WSC LegalWSC Legal
  • Firm
    • Cultural values
    • Associations
    • Community
  • Expertise
    • Practices
      • Administrative and Regulatory
      • Antitrust
      • Banking and Finance
      • Compliance
      • Corporate
      • Employment and Labor
      • Environmental
      • Insolvency and debtor-creditor
      • Litigation and Dispute Resolution
      • Mergers and Acquisitions
      • Tax and Trade
      • IT & Digital law
    • Industries
      • Agriculture and Fishing
      • Consumer Products and Retail
      • Entertainment
      • Financial Services
      • Manufacturing and Industry
      • Mining, Energy, Oil And Gas
      • ​Pharmaceuticals & Healthcare
      • Commercial Real Estate
      • The Digital Economy
    • Additional Services
  • Talent
    • Team
    • Internships and career
  • Insights
  • Contact
  • English
How Will the EU AI Act Impact Latin America?
Pilar Durante2026-05-11T10:29:42-03:00
Argentina Legal Buzz, IT & Digital Law

Check out the latest news on laws and regulations.

Insights

  Back

How Will the EU AI Act Impact Latin America?

How Will the EU AI Act Impact Latin America?

The EU Artificial Intelligence Act (EU AI Act) entered into force on August 1, 2024, establishing a common European regulatory and legal framework for AI. On August 2, 2026, the bulk of obligations for AI systems will come into effect—making this a critical date for corporate compliance.

For the entire digital industry and international companies operating in Latin America, this is a groundbreaking regulation. The EU AI Act is poised to become a key standard defining the use of AI technology on a global scale.

1. Cross-Border Reach: How does it Affect Us?

One of the most consequential features of the EU AI Act is its extraterritorial reach. Building on the model established by the GDPR, the EU AI Act rules do not apply based on the location of physical infrastructure. Instead, the regulation applies to providers that market AI systems in the EU as well as providers and deployers in third countries whenever the output of their AI systems is used in the European Union.

In practice, if a Latin American company develops or uses an AI system to assess creditworthiness, manage human resources, or analyze behavioral data, and that system is offered to users in the EU or produces outputs used there, the system falls within the scope of the regulation.

2. The Risk Pyramid: Where does Your Technology Fit?

The EU AI Act takes a risk-based approach, with obligations that apply regardless of company size. By August 2026, companies subject to the regulation must have audited and classified their AI systems according to the following tiers.

Prohibited Practices

At the top of the pyramid, certain AI practices are banned outright as incompatible with fundamental rights. These include, for example, social scoring, subliminal, manipulative, or deceptive techniques to distort behavior, exploitation of vulnerabilities related to age, disability or socioeconomic status, untargeted scraping of images from the internet or CCTV to build facial recognition databases, and “real-time” remote biometric identification by law enforcement in public spaces (subject to narrow exceptions). These prohibitions have been in force across the EU since February 2025.

High Risk

This is the core focus of the EU AI Act’s compliance framework. High-risk AI systems include certain AI used in biometrics, critical infrastructure, education and vocational training, employment and human resources management, access to essential services, law enforcement, migration and border control, and the administration of justice and democratic processes, among other areas (the list may be expanded by the European Commission). These systems require a comprehensive compliance infrastructure that encompasses risk management, data traceability, and effective human oversight.

Limited Risk

This category includes tools such as chatbots and generative AI. The main obligation is transparency: users must be informed that they are interacting with an automated system, and synthetic or manipulated content in many cases must be labeled as such.

3. Impact on the Value Chain and Competitiveness

The full implementation of the EU AI Act in 2026 will transform international procurement. European companies are already incorporating EU AI Act-related compliance clauses into their procurement policies. Latin American companies that fail to certify the compliance of their systems may be excluded from tenders and global supply chains.

Likewise, entities outside the EU operating high-risk systems subject to the regulation will be required to appoint a legal representative within the EU, who will act as the technical and legal liaison with regulatory authorities.

4. AI Regulatory Sandboxes

A notable feature of the EU AI Act is that it introduces controlled testing environments, known as regulatory “sandboxes” (Articles 57-59). These are environments where companies can test their models under the guidance of regulators prior to launch. Each Member State must operate at least one sandbox by August 2026.

For the Latin American tech ecosystem, aligning with these standards is a strategic opportunity. Sandboxes also offer something the rest of the regime does not: early access to regulator interpretation, a structured path to conformity assessment, and an entry point into the EU market without committing to a full-scale launch.

5. Financial and Regulatory Risk Management

The rigor of the EU AI Act is reflected in its enforcement regime. Fines may reach up to 35 million euros or 7% of a company’s global annual turnover. This scale elevates AI governance to a top priority in compliance programs across the region.

Final Considerations

August 2026 marks one of the final stages in the implementation of the EU AI Act, which began in 2024. Adapting to these standards should not be interpreted as an administrative burden, but rather as an investment in operational resilience and a commitment to leading the way into the future. Latin American organizations that adopt these principles early on will not only mitigate critical legal risks, but will also position themselves as leaders in a global economy that demands responsible and transparent technology.

Search

Últimas Noticias

New Tax Rules Affecting Argentine Real Estate Investments
New Tax Rules Affecting Argentine Real Estate Investments
International Successions: European Union vs. Mercosur
International Successions: European Union vs. Mercosur
How Will the EU AI Act Impact Latin America?
How Will the EU AI Act Impact Latin America?
Argentina’s New Glacier Protection Law
Argentina’s New Glacier Protection Law
Mercosur-EU Agreement: It’s Really Going to Happen Starting May 1
Mercosur-EU Agreement: It’s Really Going to Happen Starting May 1
Labor Modernization Law in Argentina: Takeaways for Employers
Labor Modernization Law: Takeaways for Employers

Áreas de Práctica

Data, Digital and AI law & governance
Tax and Trade
Mergers and Acquisitions
Litigation and Dispute Resolution
Insolvency and debtor-creditor
Environmental law
View More

More information

If you would like to discuss this matter with the attorneys at Wiener Soto Caparros, please do not hesitate to contact our authors.

Pablo Sylvester | Wiener Soto Caparros
Tom Standifer | WSC Legal

Pablo Sylvester

   

Tom Standifer

   

Subscribe to our

newsletter


    Disclaimer

    This article is based on publicly available information and is for informational purposes only. It is not intended to provide legal advice or an exhaustive analysis of the issues it mentions.


    Related Posts

    Milei Government Announces Golden Passport Opportunity for Investors Who Make Significant Financial Investments in Argentina

    Golden Visa for Foreign Investors in Argentina

    Check out the latest news on laws an... read more

    President Milei Executive Order 70/23

    President Milei Executive Order 70/23

    Check out the latest news on laws an... read more


    San Martín 140, Piso 18

    Buenos Aires, Argentina (C1004AAD)

    Phone:

    +54 11 5365-8355

    E-mail:

    info@wsclegal.com

    Connect with us


    • Company
    • Expertise
    • Talent
    • Insights
    • Contact
    • Privacy Policy
    WSC Legal © Copyright 2026. All Rights Reserved.
    • Firm
      • Cultural values
      • Associations
      • Community
    • Expertise
      • Practices
        • Administrative and Regulatory
        • Antitrust
        • Banking and Finance
        • Compliance
        • Corporate
        • Employment and Labor
        • Environmental
        • Insolvency and debtor-creditor
        • Litigation and Dispute Resolution
        • Mergers and Acquisitions
        • Tax and Trade
        • IT & Digital law
      • Industries
        • Agriculture and Fishing
        • Consumer Products and Retail
        • Entertainment
        • Financial Services
        • Manufacturing and Industry
        • Mining, Energy, Oil And Gas
        • ​Pharmaceuticals & Healthcare
        • Commercial Real Estate
        • The Digital Economy
      • Additional Services
    • Talent
      • Team
      • Internships and career
    • Insights
    • Contact
    • English
    Manage Consent
    To provide the best experiences, we use technologies like cookies to store and/or access device information. Consenting to these technologies will allow us to process data such as browsing behavior or unique IDs on this site. Not consenting or withdrawing consent, may adversely affect certain features and functions.
    Functional Always active
    The technical storage or access is strictly necessary for the legitimate purpose of enabling the use of a specific service explicitly requested by the subscriber or user, or for the sole purpose of carrying out the transmission of a communication over an electronic communications network.
    Preferences
    The technical storage or access is necessary for the legitimate purpose of storing preferences that are not requested by the subscriber or user.
    Statistics
    The technical storage or access that is used exclusively for statistical purposes. The technical storage or access that is used exclusively for anonymous statistical purposes. Without a subpoena, voluntary compliance on the part of your Internet Service Provider, or additional records from a third party, information stored or retrieved for this purpose alone cannot usually be used to identify you.
    Marketing
    The technical storage or access is required to create user profiles to send advertising, or to track the user on a website or across several websites for similar marketing purposes.
    • Manage options
    • Manage services
    • Manage {vendor_count} vendors
    • Read more about these purposes
    View preferences
    • {title}
    • {title}
    • {title}