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Analysis

See if Your State Passed Immigration Laws in 2025

State lawmakers, inspired by Trump, have passed dozens of anti-immigration bills this year.

Masked federal agents, including members of ICE, stand on either side of a hallway. A person wearing a white T-shirt and red backpack walks down the center of the hallway with their back to the camera. A woman and a young child, both with dark hair, walk behind the person with their arms around each other. A young boy with dark hair and a blue T-shirt follows behind them.
Federal agents, including members of ICE, patrol the halls of immigration court at the Jacob K. Javitz Federal Building in New York City in July 2025.

These graphics are part of “Trump Two: Six Months In,” our series taking stock of the administration’s efforts to reshape immigration enforcement and criminal justice.

In the first half of this year, 37 states enacted over 100 immigration-related laws, according to an analysis of data from the National Conference of State Legislatures (NCSL). Republican-led states have passed three-quarters of those laws.

The Marshall Project has reported on how states are enacting dozens of new statutes to fuel the Trump administration’s crackdown on illegal immigration. Lawmakers have established restrictions and penalties around many aspects of noncitizens’ lives. Meanwhile, some Democratic-led states are passing bills that reinforce support for immigrants.

Here are the new pro- and anti-immigration laws that states enacted from January to June 2025. Scroll down for more context.

NCSL’s database includes bills and amendments passed into law with a governor’s signature, as well as resolutions approved by a state legislature, dating back to 2008.

The Marshall Project found at least 34 new statutes in 2025 that relate to the role of police and sheriff’s departments in immigration enforcement — more than double the number of similar laws enacted in all of 2024. These statutes encourage state and local police to cooperate with federal authorities, criminalize aid to undocumented immigrants, create state immigration enforcement bureaus and more.

Republican-Led States Have Passed Most New Immigration Laws in 2025

States enacted dozens of new immigration-related statutes in 2025 that increase policing and restrict voting and ID cards for noncitizens.

Source: National Conference of State Legislatures

As part of the administration’s immigration enforcement, President Donald Trump expanded the 287(g) program, which lets local police departments apply to partner with federal immigration authorities by joining task forces, administering warrants or transferring detainees from local jails to federal custody.

The Marshall Project found that eight states have enacted laws encouraging or requiring participation in the 287(g) program, and more than 600 law enforcement agencies across the U.S. signed new partnership agreements from January to July.

Tags: Trump at Six Months Graphics Chart Charts migrants anti-immigrant policies/views ICE sanctuary states 287(g) State Laws Sanctuary Cities Map Donald Trump Immigration Sheriffs Trump Administration Second Trump administration Undocumented immigrants Immigration and Customs Enforcement