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The EU AI Act – One Year Later: A Startup Survival Guide

Navigating the world’s first comprehensive AI regulation without killing innovation.

It has been roughly one year since the EU AI Act became the law of the land, and the “regulatory dust” is finally settling. For European entrepreneurs, the Act hasn’t been the “innovation killer” many feared, but it has drastically changed the playbook for scaling.

Understanding the Risk Tiers

Startups must now categorize their tools into the Act’s four risk levels:

  • Unacceptable Risk: (Social scoring, etc.)—Strictly banned as of late 2025.
  • High Risk: (Recruitment AI, Credit Scoring)—Requires 24/7 human-in-the-loop oversight and rigorous data logging.
  • Limited Risk: (Chatbots)—Must provide clear transparency that the user is talking to an AI.
  • Minimal Risk: (Spam filters)—Free to operate with basic standards.

The 2026 Compliance Strategy

Successful founders are using “Compliance as a Feature.” By being the first to receive an EU AI “Quality Seal,” startups like Tallinn-based Veriff are winning enterprise contracts over US competitors who are still struggling with GDPR and AI Act alignment.

To survive, CEOs must appoint a “Chief Regulatory Officer” early. In 2026, your code is only as good as your documentation.

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