CORE COMPLIANCE CHECKLIST (50-STATE BASICS)
Within 1–3 business days of release from custody OR
Within 1–3 days of entering a new state OR
Upon conviction/sentencing if not incarcerated
* Waiting until “settling in” instead of registering immediately.
* Primary residence
* Temporary residence (hotel, shelter, couch surfing, etc.)
* Any change of address (often within **24–72 hours**)
* Staying somewhere “short-term” without reporting it
* Moving even a few miles without updating
* Not reporting homelessness or frequent relocation
* Employer name and address
* School or training programs
* Volunteer work (in many states)
* Starting a job before updating registry
* Informal work (cash jobs, gig work)
* Changing job sites within same company
* License plate numbers
* Vehicle make/model
* Regular updates when borrowing or changing vehicles long-term
* Driving a new or borrowed car without reporting it
* Not updating rental/secondary vehicles
* Email addresses
* Social media accounts
* Usernames / screen names
* Messaging apps (in some jurisdictions)
* Creating a new account without reporting it
* Using aliases online
* Forgetting old accounts still considered “active”
* Annually, semi-annually, quarterly, or monthly (depends on tier/state)
* Must appear in person at law enforcement or registry office
* Missing a scheduled verification window
* Thinking mail-in renewal replaces in-person check
* Leaving county/state for a certain period (varies widely)
* International travel (almost always required)
* Short trips not reported (even 2–3 days in some states)
* Failing to report hotel stays out of state
* Last-minute travel without prior notice
* Near schools
* Near parks/playgrounds
* Near daycare centers
* Moving into a location without verifying buffer zones
* Living in multi-unit housing near restricted areas
* GPS-based enforcement violations (in stricter states)
* Temporary lodging
* Overnight stays anywhere else
* Frequent visiting patterns that resemble residence
* Repeatedly sleeping at another person’s home
* “Splitting time” between residences without reporting both
Must usually update within a short window:
* Name changes
* Phone number
* Email changes
* Employment changes
* School changes
* Changing phone/email and forgetting to report
* Minor administrative updates treated as low priority
* New photographs at each verification
* Updated fingerprints periodically
* Missing scheduled photo updates
* Assuming initial booking data is permanent
* Tier I: usually annual reporting
* Tier II: semi-annual/quarterly
* Tier III: frequent in-person reporting + lifetime tracking
* Not knowing tier change occurred
* Assuming requirements stay the same after relocation
Across all states, enforcement actions most often come from:
1. Not updating an address quickly enough
2. Staying somewhere temporarily without reporting it
3. Missing a verification appointment
4. Using a new online identifier without reporting it
5. Moving across state lines without registering immediately
Even when people think they are “mostly compliant,” violations often happen because:
* Rules vary significantly by state and tier
* Reporting windows are short (sometimes 24–72 hours)
* “Temporary” situations are still legally reportable in many jurisdictions
* Online identifiers are treated seriously in modern enforcement