Federal Legislation
Congress Proposes AI Chatbot Impersonation Ban
March 19, 2026
Congressman Kevin Mullin and several House Representatives introduced the CHATBOT Act (H.R. 7985) to prohibit AI chatbots from impersonating licensed medical, legal, and financial professionals. The bill mandates clear guidance from the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) and bans false claims of professional licensure or verification in chatbot outputs and marketing. This legislation aims to protect consumers from misleading advice and safeguard the integrity of licensed professions.
- Procurement professionals should anticipate new compliance requirements for AI chatbot vendors involving transparency and truthful representation of professional credentials.
- Agencies and contractors developing or deploying AI-driven chatbots in healthcare, legal, or financial sectors must align with forthcoming FTC guidelines and legislative mandates.
- This indicates a growing regulatory focus on AI ethics and consumer protection, impacting contract specifications and vendor evaluations.
- Organizations offering AI solutions should prepare to demonstrate adherence to licensure representation standards to remain eligible for government contracts involving professional advisory services.
Too many families have seen the devastating effects of chatbots posing as professionals. We need this legislation, so that both consumers and qualified professionals are no longer put at risk.
— Susan Weinstock
This policy draws a clear line: an AI chatbot cannot pretend to be a licensed medical, legal, or financial professional, and it cannot falsely claim that a real expert has signed off on its advice.
— Rep. Doris Matsui
Companies with AI-powered chatbots should not be marketing or allowing these products to hold themselves out as a substitute for or equivalent to the training, education, and practice of health care professionals.
— Dr. Arthur Evans Jr.
Agencies
Federal Trade Commission