All 50 states.Not all coverage is equal.
Bill status and session calendars are tracked in every state. The analytical layer— chair profiles, blocker identification, procedural posture, coalition signals — rolls out by depth tier. Full coverage in the states where your portfolio is active. Standard everywhere else.
Coverage that scales with where your portfolio operates.
Not every state session requires the same analytical depth. InDocket concentrates the full analytical layer on the states where government affairs teams actually operate, with lighter tiers everywhere else.
- Committee chair behavioral profiles — scheduling history, hold patterns, issue stances
- Blocker identification and choke-point mapping
- Procedural posture assessments updated within 24 hours of action
- Cross-state coalition and sponsor pattern analysis
- Session-clock analysis and floor-calendar intelligence
- Leadership-ready verdict with citation and reasoning
- Momentum scoring (0–100 per bill · sparkline · direction)
- Q&A corpus search across full session record
- Whip count where roll-call data is available
- Procedural-posture context on tracked bills
- Session calendar and sine die tracking
- Committee assignment and referral history
- Floor calendar monitoring
- Amendment and substitute tracking
- Momentum scoring (score + direction, no sparkline)
- Real-time bill status from official sources
- Session calendar and adjournment tracking
- Text and amendment retrieval
- Momentum scoring: not included
Where the analytical layer runs deep.
Full-analytical states include momentum scoring, Q&A corpus, and whip count intelligence where roll-call data is available. Standard states include procedural posture and session calendar.
Depth matches where your portfolio lives.
The full analytical layer launches in the 27 states that account for the majority of active government affairs portfolios. The remaining 23 states carry procedural context and real-time status while the analytical layer expands.
State prioritization is driven by session activity, portfolio density across InDocket accounts, and committee chair data availability — not arbitrary geographic selection.
Coverage is not data. Coverage is analysis.
Every legislative tracking service covers all 50 states. That’s not what differentiates InDocket. What differentiates InDocket is what happens after the data arrives.
Bill text and status is table stakes.
Real-time bill status, text retrieval, amendment tracking, and session calendar monitoring are present in all 50 states. This is the data layer. Every legislative platform has it. It tells you what happened — not why, or what to do about it.
Procedural context tells you what the status means.
“Referred to committee” is a status. Whether that referral is routine or a procedural burial is context. Standard-tier coverage adds the session calendar, committee history, and amendment trajectory to turn the status into something actionable.
Chair profiles answer the question leadership is asking.
1,840+ committee chair behavioral profiles — six-plus years of scheduling history, issue stance patterns, hold frequency, and floor-referral rates. When your bill lands in a committee, InDocket already knows whether the chair moves bills like yours, or buries them.
Coalition signals tell you who else is in the room.
Cross-state sponsor correlation, shared amendment language, and coordinated floor-timing patterns surface when the same fight is running in multiple states simultaneously. Full analytical coverage means knowing which states are the lead dominoes — and which are waiting on Ohio.
The session clock is running. InDocket is watching.
Legislative sessions move fast and end without warning. InDocket monitors session calendars, sine die dates, and special session announcements across all 50 states so your team always knows how much time is left on the clock.
InDocket’s session clock runs continuously — briefings generate automatically when the session calendar crosses a threshold. When sine die is 14 days out, your team knows before the morning call.