EU AI Act Historic Timeline, Updates & Developments

Contributors

Anas Baig

Product Marketing Manager at Securiti

Syed Tatheer Kazmi

Associate Data Privacy Analyst, Securiti

This page is designed to provide important updates and detailed information about the EU AI Act. Here, you will find the latest developments, key changes, and significant milestones related to the Act, helping you stay informed about its progress and implications.

Article 6(1) and corresponding obligations come into effect.

2nd August 2027

The entire AI Act becomes applicable, except for Article 6(1) and corresponding obligations (High-Risk AI Systems category).

2nd August 2026

Chapters III Section 4 (Notifying bodies), Chapter V (General Purpose AI Models), Chapter VII (Governance), Article 78 (Confidentiality), and Articles 99 and 100 (Penalties) become applicable, excluding Article 101 (Fines for General Purpose AI Providers).

2nd August 2025

Chapters I (General Provisions) and II (Prohibited AI Systems) will come into effect.

2nd February 2025

Upcoming developments

The AI Act comes into force.

1st August

The EU AI Act is officially published and scheduled to come into effect 20 days later.

12th July

The European Council officially approves the AI Act, scheduling it for publication in the EU’s Official Journal.

21st May

The EU officially passes the AI Act., following the European Council performing its final checks.

13th March

The European Artificial Intelligence Office is established to facilitate the implementation of the AI Act, particularly for general-purpose AI systems.

21st February

The Internal Market and Civil Liberties Committees approves the AI Act with a vote of 71-8 (7 abstentions).

13th February

Member states unanimously adopt the AI Act.

2nd February

Euractiv’s tech editor leaks the final version of the AI Act after it was shared with the Telecom Working Party for review.

22nd January

2024

The Parliament and the Council reach a provisional agreement on the AI Act.

9th December

The European Commission, the Council, and the European Parliament reach a political agreement on the AI Act’s text, subject to final approval.

8th December

The Council of the EU releases a document with several proposed changes to the AI Act for trialogue discussions.

10th August

The European Council Presidency is updated on the progress of trilogue negotiations concerning the AI Act.

3rd August

The European Commission's Executive President for a Europe Fit for the Digital Age announces the start of trilogue negotiations on the AI Act.

15th June

The European Parliament adopts its official position on the AI Act with a vote of 499 in favour, 28 against, and 93 abstentions.

14th June

The Internal Market and Consumer Protection and the Civil Liberties, Justice, and Home Affairs Committees votes on the draft AI Act.

11th May

The European Parliament agrees on a draft of the AI Act.

27th April

2023

The Council of the EU approves its common position on the AI Act.

6th December

The European Commission proposes several changes to national liability rules for AI to complement the AI Act.

28th September

The Committee on Legal Affairs (JURI) at the European Parliament adopts its opinion on the AI Act.

5th September

The Czech Presidency of the EU Council shares its discussion paper on the AI Act’s main priorities.

17th June

The French Presidency of the EU Council circulates their final compromise text on the AI Act before the Czech Presidency takes over.

15th June

The deadline for political groups in the European Parliament to submit amendments to the AI Act passes, with thousands of amendments submitted.

1st June

The French Presidency releases a proposal for regulating general-purpose AI systems.

13th May

MEPs Brando Benifei and Dragoș Tudorache publish their draft report on the AI Act.

20th April

The European Parliament adopts its position on the AI Act. These include amendments restricting AI usage for social scoring and remote biometric identification.

7th March

The Committee on Industry, Research, and Energy publishes their draft opinion on the AI Act.

3rd March

The Committee on Legal Affairs (JURI) publishes its amendments on the AI Act.

2nd March

The French Presidency of the Council circulates two compromise texts on user and provider obligations for high-risk AI systems. Another such text on harmonised standards, conformity assessments, and transparency obligations of certain AI systems are also shared.

3rd February

The European Commission presents a new Standardisation Strategy for the single market and global competitiveness.

2nd February

The lead committees of the European Parliament hold their first joint discussion on the AI Act proposal.

25th January

2022

The European Parliament’s internal market and civil liberties committees begin leading negotiations on the AI Act.

1st December

The EU Council’s rotating presidency shares a first compromise text on the AI Act with significant changes.

29th November

The European Parliament's Committee on Internal Market and Consumer Protection adopts a report on the AI Act, advocating a ban on biometric data for surveillance.

21st September

A study on biometric techniques from an ethical and legal perspective, commissioned by the European Parliament Policy Department for Citizens' Rights and Constitutional Affairs, is published.

6th August

The public consultation period for the AI Act by the European Commission ends with over 300 submissions.

6th August

The Slovenian EU Council Presidency hosts a virtual conference on AI regulation, ethics, and fundamental rights.

20th July

The European Parliament's Committee on Legal Affairs adopts a report endorsing stronger safeguards against mass surveillance and discrimination within AI.

1st June

The European Commission proposes a regulation of artificial intelligence in the EU.

21st April

2021

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