// Skip tracing
Skip tracing laws in Pennsylvania: licensing, privacy, and DNC rules
Is skip tracing legal in Pennsylvania? Do you need a license? Here's Pennsylvania's PI-licensing status, privacy law, and telemarketing rules, plus the federal rules that always apply.
The short answer
Skip tracing is legal in Pennsylvania. If you skip trace your own lists to market your own business, you generally don't need a license. Skip tracing for hire, as a paid service to others, is regulated investigative work that requires a private investigator license through the county Court of Common Pleas, under the Private Detective Act of 1953. On top of state rules, the federal framework (FCRA, DPPA, GLBA, and TCPA) applies everywhere. Pennsylvania has no comprehensive consumer-privacy law yet, so your privacy obligations on a Pennsylvania list are the federal ones.
Do you need a license to skip trace in Pennsylvania?
The answer turns on who you're doing it for. Running skip traces on your own marketing lists, the way a real-estate investor finds owners to make offers to, is using a tool, and Pennsylvania doesn't license that. Skip tracing for hire, as a paid service to others, is regulated investigative work that requires a private investigator license through the county Court of Common Pleas, under the Private Detective Act of 1953. The same search flips from unregulated to license-required the moment you charge someone else to find people. If you're only working your own deals, licensing usually isn't your issue in Pennsylvania.
The federal rules apply in Pennsylvania too
In Pennsylvania, as in every state, the federal layer sits on top of whatever the state requires and doesn't change at the border. The Fair Credit Reporting Act decides whether your use is regulated: collecting a debt is a permissible-purpose use, but finding a property owner to market to is a non-FCRA use. The DPPA limits DMV data to specific permissible uses. The GLBA protects credit-header data and criminalizes pretexting. And the TCPA, with the national Do-Not-Call registry, governs every call and text you make to a number you find, since a skip-traced number carries no consent of its own.
Pennsylvania privacy and telemarketing rules
Pennsylvania has no comprehensive consumer-privacy law yet, so your privacy obligations on a Pennsylvania list are the federal ones. Pennsylvania layers its Telemarketer Registration Act on top of the federal Do-Not-Call registry.
What's specific to Pennsylvania
Pennsylvania is unusual: private-detective licenses are issued at the county court level rather than by a single state agency, so for-hire skip tracing means checking the county you operate in.
| Rule | Pennsylvania |
|---|---|
| PI license for for-hire skip tracing | Required for for-hire skip tracing |
| Licensing authority | the county Court of Common Pleas, under the Private Detective Act of 1953 |
| Comprehensive privacy law | None yet (federal rules apply) |
| State telemarketing / DNC | State rules on top of the federal registry |
| Federal rules (FCRA, DPPA, GLBA, TCPA) | Apply in full |
Cleaning a Pennsylvania skip-traced list before you dial
Trackyr isn't a skip-trace data provider, so it doesn't locate Pennsylvania property owners for you. It's the layer after: upload a skip-traced Pennsylvania list and Trackyr verifies the emails, validates each phone and its line type, and scrubs against Do-Not-Call before you export, so you're not dialing dead lines or registered numbers. Given how aggressively some states enforce telemarketing rules, that scrub is the cheapest insurance you can buy.
// Common questions
Answered.
Is skip tracing legal in Pennsylvania?+
Yes. Skip tracing is legal in Pennsylvania when the data source and your use line up. Locating a property owner from public and licensed data for marketing is allowed; the federal FCRA, DPPA, GLBA, and TCPA rules still apply to the data and the outreach.
Do you need a license to skip trace in Pennsylvania?+
Not to skip trace your own lists for your own business. Skip tracing for hire, as a paid service to others, is regulated investigative work that requires a private investigator license through the county Court of Common Pleas, under the Private Detective Act of 1953. So the license question only matters if you offer skip tracing as a paid service.
What privacy laws apply to skip tracing in Pennsylvania?+
Pennsylvania has no comprehensive consumer-privacy law yet, so the federal FCRA, DPPA, GLBA, and TCPA rules govern, along with Pennsylvania's telemarketing and Do-Not-Call provisions on the outreach side.
// Keep reading
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Read →Put this into practice.
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