ComplyAI is the practical compliance course built for legal, compliance and AI teams who need to understand their obligations, classify their systems, and build a framework that regulators will respect — without wading through 144 pages of legislation.
Two roles, one framework
You develop, substantially modify, or place AI systems on the EU market.
Your obligations: conformity assessment, CE marking, technical documentation (Annex IV), EU database registration, post-market monitoring.
Resources for you: R1, R2, R3, R4, R5, R7, R8
You buy and deploy third-party AI tools — ChatGPT Enterprise, Salesforce Einstein, AI recruitment platforms, credit scoring systems.
Your obligations: vendor assessment, Article 26 deployer compliance, contract protections, logging, human oversight, avoid becoming a provider through substantial modification.
Resources for you: R1, R2, R3, R4, R6, R7
Most organisations play both roles. This course covers both — with separate resources tailored to each.
A fully clickable, step-by-step digital resource that maps every compliance obligation for both Providers and Deployers — in one place. This is the tool you will reach for every time you need to check where you stand.
Select Provider, Deployer, or Both — the guide shows only the obligations relevant to your role. No noise.
From confirming Provider status through Technical Documentation, Conformity Assessment, CE Marking, and Incident Reporting — every step with article references.
Vendor due diligence, contract negotiation, human oversight, logging, monitoring, FRIA, and transparency obligations — fully mapped.
15-item Provider checklist and 15-item Deployer checklist with checkbox persistence — track what you have and what you still need.
An interactive 5-question framework that classifies any AI system across all four risk tiers — with the result documented as you go.
Mark steps as complete, track your percentage, and see exactly what remains. Your progress saves automatically between sessions.
Updated to the EU Omnibus agreement of May 2026 — extended Annex III deadline (December 2027), the ninth prohibited practice, and watermarking obligations already reflected throughout. Available immediately upon enrolment alongside all other resources.
The EU AI Act entered into force on 1 August 2024. The prohibited practices ban — covering eight categories of AI including emotion recognition in workplaces and real-time biometric surveillance — has been enforceable since 2 February 2025. Fines of up to €35M or 7% of global turnover apply. If your AI portfolio has not been audited against these prohibitions, that audit is already overdue.
Who this is for
You're being asked by leadership what your organisation is doing about the EU AI Act. This course gives you the framework to answer with authority — and the tools to build the programme.
Building for EU markets means building compliant. Missed classification is a commercial and legal risk. This course maps your obligations before you hit the market — not after.
You don't need to become a lawyer. You need to understand what questions to ask, what decisions need board-level sign-off, and what audit readiness looks like.
Included resources
Every key date and obligation at a glance — updated for Digital Omnibus 2026
42-item self-assessment covering both provider and deployer obligations
Audit your portfolio against all nine prohibited practices
Classify every AI system in your portfolio against the four risk tiers
Full Annex IV framework for high-risk AI providers
Vendor assessment, Article 26 obligations, contracts, GPAI deployment, logging & oversight
Board-ready policy framework for organisational governance
Obligations framework for foundation model developers
Classify every AI system in your portfolio against the four risk tiers and nine prohibited practices
Providers: Complete conformity assessment, issue Declaration of Conformity, affix CE marking, register in EU database
Deployers: Audit AI vendors before contracts, verify compliance (Declaration of Conformity, CE marking, technical docs)
Deployers: Meet Article 26 obligations (logging, human oversight, monitoring, incident reporting)
Deployers: Negotiate contracts with liability protections, avoid becoming a provider through substantial modification
Build an audit-ready evidence pack that will withstand scrutiny from national competent authorities
The EU AI Act is not a future proposal. It is binding law, directly applicable across all 27 EU member states, with extraterritorial scope that applies to any organisation whose AI affects EU individuals — regardless of where you are based.
The EU AI Act is a living framework. When the law evolves, the course updates — and you are notified directly. Your purchase gives you lifetime access to every future version. No re-purchasing. No separate subscription.
Module 1 is available now. Modules are added progressively as they're completed — all seven ready by 20th July 2026. Founding members access every module the moment it publishes, plus all compliance tools and the Interactive Compliance Guide — at £297 instead of the full price of £497.
The full course is ready on 20th July 2026. Module 1 is available now. Join the waitlist and we'll notify you when new modules drop, send you a free copy of the EU AI Act Timeline Infographic, and keep you updated on founding member news.