By Malcolm Lee Kitchen III | MK3 Law Group
(c) 2026 – All rights reserved.

The First Amendment and Its Boundaries

The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution protects the freedom of speech. That protection is not absolute. It never has been. Understanding what the First Amendment actually does requires stripping away the comfortable mythology that surrounds it and examining the legal architecture that courts have built over more than eight decades of case law.

The Free Speech Clause principally constrains government regulation of private speech. Speech restrictions imposed by private entities do not implicate the First Amendment. Government limits on its own speech do not implicate it either. When the government is regulating private speech, a court reviewing a First Amendment challenge will examine whether the regulation is consistent with the Constitution. That examination depends on whether the government has a sufficient interest in the restriction and whether its approach is appropriately tailored to that interest.

There is no single test that courts apply across all free speech challenges. The analysis requires courts to parse through layers of Supreme Court precedent and apply legal standards developed over decades to new contexts, new mediums, and new forms of expression. When a litigant raises a First Amendment claim or defense, much of the work involves determining which legal standard governs the challenged law or government action. That determination coalesces around three core questions.

First: is the government regulating speech or non-expressive conduct? Second: is the speech at issue protected or unprotected, commercial or noncommercial? Third: is the regulation content-based or content-neutral?

The answers to those questions determine how hard the government must work to justify its regulation.

Modern First Amendment jurisprudence has organized itself around tiers of judicial scrutiny. Rational basis review is the minimum standard of constitutionality. Strict scrutiny is the most demanding. In between sits intermediate scrutiny. Laws that regulate speech based on its content receive strict scrutiny, with one significant exception: commercial speech restrictions typically receive intermediate scrutiny. Laws that regulate speech in a content-neutral way, including restrictions on the time, place, or manner of speech, receive a form of intermediate scrutiny.

Context matters. The Supreme Court has developed specific tests for evaluating restrictions on student speech in schools, disciplinary actions against public employees for their speech, and policies governing who can speak about what on government property. The type of challenge a litigant brings also shapes the analytical framework. The result is a body of law that is precise, layered, and resistant to oversimplification.


Laws That Implicate Free Speech Protections

The Free Speech Clause constrains government action. Courts refer to this as “state action.” A government action restricting speech can take the form of a federal, state, or local law. It can also take the form of a less formal rule or policy from a public institution, or a discrete government action such as a prosecution or enforcement action.

The Free Speech Clause applies not only to laws that restrict speech but also to laws that compel speech by requiring private persons to convey a particular message. Laws that burden speech or condition government funding or benefits on undertaking or forgoing speech activity may also implicate the First Amendment.

Because the First Amendment principally limits the government’s ability to regulate private speech, it generally does not constrain the government when the government is speaking for itself. Likewise, private action is not subject to First Amendment constraints. The line between government action and private action can be difficult to draw. When a public official blocks a follower on social media, courts must decide whether that official was acting in an official or personal capacity. The First Amendment also prohibits the government from coercing private actors to suppress other private entities’ speech.

Determining whether a particular law or government action comports with the First Amendment is a multistep analysis. The first question courts consider is whether the government is actually regulating speech. The First Amendment concept of speech includes the written and spoken word along with other forms of expression across various mediums, including photographs and videos. The actions of creating or disseminating speech are themselves forms of speech. Editorial functions are included as well: the decisions that go into selecting and shaping other parties’ expression into a curated speech product qualify as speech. Beyond physical material that conveys a message, speech encompasses certain expressive conduct, meaning conduct sufficiently imbued with elements of communication to implicate the First Amendment. Burning a flag in political protest is a recognized example.

A narrow, articulable message is not a condition of constitutional protection. Courts are more likely to treat conduct as sufficiently communicative if the actor intends to convey a particularized message and that message would likely be understood by those who observe it.

The line between non-expressive conduct and speech can determine whether a court scrutinizes a law at all. A law that primarily restricts non-expressive conduct may not trigger First Amendment scrutiny. In those circumstances, a court may simply apply rational basis review or conclude there is no First Amendment violation without invoking that standard. By comparison, a law that regulates pure speech or inherently expressive conduct will receive First Amendment scrutiny. Between those two poles are subtler regulations: laws that restrict conduct with both expressive and non-expressive elements, situations where the government applies a conduct-focused law to restrict speech because of its message, and laws that have the inevitable effect of disproportionately burdening certain speakers.

The Supreme Court has also recognized that a law can impose a significant burden on expressive activity even if it does not expressly prohibit speech. This is the concept of chilling speech. A law that is vague, overbroad, or creates significant barriers to speech can cause people to curtail their expression, even when that expression is constitutionally protected. The chilling effect is a recognized constitutional problem, not a theoretical one.

After establishing that a case involves speech, the next question is whether the First Amendment protects the particular type of speech at issue. Most private speech is protected in the sense that government regulation of it would raise a constitutional question and warrant First Amendment scrutiny if challenged. The Supreme Court has, however, recognized certain historically rooted “unprotected” categories of speech, including defamation and fraud. The government can generally penalize such speech without running into First Amendment problems. But laws aimed at these narrow categories may still trigger scrutiny if they reach protected speech or draw impermissible content-based distinctions.

The case of R.A.V. v. City of St. Paul illustrates this point. The Supreme Court struck down a local law prohibiting “fighting words” because the law reached only those fighting words that insult or provoke violence on the basis of race, color, creed, religion, or gender. The Court reasoned that singling out fighting words based on the ideas they communicate violated the fundamental principle that government cannot restrict speech because it disagrees with the message conveyed.


Levels of Scrutiny and Key Concepts

When a court adjudicates a free speech challenge, it typically analyzes the constitutionality of the law or government action by applying a level of scrutiny derived from Supreme Court precedent. The two most common levels are strict scrutiny and intermediate scrutiny.

Strict scrutiny applies to laws that regulate speech on the basis of content or message. It is a demanding standard. The government is rarely able to meet it. Intermediate scrutiny applies to content-neutral laws and to commercial speech restrictions, following different lines of Supreme Court precedent. Both levels require the government to prove that it has a sufficiently important interest in regulating the speech at issue and that the law directly advances and is narrowly tailored to that interest.

Laws that fail strict or intermediate scrutiny often do so on tailoring grounds. But the government sometimes also fails to show that its interests are real and not merely conjectural. Citing an abstract significant interest without evidence of concrete harm threatening that interest is insufficient. For prophylactic speech restrictions in particular, the government must demonstrate that it is addressing a serious, actual problem and that its preventive measure will materially contribute to solving it.

Strict Scrutiny

Strict scrutiny applies to content-based laws, meaning laws that regulate speech on the basis of its subject matter, topic, or substantive message. A law can be content-based on its face or in its design and purpose. The Supreme Court treats viewpoint discrimination, which involves distinctions based on a specific ideology, opinion, or perspective, as an egregious form of content discrimination. Courts sometimes invalidate viewpoint-based laws without undertaking a full strict scrutiny analysis.

Under strict scrutiny, the government must prove that its law is narrowly tailored to advance a compelling governmental interest and that the law uses the least restrictive means of serving that interest. The Supreme Court has identified several interests it has found compelling in various contexts. National security qualifies. So does public confidence in judicial integrity, protecting the physical and psychological well-being of minors, ensuring the basic human rights of groups subjected to historical discrimination, eradicating discrimination against a state’s female citizens, and depriving criminals of the profits of their crimes while compensating victims.

Both strict and intermediate scrutiny require narrow tailoring. The government must pursue its legitimate interests through means that are neither seriously underinclusive nor seriously overinclusive. Under strict scrutiny, the law must be the least restrictive means of satisfying the compelling interest. If a less restrictive alternative would serve the government’s purpose, the legislature must use that alternative.

Intermediate Scrutiny

Intermediate scrutiny typically applies to content-neutral laws and commercial speech restrictions. A law is content-neutral if it serves purposes unrelated to the content of expression and does not, on its face, regulate speech based on subject matter, topic, or viewpoint.

The Supreme Court established an intermediate scrutiny standard for content-neutral time, place, or manner regulations. Such restrictions are valid provided they are justified without reference to the content of the regulated speech, are narrowly tailored to serve a significant governmental interest, and leave open ample alternative channels for communication. A similar test from United States v. O’Brien applies to restrictions on expressive conduct when speech and nonspeech elements are combined in the same course of conduct.

Intermediate scrutiny also governs commercial speech restrictions. Commercial speech is either speech that does no more than propose a commercial transaction or expression related solely to the economic interests of the speaker and audience. To sustain a restriction on lawful, nonmisleading commercial speech, the government must satisfy the standard from Central Hudson Gas and Electric Corp. v. Public Service Commission. It must show that its law directly advances a substantial governmental interest and is narrowly tailored, meaning not more extensive than necessary to serve that interest.

Examples of substantial or important governmental interests in this context include protecting the public from deceptive and misleading trade practices, maintaining standards of ethical conduct in licensed professions, energy conservation, preventing quid pro quo corruption or its appearance in election campaigns, and promoting fair competition in the market for television programming.

The tailoring requirement under intermediate scrutiny is less rigorous than under strict scrutiny. A law need not be the least restrictive or least intrusive means of advancing the government’s interest. But the government may not regulate expression in a manner where a substantial portion of the burden on speech does not serve to advance its goals. For commercial speech restrictions, the required fit need not be perfect, but it must be reasonable and proportionate to the interest served.

Other Tests

Strict and intermediate scrutiny are not the only tools in free speech analysis. Exacting scrutiny is often applied to campaign finance disclosure requirements. Certain commercial disclosure requirements receive a less stringent standard of review established in Zauderer v. Office of Disciplinary Counsel, which requires that the disclosure involve purely factual and uncontroversial information about the regulated entity’s own products or services. If that threshold is met, the disclosure requirement need only be reasonably related to preventing consumer deception and not unjustified or unduly burdensome.

The government can restrict commercial speech concerning illegal activity or that is inherently misleading without satisfying either intermediate scrutiny or Zauderer review. The Supreme Court has also suggested that a law singling out particular commercial speech and speakers for disfavored treatment may warrant heightened judicial scrutiny, grounded in the principle that government cannot restrict speech because of disagreement with the message it conveys.


Types of Free Speech Challenges

First Amendment challenges take multiple forms. A party can challenge a law’s validity on its face or as applied to their speech activity. As-applied challenges are more common because courts typically handle constitutional claims case by case rather than en masse. Both types of challenges can be based on different theories of constitutional invalidity, including overbreadth, vagueness, and prior restraint. Each carries its own legal standards.

The proponents and timing of free speech challenges vary as well. Defendants have raised the First Amendment as a defense in criminal prosecutions, civil litigation, and administrative enforcement actions. Plaintiffs have raised free speech challenges before enforcement occurs, on the basis that the threat of enforcement chills the exercise of free speech rights. Plaintiffs have also sought monetary damages for government interference with free speech rights through First Amendment retaliation claims.

Facial Challenge

A facial challenge occurs when a party claims that a law violates the First Amendment on its face. The judicial remedy may include a declaration that the law, or a portion of it, is invalid. The government may not lawfully enforce provisions a court has held facially unconstitutional. A court’s rejection of a facial challenge does not preclude other litigants from succeeding on as-applied challenges.

The Supreme Court has characterized facial challenges as disfavored. Claims of facial invalidity often rest on speculation about a law’s coverage and future enforcement. Facial challenges also threaten to short-circuit the democratic process by preventing duly enacted laws from being implemented in constitutional ways. Facial invalidation is a last resort that courts should employ sparingly.

As-Applied Challenge

A party bringing an as-applied challenge alleges that a law or government action violates the Free Speech Clause as applied to its own activity or intended activity. In an as-applied challenge, a court typically limits its judgment and any remedies to the parties or set of circumstances before the court. A court’s disposition may allow the government to continue enforcing the law in other contexts.

The typical analytical sequence in an as-applied challenge begins with whether the case implicates the Free Speech Clause at all. The court then considers whether the speech is protected or unprotected. After that, it examines whether the law is content-based or content-neutral. That sequence determines which level of scrutiny applies.

Overbreadth

An overbreadth claim may arise when a law aimed at non-expressive conduct or unprotected speech reaches protected expression. Under the overbreadth doctrine, a litigant can raise this claim even if the government could constitutionally apply the law to that litigant’s own speech. This stands as an exception to ordinary limits on standing. The doctrine exists not primarily for the litigant’s benefit but for society’s benefit, to prevent a statute from chilling the First Amendment rights of parties not before the court.

To succeed on an overbreadth claim, a litigant must show that the law prohibits a substantial amount of protected speech in relation to its plainly legitimate sweep. The Supreme Court clarified aspects of this test in its 2024 decision in Moody v. NetChoice, LLC, which addressed challenges to two state social media laws restricting private online platforms from removing or deprioritizing user content in certain ways.

The Supreme Court held that the lower courts failed to apply the correct overbreadth analysis and remanded for further consideration. The opinion used two formulations of the test: whether the laws would prohibit a substantial amount of protected speech, and whether a substantial number of the laws’ applications are unconstitutional. The Court emphasized that lower courts may not focus solely on the heartland applications of a challenged law. They must address the full range of activities the law covers and measure the constitutional applications against the unconstitutional ones.

In practice, the Moody decision means that a court reviewing an overbreadth challenge must first determine all the ways in which the challenged law could be applied. For each potential application that could reach protected speech, it must decide what level of scrutiny or specific First Amendment test applies. It must then apply that standard to determine whether the particular application would be constitutional or unconstitutional. Finally, it must compare all the results to determine if the law’s unconstitutional applications substantially outweigh its constitutional ones.

The burden of proof remains with the challenger to demonstrate overbreadth. The Supreme Court in Moody did not resolve every question about burden-shifting, but the tension between the challenger’s burden on overbreadth and the government’s burden under strict and intermediate scrutiny suggests that future cases will continue working out those details.

When the Court has found overbreadth, it has not hesitated to use the remedy. In 2010, it struck down a federal law criminalizing the commercial creation or sale of depictions of animal cruelty, concluding that the presumptively impermissible applications far outnumbered any permissible ones. The law could prohibit not only animal fighting videos but also recreational hunting videos. By contrast, in 2023, the Court rejected an overbreadth challenge to a federal statute making it a crime to encourage or induce an immigration law violation. The Court construed the operative language to apply only to non-expressive conduct and speech integral to criminal conduct, finding the ratio of unlawful to lawful applications insufficient to justify facial invalidation.

Vagueness

Vagueness is a type of claim ordinarily raised under the Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment for federal laws, or the Fourteenth Amendment for state laws, particularly in challenges to criminal laws, convictions, or penalties. An unconstitutionally vague law violates due process because it fails to provide fair notice of the conduct prohibited.

Vagueness poses a special problem in the speech context. Vague laws have the potential to chill protected expression. When the boundaries of forbidden areas are unclear, citizens steer far wider of the unlawful zone than if those boundaries were precisely marked. Litigants in First Amendment cases sometimes assert vagueness as an additional basis for challenging a speech restriction. A speech restriction that is ambiguous about its coverage may be unconstitutional under First Amendment standards even if it does not rise to the level of a due process violation.

A law is unconstitutionally vague if it fails to provide people of ordinary intelligence a reasonable opportunity to understand what conduct it prohibits, or if it authorizes arbitrary and discriminatory enforcement. A law is not vague simply because it lacks perfect clarity or because there is uncertainty about how it might apply in close cases. The problem arises when a law sets out an indeterminate legal standard or one that relies on wholly subjective judgments without statutory definitions, narrowing context, or settled legal meanings.

In 1971, the Supreme Court struck down an ordinance making it a crime for people to assemble on city sidewalks and conduct themselves in a manner annoying to persons passing by. Conduct that annoys some people does not annoy others. The ordinance supplied no standard of conduct at all.

A vagueness claim can take the form of either a facial or as-applied challenge. To succeed on a facial vagueness claim, the challenger must demonstrate that the law is impermissibly vague in all of its applications. The Supreme Court has urged lower courts to evaluate vagueness claims on an as-applied basis, reasoning that a plaintiff who engages in conduct that is clearly proscribed cannot complain of the vagueness of the law as applied to the conduct of others.

Prior Restraint

Penalties for speech are typically imposed after the defendant has had a chance to contest the allegations through legal process. A prior restraint on speech occurs when the government forbids certain communications before they occur or requires a private person to obtain government permission before speaking. In a system of prior restraints, the government reviews the intended message for compliance with its standards and decides whether to allow publication.

The First Amendment limits both previous restraint and subsequent punishment of speech. Prior restraints are an especially condemned form of speech infringement because they closely resemble the official censorship the Framers sought to prevent. A law requiring a speaker to obtain a license before engaging in speech is a classic example. The Supreme Court has traced the First Amendment’s concern for prepublication licensing to 16th and 17th century English laws that prescribed what could be printed, who could print, and who could sell.

Not all licensing schemes raise identical censorship concerns. The government has legitimate interests in licensing particular businesses or professions for regulatory purposes related to health and safety rather than suppression of speech.

Prior restraints can also take the form of court orders, such as injunctions restricting publication of specific information or prohibiting private parties from engaging in speech on a particular topic going forward. Regulatory schemes that effectively require private persons to seek agency advisory opinions before they can speak raise similar concerns, even if they are not prior restraints in the strict sense.

A prior restraint carries a heavy presumption of invalidity. But that presumption does not make prior restraints automatically unconstitutional. If a prior restraint involves a content-based restriction or gives a licensing official unduly broad discretion, courts may require the government to promptly go to court and prove the constitutionality of the restraint.


Special Contexts

The Supreme Court has developed specific legal standards for particular contexts where free speech intersects with other significant government interests. These standards may differ from the traditional levels of scrutiny.

Campaign Finance

Campaign finance regulations implicate political speech and association. The Supreme Court has applied different levels of scrutiny depending on the type of regulation. Limits on independent expenditures in support of a candidate would likely receive strict scrutiny. By limiting the amount of money a person or group can spend on political communication during a campaign, such limits reduce the quantity of expression by restricting the issues discussed, the depth of their exploration, and the size of the audience reached. Disclosure requirements for political committees would likely receive exacting scrutiny because, although they may burden the ability to speak, they impose no ceiling on campaign-related activities and do not prevent anyone from speaking.

Compelled Subsidization

When the government is speaking for itself through a regulatory program, it can require citizens to help finance that message without violating the First Amendment. But the government cannot require a person to contribute monetarily to a private group that engages in expressive activity conflicting with that person’s beliefs. The Supreme Court has described compelled subsidies of this nature as closely related to compelled speech and compelled association. In Janus v. AFSCME, Council 31, the Supreme Court held that compulsory agency fees collected by public sector unions violated the First Amendment.

Government Programs and Funding

The government may not deny a benefit to a person on a basis that infringes constitutionally protected interests in freedom of speech. Requirements that restrict or compel the speech of government grantees, beneficiaries, or program participants may be challenged as an unconstitutional condition on government funding. The government may selectively fund programs encouraging certain activities it believes to be in the public interest without also funding alternative programs, even when those programs are carried out through speech. The government may not, however, leverage funding to control private speech outside of its sponsored programs.

Government Property and Public Forums

The degree to which the government can regulate speech on government-owned or government-controlled property depends on the type of forum at issue. In a traditional public forum such as a public street, sidewalk, or park, content-neutral time, place, or manner restrictions must satisfy intermediate scrutiny while content-based restrictions must satisfy strict scrutiny. The same rules apply in a designated public forum, which is a forum the government has opened for use by the public as a place for expressive activity.

The government has more leeway to restrict speech in a nonpublic forum, which is property the government has not intentionally designated for public communication. A restriction on access to a nonpublic forum must be reasonable and not an effort to suppress expression merely because public officials oppose the speaker’s view.

A possible fourth category, the limited public forum, arises when the government reserves a forum for certain groups or the discussion of certain topics. The Supreme Court has not fully resolved which test applies to limited public forums, and the term has been used in ways synonymous with both designated public forums and nonpublic forums.

Intellectual Property

Intellectual property law routinely involves speech through copyrighted works and trademarks. Copyright law includes built-in First Amendment accommodations, such as the statutory fair use defense to copyright infringement claims, which protects certain uses of copyrighted works for criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, or research. Trademark infringement analysis, through the likelihood-of-confusion inquiry, typically accounts for the interest in free expression without requiring a separate First Amendment test.

In its 2024 decision in Vidal v. Elster, the Supreme Court explained that because of the uniquely content-based nature of trademark regulation and its longstanding coexistence with the First Amendment, heightened scrutiny need not apply to a solely content-based restriction on trademark registration. Viewpoint-based distinctions in trademark registration remain prohibited.

Prisons

The government has more latitude to regulate inmates’ speech and access to information within correctional facilities. Incarcerated individuals retain First Amendment rights that are not inconsistent with their status as prisoners or with legitimate penological objectives. In Turner v. Safley, the Supreme Court established a reasonableness standard for prison regulations burdening free speech rights, with reasonableness assessed through four factors.

Public Employment

The government has greater constitutional authority to regulate the speech of its employees than it does ordinary citizens. When a government employer disciplines or fires an employee based on speech, a court facing a First Amendment retaliation claim first asks whether the employee was speaking as a citizen rather than pursuant to official duties and on a matter of legitimate public concern. If both conditions are met, the court applies the Pickering balancing test, weighing the employee’s interests as a citizen against the government’s interests as an employer in promoting efficient public services.

Schools

The First Amendment applies to speech regulations at public schools. At the same time, public primary and secondary schools can restrict student speech in some circumstances in light of the special characteristics of the school environment. A school need not tolerate student speech inconsistent with its basic educational mission, even when the government could not censor similar speech outside the school.

The Supreme Court established the foundational framework for evaluating school speech restrictions in Tinker v. Des Moines Independent Community School District. A school may prohibit particular expression of opinion only if it can show that its action was caused by something more than a desire to avoid the discomfort accompanying an unpopular viewpoint. The school must demonstrate that the speech would cause substantial disruption of or material interference with school activities.

Tinker’s substantial disruption standard is not the only basis for upholding student speech restrictions. Courts have recognized that schools may also regulate indecent, lewd, or vulgar speech uttered during school assemblies; speech that promotes illegal drug use during school events; and speech that others may reasonably perceive as bearing the imprimatur of the school.

Whether Tinker and its progeny govern speech regulations at public colleges and universities remains somewhat uncertain. The Supreme Court has recognized the role of higher education institutions in facilitating free debate, describing the college classroom as peculiarly a marketplace of ideas. It has suggested that while Tinker might apply to reasonable rules governing conduct, disciplinary actions against university students based on disfavored speech would be subject to traditional First Amendment scrutiny.

Zoning of Sexually Oriented Businesses

In the 1980s, the Supreme Court developed the secondary effects doctrine in zoning cases involving adult theatres. If an ordinance targets the secondary effects of such businesses on the surrounding community, including crime and property values, rather than suppressing the expression those businesses offer, a court may apply the intermediate scrutiny standard applicable to content-neutral time, place, or manner regulations. The Court has suggested this doctrine may not extend beyond the zoning context. As of the date of the original source material, the Court had not formally overruled its secondary effects cases.


Related First Amendment Rights

Free speech claims are sometimes brought alongside claims that the government violated other First Amendment rights. Those rights include the free exercise of religion, the freedom of the press, the right to peaceably assemble, and the right to petition the government for a redress of grievances. The Supreme Court has also recognized the right of association as an implicit corollary to the freedom of speech, covering not only expressive association but also certain forms of intimate association. Because First Amendment rights can be intertwined, the Court has sometimes addressed multiple First Amendment interests through a single legal framework.


Conclusion

The First Amendment protects speech. It does not protect all speech from all regulation under all circumstances. What it does is require the government to justify its restrictions on expression against a legal standard calibrated to the risk that government presents.

Content-based restrictions face the highest bar because government restricting speech it disagrees with is the clearest threat the First Amendment was designed to address. Content-neutral restrictions face a demanding bar as well, even if a more navigable one. The government must show real interests, real harms, and proportionate means.

The doctrine is layered, precise, and resistant to easy summary. Its complexity reflects the reality that free speech intersects with competing government interests across an enormous range of contexts, from public parks to prison cells, from campaign advertisements to school hallways, from commercial products to compelled union fees. Courts have developed specialized frameworks for each of those contexts without abandoning the core principle that expression is presumptively protected and government restrictions require justification.

That presumption of protection is not a technicality. It is the structural commitment that keeps the government from using its power over the law to silence the voices it finds inconvenient. Understanding how that commitment operates in practice is not an academic exercise. It is the minimum required for any serious engagement with constitutional governance.

© 2026 – MK3 Law Group
For republication or citation, please credit this article with link attribution to marginofthelaw.com/.

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