The EU AI Act imposes dozens of concrete duties per high-risk system. Most organisations hold them as a PDF and a vague sense of dread — with no owner, no due date, and no evidence that any of it is actually done.
Duties sit between legal, product, and engineering — so each assumes another team has it.
Without due dates, nobody knows what's overdue until an auditor or regulator asks.
Doing the work isn't enough — you need the evidence attached to each duty, ready to show.
Each applicable duty becomes a line item with an owner and a due date — so the EU AI Act stops being a PDF and becomes work you can manage.
No more "someone should" — each obligation has an accountable owner, so nothing lives in the gap between teams.
Due dates drive alerts on what's slipping, so you fix gaps on your own timeline — not under audit pressure.
Attach the evidence that a duty is met to the obligation itself, so a "done" status is always backed by something you can show.
Obligations Manager is the accountability layer that grew out of AI Compliance. Compliance tells you what the frameworks require and where you stand; Obligations Manager turns that into who does what by when, and holds the evidence that it happened.
Explore AI Compliance →