🔴Illinois HB 3773IN EFFECT$10M fine|🔴Texas TRAIGAIN EFFECTActive enforcement|⚠️Colorado SB 205Jun 30, 2026Per-violation fines|⚠️California SB 942Aug 2, 2026$5K/day|⚠️EU AI Act Art. 50Aug 2, 2026€35M or 7% revenue|⚠️Virginia HB 2154Jul 1, 2026$10K/violation|⚠️Connecticut SB 2Oct 1, 2026$25K/violation|🔴Illinois HB 3773IN EFFECT$10M fine|🔴Texas TRAIGAIN EFFECTActive enforcement|⚠️Colorado SB 205Jun 30, 2026Per-violation fines|⚠️California SB 942Aug 2, 2026$5K/day|⚠️EU AI Act Art. 50Aug 2, 2026€35M or 7% revenue|⚠️Virginia HB 2154Jul 1, 2026$10K/violation|⚠️Connecticut SB 2Oct 1, 2026$25K/violation|

India AI Law Deadlines

EU AI Act + GDPR + national-law dates that businesses serving this country must meet.

No dedicated AI Act (DPDP Act enacted; rules phasing in)Deadline: DPDP Act enacted Aug 2023; implementing Rules notified 2025, with phased commencementPenalty: DPDP Act: data-protection penalties up to ₹250 crore (~US$30M) per instance
By · Legal research team
Published Reviewed

How AI law works in India

India has not enacted a standalone AI statute. AI is governed indirectly through the Digital Personal Data Protection Act, 2023 — passed in August 2023, with its implementing Rules notified in 2025 and commencing in phases — which sets consent, purpose-limitation and breach-notification duties (with penalties up to ₹250 crore) that apply to any personal data used to train or run AI. The older Information Technology Act, 2000 and the 2021 IT Rules cover intermediary liability and have driven MeitY advisories requiring labelling of AI-generated and deepfake content. A promotion-first IndiaAI Mission and NITI Aayog's voluntary 'Responsible AI' principles guide policy, and a 'Digital India Act' to replace the IT Act has been signalled but is not yet law.

Applicable laws

The EU AI Act enters into force and becomes enforceable on August 2, 2026 — a fixed, non-negotiable deadline applicable across all 27 EU member states and the EEA. This is not a deadline for planning or preparation; it is the date on which regulators and private parties can begin filing complaints, triggering investigations, and seeking penalties. Unlike GDPR, which had a 2-year grace period before enforcement (May 2016 adoption, May 2018 enforcement), the EU AI Act's enforcement timeline is compressed: the directive was adopted in December 2023, and enforcement begins August 2, 2026 — less than 20 months from adoption to active penalty risk. Businesses should treat August 2 as the same kind of hard cutoff as GDPR's May 25, 2018: compliance is required from day one, and non-compliance creates daily exposure.

Within the August 2, 2026 deadline, nested compliance deadlines apply to different system categories. Prohibited AI systems (facial recognition in law enforcement, social credit scoring, subliminal manipulation) cannot be deployed at all after August 2 — deployment is not a compliance violation, it is an immediate prohibited activity. High-risk systems must have completed conformity assessments (including bias and fairness testing) before August 2, must document human-review processes, and must implement transparency disclosures to affected individuals by the enforcement date. Limited-risk systems must provide transparency disclosures by August 2. Prohibited systems already in deployment must be removed by August 2. The deadline structure means a single non-compliance — one high-risk system without pre-deployment assessment, one prohibited system still in operation, one missing disclosure notice — creates measurable enforcement exposure on day one of the deadline.

National implementation and enforcement begin immediately on August 2, 2026. Each EU member state has designated a national AI authority responsible for complaint intake, investigation, and penalty assessment. In India, [National AI Authority details]. These authorities are staffed and equipped to begin enforcement on August 2 — they do not wait for national regulations to be finalized or enforcement guidance to be published. The first enforcement actions will likely target the highest-impact, most visible violations: prohibited systems still in operation, high-risk hiring systems without documented assessment, and chatbots that fail to disclose AI use. Smaller or less visible violations will be addressed through complaint-driven enforcement, but the baseline assumption should be that enforcement begins immediately.

The most urgent remediation timeline is now until August 2, 2026. Businesses should immediately: conduct a complete inventory of all AI systems, identify high-risk and prohibited systems, remove any prohibited systems from production, complete conformity assessments for high-risk systems, implement transparency disclosures, establish human-review processes, and document all compliance activities. For businesses with high-risk systems already in production, this timeline is extremely compressed — you must complete risk assessment, bias testing, and remediation of identified issues within months, not years. Attempting to compress months of work into weeks creates quality risk (assessment documents become rubber stamps, bias testing becomes superficial) that invites regulatory scrutiny.

After August 2, 2026, compliance obligations become ongoing and permanent. You must maintain conformity assessments for high-risk systems, re-assess annually, conduct bias re-testing after model updates, monitor human-review patterns and escalation rates, maintain audit logs, handle individual requests for explanation and appeal, and respond to regulatory inquiries. The deadline of August 2 is not the end of compliance work — it is the beginning of continuous compliance as a permanent operational function.

India AI law deadlines

Already in effect
⚠️ EU AI Act prohibited-practices ban + AI literacy obligations (Art. 4) since February 2, 2025.
Already in effect
GPAI obligations (general-purpose AI models) since August 2, 2025.
August 2, 2026
⚠️ EU AI Act high-risk-AI obligations bite — full conformity assessment, CE marking, and registration required for systems serving India users.
August 2, 2027
Final phase: high-risk AI embedded in regulated products covered by NLF legislation.
72 hours
Personal-data breach notification window under GDPR (notify the India DPA).
Annual
Refresh DPIAs and bias assessments; review the supervisory authority's latest guidance for India.

More India resources

AI Compliance Checklist💰 AI Law Fines & Penalties📋 AI Compliance Requirements📖 AI Compliance Guide← All India resources

Other countries

Germany (EU)France (EU)Netherlands (EU)Spain (EU)Italy (EU)Sweden (EU)
Editorial standards

Sources verified against official .gov filings · Last verified Jun 18, 2026.

Official sources · India