EU AI Act 2026: What Businesses Need to Know About AI Compliance
The EU AI Act is in force. We explain risk classes, compliance requirements, and how companies can deploy AI legally and responsibly.
The EU AI Act: An Overview
Since February 2025, the first provisions of the EU AI Act have been in effect. For businesses, this means every AI system must be assigned to a risk class. High-risk AI in HR, credit scoring, or critical infrastructure is subject to strict requirements — from transparency obligations to technical documentation.
Risk Classes and Their Impact on B2B AI
The four tiers — Unacceptable Risk, High Risk, Limited Risk, and Minimal Risk — determine compliance effort. For most B2B applications (process automation, chatbots, data analysis), Limited or Minimal Risk applies, but transparency requirements remain.
Competitive Advantage Through Early AI Governance
Companies that invest in AI governance now build trust with customers and partners. A clear AI strategy with documentation, risk assessment, and ethical guidelines becomes a competitive differentiator.
Practical Steps for Compliant AI Deployment
1. Inventory all AI systems in your organization. 2. Classify risks according to the EU AI Act. 3. Set up technical documentation and monitoring. 4. Train your employees. 5. Conduct regular audits and update AI governance.
