The EU AI Act introduces the first comprehensive legal framework for artificial intelligence (AI).
While it applies across industries, HR teams are directly affected because many common tools involve decisions about people, hiring, promotion, performance and workforce management – many of which will be managed by ‘high-risk’ tools under the EU AI Act.
Worryingly, many HR and L&D teams don’t know much, if anything, about the EU AI Act, meaning they could be falling foul of the new regulations.
If you’re new to the EU AI Act or want to make sure you’re handling it correctly, we’ve put together a practical FAQ guide to what HR and L&D leaders actually need to know.
The EU AI Act is a risk-based law that regulates artificial intelligence depending on the level of risk it poses to people.
It groups AI systems into four categories:
The higher the risk, the more obligations organisations must meet.
Yes – despite the fact the UK is no longer part of the EU, the EU AI Act applies to UK businesses.
The EU AI Act applies to:
This means UK businesses are in scope if they:
It has a similar extraterritorial reach to GDPR.
For instance, even though 5app is based in the UK, the EU AI Act still applies to our AI solutions.
HR is one of the most heavily affected areas of the legislation. Even though ‘high risk’ sounds alarming, it’s more focused on the obligations of AI vendors and the organisations using them to mitigate any potential risks.
AI systems are considered high risk if they are used for things like:
In simple terms: according to the EU Annex III, if AI influences a decision about someone’s job or career, it is likely high risk.
If an HR system is classified as high risk, organisations must be able to demonstrate:
The intention is that AI-driven decisions about people can be explained, audited and challenged.
Meaningful human oversight isn’t just a formality. It means the human involved in the decision:
The goal is to avoid automation bias, where people trust AI outputs without critical thinking.
For instance, it’s not enough for an administrator to accept an AI hiring platform’s candidate recommendations without reading or understanding them. A real human with the right knowledge, authority and competence must properly review the recommendations to ensure they are fit for purpose.
In HR terms, AI should support decisions with useful information and data, not replace human judgement.
No — this is a common misconception.
Many HR AI tools fall into the limited-risk category, which focuses mainly on transparency.
These often include:
The key requirement in the limited-risk category is that users must know they are interacting with AI.
When used as intended, 5app’s AI solutions VeeCoach, VeeCreate and Helix fall into the limited-risk category, as they don’t make recommendations that would affect a human user. For instance, while Helix monitors workplace behaviours, it is used as a personal development tool rather than, for example, recommending an employee for a promotion or making disciplinary decisions.
If AI is used in HR processes, organisations must ensure employees and candidates understand:
This applies even when historical or legacy employee data is analysed by AI systems. Transparency is a core legal requirement according to the EU AI Act, not a best practice.
Responsibility is shared.
HR teams can’t and shouldn’t rely solely on vendor assurances. Organisations should carry out due diligence to ensure they understand the risk level of their AI tools so that end users can make informed decisions about whether or how they use these tools.
Even if a tool is compliant by design, organisations remain responsible for how it is deployed in real-world decisions. For instance, for our own AI platforms like Helix, we ensure that customers are provided with the right information and training to use it responsibly and as it’s intended to be used. We are also very clear where AI is used and how it’s used across our products.
The most important first step for HR teams looking to adhere to the EU AI Act is to build an AI inventory, covering:
From there, organisations can build governance, oversight and documentation where it matters most.
You don’t need a complex framework on day one, but you do need clarity.
The Act is already law, but it’s being introduced in phases:
Some areas may transition further into 2027–2028 depending on system type and implementation pathway. The European Commission AI policy overview is a good place to start for the most up-to-date timelines.
The EU AI Act isn’t about stopping AI adoption in HR, and it shouldn’t put off HR and L&D teams looking to use AI as part of their processes and strategies.
Instead, it’s about ensuring that when AI influences ‘people decisions’, organisations:
The organisations that succeed will not necessarily be those using the most AI, but those using it most responsibly.