Answer a few questions about your AI system. Get an indicative read on whether the EU AI Act applies, at what risk tier, and which obligations and deadlines follow. Nothing you enter is stored.
Start with the free AI governance starter kit, mapped to ISO 42001, the EU AI Act, and NIST AI RMF.
The EU AI Act sorts AI systems by risk. A small set of uses are prohibited outright. A defined list of uses are treated as high-risk and carry the heaviest obligations. Some uses trigger transparency duties only. Everything else is minimal-risk. Separately, providers of general-purpose AI models have their own obligations. This tool walks the same branches an adviser would, based on your answers, to point you to the likely tier and what follows from it.
A narrow set of practices banned under Article 5, in force since February 2025. These systems may not be placed on the EU market or used.
Listed uses in Annex III and safety components under Annex I. Full obligations, with the main Annex III duties deferred to December 2027 under the 2026 Digital Omnibus.
Transparency obligations under Article 50, such as telling people they are dealing with AI and labelling synthetic media. These apply from August 2026.
The majority of AI systems. No specific obligations under the Act, though voluntary codes and sound governance are encouraged.
This tool is indicative and educational, not legal advice, and it does not store your answers. Classification under the Act turns on specific facts, so confirm the outcome with qualified counsel before you rely on it. For a fuller walkthrough, read the EU AI Act compliance checklist.