AI Agents Under EU Law
Luca Nannini, Adam Leon Smith, Michele Joshua Maggini, Enrico Panai, Sandra Feliciano, Aleksandr Tiulkanov, Elena Maran, James Gealy, Piercosma Bisconti

TL;DR
This paper systematically maps EU regulations affecting autonomous AI agents, proposing a compliance framework and highlighting challenges in ensuring legal adherence for high-risk systems.
Contribution
It offers the first comprehensive regulatory mapping and a practical compliance architecture for AI agent providers under multiple EU legal frameworks.
Findings
High-risk AI agents with behavioral drift cannot meet AI Act requirements.
A twelve-step compliance architecture is proposed for regulatory adherence.
Mapping agent actions to legislation aids compliance efforts.
Abstract
AI agents - i.e. AI systems that autonomously plan, invoke external tools, and execute multi-step action chains with reduced human involvement - are being deployed at scale across enterprise functions ranging from customer service and recruitment to clinical decision support and critical infrastructure management. The EU AI Act (Regulation 2024/1689) regulates these systems through a risk-based framework, but it does not operate in isolation: providers face simultaneous obligations under the GDPR, the Cyber Resilience Act, the Digital Services Act, the Data Act, the Data Governance Act, sector-specific legislation, the NIS2 Directive, and the revised Product Liability Directive. This paper provides the first systematic regulatory mapping for AI agent providers integrating (a) draft harmonised standards under Standardisation Request M/613 to CEN/CENELEC JTC 21 as of January 2026, (b) the…
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