Fact Check

Investigating rumor cellphone 'touch law' implemented in 31 states on June 5, 2025

The "touch law" — officially dubbed "Paul Miller's Law" — went into effect in the state of Pennsylvania on June 5.

by Joey Esposito, Published June 21, 2025


Image courtesy of Getty Images


Claim:
On June 5, 2025, a “touch law" banning the use of handheld cellphones while driving went into effect across 31 U.S. states.
Rating:
Mostly False

About this rating

Context

Pennsylvania's "touch law" — officially known as "Paul Miller's Law" — went into effect on June 5, 2025. The other states mentioned in social media posts already had such laws in place before this date, some as far back as 2008.


An internet rumor that a "touch law" — a law that prohibits any use of handheld cellphones while driving — went into effect across 31 U.S. states as of June 5, 2025, spread online around that same time. 

The rumor was shared by users on social media platforms like TikTok (archived) and Facebook (archived), the popularity of which spurred Snopes readers to email us, asking for the truth behind the purported "touch law." 

@tiktoknews645 New Driving Law: June 5th "Touch Law" #jojoonthegogotravels #safetytips #newlaw #travel #fyp #driving #safety #drivingtips ♬ original sound - tiktoknews645

The claim that a "touch law" went into effect in 31 U.S. states on June 5, 2025, is mostly false. Although the 31 states featured in the social media posts do, in fact, have such laws, it was only Pennsylvania's that went into effect on that date. 

The Pennsylvania law was dubbed "Paul Miller's Law," named after a man "who was tragically killed in a crash with a tractor trailer in 2010 in Monroe County, as the result of a distracted driver who reached for their phone while driving," according to a news release issued by the Pennsylvania Department of Transportation

An article on the online tabloid website The U.S. Sun that listed "31 states where drivers face 'touch law'" was published in late May 2025. When combined with timely reports about the Pennsylvania law going into effect, it appeared to result in some of some users conflating the new law with statutes already in place in other states. 

The other states' "touch laws," typically referred to as "distracted driving" or "hands-free" laws, have been in effect for varying lengths of time since as far back as 2008.

Below are the 30 other states listed in The U.S. Sun article with links to each state's respective law or to state government pages about their version of the law. 

An overview of distracted driving laws on the Governors Highway Safety Association website, a nonprofit organization seeking to improve traffic safety and influence national policy, confirmed that these 31 states, along with "D.C., Puerto Rico, Guam, the Northern Mariana Islands and the U.S. Virgin Islands," have laws in effect that "prohibit all drivers from using handheld cellphones while driving." 

The nonprofit also pointed out that "all but Alabama and Missouri are primary enforcement laws," meaning a law-enforcement officer can cite a driver for a violation without requiring any other offense to make a traffic stop.

So while it is true that the 31 states in question have laws prohibiting the use of handheld cellphones while driving, it is false to claim that their laws all went into effect on June 5, 2025.


By Joey Esposito

Joey Esposito has written for a variety of entertainment publications. He's into music, video games ... and birds.


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