The EU AI Act takes effect.
Is your system ready?
On August 2, 2026, the EU AI Act takes effect, with fines up to €35M for non-compliance. Classify your AI system and find out what requirements apply. It only takes 5 minutes.
Have NIS2 obligations? National transposition laws are now in force across the EU. Classify NIS2 entity →
Where is the system used?
Check everything that applies.
How it works
From uncertainty to compliance in three steps.
Classify
Describe your AI system and get a risk assessment based on EU AI Act Annex III.
See requirements
Get a list of exactly which documents and measures are required for your system.
Generate drafts
Create a free account and generate structured drafts for Annex IV, FRIA, risk management, data governance, and quality management. 15 free credits per organization.
See what a draft looks like
You get a structured draft with all sections required by Annex IV — ready for review by your legal counsel or compliance specialist.
See example document →
Compliance tools
Classify, document, monitor. Annex IV is live — more frameworks coming.
Learn more about the EU AI Act
Read about the AI Act before you start classifying.
What you get
Instead of starting with a blank document, you get a structured draft your legal team can review and refine.
Classify your systemFrequently asked questions
Is my AI system high-risk under the EU AI Act?
It depends on whether your AI system falls under one of the categories in Annex III of the EU AI Act, including biometrics, critical infrastructure, education, recruitment, credit scoring, and law enforcement. Use our classification tool to find out.
When is the EU AI Act deadline?
The deadline for high-risk AI systems is August 2, 2026. The ban on certain AI practices (Article 5) has been in effect since February 2025. Fines for non-compliance can reach €35 million.
What does it cost?
Classification is free and requires no registration. Create an account to get 15 free credits — enough to generate a full Annex IV draft.
Does this replace legal advice?
No. The service provides you with a structured starting point — not legal advice. We recommend all documents be reviewed by a qualified lawyer before being used for regulatory purposes.