The Supreme Court (SCOTUS) ruled on the constitutionality of Texas’s age verification law targeting adult websites. In a 6–3 decision on June 27, 2025, the Court upheld the state’s requirement that pornographic websites verify users are 18 or older, ruling in Free Speech Coalition v. Paxton that the law does not violate the First Amendment.
What We Know:
- The Texas law mandates that websites hosting “sexual content harmful to minors” must implement age verification to restrict access to users 18 and older.
- Plaintiffs, led by the Free Speech Coalition, argued that the law imposes unconstitutional burdens on adult access to legal sexual content, limiting free expression.
- The Court ruled the law was a permissible regulation of access to harmful content for minors and applied intermediate scrutiny, not strict scrutiny.
- Violators of the law face civil penalties, including up to $10,000 per day and $250,000 if minors access the content.
Deeper Dive:
Texas passed H.B. 1181 in 2023 to prevent minors from accessing online pornography. The age verification law is part of a growing trend among conservative-led states to restrict access to online pornography. The law requires adult websites to implement third-party verification systems using government-issued IDs or biometric data, raising concerns about surveillance, data collection, and privacy rights. At least 21 other states have similar age-verification laws.
The law allows for verification through government-issued IDs and transactional data, which are already in use by many websites. The requirement for age verification is deemed necessary for effectively preventing minors from accessing age-inappropriate content. SCOTUS noted that states are not required to adopt the least restrictive means to achieve their protective goals.
The Free Speech Coalition, a trade group representing the adult entertainment industry, sued, arguing the law would burden protected expression, force self-censorship, and expose adult users to state overreach and potential data breaches. Lower courts were split on the decision with the district court granting an injunction and the Fifth Circuit reversing the decision, applying rational-basis review.
The District Court initially granted a preliminary injunction, suggesting Texas failed to show the law was narrowly tailored to serve a compelling interest. The Fifth Circuit vacated the injunction, applying rational-basis review and concluding the law was rationally related to preventing minors’ access to pornography.
In a 6-3 decision, SCOTUS determined that H.B. 1181 is subject to intermediate scrutiny rather than strict scrutiny, as it only incidentally affects adults’ protected speech. Justice Clarence Thomas delivered the majority opinion, joined by Justices Roberts, Alito, Gorsuch, Kavanaugh, and Barrett, with the dissenting opinion being delivered by Justice Elena Kagan, joined by Justices Sotomayor and Jackson. The majority found that the law does not ban content but imposes a regulation designed to shield minors from harmful material. They applied intermediate scrutiny, concluding that the law serves a substantial government interest (protecting minors) and is narrowly tailored enough to be constitutional.
The dissent argued that such laws open the door to broad digital surveillance and deter adults from accessing legal information or expression online. They emphasized that less restrictive alternatives (like filtering software) should be considered.
Dissenting Opinion – Justice Kagan:
No one doubts that the distribution of sexually explicit speech to children, of the sort involved here, can cause great harm. Or to say the same thing in legal terms, no one doubts that States have a compelling interest in shielding children from speech of that kind.
I would demand Texas show more, to ensure it is not undervaluing the interest in free expression. Texas can of course take measures to prevent minors from viewing obscene-for-children speech. But if a scheme other than H. B. 1181 can just as well accomplish that objective and better protect adults’ First Amendment freedoms, then Texas should have to adopt it (or at least demonstrate some good reason not to).
Why This Matters:
For supporters, this bill is a child safety measure, while dissenters consider this ruling a door opening for stricter online regulation across the country, concerned that similar laws might be passed, which may require users to provide biometric data or identification to access sexual health, LGBTQ+, or culturally specific content.
For queer communities, sex educators, and creators working in adult or body-positive spaces, these laws threaten both access and economic survival. While the Court insists the law is narrow, critics warn it could usher in a new era of digital censorship under the banner of moral protectionism.
What do you think? Sound off in the comments.