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Megan's Law - Klaas Kids



Megan’s Law Map 2026

Megan’s Law by State

Washington State’s 1990 Community Protection Act included America’s first law authorizing public notification when dangerous sex offenders are released into the community. However, it was the brutal 1994 rape and murder of seven-year-old Megan Kanka that prompted the public demand for broad based community notification. On May 17, 1996, President Clinton signed Megan’s Law. Megan’s Law requires the following two components:

Sex Offender Registration – The 1994 Jacob Wetterling Act requires the States to register individuals convicted of sex crimes against children. Sex offender registration laws are necessary because:

  • Sex offenders pose a high risk of re-offending after release from custody;
  • Protecting the public from sex offenders is a primary governmental interest;
  • The privacy interests of persons convicted of sex offenses are less important than the government’s interest in public safety;
  • Release of certain information about sex offenders to public agencies and the general public will assist in protecting the public safety.

Community Notification – Megan’s Law allows the States discretion to establish criteria for disclosure, but compels them to make private and personal information on registered sex offenders available to the public. Community notification:

  • Assists law enforcement in investigations;
  • Establishes legal grounds to hold known offenders;
  • Deters sex offenders from committing new offenses;
  • Offers citizens information they can use to protect children from victimization.

In order to remain current and maintain relevance we ask the public to provide updated information that we may have overlooked, including new, broken or invalid web links so that the KlaasKids Foundation can continue to be the Internet’s premiere Megan’s Law destination.

On July 27, 2006 President Bush signed the Adam Walsh Child Protection and Safety Act. One important component requires the U.S. Justice Department to create a public accessible Internet based national sex offender database that allows users to specify a search radius across state lines. The result is the Dru Sjodin National Sex Offender Public Website.

Accessing Megan’s Law – International Efforts 

Comparative Analysis of Megan’s Law by State

  • Alabama – 25,404  as of 3/25/2026
  • Alaska3711 on the website (including incarcerated offenders) and 211 noncompliant as of 6/16/2026
  • Arizona16,362 as of 3/24/2026
  • Arkansas – 20,338 as of 3/26/2026
  • California – 98,067 as of 4/10/2026
  • Colorado19,407 as of 3/25/2026
  • Connecticut – 4,668 as of 3/25/2026
  • Delaware – 4,748 as of 1/31/2023
  • Florida – 17,110 predators, 73,466 sexual offenders, and 597 juvenile sexual offenders as of 3/31/2026
  • Georgia40,795 registered; 962 non-compliant as of 3/25/2026
  • Hawaii – 2,980 as of 3/25/2026
  • Idaho – 5,282 active offenders as of 3/02/2026
  • Illinois – 39,322 in database as of 4/15/2026
  • Indiana – 10,848 as of 12/31/2023
  • Iowa – 7,129 as of 4/7/2026
  • Kansas – 11,610 Public records, 12,527 Restricted and public records, 756 Non-compliant public offender records, 819 Non-compliant public and restricted records As of 6/15/2026
  • Kentucky15,310 as of 3/25/2026
  • Louisiana – Active Registered Offenders – 10,545 Inactive – Incarcerated – 2,576, Non-Compliant – 551, Active Warrants - 481 as of 5/12/2026
  • Maine – 2,898 as of 3/30/2026
  • Maryland –8,960 as of 4/15/2026
  • Massachusetts – 9,291 as of 4/8/2026
  • Michigan43,769 as of 3/25/2026
  • Minnesota19,229 as of 6/9/2026
  • Mississippi14,496 total registered offenders as of 3/31/2026
  • Missouri18,640 as of 3/25/2026
  • MontanaTotal Active: 2,983  Total Inactive: 2,706.  Total: 5,689 as of 3/25/2026.
  • Nebraska7,153 as of 3/25/2026
  • Nevada36,138 total, 7,649 active, 28,489 inactive, 3,714 Tier 3, 2,095 Tier 2, 1,840 Tier 1 registered offenders as of 3/25/2026
  • New Hampshire2,965 as of 5/6/2026
  • New Jersey14,508 as of 5/1/2026
  • New Mexico3,483 as of 3/25/2026
  • New York – 43,030 as of 3/25/2026
  • North Carolina – 19,703 as of 2/15/2023