Nevada · State Privacy Guide

Nevada Data Removal Guide (2026)

Nevada's SB 220 grants residents the right to opt out of the sale of their personal information — but only the right to opt out, not a broader right to delete. For full deletion leverage, Nevadans use cross-state CCPA workflows operated by most national data brokers.

At a glance

Comprehensive state privacy law
No (cross-state leverage applies)
Enforcement
Nevada Office of the Attorney General
Residents
3.2M (approx.)

Nevada Privacy Landscape

Nevada SB 220 (effective October 2019) grants Nevada residents the right to opt out of the sale of their covered information. "Sale" is narrowly defined, and the law lacks deletion, access, or correction rights. Response window: 60 days. Enforcement is exclusively by the AG — no private right of action. SB 260 (2022) expanded coverage to data brokers and added registry considerations but stopped short of comprehensive privacy rights.

Your rights

  • Opt-out of sale (narrowly defined)
  • AG exclusive enforcement
  • No deletion, access, or correction rights under state law

Where your data leaks from in Nevada

Data brokers don\u2019t guess your address \u2014 they scrape specific public-record sources. The ones most relevant in Nevada:

  • Clark, Washoe County property records
  • Nevada Secretary of State business filings
  • Nevada DMV records

Ready to remove

Opt out of 200+ brokers for $2

OfflistMe drafts a legally compliant deletion email citing CCPA-equivalent protections for every broker. You send from your own inbox. No account, no ID upload.

Start for $2 \u2192

If a broker ignores your request

File a complaint with the Nevada Office of the Attorney General’s consumer protection division. Deceptive-practice statutes often provide remedies even without a state-specific privacy law.

File a complaint with Nevada Office of the Attorney General \u2197

FAQ: Nevada data removal

Does Nevada SB 220 let me delete my data?+

No. SB 220 grants only an opt-out-of-sale right, not a deletion right. For deletion, Nevadans rely on brokers' voluntary CCPA-compliant workflows and GDPR where applicable.

Related resources

Other state guides