Wearable Recording Devices at Work: A Complete Legal Guide
AI voice recorders clipped to lanyards. Smart glasses indistinguishable from regular eyewear. Wrist-worn devices that transcribe every conversation throughout the day. Wearable recording technology has arrived in the workplace, and the law is scrambling to catch up. This guide covers every legal dimension of using, wearing, or banning recording-capable wearable devices at work in the United States and internationally.
The Devices Reshaping the Workplace
Several categories of wearable recording devices are now common in professional settings, each with distinct legal implications based on what they capture and how they operate.
AI voice recorders like the Plaud NotePin and NotePin S clip onto clothing and record audio when manually activated. Plaud reports over one million professional users as of 2025, with particular adoption among sales teams, consultants, and attorneys. Because these devices require a deliberate button press to begin recording, they map most cleanly onto existing wiretapping law frameworks.
Smart glasses change the equation. Meta's smart glasses line (including Ray-Ban Meta and Oakley Meta models) sold over seven million units in 2025 alone, and they capture both audio and video while looking nearly identical to ordinary eyewear. A small LED indicator signals recording, but it is easily missed by people nearby. Harvard researchers demonstrated in October 2024 that these glasses could be paired with facial recognition to identify strangers in real time and retrieve their personal information.
Always-on ambient recorders like Bee AI (acquired by Amazon in July 2025) continuously transcribe conversations throughout the day without requiring the wearer to press anything. Bee's LED indicator glows red only when the device is muted, not when it is actively recording. This inversion of the standard indicator design raises significant consent questions.
AI meeting bots such as Otter.ai and Fireflies.ai join virtual meetings as software participants, recording and transcribing the audio. While not wearable devices in the traditional sense, they present the same core legal question: who consented to this recording?
Federal Law: The Baseline
The federal Wiretap Act (18 U.S.C. § 2511) establishes one-party consent as the national floor. Under federal law, a person can record a conversation they are a party to without informing or obtaining permission from the other participants. This means that at the federal level, an employee wearing a Plaud or similar device can legally record their own workplace conversations.
Federal law does not protect recording conversations you are not part of. An always-on device that captures background conversations at adjacent desks or in hallways may pick up "oral communications" where the speaker has a reasonable expectation of privacy, potentially violating the federal Wiretap Act even in a one-party consent framework.
Penalties under federal law are severe. Intentional interception of oral, wire, or electronic communications carries up to five years in prison and fines under 18 U.S.C. § 2511(4). Civil liability under 18 U.S.C. § 2520 includes actual and punitive damages. Statutory damages are computed at $100 per day of violation or $10,000, whichever is greater.
State Consent Laws: One-Party vs. Two-Party
State law is where wearable recording legality diverges dramatically. Thirteen states require all-party consent (often called two-party consent), meaning every person in a conversation must agree before recording begins. The remaining 37 states and DC follow one-party consent, aligning with the federal standard. (Michigan and Oregon have hybrid rules: Michigan courts have found that a participant may record their own conversation, and Oregon distinguishes between electronic and in-person communications.)
Two-party consent states: California, Connecticut, Delaware, Florida, Illinois, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Montana, New Hampshire, Oregon, Pennsylvania, and Washington. In these states, wearing a recording device to a meeting without informing all attendees is a criminal offense, regardless of your reason for recording.
Penalties in two-party consent states are not trivial. Pennsylvania classifies wiretapping as a third-degree felony carrying up to seven years imprisonment. Florida treats violations as third-degree felonies with up to five years. Maryland imposes fines up to $10,000 and up to five years imprisonment under Md. Code, Cts. & Jud. Proc. § 10-402.
The interstate complication: When a video call or phone call connects participants in different states, the strictest state's law generally applies. An employee in New York (one-party) recording a call with a colleague in California (two-party) could face criminal liability under California law.
The NLRB and Employee Recording Rights
The National Labor Relations Board has consistently held that employees have a right to record workplace conditions under certain circumstances, and that employer policies must respect this right. This creates a tension that every workplace recording policy must navigate.
Section 7 of the National Labor Relations Act (29 U.S.C. § 157) protects employees' rights to engage in "concerted activities for the purpose of collective bargaining or other mutual aid or protection." The NLRB has interpreted this to include recording workplace conditions when done to document safety concerns, harassment, discrimination, or other matters related to working conditions.
Blanket no-recording policies are legally vulnerable. The NLRB has invalidated overbroad rules that could "reasonably tend to chill employees in the exercise of their Section 7 rights." In January 2026, an NLRB Administrative Law Judge dismissed a complaint against United Parcel Service's recording policy, finding that the General Counsel had not shown the policy had a reasonable tendency to chill Section 7 rights under the Stericycle framework. The decision suggests that narrowly tailored policies restricting recording during work time and in work areas, while permitting it during breaks and in non-work areas, can withstand NLRB scrutiny.
There are limits. In June 2025, NLRB Acting General Counsel William Cowen issued Memo GC 25-07 clarifying that secretly recording collective bargaining sessions constitutes a per se unfair labor practice, even though recording other workplace interactions may be protected. The NLRB has also held that federal labor law can preempt state two-party consent statutes when the recording serves a protected purpose, though this intersection remains legally contested.
Biometric Privacy: Smart Glasses and BIPA
Smart glasses that capture video add a legal layer that audio-only recorders do not face: biometric privacy law. Three states have dedicated biometric privacy statutes, and Illinois's is the most consequential for workplace wearable devices.
The Illinois Biometric Information Privacy Act (740 ILCS 14) requires informed written consent before collecting biometric identifiers, which include "face geometry." Smart glasses with AI features that process facial characteristics trigger BIPA regardless of whether the wearer intended to use facial recognition. Statutory damages are $1,000 per negligent violation and $5,000 per intentional or reckless violation. The $51.75 million Clearview AI settlement in 2025 demonstrated the scale of BIPA exposure.
Texas's Capture or Use of Biometric Identifier Act (CUBI, Tex. Bus. & Com. Code § 503.001) prohibits capturing biometric identifiers for commercial purposes without consent, with enforcement by the attorney general and penalties up to $25,000 per violation. Washington's biometric privacy law (RCW 19.375) restricts commercial use of biometric identifiers. Colorado's HB24-1130, effective July 1, 2025, requires written consent before collecting biometric identifiers from employees and mandates written retention and destruction policies.
AI wearables that create voiceprints trigger an additional biometric concern. The Fireflies.ai BIPA lawsuit (Cruz v. Fireflies.AI, December 2025) alleges that the AI meeting tool collected voiceprints to identify speakers across sessions without the written consent BIPA requires. Voice recognition data falls squarely within BIPA's definition of "biometric identifier."
New Legislation: California SB 1130
On February 17, 2026, California Senator Eloise Gomez Reyes introduced SB 1130, the "Wearable Device Privacy Protection Act." This is the first bill in any U.S. state that directly and specifically targets wearable recording devices by name.
The bill would add Sections 632.8 and 632.9 to California's Penal Code and would:
- Prohibit operating a wearable recording device to capture sound or video inside any area of a business where there is a reasonable expectation of privacy, without the explicit consent of people being recorded
- Prohibit disabling or obstructing the recording indicator light on a wearable device
- Prohibit manufacturing, selling, or offering technology designed to disable indicator lights
- Impose fines up to $2,500 per violation for first offenses and up to $10,000 for repeat offenders, plus up to one year in county jail
As of March 2026, SB 1130 has been assigned to policy committees. California often sets the template for other states' technology legislation, making this bill significant even before it passes.
AI Meeting Recorders and Virtual Workplace Recording
AI meeting transcription tools have become a legal flashpoint. Multiple class action lawsuits filed in 2025 allege that these tools violate wiretapping and biometric privacy statutes by recording participants who never consented.
The lead case is Brewer v. Otter.ai (N.D. Cal., August 2025). The plaintiff, who was not an Otter user, alleges that Otter's AI notetaker joined his meetings without his knowledge, recorded his conversations, created a voiceprint, and sent transcripts and screenshots to people who had not attended. The complaint alleges violations of the Electronic Communications Privacy Act, the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act, and the California Invasion of Privacy Act.
Four related lawsuits against Otter.ai (Walker, Theus, Winston) are now consolidated before Judge Eumi K. Lee. Separately, Fireflies.ai faces a BIPA class action over voiceprint collection from meeting recordings.
The core legal question is consent scope. The meeting host who activates the AI recorder may have consented to recording, but the other participants typically have not. In two-party consent states, this creates clear criminal and civil liability. Even in one-party consent states, courts may examine whether a software bot that the user deployed qualifies as a "party" to the conversation.
Employer Policies: What the Law Requires
The EEOC published a fact sheet on wearable technologies in December 2024, defining them as "digital devices embedded with sensors and worn on the body that may keep track of bodily movements, collect biometric information, and/or track location." The guidance warns employers that mandating wearables collecting health data could constitute medical examinations in violation of the ADA and that adverse actions based on wearable data may violate Title VII or GINA.
For employers drafting wearable recording device policies, legal compliance requires threading a narrow needle. The policy must:
- Avoid blanket recording prohibitions that could violate NLRA Section 7
- Ground restrictions in legitimate business interests (confidentiality, client privacy, trade secrets)
- Expressly preserve employees' rights to record for protected purposes
- Address video capture separately from audio recording
- Account for biometric data collection in states with BIPA or similar laws
- Include reasonable accommodation provisions for disability-related recording needs
OSHA's own use of smart glasses adds a twist. The agency has expanded deployment of Vuzix M400 smart glasses for workplace inspections, enabling inspectors to livestream what they see to remote supervisors. Employers facing OSHA inspections may encounter government recording of their facilities using the same technology they are trying to regulate among their employees.
State Employee Monitoring Statutes
Several states have enacted statutes specifically addressing employer electronic monitoring of employees. These create obligations beyond the general wiretapping consent framework.
Connecticut (CGS § 31-48d) has one of the oldest and most specific employee monitoring statutes. Employers must provide prior written notice of all forms of electronic monitoring and post conspicuous workplace notices. Monitoring is prohibited in areas designated for employee rest or comfort (restrooms, lounges, locker rooms). Penalties are progressive: $500 for a first offense, $1,000 for a second, and $3,000 for subsequent violations.
New York (Civil Rights Law § 52-c), effective May 7, 2022, requires written notice to employees upon hiring that the employer may monitor telephone, email, or internet access. Employees must sign an acknowledgment. New York also has a pending bill (S5070) that would convert the state from one-party to two-party consent.
Delaware requires employers to give notice of monitoring, and Colorado enacted a biometric consent statute in 2024. Hawaii and New Jersey recently passed statutes requiring consent for workforce location tracking.
The Texas Privacy Protection Act became fully effective in January 2025 with comprehensive disclosure requirements. Maryland is actively considering modernizing its two-party consent wiretapping law to account for Ring cameras, cell phones, and wearable devices in the workplace.
Industry-Specific Rules
Healthcare and HIPAA
Wearable recording devices in healthcare settings create acute HIPAA compliance risks. Any inadvertent capture of protected health information, including patient faces visible on a screen, names on charts, or overheard treatment discussions, could constitute a breach.
LBMC, a healthcare compliance firm, published a direct recommendation that hospitals ban Meta Ray-Ban smart glasses from clinical areas. UW Medicine's formal wearable technology policy requires that any wearable device in clinical areas must use HIPAA-compliant encryption at rest and in transit, have documented patient consent for recording, and transmit data only over secure organization-approved networks. Smart glasses used for clinical purposes (remote expert consultation during surgery, for example) must meet all of these requirements.
Financial Services
Financial firms operate under some of the most stringent recording regulations. FINRA Rule 3170 (the "Taping Rule") requires designated firms to record 100% of registered persons' telephone conversations. SEC Rule 17a-4 mandates retention of communications for three years and account records for six years, with records readily accessible for the first two years. Unauthorized communication channels, including wearable recording devices, create compliance violations.
The proliferation of off-channel communications has already cost financial firms billions in fines. In the EU, MiFID II mandates recording of calls related to client orders, creating a framework where some recording is legally required while other recording by wearable devices may be prohibited.
Education and FERPA
Recordings that include identifiable student information (names, images, voices linked to academic context) may constitute education records under FERPA. The College Board banned smart glasses during the SAT starting in March 2026. Multiple universities have issued campus-wide policies restricting wearable recording devices.
Federal disability law may require exceptions: students with documented disabilities may use recording or transcription devices as reasonable accommodations, even where general campus policy prohibits them.
Classified and Government Settings
In Sensitive Compartmented Information Facilities (SCIFs) and classified environments, the rule is absolute: all personal electronics are prohibited. This includes cell phones, smart watches, and any device with wireless connectivity, data storage, or recording capability. Government-issued phones are also excluded. This applies to meetings, conferences, and all contexts where classified information is discussed.
ADA Accommodations and Recording Devices
The Americans with Disabilities Act creates a direct tension with workplace recording bans. Employees with hearing disabilities or other conditions may require recording or real-time transcription devices as reasonable accommodations. The EEOC's guidance on hearing disabilities specifies that reasonable accommodations include real-time captioning (CART), assistive listening devices, hearing aid-compatible headsets, and direct streaming to cochlear implants.
Under the ADA, if a recording or transcription device is the necessary accommodation for an employee's disability, the employer cannot simply point to a no-recording policy as grounds for denial. The employer must engage in the interactive process and explore whether the accommodation can be provided in a way that addresses both the employee's need and any legitimate confidentiality concerns.
AI-powered hearing aids and real-time captioning glasses are increasingly used as workplace accommodations. As these devices blur the line between assistive technology and general-purpose recording, employers will face growing tension between privacy policies and accommodation obligations.
Recording Laws by State
The single most important factor in determining whether a wearable recording device is legal at work is your state's consent framework. Click any state below to read its full recording law guide with statute citations, penalties, and workplace-specific rules.
One-party consent (37 states + DC): A conversation participant can record without telling others.
Two-party consent (13 states): All parties must consent before any recording. Criminal penalties apply for violations.
International Workplace Recording Laws
Remote work has turned workplace recording into a cross-border problem. A single video call may connect participants in New York, London, Berlin, and Tokyo, each governed by different recording consent frameworks. An employee wearing a Plaud pin in a one-party consent country can inadvertently violate the law in every other country on the call.
European Union and GDPR
The EU imposes the strictest constraints on workplace wearable recording through two overlapping layers. National criminal law governs whether recording is permitted at all (Germany and Greece require all-party consent; Spain and the Netherlands allow one-party). On top of that, GDPR requires a documented lawful basis under Article 6 to process any voice recording as personal data, regardless of what the criminal law permits.
Employer audio surveillance of employees is effectively prohibited across the EU, even in one-party consent countries like Sweden and Finland, where national data protection authorities have ruled that recording workers violates proportionality requirements. The European Data Protection Supervisor published a technology report specifically addressing smart glasses, and in March 2026, 17 members of the European Parliament from four political groups formally questioned the European Commission about whether Meta's smart glasses practices comply with GDPR.
The EU AI Act, fully applicable from August 2026, adds another compliance dimension. AI-powered wearable devices that perform real-time biometric categorization in publicly accessible spaces are prohibited outright. Devices that process biometric data for identification require risk assessments and conformity evaluations.
How difficult is compliance for always-on wearable recorders in Europe? Meta acquired the Limitless pendant in December 2025 and immediately pulled its service from the EU, UK, Brazil, Israel, South Korea, Turkey, and China rather than attempt to comply with local privacy frameworks.
United Kingdom
The UK follows one-party consent for personal recordings under the Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act 2000 (RIPA). An employee can record their own workplace conversations without telling others. However, employer surveillance of workers requires compliance with the Data Protection Act 2018, which mirrors GDPR.
The UK Information Commissioner's Office formally wrote to Meta on March 5, 2026 requesting information about data protection compliance following the Swedish investigation into smart glasses footage being reviewed by contractors in Kenya. The ICO described the allegations as "concerning" and stated it has authority to issue enforcement notices, fines, and orders to change data practices. This investigation signals heightened UK regulatory attention to wearable recording devices.
Canada
Canada operates on one-party consent federally under the Criminal Code (Section 184). An employee participating in a conversation can record it without telling other parties. PIPEDA (the federal privacy law) applies to commercial recording activities but not purely personal recordings. Provincial laws in Quebec, British Columbia, and Alberta add additional privacy layers for workplace contexts. No Canadian jurisdiction has proposed wearable-specific legislation as of March 2026.
Asia-Pacific
Japan stands out for actively encouraging employees to record workplace interactions. Courts routinely admit secret workplace recordings in labor disputes, and the practice is considered normal rather than adversarial. South Korea and Taiwan also permit one-party recording.
Australia's laws are fragmented by state and territory. The Surveillance Devices Act 2007 (NSW) prohibits using a listening device to record a private conversation without consent of all parties. A new statutory tort for serious invasions of privacy took effect on June 10, 2025, allowing Australians to sue for serious privacy invasions from wearable recording. Researchers at RMIT University have urged lawmakers to update surveillance device laws specifically for wearables.
Cross-Border Calls and Remote Work
When a workplace video call crosses borders, the strictest participating jurisdiction's law generally applies. An employee in Toronto (one-party consent) wearing a Plaud recorder on a call with a colleague in Frankfurt (all-party consent under German StGB § 201) could face liability under German law. GDPR's extraterritorial reach under Article 3 compounds this: if any EU resident is on the call, GDPR may apply regardless of where the recorder is located.
For multinational employers, the practical approach is to adopt the strictest applicable standard as the company-wide default: inform all meeting participants that recording may occur, document consent, and provide opt-out mechanisms. This approach satisfies virtually every jurisdiction simultaneously.
Click any country below to read its full recording law guide, including workplace-specific rules, statute citations, and penalties.
Europe(33 countries)
Belgium
Czech Republic
Denmark
Estonia
Finland
Ireland
Italy
Latvia
Netherlands
Norway
Poland
Romania
Spain
Sweden
Austria
Croatia
Cyprus
France
Germany
Greece
Luxembourg
Portugal
Switzerland
Hungary
Iceland
Russia
Ukraine
United Kingdom
Bulgaria
Lithuania
Malta
Slovakia
Slovenia
Asia-Pacific(19 countries)
Japan
South Korea
Taiwan
India
New Zealand
Singapore
Australia
Philippines
Malaysia
Nepal
Pakistan
Bangladesh
Indonesia
Vietnam
China
Hong Kong
Thailand
Sri Lanka
Myanmar
North America(2 countries)
Central & South America(11 countries)
Middle East & North Africa(15 countries)
Israel
Saudi Arabia
UAE
Egypt
Turkey
Morocco
Tunisia
Qatar
Kuwait
Jordan
Lebanon
Bahrain
Oman
Iran
Iraq
Sub-Saharan Africa(14 countries)
South Africa
Ghana
Cameroon
Senegal
Mozambique
Zimbabwe
Rwanda
Nigeria
Kenya
Tanzania
Ethiopia
Uganda
Botswana
Ivory Coast
Frequently Asked Questions
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I legally wear a Plaud or AI voice recorder to work meetings?
It depends on your state's recording consent law. In 37 one-party consent states plus DC, you can legally record a meeting you are participating in without telling others. In 13 two-party consent states (California, Connecticut, Delaware, Florida, Illinois, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Montana, New Hampshire, Oregon, Pennsylvania, and Washington), recording without everyone's consent is a crime. Even in one-party states, your employer may have a workplace policy prohibiting recording, and violating that policy could result in termination, though it may not be a criminal offense.
Can my employer ban wearable recording devices in the workplace?
Employers can restrict recording devices, but blanket bans risk violating the National Labor Relations Act. The NLRB has held that overbroad no-recording policies can interfere with employees' Section 7 rights to document workplace conditions for protected concerted activity. Lawful policies are narrowly tailored, restricting recording during work time and in work areas while permitting it during breaks and in non-work areas. Policies must avoid language that could chill legally protected activity like documenting safety concerns or harassment.
Are Meta Ray-Ban smart glasses legal to wear at work?
Meta Ray-Ban glasses present unique legal issues because they capture both audio and video. Audio recording follows your state's consent law. Video recording may trigger additional privacy and biometric laws. In Illinois, if the glasses' AI features process facial geometry, BIPA requires written informed consent from anyone whose face is captured, with statutory damages of $1,000 to $5,000 per violation. California's SB 1130 would prohibit operating wearable recording devices in business areas without explicit consent.
Can I record my employer if I suspect harassment or discrimination?
In one-party consent states, you can generally record your own conversations at work, including those involving harassment or discrimination. Some states provide additional protections. California Penal Code 633.5 allows recording without consent to gather evidence of certain crimes, including extortion, bribery, and kidnapping. Federal labor law under NLRA Section 7 may protect recording to document workplace conditions. However, in two-party consent states, secret recording remains illegal regardless of the reason, with limited exceptions for law enforcement.
Do AI meeting tools like Otter.ai need consent from all participants?
In two-party consent states, AI meeting tools that record without all participants' knowledge violate wiretapping laws. The August 2025 class action Brewer v. Otter.ai alleges exactly this: that Otter joined meetings as a silent participant and recorded non-consenting users, violating the Electronic Communications Privacy Act and state wiretapping statutes. Even in one-party consent states, the legal question is whether the person who activated the AI recorder is truly a "party" to all conversations the tool captures.
What happens if an employee records in a two-party consent state without permission?
Criminal penalties vary by state. In California, a first offense under Penal Code 632 carries a fine up to $2,500 and up to one year in jail. Illinois's eavesdropping statute (720 ILCS 5/14-2) makes it a Class 4 felony with one to three years imprisonment. Pennsylvania classifies wiretapping violations as a third-degree felony with up to seven years. Beyond criminal exposure, illegally recorded conversations may be inadmissible as evidence, and the recorder faces civil liability for damages.
Can my employer force me to wear smart glasses or a recording device for work?
Employers can require smart glasses as a work tool (warehouse picking, remote inspections), but must address privacy concerns. The EEOC's December 2024 fact sheet warns that employer-mandated wearables collecting health data (eye tracking, heart rate) may constitute medical examinations violating the ADA. Employees with disabilities may request alternatives as reasonable accommodations. State biometric privacy laws (Illinois BIPA, Texas CUBI) require written consent before collecting biometric identifiers through mandatory wearable devices.
Does HIPAA affect wearable recording devices in healthcare workplaces?
Any wearable device that inadvertently captures protected health information (patient faces, chart data, treatment conversations) could trigger a HIPAA violation. Smart glasses are particularly risky in clinical settings because they capture visual PHI that audio-only devices would miss. UW Medicine published formal guidance requiring that wearable technology in clinical areas must use HIPAA-compliant encryption, have documented patient consent, and transmit data only over secure organization-approved networks.
This page provides general legal information about wearable recording devices in the workplace. Laws vary by state and country, and this guide may not reflect the most recent legislative changes. Consult an attorney licensed in your jurisdiction for advice specific to your situation.
Sources and References
Sources and References
- Federal Wiretap Act, 18 U.S.C. § 2511(law.cornell.edu)
- National Labor Relations Act, 29 U.S.C. § 157 (Section 7)(law.cornell.edu)
- NLRB General Counsel Memo GC 25-07 on Surreptitious Recordings(nlrb.gov).gov
- EEOC Fact Sheet: Wearables in the Workplace (December 2024)(eeoc.gov).gov
- California SB-1130: Wearable Device Privacy Protection Act (2026)(leginfo.legislature.ca.gov).gov
- California Penal Code § 632 (Eavesdropping)(leginfo.legislature.ca.gov).gov
- Illinois Biometric Information Privacy Act (740 ILCS 14)(ilga.gov).gov
- Connecticut General Statutes § 31-48d (Employee Monitoring)(cga.ct.gov).gov
- New York Civil Rights Law § 52-c (Electronic Monitoring)(nysenate.gov).gov
- ADA Reasonable Accommodation Requirements(ada.gov).gov
- Brewer v. Otter.ai Class Action (N.D. Cal. 2025)(npr.org)
- Meta Ray-Ban Smart Glasses Class Action (N.D. Cal. 2026)(techcrunch.com)
- OSHA Expands Vuzix Smart Glasses Deployment for Inspections(vuzix.com)
- FINRA Rule 3170 (Taping Rule)(finra.org)
- GDPR Article 6 (Lawful Basis for Processing)(eur-lex.europa.eu).gov
- UK ICO Letter to Meta on Smart Glasses (March 2026)(ico.org.uk).gov
- Germany StGB Section 201 (Violation of Confidentiality of the Spoken Word)(gesetze-im-internet.de).gov
- Canada Criminal Code Section 184 (Interception of Communications)(laws-lois.justice.gc.ca).gov
- Australia Surveillance Devices Act 2007 (NSW)(legislation.nsw.gov.au).gov