Regulatory trackerUpdated March 2026

Regulatory updates

Tracking the Digital Omnibus legislative process and key EU AI Act developments. All information is sourced from official EU institutions. Dates marked as indicative may change pending the outcome of trilogue negotiations.

Important: The Digital Omnibus on AI has not yet been formally adopted. The original EU AI Act deadlines remain legally in force until the Omnibus is adopted and published in the Official Journal of the European Union. Organisations should plan for compliance with current deadlines while monitoring the legislative process.

Digital Omnibus on AI

Trilogue pending

The Digital Omnibus on AI is a Commission proposal to amend the EU AI Act, primarily to delay the application of high-risk AI obligations. The Council and Parliament have each adopted their negotiating positions; trilogue negotiations are expected to begin after the Parliament plenary vote on 26 March 2026.

Pending26 March 2026Digital Omnibus

European Parliament plenary vote on Digital Omnibus on AI

The full Parliament is expected to vote on the Digital Omnibus on AI, following the IMCO/LIBE committee joint position adopted on 18 March 2026 (101 votes in favour, 9 against). If adopted, trilogue negotiations with the Council will begin.

ALMA impact:Triggers trilogue negotiations. No change to current legal deadlines until final adoption.
Adopted18 March 2026Digital Omnibus

EP IMCO/LIBE committees adopt joint position on Digital Omnibus

The Internal Market and Civil Liberties committees adopted their joint position by 101–9. MEPs propose fixed new dates: 2 December 2027 for high-risk AI (Annex III) and 2 August 2028 for embedded systems. For Article 50 AI content labelling, MEPs propose a shorter extension to 2 November 2026. MEPs also propose a new ban on AI 'nudifier' systems.

ALMA impact:Parliament's mandate for trilogue. Article 4 AI literacy obligation: no change proposed.
Adopted13 March 2026Digital Omnibus

EU Council agrees negotiating mandate on Digital Omnibus on AI

The Council agreed its position on the Digital Omnibus on AI. The Council mandate introduces fixed new dates: 2 December 2027 for stand-alone high-risk AI systems (Annex III) and 2 August 2028 for high-risk AI systems embedded in products. The mandate also delays AI regulatory sandboxes to 2 December 2027 and adds a new prohibition on AI systems generating non-consensual intimate content.

ALMA impact:Council's mandate for trilogue. Reinstates obligation for providers to register AI systems in EU database.
In progress19 November 2025Digital Omnibus

European Commission publishes Digital Omnibus package

The Commission published the seventh omnibus package — the Digital Omnibus — consisting of two proposals: one to simplify the EU digital legislative framework and one to amend the AI Act. The AI Act proposal delays high-risk AI obligations by up to 16 months (flexible, triggered when standards are ready) and extends Article 50(2) AI content labelling to 2 February 2027.

ALMA impact:Proposal only — not yet law. Original AI Act deadlines remain in force until formal adoption.

EU AI Act — key milestones

Significant application dates and obligations under Regulation (EU) 2024/1689 that have already entered into force or are approaching. Future dates are indicative and subject to change pending the Digital Omnibus.

In progress3 February 2026

Commission misses deadline for high-risk AI guidance

The European Commission missed the 2 February 2026 deadline to publish guidance on how to comply with the high-risk requirements under Article 6 of the AI Act. This guidance was required to help organisations determine whether their AI systems fall within the high-risk classification.

ALMA impact:Organisations deploying AI systems should monitor the EU AI Office for updated guidance on Article 6 classification.
Adopted2 February 2025

EU AI Act prohibitions on unacceptable AI systems enter into force

The prohibitions on AI systems posing unacceptable risks under Article 5 of the EU AI Act became applicable on 2 February 2025. These include bans on social scoring by public authorities, real-time remote biometric identification in public spaces (with limited exceptions), and AI systems exploiting vulnerabilities of specific groups.

ALMA impact:Organisations must have ceased any prohibited AI practices. Non-compliance carries fines of up to €35 million or 7% of global annual turnover.
Adopted2 August 2025

GPAI model obligations and codes of practice apply

Obligations for providers of general-purpose AI (GPAI) models under Chapter V of the EU AI Act became applicable on 2 August 2025. The EU AI Office published codes of practice for GPAI model providers, covering transparency, copyright, and systemic risk obligations.

ALMA impact:GPAI model providers must comply with transparency and copyright obligations. Deployers of GPAI models (such as ALMA) are subject to Article 50 disclosure requirements.

Stay informed on regulatory changes

Receive a concise digest when new EU AI Act or Digital Omnibus developments are added. No spam — unsubscribe at any time.