Alabama Do Not Call Registry
How to register, what it covers, and how to enforce — 2026
Alabama maintains its own Do Not Call list separate from the federal National DNC Registry. Consumers should register on both lists for full protection.
Telemarketers calling into Alabama must scrub their lists against the state registry AND the federal registry before each campaign. Scrubbing only the federal list is not enough.
How to register your number
Alabama State Registry
Alabama Do Not Call Register
Administered by Alabama Public Service Commission (APSC)
https://psc.alabama.gov/register-for-do-not-call/ →Federal National DNC Registry
donotcall.gov
Administered by the Federal Trade Commission. Free, permanent, covers landlines and cell phones in every state.
How long it takes effect
Federal: 31 days for telemarketers to scrub against your number. State registries vary — most align with the federal 31-day window. Reputable telemarketers stop calling within a week. Bad actors keep calling and rack up violations.
What the registry covers
Landlines
Yes
Cell phones
Yes
Text messages
Restricted under TCPA
What it blocks: Telemarketing sales calls and texts. Calls trying to sell you something.
What it does NOT block: Political calls, charitable solicitations, calls from companies you have a current business relationship with (within 18 months of last purchase / 3 months of inquiry), debt collectors, surveys, and informational calls.
Robocalls and AI voice: Already restricted by TCPA regardless of registration. Adding your number to the DNC list adds an extra layer of liability for callers.
Alabama state list — details
Alabama maintains its own Do Not Call Register administered by the Public Service Commission under Ala. Admin. Code r. 770-X-5-.31. Consumer registration is free and permanent. Telemarketers must pay an annual fee to the APSC for access to the register. Violations carry penalties of up to $5,000 for the first offense and $10,000 for subsequent offenses. The Alabama Telemarketing Act (Code of Alabama § 8-19A-1 et seq.) also requires telemarketers to be licensed by the Attorney General's Office — failure to register is a Class C felony. Alabama also has restricted calling dates around state holidays (e.g., Confederate Memorial Day). Telemarketers must scrub against BOTH the state register and the federal NDNC.
What to do when telemarketers call after you registered
- Tell the caller to put you on their internal do-not-call list. That triggers a separate 30-day cure obligation under federal law. If they call again after 30 days, that is an independent violation.
- File a federal complaint at donotcall.gov/report. The FTC tracks these and pursues serial offenders.
- Document the call. Date, time, number that called, company name, what they were selling. Screenshot or save voicemails. This is the evidence you need if you sue or file a state complaint.
- File a complaint with the Alabama attorney general. Alabama state penalties are $2,000 per violation, enforced by the AG. Federal TCPA also gives you a private right of action for $500 per call. File a complaint here →
Recent Alabama DNC enforcement actions
Gulf Coast Insurance Marketing
insurance
Nov 2023
$185,000 penalty
Insurance marketer fined for prerecorded messages to AL DNC registrants.
Running a telemarketing operation?
This page is for consumers and Alabama residents. If you operate outbound calls into Alabama, the compliance scrub workflow is documented separately.
Alabama DNC compliance for telemarketers →Compare DNC Registry across states
Federal TCPA is the floor. Each state can — and many do — go further.
Stay Current
Weekly digest: what changed this week
New enforcement actions, statute updates, and rule changes in Alabama — delivered once a week.
No spam. Unsubscribe anytime. Powered by Brevo.
Telemarketers — need automated DNC scrubbing?
Catalyst Partners sets up automated DNC scrubbing across every state you operate in. Federal list, state lists, internal lists, on a schedule that keeps you legal.
Book a Compliance Call →This is a compliance reference tool, not legal advice. Data compiled from public statutes, LegiScan, CourtListener, state AG offices, and AI-assisted analysis. Verify all information with qualified counsel before relying on it. Full terms & data sources →