AYSO Soccer Volunteer Compliance in New York
New York ayso soccer programs must meet AYSO (American Youth Soccer Organization)'s national requirements AND New York's own legal mandates. Volunteer Tracker tracks both in one dashboard.
AYSO (American Youth Soccer Organization) requires ayso soccer programs to verify that coaches and staff have completed required background checks and training before working with youth athletes. For New York organizations, Volunteer Tracker automates this in a single dashboard.
As of July 2026, New York has no statewide legal mandate — background checks, concussion training, or CPR/AED — that applies to community youth-sports volunteers; its concussion and sudden-cardiac-arrest statutes cover school athletics only. That is likely to change soon: S5257C passed both houses of the Legislature in May 2026 and, if signed, will require youth service providers to run sex-offender-registry checks on every employee and volunteer with direct contact with minors, before service and at least every three years, with penalties up to $25,000 per violation.
How New York Law Fits Your AYSO Region's Compliance
AYSO runs its national compliance through AYSOU and the national registration system — the annual eSigned volunteer application, the Sterling Volunteers background check, Safe Haven, and the SafeSport cycle all live there. Those systems confirm a volunteer is cleared to AYSO's standard, but they stop at AYSO's own requirements; New York's separate legal mandates are never part of the AYSO record.
For an AYSO region in New York, that means running two systems that don't talk to each other — AYSOU for the national items and New York law for everything the state layers on top, such as its own background-check statutes or Live Scan rules. Volunteer Tracker consolidates them by region, so a Regional Commissioner sees Sterling status, SafeSport dates, and New York's requirements in one place and can tell at a glance which coaches and referees are fully cleared to take the field.
New York Compliance at a Glance
- No New York state law currently mandates background checks, concussion training, or CPR/AED certification for community youth-sports volunteers.
- S5257C passed both houses in May 2026 and awaits the Governor's signature — it would require sex-offender-registry checks of every covered volunteer before service and at least every three years.
- The pending checks are registry-based (state registry, prior-state registries, and the National Sex Offender Public Website), not full FBI fingerprint checks.
- New York's concussion and Dominic Murray sudden-cardiac-arrest laws apply to schools only — community leagues carry those duties through their governing bodies instead.
- Community volunteer coaches are not mandated reporters under New York law, though anyone is permitted to report suspected abuse.
National Requirements for AYSO Soccer Volunteers
Baseline requirements set by AYSO (American Youth Soccer Organization):
- Volunteer application completed and eSigned each membership year, including consent to a background check
- Background check through Sterling Volunteers for all adult volunteers
- AYSO Safe Haven certification (current course version) plus job-specific training
- SafeSport training — full course the first year, refresher courses in following years (U.S. Soccer mandate)
Where National Standards End and New York Law Begins
As of July 2026, New York has no statewide legal mandate — background checks, concussion training, or CPR/AED — that applies to community youth-sports volunteers; its concussion and sudden-cardiac-arrest statutes cover school athletics only. That is likely to change soon: S5257C passed both houses of the Legislature in May 2026 and, if signed, will require youth service providers to run sex-offender-registry checks on every employee and volunteer with direct contact with minors, before service and at least every three years, with penalties up to $25,000 per violation.
National minimums
AYSO (American Youth Soccer Organization) sets baseline requirements and provides tools to track them — but those tools stop at the national standard.
New York legal requirements
New York adds its own legally binding mandates on top — and tracking them is your organization's responsibility. Volunteer Tracker tracks national, state, and league-specific requirements together.
S5257C: the background-check law awaiting signature
Senate bill S5257C (Hinchey) passed the Senate on May 28, 2026 and the Assembly on May 29, 2026, and awaits the Governor's signature. It would add § 398-g to the General Business Law, requiring every "youth service provider" — business corporations, not-for-profit corporations, LLCs, and limited partnerships that regularly provide instructional, recreational, or extracurricular services to minors, expressly including sports training facilities — to run background checks on every "covered person": operators, employees, volunteers, and independent contractors with direct and substantial contact with minors.
The required checks are registry-based: the New York sex-offender registry, the registries of any state the person lived in during the prior five years, and the U.S. Department of Justice's National Sex Offender Public Website. Checks must be completed before service begins and repeated at least every three years. The bill provides civil penalties of up to $25,000 per violation and takes effect 180 days after becoming law — meaning first compliance deadlines in 2027 if signed in 2026.
Most incorporated youth leagues fall within the bill's literal definition of a youth service provider, while public and private schools and licensed day cares are excluded. Organizations that already run broader criminal-history screening through a national governing body will still need to document the registry checks and the three-year renewal cycle the New York statute would require.
What New York law covers today — and what it doesn't
New York's Concussion Management and Awareness Act (Education Law § 305(42)) requires biennial concussion training — but only for school coaches, physical-education teachers, nurses, and athletic trainers in school-sponsored activities, and a 2026 amendment moving through the Assembly (A10675A) keeps that school-only scope. The Dominic Murray Sudden Cardiac Arrest Prevention Act, effective July 2022, likewise applies to school districts, BOCES, charter, and nonpublic schools.
Community and travel programs therefore carry no state-imposed concussion or cardiac training duty — their training obligations come from national governing bodies. New York's mandated-reporter statute (Social Services Law § 413) enumerates compensated school coaches holding coaching licenses and children's camp directors, not community volunteers; any person may report suspected abuse voluntarily under § 414.
Built for Any Volunteer Role
Roles are fully customizable — you define the roles your New York program uses, each with its own requirements. These AYSO Soccer roles are common examples, not a limit:
Coach
Referee
Team Parent
Board Member
How It Works
Three steps to a fully compliant New York ayso soccer roster.
Set Up Your Region's Roles
Define your roles — Coach, Referee, Team Parent, Board Member — and assign which national, state, and region requirements each role needs.
Volunteers Self-Onboard
Volunteers self-onboard and upload their certifications. Automated reminders handle background-check renewals and SafeSport refreshers so you don't have to chase anyone.
See Who's Cleared at a Glance
Your admin dashboard shows exactly who is cleared versus who has outstanding items — across every requirement — before the season kicks off.