AI Regulation Tracker

Clear breakdown of regulation direction, accountability expectations, and implementation timelines across major regions.

Regulation is shifting from discussion to enforceable structure.
This page tracks what is live, what is emerging, and what requires preparation.

AI Regulation Tracker

Clear breakdown of regulation direction, accountability expectations, and implementation timelines across major regions.

Regulation is shifting from discussion to enforceable structure.
This page tracks what is live, what is emerging, and what requires preparation.

United Kingdom

The UK is taking a sector-led approach rather than introducing a single AI law.
Regulators are integrating AI oversight into existing legal frameworks.

Sector-Based Oversight

Guidance is being issued by sector regulators (employment, finance, consumer protection) rather than a standalone AI authority.

Employment & Bias Risk

Hiring tools and screening systems are under increased scrutiny, especially around fairness and discrimination.

Coordinated Enforcement

Regulatory bodies are aligning enforcement mechanisms across data protection and competition law.

European Union

The EU is implementing the AI Act through phased timelines and risk categorisation.

Risk Classification

AI systems are classified by risk level: minimal, limited, high-risk, or prohibited.

Compliance Requirements

High-risk systems require documentation, transparency obligations, and human oversight.

Enforcement & Penalties

Non-compliance may result in significant fines and operational restrictions.

United States

The US approach combines executive action, agency oversight, and state-level experimentation.

Federal Direction

Executive orders are shaping voluntary standards and agency frameworks around safety, transparency, and labour impact.

State-Level Action

Individual states are introducing targeted rules around hiring algorithms and automated decision systems.

Increased Algorithm Scrutiny

Recruitment tools, credit decisions, and automated consumer systems are facing closer review.

What This Means for SMEs

Regulation is increasingly focused on accountability rather than prohibition.

Documentation Is Becoming Essential

Maintain a simple internal record of which AI tools are used, what data is involved, and who reviews outputs.

Human Oversight Must Be Explicit

AI can assist recommendations, but final decisions in hiring, pay, eligibility, and disputes should remain human-controlled.

Existing Laws Already Apply

Even without dedicated AI legislation, data protection, discrimination, and consumer laws apply to AI use.

Governance Signals Maturity

Clear AI governance builds trust with clients, partners, and regulators.