Last updated: 19 May 2026
On 2 August 2026 the EU AI Act reaches full enforcement, giving national authorities across every Member State, including Spain, complete investigatory and sanctioning powers over businesses that provide or deploy artificial-intelligence systems. For companies operating in or selling into the EU, the practical effect is stark: from that date, regulators can inspect premises, order corrective measures, withdraw non-compliant systems from the market, and impose fines that reach €35 million or 7 % of worldwide annual turnover.
With roughly eleven weeks remaining, this article serves as a deadline-driven compliance playbook, covering the EU AI Act full enforcement obligations businesses must meet, the provider-versus-deployer allocation of duties, the high-risk classification framework, Spain-specific governance considerations, and a week-by-week action plan designed for legal teams advising clients right now.
Regulation (EU) 2024/1689, commonly known as the AI Act, entered into force on 1 August 2024 with a phased implementation schedule. Earlier milestones, the prohibition of unacceptable-risk AI practices (February 2025) and transparency obligations for general-purpose AI models (August 2025), are already live. The final and most consequential phase lands on 2 August 2026, when the remaining provisions take effect, most critically the full obligations for high-risk AI systems and the activation of enforcement powers for national market surveillance authorities.
For businesses, the countdown creates a single, urgent compliance decision: identify every AI system in your organisation, classify each one, and ensure that the entity responsible, provider or deployer, has the documentation, processes, and contractual safeguards in place before regulators gain the authority to act.
Five immediate actions for counsel and compliance teams:
Before 2 August 2026, many AI Act provisions exist on the statute book but carry limited practical enforcement risk because national authorities have not yet been granted the full suite of powers. The date marks a structural shift: market surveillance authorities in each EU Member State will be empowered to conduct proactive and reactive inspections, request access to source code and training data under specific conditions, issue binding corrective orders, and impose administrative fines at the maximum tiers set out in the regulation. The European AI Office, housed within the European Commission, coordinates cross-border enforcement and retains direct supervisory competence over general-purpose AI models under Chapter V of the Act.
The timeline below summarises the phased enforcement milestones established by Regulation (EU) 2024/1689:
| Date | Milestone | Practical effect |
|---|---|---|
| 1 August 2024 | Regulation enters into force | 20-day post-publication start; clock begins on transitional periods |
| 2 February 2025 | Prohibited AI practices apply | Unacceptable-risk systems (social scoring, manipulative subliminal techniques, etc.) must be discontinued |
| 2 August 2025 | General-purpose AI model obligations + governance structures | Transparency rules for GPAI models take effect; European AI Office oversight begins; Member States designate national competent authorities |
| 2 August 2026 | Full enforcement, high-risk obligations + national enforcement powers | All remaining provisions apply; national market surveillance authorities gain full investigatory and sanctioning powers; conformity assessments, registration, and post-market monitoring become mandatory |
Industry observers expect the initial months after 2 August 2026 to see a wave of information requests and sectoral audits rather than headline fines, but the legal exposure is immediate and there is no grace period built into the regulation.
Enforcement under the AI Act operates at two levels. At the EU level, the European AI Office, established within the Commission’s Directorate-General for Communications Networks, Content and Technology, coordinates application, issues guidelines, and directly supervises obligations relating to general-purpose AI models. At the national level, each Member State is required to designate one or more market surveillance authorities responsible for monitoring compliance with the full range of AI Act obligations, including high-risk AI systems deployed or placed on the market within their territory.
Spain’s national enforcement landscape for the AI Act intersects with existing supervisory structures. The Agencia Española de Protección de Datos (AEPD) has historically played a prominent role in regulating data-driven technologies and is widely expected to coordinate closely with whichever body is formally designated as Spain’s national market surveillance authority for AI. As of the date of this article, practitioners should monitor Spain’s official gazette (Boletín Oficial del Estado) and AEPD announcements for the definitive designation and any accompanying implementing regulations. Counsel advising clients in Spain should treat the national enforcement structure as evolving and ensure that compliance documentation is sufficiently robust to satisfy whichever authority ultimately exercises jurisdiction.
Early engagement with legal specialists familiar with the Spanish regulatory environment is strongly recommended.
The AI Act’s heaviest obligations attach to high-risk AI systems, defined primarily through two routes: systems that function as safety components of products already subject to EU harmonisation legislation (Annex I) and standalone systems listed in Annex III of the regulation. The latter category is where most commercial businesses will encounter classification questions. Annex III organises high-risk systems by sector, and early indications suggest that national authorities will focus enforcement attention on the categories with the most direct impact on individuals’ fundamental rights.
| Sector / Use Case | Example AI System | Why It Is High-Risk |
|---|---|---|
| Employment and recruitment | Automated CV-screening or interview-assessment tools | Directly affects access to employment; risk of bias on protected characteristics |
| Credit and financial services | AI-driven creditworthiness scoring or insurance-risk assessment | Determines access to essential financial products; opacity of decision-making |
| Education and vocational training | AI systems that determine admissions or evaluate student performance | Influences educational and career trajectories; risk of discriminatory outcomes |
| Administration of justice and legal services | Systems assisting judicial decisions or applied in legal research affecting individual cases | Impact on fundamental rights, including right to effective remedy and fair trial |
| Biometric identification | Real-time or post-remote biometric identification in publicly accessible spaces | Severe privacy and civil-liberties implications; subject to additional restrictions |
| Critical infrastructure | AI managing energy grids, water supply, or transport safety systems | Failure or malfunction can endanger life, health, or essential services |
For each high-risk system, the responsible entity must complete a conformity assessment, maintain comprehensive technical documentation, implement a quality management system, ensure human oversight mechanisms, and register the system in the EU database before placing it on the market or putting it into service.
Understanding who bears which obligations under the AI Act is essential, and frequently more complex than it first appears. The regulation draws a clear distinction between the provider (the entity that develops an AI system or has it developed and places it on the market or puts it into service under its own name or trademark) and the deployer (the entity that uses an AI system under its authority, other than for purely personal, non-professional purposes). A single business may occupy both roles simultaneously, for example, a bank that builds a proprietary credit-scoring model and also uses third-party fraud-detection AI.
Providers bear the primary burden of pre-market compliance. Their obligations include conducting or commissioning a conformity assessment for each high-risk system, producing and maintaining complete technical documentation covering system design, training data, performance metrics, and known limitations, establishing a quality management system (as detailed in Article 17 of the regulation), implementing post-market monitoring processes, and issuing clear instructions of use that enable deployers to fulfil their own obligations. Providers must also affix the CE marking where applicable and register high-risk systems in the EU database before market placement.
Deployers must ensure that high-risk AI systems are used in accordance with the provider’s instructions, implement appropriate human oversight measures (staffed by individuals with the competence, authority, and tools to override or discontinue the system), maintain input data logs for the period specified by the regulation, carry out a fundamental-rights impact assessment where required, and inform affected individuals that they are subject to a high-risk AI system. Deployers should also verify that the provider has completed a valid conformity assessment before commencing use.
Where provider and deployer are separate legal entities, the allocation of responsibilities must be reflected in enforceable contractual provisions. Key clauses should address: which party performs the conformity assessment and maintains the technical file, who bears responsibility for post-market monitoring and incident reporting, indemnification for regulatory fines arising from the other party’s non-compliance, data-access and log-retention commitments, and cooperation obligations during any market surveillance investigation. Counsel should review and amend existing supplier agreements well before 2 August 2026.
| Entity Type | Primary Compliance Obligations | Practical Examples |
|---|---|---|
| Provider (developer / owner of system) | Conformity assessment, complete technical documentation, implement QMS, post-market monitoring, supply instructions for safe use, CE marking, EU database registration | ML model vendor performs conformity testing and supplies technical file and model cards to each deployer client |
| Deployer (business using the system) | Ensure appropriate human oversight, implement operational controls, keep deployment and input-data logs, verify provider conformity, conduct fundamental-rights impact assessment, inform affected individuals | Employer using an automated CV-screening tool documents oversight protocols, runs periodic bias audits, and ensures no automated-only hiring decisions |
| Joint provider / deployer (roles overlap) | Shared responsibilities allocated in contracts; lead entity handles conformity and notifications; both maintain documentation | SaaS platform with an in-built decision tool acts as both provider and deployer, requires a combined compliance approach and clear contractual delineation |
The AI Act establishes a tiered penalty structure designed to be effective, proportionate, and dissuasive. The maximum fines reflect the severity of the infringement:
Beyond financial penalties, national market surveillance authorities can order the withdrawal or recall of non-compliant AI systems, impose temporary or permanent bans on market placement, and require corrective action within specified timeframes. For businesses in Spain, enforcement actions are likely to follow administrative procedures governed by both the AI Act framework and national administrative law, meaning that procedural rights (including the right to be heard and judicial review) will apply, but delays in remediation should not be assumed to provide a buffer against penalties.
The territorial scope of the AI Act extends well beyond the borders of the EU. The regulation applies to providers placing AI systems on the EU market or putting them into service in the EU regardless of where the provider is established, deployers physically located within the EU, and, critically, providers and deployers based in third countries where the output of the AI system is used within the EU. This means that a US-based SaaS company whose AI tool is used by a Spanish customer to screen job applicants in Madrid falls squarely within the Act’s scope, as does a recruitment platform operated from Singapore that processes applications from EU residents.
Non-EU providers must appoint an authorised representative established in the Union before placing high-risk systems on the market. Counsel advising multinational clients should map every AI touchpoint that produces an output consumed within the EU and ensure that provider-deployer contracts address cross-border allocation of obligations, data-access requirements, and cooperation with EU enforcement authorities.
The single most effective action any business can take in the weeks remaining before full enforcement is to build a comprehensive AI inventory. This is the foundational document from which every subsequent compliance step flows: risk classification, conformity assessment scoping, contract review, human-oversight mapping, and regulator-ready documentation. The inventory should capture, at a minimum, the following fields for every AI system in use or under development:
The likely practical effect of having a complete inventory is that it accelerates every downstream compliance workstream and provides the evidence base regulators will request first in any inspection. Counsel should request that clients populate this inventory within the first week and treat it as a living document subject to ongoing updates.
With approximately eleven weeks between the date of this article and the 2 August 2026 full enforcement deadline, the following week-by-week action plan provides a realistic remediation timetable for businesses that have not yet commenced compliance work, or that need to close significant gaps.
This timetable is demanding but achievable if resources are allocated immediately. Businesses that began earlier compliance work can compress or skip completed stages. For those starting from a standing start, the priority is to get the inventory done in week one, everything else depends on it.
To support counsel advising clients through the 2 August 2026 deadline, the following templates and outputs should form part of any compliance toolkit:
The 2 August 2026 enforcement deadline is not a theoretical risk, it is an operational reality that will reshape how businesses develop, procure, and deploy AI systems across every sector. For organisations operating in or selling into Spain, the convergence of EU-level obligations and national enforcement machinery creates a compliance environment that rewards early, structured action and penalises delay. The EU AI Act full enforcement framework for businesses demands that legal teams move past awareness and into execution: inventories completed, high-risk systems classified, conformity files opened, contracts amended, and human oversight mechanisms documented and staffed. The eleven-week window is narrow, but the steps are clear.
Engaging a specialist technology lawyer now provides the best opportunity to close compliance gaps before regulators gain the full authority to act.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Jesus Osuna at Addwill, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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