Give clients an AI Act readiness snapshot before launch

Paste a URL or upload a document. Get a first-pass snapshot of visible AI systems, likely risk class, public-surface gaps, and questions to ask counsel or a client.

For AI agenciesScan client projects before proposals, procurement reviews, or launch handoff.View sample report

First scan free. Built for agencies, consultants, and teams reviewing EU-facing AI projects.

For agencies

Turn AI Act uncertainty into a client conversation.

Scan client projects before proposals, procurement reviews, or launch handoff.

View sample report

Before proposals

Run a client URL before scoping work so you can price discovery, documentation, and transparency fixes with evidence.

Procurement reviews

Give buyers a first-pass view of visible AI claims, likely risk class, and missing public disclosures before legal review.

Launch handoff

Package the public-surface gaps and counsel questions into the handoff before an EU-facing AI feature goes live.

How it works

Three steps to a client-ready snapshot

01

Drop a client URL

Scan a product, app, or documentation URL before proposals, procurement reviews, or launch handoff.

02

Find public AI signals

We inspect visible product claims, policies, and docs to identify likely AI systems, risk classes, and public-surface evidence gaps.

03

Use the report in the conversation

Share a first-pass readiness snapshot with remediation priorities and concrete questions to ask counsel or the client.

FAQ

Common questions

The EU AI Act (Regulation EU 2024/1689) is the world's first comprehensive AI regulation. It creates a risk-based framework with requirements ranging from outright bans to transparency obligations. It applies to any organization whose AI systems affect EU users, regardless of where the company is based.

The timeline is staggered. Prohibited practices started applying in February 2025, GPAI model obligations in August 2025, transparency duties in August 2026, many standalone high-risk rules on December 2, 2027, and embedded regulated-product high-risk rules on August 2, 2028.

If your AI systems are placed on the EU market or their output is used in the EU, yes. The Act has extraterritorial scope — US, UK, or any international company serving EU customers may need to comply.

Prohibited (banned outright, e.g. social scoring), High-Risk (strict requirements, e.g. AI in hiring), Limited Risk (transparency obligations, e.g. chatbots must disclose they're AI), and Minimal Risk (no mandatory requirements).

No. This tool provides a first-pass readiness snapshot from public or uploaded material. For definitive assessment, consult a qualified legal professional specializing in EU AI regulation.