding a tracker into a wheel well or under a bumper counts.
The unusual part is the legitimate purpose element. The state must prove the tracking happened without a legitimate purpose. That is an element of the offense, not a defense the accused has to raise, so prosecutors carry the burden of negating it.
In practice, that carve-out shelters obviously justified tracking. A business monitoring its own delivery vans has a legitimate purpose. A parent tracking a minor child's location for safety arguably does too, though Iowa courts have not drawn a precise line. A suspicious spouse tracking a partner's separately owned car, or an ex following a former partner, will have a very hard time claiming any legitimate purpose.
Compare that to California Penal Code 637.7 or Florida Statutes 934.425, which ban tracking another person's vehicle without consent outright, with narrow listed exceptions. Iowa's statute is weaker on paper because of the legitimate purpose language. But Iowa compensates with one of the toughest stalking enhancements in the country, covered next.
Stalking With a GPS Is a Class C Felony, Even the First Time (Iowa Code 708.11)
Iowa Code 708.11 defines stalking as purposefully engaging in a course of conduct directed at a specific person that would cause a reasonable person to feel terrorized, frightened, intimidated, or threatened, or to fear bodily injury or death, when the offender knows or should know the conduct will have that effect. Lawmakers broadened that fear element in 2023; before that, it required fear of bodily injury or death.
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Ordinarily, a first stalking offense is an aggravated misdemeanor, punishable by up to 2 years. A second offense is a class D felony, and a third or subsequent offense is a class C felony on its own.
Here is the Iowa twist. Under 708.11(3)(a)(4), added by the 2017 legislation, stalking is a class C felony when the offender "utilizes a technological device while committing stalking," even if it is the offender's first offense. The statute defines technological device to expressly include a global positioning device.
A class C felony in Iowa carries up to 10 years in prison and a fine of $1,370 to $13,660 under Iowa Code 902.9. Stalking is also a class C felony when the offender is subject to a protective or no-contact order, possesses a dangerous weapon, targets a victim under 18, or commits a third or subsequent offense.
The practical message is blunt. Following an ex around town on foot might start as a misdemeanor case. Doing the same thing with a $20 tracker stuck under their car starts as a 10-year felony.
Who Can Legally Track a Vehicle in Iowa
Several categories of tracking remain lawful:
- Your own vehicle. Tracking a car titled in your name, including one driven by a family member, does not violate 708.11A because the tracking has a legitimate purpose and you consent to the device on your own property.
- Tracking with consent. If the vehicle owner agrees to the device, there is no crime. Get that consent in writing.
- Business and fleet vehicles. A company tracking vehicles it owns is the textbook legitimate purpose.
- Parents of minor children. Tracking a minor child for safety is widely treated as legitimate, though tracking the other parent's car during a custody dispute is a different story and a common way people get charged.
- Law enforcement with a warrant. After the U.S. Supreme Court's decision in United States v. Jones (2012), attaching a GPS device to a vehicle to monitor its movements is a Fourth Amendment search, so police generally need a warrant.
Co-owned cars in a divorce sit in a gray zone. A spouse who jointly owns the vehicle has a stronger argument than one tracking a separately titled car, but if the tracking feeds a pattern that frightens the other spouse, the stalking statute can still apply. Family law attorneys in Iowa routinely warn clients against it.
Can My Employer Track My Car in Iowa?
Iowa has no statute limiting employer GPS tracking, so the default rules apply.
If the vehicle belongs to the employer, the employer can track it. Courts have consistently found that employees have a minimal expectation of privacy in the location of a company-owned vehicle used for work, and the company plainly has a legitimate purpose.
Your personal car is different. An employer that hides a tracker on an employee's personal vehicle without consent runs straight into 708.11A, and the legitimate purpose argument gets much weaker once the tracking follows you off the clock. Careful employers handle this with written consent policies, often through a mileage or telematics app the employee installs knowingly.
If workplace monitoring is your concern more broadly, see our guide to workplace surveillance camera laws and Iowa's recording laws.
AirTags and Item Trackers
Iowa's statutes do not mention Apple AirTags, Tile, or Samsung SmartTags by name, and they do not need to. Section 708.11A covers any "global positioning device" placed to track a person, and 708.11 defines technological device broadly enough to capture Bluetooth item trackers used to follow someone.
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Dropping an AirTag into someone's bag or attaching one to their car, in order to monitor where they go, fits the same analysis as a hardwired GPS unit. If it is done without consent and without a legitimate purpose, it is a serious misdemeanor. If it is part of conduct that puts the person in fear, it is a class C felony.
Apple and Google now push anti-stalking alerts to nearby phones when an unknown tracker travels with you. Those alerts are frequently the first piece of evidence in Iowa tracking cases.
Penalties for Illegal GPS Tracking in Iowa
| Offense | Statute | Classification | Penalty |
|---|---|---|---|
| Unauthorized placement of a GPS device | Iowa Code 708.11A | Serious misdemeanor | Up to 1 year in jail; fine of $430 to $2,560 |
| Stalking, first offense (no enhancement) | Iowa Code 708.11(3)(c) | Aggravated misdemeanor | Up to 2 years; fine of $855 to $8,540 |
| Stalking, second offense (no class C factor) | Iowa Code 708.11(3)(b) | Class D felony | Up to 5 years; fine of $1,025 to $10,245 |
| Stalking using a technological device (including GPS), while subject to a protective order, with a dangerous weapon, victim under 18, or third or subsequent offense | Iowa Code 708.11(3)(a) | Class C felony | Up to 10 years; fine of $1,370 to $13,660 |
Fine amounts come from Iowa Code 902.9 (felonies) and 903.1 (misdemeanors).
Federal law can stack on top. 18 U.S.C. 2261A makes it a federal crime to use any electronic communication service or electronic monitoring to engage in a course of conduct that places a person in fear or causes substantial emotional distress, with interstate elements. Cross-border tracking cases are sometimes charged federally.
Civil Options and Protective Orders
Iowa does not give tracking victims a dedicated statutory right to sue, the way California Penal Code 637.7 pairs with that state's privacy claims. But Iowa victims still have civil tools.
Invasion of privacy. Iowa recognizes the common-law tort of intrusion upon seclusion. Secretly monitoring someone's daily movements with a hidden device is the kind of highly offensive intrusion the tort was built for, and a successful claim can recover damages.
Protective orders. Victims can seek civil protective orders, including under Iowa Code chapter 236 for domestic abuse and chapter 236A for sexual abuse. Once criminal charges are filed, courts issue no-contact orders, and stalking while subject to one independently triggers the class C felony tier. Our guide to Iowa restraining order laws walks through the process.
Divorce and custody consequences. Evidence obtained through illegal tracking can backfire badly in family court, and the tracking itself can support a protective order against the person who placed the device.
What to Do If You Find a Tracker on Your Car
- Do not destroy it. The device is evidence, and its serial number can identify the buyer.
- Photograph it in place. Capture where it was mounted before anyone moves it.
- Call local police or the county sheriff. Report it under Iowa Code 708.11A, and mention any history of harassment so officers evaluate the stalking statute too.
- Save tracker alerts. Screenshot any AirTag or unknown-tracker notification from your phone, with timestamps.
- Consider a protective order. If you know or suspect who placed it and you fear them, ask the clerk of court about a chapter 236 (domestic abuse) or chapter 236A (sexual abuse) petition.
- Get a sweep if needed. If one device turned up, a mechanic or private investigator can check for others, including hardwired units behind the dash.
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Police can sometimes leave the device in place briefly to identify who is monitoring it, which is another reason to call before ripping it off.
Sources
- Iowa Code 708.11A, Unauthorized placement of a global positioning device, Iowa Legislature
- Iowa Code 708.11, Stalking, Iowa Legislature
- Iowa Code 902.9, Maximum sentence for felons, Iowa Legislature
- Iowa Code 903.1, Maximum sentence for misdemeanants, Iowa Legislature
- Iowa Code chapter 236A, Sexual abuse protective orders, Iowa Legislature
- United States v. Jones, 565 U.S. 400 (2012), Legal Information Institute
- 18 U.S.C. 2261A, Stalking, Legal Information Institute
Disclaimer: This article is for general informational purposes only and is not legal advice. Laws change and outcomes depend on specific facts. If you are facing a GPS tracking issue in Iowa, consult a licensed Iowa attorney. If you are in immediate danger, call 911.
Related guides: GPS Tracking Laws by State | Iowa Recording Laws | Iowa Surveillance Camera Laws | Iowa Restraining Order Laws
Sources and References
- Iowa Code 708.11A, Unauthorized placement of a global positioning device(legis.iowa.gov)
- Iowa Code 708.11, Stalking(legis.iowa.gov)
- Iowa Code 902.9, Maximum sentence for felons(legis.iowa.gov)
- Iowa Code 903.1, Maximum sentence for misdemeanants(legis.iowa.gov)
- Iowa Code chapter 236A, Sexual abuse protective orders(legis.iowa.gov)
- United States v. Jones, 565 U.S. 400 (2012)(law.cornell.edu)
- 18 U.S.C. 2261A, Stalking(law.cornell.edu)