There's been a lot of noise, and several shifting deadlines, around the EU AI Act. Here's the honest version: one big deadline just moved, but the obligation most likely to affect your people is already in force.
The much-quoted 2 August 2026 deadline for high-risk AI systems has been deferred to December 2027 under the Digital Omnibus. But the Article 4 AI-literacy obligation has applied since 2 February 2025 and becomes enforceable from August 2026. Literacy is the live, near-term duty, not the thing that got delayed.
What is the EU AI Act?
The EU AI Act is the world's first comprehensive law regulating artificial intelligence. It entered into force on 1 August 2024 and applies in stages, using a risk-based approach: the more potential for harm, the heavier the obligations.
Does it apply to UK companies?
Potentially, yes. The Act has extraterritorial reach: it can apply to organisations outside the EU (including the UK) if they provide AI systems into the EU market, or if the output of their AI is used in the EU. Many UK firms with EU customers, staff or operations are in scope.
Article 4: the AI-literacy obligation
Article 4 is the part most relevant to HR, because it's about your workforce, not your software.
Providers and deployers of AI systems must ensure a sufficient level of AI literacy among their staff and others operating AI on their behalf, taking into account those people's knowledge and training, the context of use, and the people it's used on.
“Provider” vs “deployer”: which are you?
- Provider: you develop an AI system (or have one built) and put it on the market under your name.
- Deployer: you use an AI system in your operations. Almost every organisation is a deployer the moment staff use ChatGPT, Copilot or Claude for work.
What changed in 2026
Under the Digital Omnibus (provisional political agreement, 7 May 2026, pending formal adoption), Article 4 is being softened: from a duty to “ensure a sufficient level” of literacy to a duty to “take measures to support the development of” literacy.
The obligation still exists, still applies to deployers, and becomes enforceable by national authorities from August 2026. “Support the development of literacy” still means delivering real, role-appropriate training, and being able to evidence it.
The timeline that matters
What companies need to do now
Regardless of the high-risk delay, these are live today because Article 4 is already in force:
| Action | Why it matters now |
|---|---|
| Inventory AI in use | Including shadow AI. You can't govern or train for tools you can't see. |
| Baseline literacy training | Role-appropriate, hands-on. The core of the Article 4 duty. |
| A clear safe-use policy | What data can and can't go into AI tools: your first line against leaks. |
| Name an owner | One accountable person for AI literacy and governance. |
| Keep evidence | Dates, attendance, policy sign-off; enforcement lands August 2026. |
What to do before the key dates
- Before August 2026 (literacy enforcement): role-appropriate training delivered and documented, a safe-use policy live, and an accountable owner in place. Keep the evidence in one place: here's a free fill-in Article 4 record template.
- Before December 2026 (transparency): if you generate AI content at scale, make sure it's labelled as required.
- Through 2027 (high-risk): if you deploy AI in hiring, credit or education, use the extra time to map those systems and prepare; the delay is breathing room, not a reprieve.
The deadline that got the headlines moved. The obligation that touches your workforce did not. Treat AI literacy as box-ticking panic and you'll waste money; use it to build a genuinely capable, confident workforce and a compliance duty becomes a productivity advantage.
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Sources & further reading
- European Commission: Regulatory framework on AI & AI Literacy Q&A
- Article 4: AI literacy & Implementation timeline
- Council of the EU: Agreement to simplify the rules (7 May 2026)
This guide is for general education and does not constitute legal advice. Verify obligations specific to your organisation with qualified counsel.