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Texting & Voicemail Rules for Sales Reps in Alaska

To text or send ringless voicemail to sales leads in Alaska, you need prior express written consent (PEWC) under the federal TCPA (47 CFR 64.1200(f)(9)) — a purchased list is not consent. Send only during 8:00 AM – 9:00 PM at the recipient's local time, honor STOP opt-outs immediately, and include your business name. Alaska's key statute is AS 45.50.475, and it carries a private right of action (recipients can sue directly).

By Ryan Madden, Founder, FollowUp AI · Updated June 16, 2026 · This is a general summary of common rules, not legal advice. Confirm specifics with counsel.

Alaska SMS & voicemail compliance at a glance

Consent for automated marketingPrior express written consent (PEWC) — 47 CFR 64.1200(f)(9)
Quiet hours8:00 AM – 9:00 PM — Matches federal default
State EBR exemptionNo state EBR exemption
State DNC registryNo separate state registry (federal DNC applies)
Private right of actionYes — recipients can sue directly
Penalties$500/violation
Call-recording consentOne-party consent
Risk tierStandard
Key statuteAS 45.50.475
FollowUp AI keeps Alaska sends compliant automatically
Per-recipient timezone quiet hours, opt-out handling, and consent tracking — built in. Start free →

Frequently asked questions

Do I need consent to text sales leads in Alaska?

Yes. Automated marketing texts (and ringless voicemail) require prior express written consent (PEWC) under the federal TCPA, 47 CFR 64.1200(f)(9), in every state including Alaska. A purchased lead list is not consent.

What are the texting quiet hours in Alaska?

In Alaska, send marketing messages only 8:00 AM – 9:00 PM at the recipient's local time. Matches federal default

Is there a storm or insurance-claim solicitation ban in Alaska?

Alaska has no special storm-solicitation ban beyond the standard federal rules. Roofing/restoration insurance-claim restrictions exist only in FL, TX, and LA.

Can I be sued for texting violations in Alaska?

Yes — Alaska provides a private right of action, so recipients can sue you directly in addition to the federal TCPA ($500–$1,500 per violation).

Does an existing customer relationship (EBR) let me skip consent in Alaska?

An EBR (18 months from a purchase, 3 months from an inquiry) only exempts you from the Do-Not-Call registry — it does not replace PEWC for automated marketing. You still need written consent to send automated texts or voicemail.

About the author. Ryan Madden is the founder of FollowUp AI, an SMS and ringless-voicemail follow-up platform for field sales teams, where he works on TCPA-aware outreach compliance. This is general information, not legal advice.