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Neural Data and Brain-Computer Interfaces: The Governance Frontier for the Most Sensitive Data That Exists
Neural data — information derived from brain activity and the nervous system — is now collected by consumer devices, workplace wearables, and medical implants. Four US states have enacted neural data privacy laws. UNESCO has adopted global neuroethics standards. This is the governance guide for the emerging neurotechnology landscape.
Key Takeaways
Neural data is arguably the most sensitive category of personal data — it provides direct insight into cognitive states, emotional responses, and mental health conditions.
Four US states have enacted neural data privacy laws as of 2026: Colorado, California, Connecticut, and Minnesota. At least six more have active bills.
UNESCO adopted global standards on neuroethics in November 2025, establishing international principles for neural data governance.
The EU AI Act classifies emotion recognition AI in workplace and education contexts as high-risk. Proposed GDPR revisions may classify raw brain signals as high-risk biometric data.
California SB 44 (2025-2026 session) would require neural data collected through BCIs to be used only for the purpose collected and deleted when that purpose is accomplished.
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Neural data governance addresses the policies, legal frameworks, and ethical guardrails needed to manage information derived from brain activity and the nervous system. Neural data is distinct from other categories of personal data because it provides direct and unfiltered insight into an individual's cognitive state, emotional responses, attention patterns, and mental health — information that was previously inaccessible to external observation. In 2026, neural data is no longer confined to clinical neuroscience. Consumer-grade EEG headsets, workplace focus-monitoring wearables, VR headsets with neural sensing, and invasive brain-computer interfaces are collecting this data at commercial scale. The governance challenge is acute: four US states have enacted neural data privacy laws, UNESCO has adopted global neuroethics standards, and the regulatory landscape is evolving faster than most organisations' compliance frameworks can track.
What qualifies as neural data
Neural data encompasses information generated by or derived from the central or peripheral nervous system. This includes raw brainwave data from EEG devices, signals from invasive brain-computer interfaces, neural activity patterns inferred from non-invasive wearables, and derivative data such as attention scores, emotional state classifications, cognitive load estimates, and mental health indicators derived from neural signals. The sensitivity of this data is qualitatively different from other biometric data — while a fingerprint identifies you, neural data can reveal what you are thinking, feeling, and experiencing.
The emerging regulatory landscape
Colorado became the first US state to enact neural data protections in 2024, amending its Privacy Act to include neural data in the definition of sensitive data. California followed with amendments to the CCPA. Connecticut's SB 1295 (signed June 2025) covers central nervous system data specifically, applying primarily to brain-computer interfaces, EEG headsets, and similar devices. Minnesota enacted similar protections in 2025. As of early 2026, active neural data bills exist in Virginia (HB 654, classifying neural data as biometric data), Alabama (HB 263, standalone neural data privacy statute), New York (S9008, data broker regulations), Illinois (SB 2994, amending GIPA for neural data), California (SB 44, purpose limitation for BCI data), and Vermont.
At the international level, UNESCO adopted global standards on neuroethics in November 2025, establishing principles including cognitive liberty, mental privacy, mental integrity, and psychological continuity. The EU AI Act classifies emotion recognition systems in workplace and education contexts as high-risk AI under Annex III. Proposed GDPR revisions may classify raw brain signals as high-risk biometric data, which would trigger enhanced protections across the EU.
Governance implications for organisations
Organisations that develop, deploy, or use neurotechnology products — whether medical devices, workplace productivity tools, VR training systems, or consumer wearables — face a rapidly evolving compliance landscape. The key governance requirements emerging across jurisdictions include purpose limitation (neural data must be collected and used only for specified, legitimate purposes), consent requirements (informed, specific consent as a precondition for collection), data minimisation (collect only the neural data necessary for the stated purpose), deletion obligations (delete neural data when the collection purpose is accomplished), prohibition on discrimination (employers and insurers cannot use neural data for adverse decisions), and restrictions on sale or transfer (neural data cannot be sold to third parties without explicit consent).
For organisations not yet subject to neural data-specific laws, the trajectory of regulation is clear: neural data is being classified as among the most sensitive categories of personal data across multiple jurisdictions. Building governance frameworks now — before enforcement begins — is the practical approach. This includes conducting privacy impact assessments for any product or service that collects neural or nervous system data, implementing purpose limitation and deletion controls by design, and ensuring vendor contracts for neurotechnology platforms include appropriate data handling and audit provisions.
Primary sources: Cooley — Neural Data Regulation Patchwork (February 2026) | Future of Privacy Forum — Neural Data Definition