🔴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|
In Effect (Jan 22, 2026)
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AI Act Compliance in South Korea

South Korea's AI Basic Act — the first comprehensive national AI framework in Asia — took effect on January 22, 2026, with a one-year grace period before fines are enforced. Operators must determine whether their system is 'high-impact AI' (used in healthcare, hiring, biometrics, or public services) and, if so, provide explanations of outputs, ensure human oversight, and run risk and fundamental-rights impact assessments. All providers must label AI-generated content and disclose AI interaction; large foreign providers must appoint a Korea-based domestic representative. Administrative fines reach KRW 30 million.

By · Legal research team
Published Reviewed
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⚠️ Maximum penalty: Administrative fines up to KRW 30 million
Deadline: Effective January 22, 2026 (fines after a one-year grace period)

The EU AI Act enters into force on August 2, 2026, creating a unified regulatory framework for artificial intelligence across all 27 EU member states and the European Economic Area. Unlike the patchwork of US state laws, the EU AI Act is a single directive with direct applicability — companies serving EU customers cannot negotiate compliance state-by-state. The regulatory environment is layered: existing data-protection obligations under GDPR remain in force and interact with new AI-specific requirements. The EU AI Act imposes transparency, documentation, and risk-assessment obligations regardless of where the company is incorporated, making it effectively extra-territorial for any business with EU users, customers, or employees.

The EU AI Act uses a risk-based compliance framework that escalates with system impact. The framework identifies four risk tiers: prohibited AI systems (facial recognition in law enforcement, social credit scoring, subliminal manipulation); high-risk systems (hiring, benefits determination, law enforcement, biometric identification, facial emotion recognition); limited-risk systems (chatbots and transparent AI); and minimal-risk systems (game AI, spam filters). High-risk systems require pre-deployment impact assessments, bias and fairness testing, documented risk mitigation, human oversight mechanisms, and transparency to end users. Limited-risk systems require transparency disclosures. The tiered approach means compliance effort scales with AI risk — but almost any business AI system will land in the high-risk or limited-risk category, triggering active obligations.

Penalties for non-compliance are severe: up to €35 million or 7% of global annual turnover, whichever is higher. Fines accumulate per violation, and per-decision violations (e.g., a non-compliant AI system used in 1,000 hiring decisions) can multiply exposure. Unlike US state laws where compliance is sector-specific, the EU AI Act applies uniformly across all industries — healthcare, finance, government, retail, recruitment, all face the same framework. Some member states have enacted opt-out rights for citizens, allowing individuals to request human-only decisions in high-risk contexts. The financial and operational stakes make EU AI Act compliance a separate, high-priority workstream from US state-law compliance.

Compliance with the EU AI Act is not a forward-looking exercise — August 2, 2026 is the enforcement start date. Businesses should treat this deadline the same way they treated GDPR's May 25, 2018 enforcement date: as a hard cutoff after which non-compliance creates daily exposure. National data-protection authorities and AI-specific regulators (newly established in many member states) will begin accepting complaints and conducting audits immediately upon enforcement. The most effective compliance strategy is to conduct an immediate AI inventory, prioritize high-risk systems for pre-deployment assessment, complete bias and fairness testing, and establish documentation and human-review processes before August 2. Attempting remediation after enforcement has begun creates longer periods of documented non-compliance and higher penalty exposure.

Applicable laws

📜 Basic Act on the Development of AI and Establishment of Trust (AI Basic Act, effective Jan 22, 2026)
📜 AI Basic Act Enforcement Decree (MSIT)
📜 Personal Information Protection Act (PIPA)
● Live

Recent AI law developments in South Korea

Updated June 17, 2026

Recent news coverage of AI regulation and policy in South Korea. Headlines are aggregated automatically; follow each link for the full story.

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Coverage from Caspian Post on AI legislation and regulation relevant to South Korea.

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MLex
May 7, 2026
South Korea passes special law to speed AI data-center expansion

Coverage from MLex on AI legislation and regulation relevant to South Korea.

MLex·
Checklist
Fines
Requirements
Guide
Deadline

US-based? Check your state laws too

If you're a US company serving South Korea customers, you need to comply with both your state's AI laws and the EU AI Act.

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High-risk industries under EU AI Act

🏥 Healthcare
🏦 Finance
👔 HR & Hiring
🛡️ Insurance
⚖️ Legal
🎓 Education

Other EU countries

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

Sources verified against official .gov filings · Last verified Jun 16, 2026.

Official sources · South Korea