Is it legal to record a call in North Dakota?
In North Dakota, recording phone calls generally follows One-party consent. Here's what that means in plain language — with the source and what you can and can't do.
Generally allowed One-party
If you are part of the conversation, you may record it without informing the other person. Recording calls you are NOT part of, or sharing recordings publicly to harm someone, can still be unlawful. One-party consent applies to private calls and conversations.
- Record calls you take part in, for your own records.
- Don't secretly record conversations between other people.
- Don't publish or share a recording to harm someone.
⚖ Informational only — not legal advice. This data may be out of date and laws change often — always verify your country's current legislation (tap the source link above) before recording, and consult a qualified lawyer for your specific case.
More places with One-party rules
Frequently asked
Is it legal to record phone calls in North Dakota?
Generally allowed. If you are part of the conversation, you may record it without informing the other person. Recording calls you are NOT part of, or sharing recordings publicly to harm someone, can still be unlawful. One-party consent applies to private calls and conversations.
Do I need the other person's consent to record a call in North Dakota?
If you are part of the conversation, you may record it without informing the other person. Recording calls you are NOT part of, or sharing recordings publicly to harm someone, can still be unlawful.
Record on the right side of the law in North Dakota.
Klear shows your local consent rule before every call and records in line with it — so you're covered wherever you are.