All articles

ESIGN Act vs UETA: How US Electronic Signature Law Actually Works

ESIGN is federal; UETA is state-level — together they make e-signatures enforceable almost everywhere in the US. When each applies, what they require, and what still needs wet ink.

United States Capitol building representing federal legislation

US teams often ask whether ESIGN or UETA “applies” to their contract. In practice, both frameworks work together: the federal Electronic Signatures in Global and National Commerce Act (ESIGN, 2000) sets a nationwide baseline, and the Uniform Electronic Transactions Act (UETA) — adopted by 49 states — harmonizes state law. New York uses a parallel statute (ESRA) instead of UETA, but the principles align. The result: electronic signatures are generally enforceable for most commercial agreements.

ESIGN Act — federal baseline

ESIGN prevents denial of legal effect solely because a signature or record is electronic. Key themes for business users:

  • Consumer consent — additional disclosure/consent rules may apply when signing with consumers
  • Record retention — parties must be able to retain and reproduce the electronic record
  • Interstate commerce — ESIGN covers transactions in or affecting interstate commerce
  • Electronic agents — actions of electronic agents can bind the person who deployed them (15 U.S.C. §7001(h))

UETA — state harmonization

UETA applies when both parties agree to conduct a transaction electronically — agreement can be inferred from context in many B2B settings. UETA emphasizes:

  • Intent to sign and association of the signature with the record
  • Attribution of electronic signatures and records to persons
  • Change of medium — if a law requires a writing, an electronic record satisfies it when parties agree
  • Error correction — mechanisms when an electronic agent makes an error the person did not review

ESIGN vs UETA — quick comparison

ESIGN ActUETA
ScopeFederal — interstate commerceState — parties in adopting states
AdoptionFederal law49 states + DC + territories; NY uses ESRA
Core ruleNo denial of effect for being electronicSame principle at state level
ConsentConsumer disclosure rulesAgreement to transact electronically
AgentsExplicit electronic agent provisionAttribution and error rules
ExceptionsShared categories (wills, some family law, etc.)Similar carve-outs vary by state

Shared exceptions — when wet ink may still be required

  • Wills, codicils, and testamentary trusts
  • Adoption, divorce, and certain family-law documents
  • Some real property transfers and court filings (state-specific)
  • Cancellation of utility or insurance in some contexts

Making signatures defensible under both frameworks

Courts look at evidence: intent, consent, attribution, and integrity. Platforms should capture signer actions, timestamps, IP and user agent where appropriate, and produce tamper-evident completed documents. SumoSign’s append-only audit trail and certificate of completion are designed around these requirements — without replacing legal advice on document-specific exceptions.

US B2B team going paperless?

SumoSign provides audit-grade electronic signatures with exportable evidence — built for multi-party commercial contracts.

Get started

Frequently asked questions

Do I need to cite ESIGN or UETA in my contract?

Usually not for standard B2B agreements. Some teams add a clause agreeing to conduct business electronically; your counsel may prefer explicit language for high-value deals.

Which law applies if parties are in different states?

ESIGN provides a federal floor for interstate transactions. Choice-of-law clauses and specific document rules may still matter — involve counsel for unusual cases.

Are email replies like “I agree” enough?

Sometimes, for simple agreements — but weak evidence if disputed. Dedicated e-signature platforms produce stronger attribution and integrity records.