World Watch/Germany/Artificial Intelligence

Artificial Intelligence · Germany

Artificial Intelligence - Germany

Comprehensive lawEU Artificial Intelligence Act (Regulation (EU) 2024/1689), directly applicable in Germany, with national implementation via the draft 'KI-Marktüberwachungs- und Innovationsförderungsgesetz' (KI-MIG); Bundesnetzagentur designated as central market surveillance authority.

As an EU member state, Germany is governed by the directly-applicable EU AI Act, a comprehensive, risk-based horizontal law whose prohibitions and GPAI rules already apply and whose high-risk obligations apply from 2 August 2026. Germany is enacting a national implementation law (KI-MIG), approved by the Federal Cabinet on 11 February 2026, that designates the Bundesnetzagentur as the central national competent and market surveillance authority while preserving sectoral supervisors. The framework is complemented by Germany's national AI strategy under the Hightech Agenda Deutschland.

EU AI Act as baseline

The EU AI Act (Regulation 2024/1689) is directly applicable in Germany. It is a comprehensive, risk-tiered law: prohibited practices and AI-literacy duties have applied since 2 February 2025, GPAI-model obligations since 2 August 2025, and most high-risk and transparency obligations apply from 2 August 2026.

National implementation law (KI-MIG)

On 11 February 2026 the Federal Cabinet approved the draft 'KI-Marktüberwachungs- und Innovationsförderungsgesetz' (KI-MIG) / Gesetz zur Durchführung der KI-Verordnung, which sets national competent authorities, innovation-promotion measures (e.g. regulatory sandboxes) and the penalty regime; it is proceeding through the Bundestag.

Lead authority: Bundesnetzagentur

The Federal Network Agency (Bundesnetzagentur) is designated as Germany's central market surveillance authority, notifying authority and single point of contact, hosting a Coordination and Competence Centre (KoKIVO) and an independent AI Market Surveillance Chamber (UKIM).

Hybrid sectoral supervision

Germany adopts a hybrid model: rather than a single new AI authority, existing sectoral regulators retain competence in their fields — notably BaFin as market surveillance authority for high-risk AI tied to regulated financial activities — coordinated centrally through Bundesnetzagentur.

Data-protection overlay

AI systems processing personal data remain subject to the GDPR and the German Federal Data Protection Act (BDSG), enforced by federal and Länder data-protection authorities, which operate alongside the AI Act framework.

National AI strategy

Beyond binding law, Germany pursues an AI policy agenda within the Hightech Agenda Deutschland, targeting roughly 10% of value creation via AI and over 50% AI uptake among manufacturing SMEs, with implementation roadmaps launched in 2026.

Machine-assisted translation · verified 5/23/2026 · orientation, not legal advice. English version →