Are Laser Jammers Illegal or Legal in the USA? Laser Jammer Laws

Laser jammers are designed to prevent a police officer from acquiring your speed when he’s targeting you with his laser gun. It gives you time to quickly slow down as needed, disable your jammers, and let him get a reading off of your car doing the speed limit. Are laser jammers illegal or are they legal? What are the laws regarding laser jammers? Well, things actually vary depending on what state you’re driving in, so let’s go over some of the details regarding laser jammer legalities.
Laser jammer laws: Police shooting lidar gun

Laser Jammer Regulation in the US

Here in the US, with the exception of several states (which I’ll cover in just a sec), laser jammers are actually legal in most of the country. You see, laser jamming is actually different than radar jamming, which is extremely illegal with stiff penalties. Radar and laser are regulated by two different federal agencies. The FCC governs radar usage since it has to do with radio waves, but the FDA (believe it or not) regulates laser usage and they’re concerned about health issues so the main limitations with laser products are ensuring that they’re eye safe and not going to hurt anyone when a police officer aims a laser at oncoming traffic or a laser jammer fires back.

However, several states do have their own laws specifically prohibiting laser jammer usage.

States Where Laser Jammers are Illegal

Laser jammers are banned in several states around the US, as well as Washington D.C. Here is the list of where laser jammers are illegal in the US:

  • California
  • Colorado
  • Illinois
  • Minnesota
  • Nebraska (questionable)
  • Oklahoma
  • South Carolina
  • Tennessee
  • Texas
  • Utah
  • Virginia
  • Washington D.C.

Running Laser Jammers in Banned Areas

People always ask about running laser jammers, particularly in areas where they are illegal, and there are actually lots of people who run jammers in banned areas without issue. Now I certainly don’t advocate breaking the law of course, but I do advocate understanding how things work so that you can make an educated decision. Here’s the story of how this works.

People sometimes worry and say that laser jammers are illegal, but the fact is that speeding is illegal too, plus the penalties for speeding are far worse than the penalties for having jammers. In fact, if you  use your jammers properly, police officers won’t even know that you have laser jammers and so you’ll be able to use them without issue.

In states where laser jammers are illegal, it’s generally just an equipment violation with no points and nothing on your record. It’s similar to having windows that are tinted too dark or not running a front plate in a state where you’re supposed to. For example, in Utah it’s a $110 infraction.

With speeding tickets, tickets can easily be hundreds of dollars, not to mention you’ll also get points on your license and increases to your insurance premiums.

Laser jammers are typically also sold as parking sensors only and have to have the laser jammer functionality specifically enabled. If you ever have an issue, you can always return your jammers back to parking jammer only functionality when you’re in a banned area and your jammers will no longer jam or even detect police lidar and you’re just fine.

Proper Laser Jammer Usage (JTK)

Whether laser jammers are legal in your area or not, it’s important to know how to use your jammers. The proper technique is when your jammers start going off and the alarms and lights start going off in your car, you quickly slow down to the speed limit, and disable your jammers. You jam the officer until you kill your jammers, a technique known as “Jam to Kill” or “JTK.” Your goal is to do this within 2-3 seconds.

It’s not uncommon for a laser gun to take a little longer to get a speed reading sometimes, whether it’s due to handshake from a police officer and the lidar gun not getting a consistent reading, a lower profile sports car that’s harder to get a reading off of, a smaller vehicle at a distance, and so on, so an extra 2-3 seconds isn’t generally a big deal.

You never ever want to jam the officer indefinitely, what we call “Jam to Gun” or “JTG.” This makes it very obvious that you’re running a jammer and is an easy way for a police officer to know you’re running jammers. That’s just asking for trouble and people that I know who’ve gotten in trouble for running jammers, it’s because they JTG’ed the officer and didn’t JTK.

Killing your jammers is important even if jammers are legal. After all, you do want them to stay legal, right? There was a guy in Texas who’d go around intentionally jamming police officers and posting the videos on YouTube. He pissed off the police who then turned around and pushed through legislation to make jammers illegal in Texas. Whether jammers are legal in your area or not, it’s important to use your tools responsibly.

Now laser jammers can be killed manually or can be set to automatically disable after a few seconds. I recommend using both techniques. I manually slow and kill my jammers when needed and it typically takes only about 2 seconds. In case someone else is driving my car and has no idea what the sirens mean or I happen to be drinking a cup of coffee when I get shot and can’t quickly reach the kill switch, the autokill is a great backup solution.

Practicing is important too. Usually when people get shot the first time, they freak out, have no idea what’s going on, and go a little deer in the headlights. It’s important to practice the procedure of slowing down, checking your RVM to make sure you don’t get rear ended, looking at your speedometer, moving your hand to the kill switch, and pressing the button… and getting that all into your muscle memory so you can do it without thinking. I’ll sometimes do it on drives when there’s no one behind me and it’s safe for me to brake hard as needed. A little practice goes a long way when it comes time to getting shot.

Best Laser Jammers to Buy

If you’re looking for a set of laser jammers and are wondering which ones to buy, I recently published an article covering the best laser jammers on the market.

The best laser jammer today is the AntiLaser Priority.

You can read my AntiLaser Priority review or purchase the ALP here.

Alternatives to Laser Jammers

People sometimes ask about alternatives or additions to laser jammers, either because laser jammers are illegal in their area or because they want to add additional laser or protection to supplement their jammers. Let’s take a look at a few of the popular options.

Veil

Veil is a special laser absorbing paint that’s designed to be painted onto the areas of your car that police will target including your headlights, grill, and license plate area. The idea is it absorbs lidar, making it more difficult for the laser gun to acquire a reading, giving you a few seconds to slow down once your radar detector is alerting you to laser (assuming it goes off… often times it won’t).

Unfortunately the product is ineffective. Modern lidar guns have no problem acquiring a speed against a moving vehicle so absorbing a little bit of the laser gun’s light isn’t enough to prevent it from getting a reading. It’s also only designed to be applied to headlights, your grill, and plate, but a lidar gun can and will get a reading off of the rest of your vehicle as well including the bumper and other painted areas where Veil can’t be applied, so

Veil also has a history of cracking and damaging people’s headlights, it’s extremely dark and obvious when painted onto your vehicle.

Veil G4 & G5 painted onto license plates

Perhaps the biggest issue though is that it simply doesn’t work. To see for yourself, please take a look at the following tests:

Veil Effectiveness Test A 
Veil Effectiveness Test B

If Veil looked okay when it was applied and if it performed as advertised, I could see it being a valuable tool and a supplement or even replacement to laser jammers. The more layers of protection the better, you know? However, it’s a product I don’t recommend. Veil has earned a very poor reputation within the community, and for good reason.

License Plate Covers

They also sell these license plate covers that are designed to cover your license plate and absorb and diffuse the lidar beam coming out of the lidar gun, theoretically giving you additional time to react.

I’ve had a chance to test these before in meetups when people have bought them because they’re cheap and an additional layer of protection and unfortunately even my older ProLaser III has no issue getting an immediate speed reading when aimed at a licence plate covered in one of these plate covers. This is true both at close range when the beam is tightly focused on just the plate as well as farther away when the lidar beam diverges and spreads beyond the plate to the bumper area as well.

You also run into potential issues running a plate cover, but in terms of laser protection, I haven’t found it to be beneficial and so I don’t run one myself.

Waze

Probably the best thing you can add to your laser jammers is Waze. It’s a free navigation app where people are free to report where police are located on the side of the road. One of the nice things about laser is that, unlike radar, an officer has to be stationary to use laser. They can’t drive and shoot laser at the same time. Because of this, they’ll set up on the side of the road or on a bridge somewhere and sit and shoot cars until they find their next victim. While they’re shooting, people will mark them on Waze and you’ll get the alert on your phone as you approach. Similarly, you can mark them on the map and other drivers will benefit from your alerts as well.

Waze is an excellent addition to laser jammers. It’s not a replacement for them, but it is an effective additional layer or protection to add to your countermeasure kit (radar detector, laser jammer, & waze).

To learn more about laser jammers, see my Reviews of the Best Laser Jammers.

DISCLAIMER:
All information on this website is provided for informational & educational purposes only, and is not intended to be, nor should it be construed as, legal advice. Although every effort has been made to assure that this information is up-to-date as of the date of publication, no warranty or representation as to its accuracy is made. Check your local regulations. Vortex Radar assumes no liability or responsibility for any errors or omissions in the content of the site. 

This website contains affiliate links and I sometimes make commissions on purchases. All opinions are my own. I don’t do paid or sponsored reviews.

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8 comments

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  1. Looks like in CO (C.R.S 42-4-1415), at least, the penalty for even *possessing* laser jammers is a class 2 misdemeanor traffic offense with a $150-$300 fine (and potentially up to 90-days in jail, if they really want to screw with you), which is the same as a 25+MPH over and/or reckless driving. So unless you’re a frickin’ maniac on the road, it looks like getting caught with a jammer is worse than the speeding ticket. (And you’re really putting any other driver of your vehicle at a significant risk if they don’t know how to JTK and end up JTG’ing an LEO. Having a system that doesn’t have an automatic 3-5 second kill is really asking for trouble.)

    Plus, jammers are subject to on-the-spot seizure, which probably would mean having your car impounded, and maybe a not-very-gentle “de-installation.” Sucks.

    1. Outch! Lots to consider!

  2. Vortex –

    Good day and Happy Holiday. I reciently received a speeding ticket in NY. It’s the session of giving or in the case of NYS taking. I’ve been looking at radar detectors to help prevent future contributions to NYS coffers. In any case my questions is simple. Does NYS Police and NYC Police even use Radar anymore or are they just using laser?

    Thank you,
    Chris

    1. Sorry to hear about the ticket! Yeah they definitely still use radar. Stalker radar guns are common, as well as some lower powered MultaRadar mobile radar in some vehicles. Laser is used very actively as well. A newer Radenso or Uniden detector, paired with an AntiLaser Priority, would be the way to go.

  3. A cop pulled me over from a stationary spot along a curb. His windows are all up and the moment I passed him. I was already arriving to my destination in less than 15 seconds to my stop. I’m pretty sure I had to have slowed down the moment I passed him to prepare for my stop. Can a cop clock me with his windows up? Wouldn’t he have to have his LIDAR out the window free from obstruction to be able to clock me? Any tips or thoughts on this ? thanks in advance ;’) By the way, there was an SUV on my left who was speeding ahead of me prior to the cop’s location.It wasn’t only until we got seconds closer to the cop that the SUV fell behind me and maintained a good distance from me to keep me ahead.

    1. They can shoot laser through a closed window, yeah. I did a video about that recently: https://youtu.be/jhWK94-gTvY

  4. A couple things. Using a jammer when you get targeted from behind is gonna be obvious and stick out like a SORE THUMB to the officer, because he will see your brake lights come on and see the car spike down, and then suddenly be at a steady speed again once the laser returns a reading! This will likely get you pulled over as well, just so the officer can give you a hard time about SOMETHING, and find something to give you a ticket for!!! I hope you realize that many officers are TRAINED and CERTIFIED to judge your speed JUST BY EYE!!!! This will hold up in court too, which means there is a strong likelihood you will get pulled over and given a ticket purely because he had already estimated how fast you were going even before the laser tagged you, and if you jam him, he is ABSOLUTELY gonna give you a ticket instead of just a warning as he MIGHT HAVE if you hadn’t jammed him!!!! You can also see a car spike down from the front when the driver hits the brakes, and can also see the instant change in relative speed between you and any other cars around (front, behind, or beside).
    When an officer even SUSPECTS you may have jammed him, he can pull you over and find ALL SORTS OF THINGS to give you a ticket for. Using jammers is simply asking for trouble.

    Also, with regards to radar, a comment was made that Radar detectors are ALWAYS illegal! This is completely WRONG, and very misguided. While SOME, perhaps even MANY states supposedly have laws against them, radar detectors are CONSTITUTIONALLY PROTECTED!!! Radar is simply a radio wave, and citizens have a right to receive ANY RADIO WAVE/SIGNAL that is transmitted!! Pure and simple!

  5. This dude ^ is funny and “uninformed” we’ll call it

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