Classify your AI system under the EU AI Regulation in minutes — get compliance requirements, timeline and action checklist
The EU AI Act (Regulation (EU) 2024/1689) is the world's first comprehensive AI legislation. Every company that develops, sells or uses AI systems within the EU must understand its place in the regulation — prohibitions apply already from 2 February 2025, and heavy requirements on high-risk systems take effect 2 August 2026.
Describe your AI system → get classification and compliance requirements.
Sign in to try →Prohibited, High-risk, Limited risk, Minimal risk or GPAI — with reasoning against specific articles in the AI Act.
Concrete list of requirements applying to the system (risk management, documentation, human oversight etc.) under Art. 9–15.
When do the requirements apply for your specific system? Clear dates: 2025, 2026 or 2027.
5–10 concrete steps in priority order to achieve compliance — handbook style.
System descriptions are not stored after analysis (Zero Data Retention). Analysis runs via the AI provider (SOC 2, ISO 27001).
Read more about data protection →
The EU AI Act (Regulation (EU) 2024/1689) is the world's first comprehensive AI legislation. It classifies AI systems by risk (Prohibited, High-risk, Limited risk, Minimal risk) and sets requirements accordingly.
Among others: government social scoring, subliminal manipulation, emotion analysis in workplaces/schools, scraping of facial images, real-time biometric identification in public spaces. The prohibition applies from 2 February 2025.
Sanctions under Art. 99: up to EUR 35 million or 7% of global annual turnover for prohibited use. For other breaches: up to EUR 15 million or 3% of turnover.
The AI Act applies uniformly across the EU and via the EEA Agreement in Norway. National supervisory authorities vary — Sweden: IMY (proposed); Norway: Datatilsynet (likely). Market surveillance authorities vary by sector.