🔴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|

United Arab Emirates AI Compliance Checklist

Step-by-step actions every business serving customers in this country must take to meet EU AI Act and local rules.

Strategy-led; binding data-protection lawDeadline: Strategy-led; PDPL in force (Executive Regulations phasing in)Penalty: PDPL administrative fines set by Cabinet decision; DIFC fines up to US$100,000+ per contravention
By · Legal research team
Published Reviewed

How AI law works in United Arab Emirates

The UAE leads on AI strategy rather than binding AI legislation: it appointed the world's first Minister of State for AI in 2017 and runs the National Strategy for AI 2031. There is no federal AI Act, so AI obligations flow from data-protection law — Federal Decree-Law No. 45 of 2021 (the PDPL), overseen by the UAE Data Office, plus the financial-free-zone regimes DIFC (whose Data Protection Law No. 5 of 2020 has specific rules on autonomous and automated decision-making) and ADGM. Emirate-level instruments such as Dubai's 2024 Charter for the Development and Use of AI add voluntary ethics principles. Businesses should treat the PDPL and free-zone laws as the enforceable baseline while AI-specific rules remain policy.

Applicable laws

An EU AI Act compliance checklist for United Arab Emirates businesses begins with system identification and inventory. Document every AI system your organization deploys or relies on — include third-party tools (marketing automation, recommendation engines, fraud detection, hiring assessments, content moderation), internal models, and any system that makes automated decisions affecting EU residents. For each system, record: what it does, what data it uses, whether it qualifies as high-risk under the EU AI Act, and whether you built it or procured it from a vendor. This inventory is the compliance foundation — you cannot manage risk for systems you have not documented.

Step two is risk-level assessment and documentation obligation. For each system in your inventory, determine whether it meets the EU AI Act's definition of high-risk. High-risk categories include: systems used in hiring, promotion, performance monitoring, or firing; systems used for benefits eligibility (loans, insurance, social services); systems used in law enforcement, criminal risk assessment, or immigration; systems used for biometric identification or facial recognition; and systems that materially impact legal rights or safety. If a system is high-risk, you must complete a documented conformity assessment before it goes into production, addressing bias testing, model explainability, data-quality assessment, and human-oversight design. If the system has already deployed and is high-risk, you must complete this assessment immediately and prepare remediation.

Step three is transparency and user-rights implementation. For limited-risk systems (chatbots, transparent AI tools), you must disclose to end users that they are interacting with AI and provide information about the system's capabilities and limitations. For high-risk systems, you must go further: provide clear, accessible notice to individuals subject to AI decisions, explain how the AI system works, disclose the personal data being used, and provide a mechanism for individuals to request human review or appeal the AI decision. In United Arab Emirates, this transparency obligation is enforceable directly by end users — a failure to provide required disclosures creates both regulatory exposure and private civil liability for breach of individual rights.

Step four is ongoing monitoring and human-oversight deployment. For high-risk systems, you must establish a process by which individuals can escalate AI-driven decisions to a human decision-maker with authority to override and provide a substantive review. This human-review process must be monitored: log every escalation, review escalation patterns monthly to identify when the AI system is consistently overridden (a sign of miscalibration), and retrain the model if needed. You must also maintain audit logs of every high-risk AI decision for at least three years, capturing inputs, model version, confidence scores, and reviewer notes. These logs are evidence of compliance and a key defense against penalty allegations.

Step five is governance, vendor management, and readiness for inspection. Designate a compliance owner and establish a schedule for annual risk re-assessment and bias re-testing of high-risk systems. If you use third-party AI vendors, review their documentation of conformity assessment, bias testing, and data-protection practices — if they cannot provide it, treat the deployment as high-risk and conduct assessment yourself. Maintain a written compliance manual describing your AI systems, how you assess and mitigate risk, how you handle human review, and how you meet transparency obligations. This manual is both an operational guide and evidence of good-faith compliance — regulators and private litigants will ask for it. By August 2, 2026, your organization should be prepared for a regulatory inspection covering all high-risk systems.

The United Arab Emirates AI compliance checklist

Disclosure & transparency

Notify United Arab Emirates users when AI is part of a consequential decision affecting them, in plain language and before the decision is final.
Label AI-generated text, image, audio, or video content (Article 50, EU AI Act) where a reasonable person could be misled.
Maintain an internal register of all AI systems serving United Arab Emirates users, including purpose, model, and risk classification.
Publish a public-facing AI usage statement on your website covering United Arab Emirates.

Risk classification & assessment

Classify each AI system against United Arab Emirates's national framework. Where rules are sector-specific, layer applicable EU/UK obligations on top.
Run a Data Protection Impact Assessment (DPIA) under GDPR Article 35 / equivalent for any system that profiles or makes automated decisions about people.
Document training data sources, validation, and testing — regulators in United Arab Emirates can request the technical file.
Implement bias / fairness testing across protected categories (race, gender, age, disability, religion).

Governance & accountability

Designate an EU representative if your business is established outside the EU (EU AI Act Art. 22 / GDPR Art. 27).
Cooperate with the local supervisory authority — for United Arab Emirates this is typically the national DPA plus an AI-specific competent authority.
Adopt an AI acceptable-use policy and require staff acknowledgement.
Stand up an incident-response procedure: within 72h GDPR breach window, plus EU AI Act serious-incident reporting.

Technical controls

Apply data minimization to all prompts/inputs sent to AI vendors.
Sign a DPA + EU AI Act compliance addendum with every AI vendor.
Enable detailed audit logging for AI-assisted decisions.
Build a contestation / human-review path for adverse automated decisions, satisfying GDPR Art. 22.

More United Arab Emirates resources

💰 AI Law Fines & Penalties📋 AI Compliance Requirements📖 AI Compliance Guide AI Law Deadlines← All United Arab Emirates 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 · United Arab Emirates