Virginia 2026 Regular Session All Bills (Page 2)

Page 2 of 243
VA

Virginia 2026 Regular Session

Virginia House Bill HB5

Introduced
11/17/25  
Refer
11/17/25  
Report Pass
1/27/26  
Report Pass
2/6/26  
Engrossed
2/12/26  
Refer
2/17/26  
Report Pass
2/23/26  
Report Pass
3/3/26  
Engrossed
3/4/26  
Engrossed
3/13/26  
Engrossed
3/13/26  
Employment; paid sick leave; civil penalties; civil actions. Requires one hour of paid sick leave for every 30 hours worked for all employees of private employers and state and local governments, with certain exceptions. The bill requires that employees who are employed and compensated on a fee-for-service basis accrue paid sick leave in accordance with regulations adopted by the Commissioner of Labor and Industry. The bill provides that employees transferred to a separate division or location remain entitled to previously accrued paid sick leave and that employees retain their accrued paid sick leave under any successor employer. The bill allows employers to provide a more generous paid sick leave policy than prescribed by its provisions and specifies that employees, in addition to using paid sick leave for their physical or mental illness or to care for a family member, may use paid sick leave to seek or obtain certain services or to relocate or secure an existing home due to domestic abuse, sexual assault, or stalking. The bill requires the Commissioner to promulgate regulations for the implementation and enforcement of the bill's provisions by July 1, 2027.The bill authorizes the Commissioner, in the case of a knowing violation, to subject an employer to a civil penalty not to exceed $150 for the first violation, $300 for the second violation, and $500 for each successive violation. The Commissioner or Attorney General may commence administrative proceedings or bring a civil action to enforce the bill's provisions. Additionally, the bill authorizes an aggrieved employee to bring a civil action against the employer in which he may recover double the amount of any unpaid sick leave and the amount of any actual damages suffered as the result of the employer's violation. Certain provisions of the bill have a delayed effective date of July 1, 2027. This bill is identical to SB 199.
VA

Virginia 2026 Regular Session

Virginia Senate Bill SJR2

Introduced
11/17/25  
Refer
11/17/25  
Report Pass
1/14/26  
Refer
11/17/25  
Engrossed
1/16/26  
Report Pass
1/14/26  
Refer
1/20/26  
Engrossed
1/16/26  
Report Pass
1/14/26  
Refer
1/20/26  
Engrossed
1/16/26  
Report Pass
1/30/26  
Report Pass
1/30/26  
Enrolled
2/2/26  
Refer
1/20/26  
Passed
2/2/26  
Report Pass
1/30/26  
Enrolled
2/2/26  
Chaptered
4/13/26  
Passed
2/2/26  
Constitutional amendment (second reference); qualifications of voters and the right to vote; persons not entitled to vote. Provides that every person who meets the qualifications of voters set forth in the Constitution shall have the fundamental right to vote in the Commonwealth and that such right shall not be abridged by law, except for persons who have been convicted of a felony and persons who have been adjudicated to lack the capacity to understand the act of voting. A person who has been convicted of a felony shall not be entitled to vote during any period of incarceration for such felony conviction, but upon release from incarceration for that felony conviction and without further action required of him such person shall be invested with all political rights, including the right to vote. Currently, in order to be qualified to vote a person convicted of a felony must have his civil rights restored by the Governor or other appropriate authority. The amendment also provides that a person adjudicated by a court of competent jurisdiction as lacking the capacity to understand the act of voting shall not be entitled to vote during this period of incapacity until his capacity has been reestablished as prescribed by law. Currently, the Constitution provides that a person who has been adjudicated to be mentally incompetent is not qualified to vote until his competency is reestablished.
VA

Virginia 2026 Regular Session

Virginia Senate Bill SB11

Introduced
11/17/25  
Refer
11/17/25  
Expanded polystyrene food service containers; repeal of prohibition. Repeals the statute prohibiting food vendors and certain restaurants from dispensing prepared food to a customer in a single-use expanded polystyrene food service container.
VA

Virginia 2026 Regular Session

Virginia Senate Bill SB18

Introduced
11/17/25  
Refer
11/17/25  
Refer
11/17/25  
Report Pass
1/19/26  
Engrossed
1/21/26  
Report Pass
1/19/26  
Engrossed
1/21/26  
Refer
2/3/26  
Report Pass
3/2/26  
Engrossed
3/4/26  
Engrossed
3/6/26  
Enrolled
3/12/26  
Chaptered
4/13/26  
Children; adjudication of delinquency. Specifies that "delinquent child" means a child 11 years of age or older who has committed a delinquent act. Currently, there is no minimum age for a child to be adjudicated delinquent. The bill provides that if a child younger than 11 years of age is found to have committed an act that would be delinquent if committed by a child 11 years of age or older, the child shall not be proceeded upon as delinquent and the court shall (i) dismiss any petition alleging such child has committed an act that would be delinquent if committed by a child 11 years of age or older and (ii) order that the court records pertaining to such petition be expunged pursuant to relevant law. The bill allows the attorney for the Commonwealth to file a petition alleging that such child is in need of services and if such child is found to be in need of services, the court may make any orders of disposition authorized under relevant law. The bill also provides that any funding that is available to provide services to a child 11 years of age or older who is proceeded upon as delinquent shall also be made available to a child younger than 11 years of age who is found to have committed an act that would be delinquent if committed by a child 11 years of age or older in order to provide such child with the same services. The bill includes in the definition of "child in need of services" a child younger than 11 years of age who has committed an act that would be delinquent if committed by a child 11 years of age or older.The bill adds that a child may be taken into immediate custody when such child is alleged to be in need of services or supervision and there is a clear and substantial danger to the safety of the child's family or the safety of the public. Currently, a child may be taken into immediate custody when such child is alleged to be in need of services or supervision and there is a clear and substantial danger to the child's life or health. Finally, the bill includes in the offense of causing or encouraging acts rendering children delinquent, abused, etc., any person 18 years of age or older, including the parent of any child, who willfully contributes to, encourages, or causes any act, omission, or condition that (a) causes a child younger than 11 years of age to commit an act that would be delinquent if committed by a child 11 years of age or older or (b) causes any child to participate in or become a member of a criminal street gang in violation of existing law. Under the bill, any person who commits such offense is guilty of a Class 1 misdemeanor.
VA

Virginia 2026 Regular Session

Virginia Senate Bill SB22

Introduced
11/17/25  
Refer
11/17/25  
Report Pass
1/29/26  
Engrossed
2/2/26  
Refer
2/6/26  
Report Pass
2/19/26  
Enrolled
2/26/26  
Chaptered
4/8/26  
Board of Medicine and Board of Nursing; continuing education; bias reduction training. Directs the Board of Medicine and Board of Nursing to require certain licensees to complete continuing learning activities on implicit and explicit bias reduction in health care as part of their continuing education and continuing competency requirements for licensure and authorizes the Board of Nursing to require certain continuing learning activities or courses in a specific subject area. Under current law, the Board of Medicine has such authority.
VA

Virginia 2026 Regular Session

Virginia Senate Bill SB15

Introduced
11/17/25  
Refer
11/17/25  
Refer
11/17/25  
Report Pass
1/29/26  
Report Pass
1/29/26  
Report Pass
2/4/26  
Driver improvement clinics; motorcycle driver improvement clinics; Motorcycle Driver Improvement Clinic Fund; created. Creates motorcycle driver improvement clinics, defined in the bill, as a subset of existing driver improvement clinics and provides requirements and parameters for the instruction and administration of the motorcycle driver improvement clinics. The bill authorizes courts to direct defendants who have committed violations while operating a motorcycle to attend a motorcycle driver improvement clinic and satisfy the requirements thereof. The bill also creates the Motorcycle Driver Improvement Clinic Fund for the operation and administration of motorcycle driver improvement clinics. The bill specifies that priority be given to the creation of motorcycle driver improvement clinics that operate as computer-based clinics.
VA

Virginia 2026 Regular Session

Virginia Senate Bill SB10

Introduced
11/17/25  
Refer
11/17/25  
Refer
11/17/25  
Report Pass
2/2/26  
Engrossed
2/5/26  
Refer
2/12/26  
Report Pass
2/19/26  
Engrossed
2/26/26  
Engrossed
3/2/26  
Enrolled
3/5/26  
Chaptered
4/6/26  
Passed
4/6/26  
Chaptered
4/6/26  
Employment prohibition exceptions; apprenticeships; children 16 years of age or older. Permits a child 16 years of age or older to serve in an apprenticeship program or other work-based learning experience related to culinary arts or information technology, provided that (i) the child is continuously enrolled in an accredited secondary school, (ii) the child is a registered apprentice, (iii) the child is employed in a work-training program administered under the Board of Education, and (iv) the work being performed is not in violation of federal or state laws. The bill requires that a child 16 years of age or older serving in a licensed barbershop or cosmetology salon, as permitted under current law, also meets the same requirements.
VA

Virginia 2026 Regular Session

Virginia Senate Bill SB8

Introduced
11/17/25  
Real property tax exemption; surviving spouses of members of the armed forces who died in the line of duty. Authorizes localities to provide, for tax years beginning on and after January 1, 2026, up to a total exemption from real property taxes for dwellings owned by surviving spouses of members of the armed forces that are situated on property zoned as single family residential. Under current law, a total exemption is only allowed for such dwellings with assessed values in the most recently ended tax year that are not in excess of the average assessed value for such year of a dwelling situated on property that is zoned as single family residential.
VA

Virginia 2026 Regular Session

Virginia Senate Bill SB5

Introduced
11/17/25  
Refer
11/17/25  
Report Pass
2/4/26  
Report Pass
2/10/26  
Engrossed
2/12/26  
Refer
2/18/26  
Report Pass
2/24/26  
Engrossed
2/27/26  
Engrossed
3/3/26  
Enrolled
3/9/26  
Chaptered
4/13/26  
Department of Housing and Community Development; Income-Qualified Energy Efficiency and Weatherization Task Force established; report. Directs the Department of Housing and Community Development to establish, in collaboration with the Department of Energy, and with assistance from the Department of Social Services, the Income-Qualified Energy Efficiency and Weatherization Task Force to determine barriers to access and enrollment in the current energy efficiency programs for income-qualified energy customers and to evaluate and develop a plan to address any necessary improvements regarding coordination among state and federal government agencies for utility services and resources to more effectively deliver energy-efficient housing, weatherization resources, and energy efficiency upgrades for income-qualified individuals and households in the Commonwealth. The bill requires the Task Force to meet at least six times between July 1, 2026, and September 30, 2027, and to submit a report of its findings and recommendations no later than September 30, 2027. The bill specifies that such report shall include policy recommendations and a plan to ensure that weatherization-ready repairs and whole-home energy efficiency retrofits are provided to all eligible income-qualified individuals and households in the Commonwealth residing in multifamily buildings, single-family dwellings, and manufactured homes by December 31, 2034. This bill is identical to HB 3.
VA

Virginia 2026 Regular Session

Virginia Senate Bill SB19

Introduced
11/17/25  
Refer
11/17/25  
Report Pass
1/22/26  
Engrossed
1/26/26  
Refer
2/3/26  
Engrossed
1/26/26  
Refer
2/3/26  
Report Pass
2/18/26  
Enrolled
2/24/26  
Chaptered
4/6/26  
Passed
4/6/26  
Chaptered
4/6/26  
Department of Education; policies relating to instructional material that contains sexually explicit content; applicability; construction. Amends current law requiring the Department of Education to develop model policies and each school board to adopt policies consistent with the Department's model policies for ensuring parental notification of any instructional material that includes sexually explicit content by (i) defining "instructional material" as any material, regardless of its format, assigned and provided to a student by a public school teacher directly for the completion of an assignment or curricular objective and clarifying that "instructional material" does not include any book or audiovisual material available in a public school library unless specifically required or assigned by a public school teacher directly for completion of an assignment or curricular objective and (ii) providing that nothing in the applicable law or any model policy or amendments thereto adopted by the Department or any policy or amendments thereto adopted by a school board pursuant to the applicable law shall be (a) construed to permit the censoring of books in any public elementary or secondary school or (b) utilized as a rationale or basis for the removal of books from any public elementary or secondary school. This bill is identical to HB 1499.
VA

Virginia 2026 Regular Session

Virginia Senate Bill SJR3

Introduced
11/17/25  
Refer
11/17/25  
Report Pass
1/14/26  
Refer
11/17/25  
Engrossed
1/16/26  
Report Pass
1/14/26  
Enrolled
1/16/26  
Report Pass
1/14/26  
Passed
1/16/26  
Refer
1/20/26  
Enrolled
1/16/26  
Refer
1/20/26  
Report Pass
1/30/26  
Passed
1/16/26  
Report Pass
1/30/26  
Enrolled
2/2/26  
Refer
1/20/26  
Report Pass
1/30/26  
Passed
2/2/26  
Enrolled
2/2/26  
Chaptered
4/13/26  
Passed
2/2/26  
Constitutional amendment (second reference); marriage between two adult persons; repeal of same-sex marriage prohibition; affirmative right to marry. Repeals the constitutional provision defining marriage as only a union between one man and one woman as well as the related provisions that are no longer valid as a result of the United States Supreme Court decision in Obergefell v. Hodges, 576 U.S. 644 (2015). The amendment prohibits the Commonwealth and its political subdivisions from denying the issuance of a marriage license to two adult persons seeking a lawful marriage on the basis of the sex, gender, or race of such persons. The Commonwealth and its political subdivisions are required to recognize any lawful marriage between two adult persons and to treat such marriages equally under the law, regardless of the sex, gender, or race of such persons.
VA

Virginia 2026 Regular Session

Virginia Senate Bill SB24

Introduced
11/17/25  
Refer
11/17/25  
Refer
11/17/25  
Report Pass
2/4/26  
Report Pass
2/11/26  
Engrossed
2/13/26  
Refer
2/18/26  
Report Pass
3/2/26  
Engrossed
3/4/26  
Enrolled
3/10/26  
Chaptered
4/22/26  
Discovery; methods of delivery; report. Requires the Commonwealth, upon request by the accused or his counsel, to copy or photograph any discovery materials or evidence the accused is permitted to inspect and review, including relevant police reports, criminal records, dashboard camera footage, and body-worn camera footage, and requires the Commonwealth to provide copies to the accused or his counsel, subject to the redaction, restricted dissemination, and protective order provisions of the relevant Rules of the Supreme Court of Virginia and unless such material is prohibited from being distributed by law. The bill also directs the Department of Criminal Justice Services to evaluate and report, no later than November 1, 2026, the feasibility, costs, and other impacts with requiring the attorney for the Commonwealth to provide counsel of record for the accused a copy of any relevant police report at least 10 days prior to trial or preliminary hearing.
VA

Virginia 2026 Regular Session

Virginia Senate Bill SB27

Introduced
11/17/25  
Refer
11/17/25  
Refer
11/17/25  
Report Pass
1/28/26  
Report Pass
1/28/26  
Report Pass
2/4/26  
Engrossed
2/6/26  
Refer
2/12/26  
Report Pass
2/13/26  
Engrossed
2/16/26  
Engrossed
3/5/26  
Engrossed
3/5/26  
Enrolled
3/11/26  
Chaptered
4/10/26  
Firearm industry members; standards of responsible conduct; civil liability. Creates standards of responsible conduct for firearm industry members and requires such members to establish and implement reasonable controls regarding the manufacture, sale, distribution, use, and marketing of the firearm industry member's firearm-related products, as those terms are defined in the bill. Such reasonable controls include reasonable procedures, safeguards, and business practices that are designed to (i) prevent the sale or distribution of a firearm-related product to a straw purchaser, a firearm trafficker, a person prohibited from possessing a firearm under state or federal law, or a person who the firearm industry member has reasonable cause to believe is at substantial risk of using a firearm-related product to harm themselves or unlawfully harm another or of unlawfully possessing or using a firearm-related product; (ii) prevent the loss of a firearm-related product or theft of a firearm-related product from a firearm industry member; (iii) ensure that the firearm industry member complies with all provisions of state and federal law and does not otherwise promote the unlawful manufacture, sale, possession, marketing, or use of a firearm-related product; (iv) prevent the installation and use of an auto sear on firearm-related products; and (v) ensure that the firearm industry member does not engage in an act or practice in violation of the Virginia Consumer Protection Act. The bill also provides that a firearm industry member may not knowingly create, maintain, or contribute to a public nuisance, as defined in the bill, through the sale, manufacturing, importing, or marketing of a firearm-related product. The bill creates a civil cause of action for the Attorney General or a local county, city, or town attorney to enforce the provisions of the bill or for any person who has been injured as a result of a firearm industry member's violation to seek an injunction and to recover costs and damages. The bill also allows the Attorney General to issue a civil investigative demand if he has reasonable cause to believe that any person has engaged in, is engaging in, or is about to engage in any violation of such standards of responsible conduct. This bill is identical to HB 21.
VA

Virginia 2026 Regular Session

Virginia Senate Bill SB26

Introduced
11/17/25  
Refer
11/17/25  
Report Pass
2/9/26  
Engrossed
2/11/26  
Refer
2/17/26  
Report Pass
2/20/26  
Engrossed
2/25/26  
Engrossed
2/27/26  
Enrolled
3/4/26  
Chaptered
4/13/26  
Land development; solar canopies in parking areas. Provides that any locality may include in its land development ordinances a provision that requires that an applicant must install a solar canopy over designated surface parking areas. Such provisions shall apply only to nonresidential parking areas with 100 or more new off-street contiguous parking spaces and may require coverage of up to 50 percent of the surface parking area. The bill provides that an ordinance adopted pursuant to this bill shall be subject to various additional requirements and shall allow for deviations, in whole or in part, from the requirements of the ordinance when its strict application would prevent the development of uses and densities otherwise allowed by the locality's zoning or development ordinance or when a property owner shows that the solar canopy, if installed as otherwise required under the ordinance, will generate less than 75 percent of the electricity that would be expected, given the nameplate capacity of the solar modules installed on such canopy, if the canopy were to be installed at another location in the locality without surrounding impediments to insolation such as buildings or shading vegetation. Finally, the bill provides that the applicant or owner may use the electric energy generated from such solar canopy to offset the consumption of the parking lot or adjoining building served under the same account. The bill has a delayed effective date of July 1, 2027. This bill is identical to HB 1234.
VA

Virginia 2026 Regular Session

Virginia Senate Bill SB31

Introduced
11/17/25  
Railroad safety; minimum train crew; movement of freight; civil penalties. Requires a crew of at least two qualified individuals on all trains, locomotives, or light engines used in connection with moving freight. The bill requires a railroad company that violates its provisions to pay certain fines for first, second, and third or subsequent violations within three years.