Federal headlines may dominate the news cycle, but the real action often takes place in state capitols, where fast-moving sessions and packed agendas require constant vigilance from government affairs and advocacy professionals.
This year was no exception. Lawmakers introduced a flood of bills across a wide range of issues, keeping government affairs professionals in high gear from January through June.

Now that nearly every state legislature has wrapped up its 2025 session, it’s the perfect time to step back and examine where legislative activity was most intense, and which states were most productive.
The pace of legislation surged in 2025, with the statehouses across the nation introducing more than 135,500 bills. The United States Congress, meanwhile, has introduced just over 10,000 bills in 2025, and only 2.3 percent of those bills were enacted. Congress had a lower effective rate than all but four states, which is something to ponder as you lay out your legislative strategy.

State Legislation Introduced in 2025
States introduced more than 135,500 bills in 2025. That was an increase of around 55 percent from the 87,500 bills introduced in 2024.
This is in part because some states (Montana, Nevada, North Dakota, and Texas) have no even-year legislation. Those four states combined introduced more than 13,000 bills: More than 9,000 in Texas, over 1,800 in Montana, more than 1,000 in Nevada and North Dakota.
Some states saw their numbers rise in 2025. New Hampshire introduced 990 bills this year, a huge jump compared to last year’s 31 bills. Oregon, Maine, and Arkansas introduced many more bills compared to previous years.
The state with the steepest drop in introduced legislation was New Jersey. In 2025, New Jersey introduced only about 1,500 bills, compared to more than 8,750 in 2024 — an 83 percent decrease.
New York lawmakers introduced the most bills by far in their 2025 session, with 18,800+ pieces of legislation. But only 2,301 of those got enacted, for a 12 percent effectivity rate.
