News UK AI Regulation Developments 2026
The United Kingdom has continued its sector-specific approach to AI regulation in early 2026, with no comprehensive AI legislation enacted. Instead, developments have focused on implementing the Data (Use and Access) Act 2025, expanding regulatory sandboxes, and issuing guidance through existing regulators.[1]
Data (Use and Access) Act 2025
The DUAA's data protection provisions entered into force on February 5, 2026, making significant changes to UK GDPR and PECR enforcement:[2]
- Automated Decision-Making: Relaxed UK GDPR Article 22 rules, easing restrictions on solely automated decision-making
- Fines: PECR fines raised to GBP 17.5 million or 4% of global turnover
- Direct Marketing: Listed as a legitimate interest under the updated framework
- AI-Copyright: Government response to the AI-copyright consultation was due by March 18, 2026 under DUAA requirements[1]
The ICO oversees enforcement of these provisions.
No AI Bill
Despite being promised in the 2024 King's Speech, a comprehensive UK AI Bill has not materialized. DSIT Secretary Peter Kyle stated in June 2025 that legislation would be delayed beyond H2 2026. The government has instead emphasized AI Growth Zones and AI Labs as regulatory sandboxes.[1]
Financial Sector Developments
The Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) has been the most active UK regulator on AI in early 2026:
- January 27, 2026: FCA launched the "Mills Review," a long-term examination of AI's impact on retail financial services, including planned AI stress testing, 2026 guidance on consumer protection and SMCR accountability, and HM Treasury designation of AI/cloud providers under the UK Critical Third Parties regime.[3]
- March 26, 2026: FCA published its 2026/27 work programme, expanding the Supercharged Sandbox for AI-driven financial products using synthetic data, prioritizing experimentation over new rules.[3]
Cross-Regulator Coordination
- January 2026: DSIT and DBT issued strategic letters to 19 regulators (including FCA, Bank of England, and PRA), directing publication of AI innovation plans and annual progress reports to promote safe AI adoption.[3]
- February 25, 2026: The next AI Regulatory Lab was scheduled, enabling cross-regulator collaboration on AI through technical sandboxes under the sector-specific approach.[4]
ICO and CMA
As of April 2026, no court decisions or formal enforcement actions specific to AI have been reported from the ICO or CMA. Both regulators continue a principles-based oversight approach without a dedicated AI statute.[2][5]
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 Osborne Clarke, "Regulatory Outlook — January 2026: Artificial Intelligence"
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 WhiteHat SEO, "AI Policy Updates 2026"
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 Global Policy Watch, "UK Financial Services Regulators' Approach to AI in 2026" (April 2026)
- ↑ Two Birds Law, "AI Regulation in the UK: The Role of the Regulators" (2026)
- ↑ Bratby Law, "UK AI Regulation: What the Law Says"