Recording consent
Twelve states are two-party. We've got it covered.
Drilll plays an automatic disclosure on every live call and blocks coaching where consent is unclear. Here's what you need to know.
Two-party consent states
All other US states are one-party consent. We still play the disclosure — it's the right thing to do and it makes scoring cleaner.
FAQ
What is two-party consent?+
Some US states require every party on a call to consent to being recorded — not just the person doing the recording. If even one participant is in a two-party state, the strictest rule applies.
How does Drilll handle this automatically?+
On every live call, Drilll plays a brief disclosure tone and reads an opening prompt: "This call may be recorded for quality and coaching." If the prospect declines, the recording does not start and coaching is suppressed for that call.
What if I am in a one-party state and my prospect is in a two-party state?+
The strictest rule wins. Drilll uses the area code of the called number plus the caller location to apply two-party consent whenever there's any doubt.
Can I turn the disclosure off?+
No. The disclosure is non-optional on live calls and runs even for practice mode (where it is irrelevant but consistent). This is a hard product invariant.
Where is recorded audio stored?+
Encrypted at rest in our US data region (Supabase, us-east-1). Access is restricted to you and Drilll's automated coaching pipeline. See our privacy policy for retention windows by plan.
Is Drilll giving me legal advice?+
No. We summarize publicly known state laws as a courtesy. You are responsible for compliance. Consult counsel for your specific situation.
Not legal advice
This page summarizes publicly known state laws as a courtesy. You are responsible for your own compliance. See our terms for full disclaimers.