HumanX to establish permanent European base with 2026 Amsterdam AI summit
John E. Kaye
- Published
- News

HumanX, one of the largest US artificial intelligence summits, is expanding to Europe with a new Amsterdam event in 2026. It will be the first permanent European base for a major U.S AI conference, reflecting the region’s growing weight in global AI strategy, investment, and regulation
HumanX, the U.S-based artificial intelligence conference, will launch a European edition in Amsterdam next year as it seeks to capitalise on the region’s growing role in AI policy and investment.
The event, HumanX EMEA, will be held at The RAI from 22 to 24 September 2026 and marks the first permanent European base for a major U.S AI summit.
The expansion comes amid record investment in European AI companies and growing regulatory influence through the EU AI Act. Venture funding for AI startups in Europe reached more than $8bn in 2024, according to industry data.
HumanX, created by the organisers of Money20/20, Shoptalk, and HLTH, has become one of the largest AI business events in the United States. Its most recent conference drew more than 6,000 attendees, including 350 speakers and 400 exhibitors.
The European edition is expected to attract about 2,500 delegates from industry, government, and finance. Confirmed speakers include Mike Krieger and Kevin Weil of Anthropic and OpenAI, the chief executives of Databricks, Mistral, and Synthesia, and senior investors from Sequoia Capital and Accel. Former US vice-president Kamala Harris is also listed among the keynote participants.
Stefan Weitz, chief executive of HumanX, said: “Europe is at a pivotal moment in AI, and it deserves a world-class platform that reflects its growing influence in shaping the future of artificial intelligence.
“European companies are incredibly innovative, but they need access to the same caliber of strategic insights and proven playbooks that are accelerating AI adoption globally. HumanX is built to meet this moment: a platform for solutions, partnerships, and action that helps leaders cut through barriers, align global momentum with European strengths, and drive AI forward in a way that’s responsible, ambitious, and uniquely European.”
Amsterdam was chosen as the European hub for its strategic position as a gateway between Europe, the Middle East, and global markets, combined with the “Netherlands’ progressive approach to AI governance and robust multilingual tech infrastructure”.
Maurits van der Sluis, a board member at RAI Amsterdam, said the event would “bring together the world’s AI community” and “inspire collaboration that benefits Amsterdam, the Netherlands, and beyond.”
HumanX will host smaller events across Europe ahead of the main conference. Registration for the Amsterdam summit opens early next year.
READ MORE: ‘Britain’s most powerful supercomputer to be built in Edinburgh in £750m push for AI research‘. The UK’s most advanced supercomputer is to be built in Edinburgh, Scotland, with up to £750 million in government funding confirmed by the Chancellor in yesterday’s Spending Review.
Do you have news to share or expertise to contribute? The European welcomes insights from business leaders and sector specialists. Get in touch with our editorial team to find out more.
Main image: Pixabay
RECENT ARTICLES
-
UK exposed by cyber omission in Spring Statement as threats intensify, ISF chief warns -
Sadiq Khan says Labour should back return to EU -
World’s most ethical companies revealed as 138 firms make 2026 list -
Celebrities who apologise after a scandal get a better reaction than those who deny it, study finds -
New 235-room hotel planned for Dublin’s Liberties after €54.2m funding deal -
Unclear AI rules risk driving talent away from UK employers, survey suggests -
Scotland’s oldest heritage charity launches £1.5m appeal to buy permanent Edinburgh home -
A dram good investment: Investors turning to whisky casks and gold -
Where Britain’s super-rich are buying as the nation’s priciest streets are revealed -
Global fraud summit told AI scams and sextortion are driving industrial-scale crime -
Boulder dash: AI thinks Giant’s Causeway rocks are day-trippers -
AI boom leaves many workers without the data skills employers now need -
Utilities faces communications talent flight as trust pressures intensify -
The Wolseley to open first hotel in New York as Minor launches global luxury brand -
Electric air taxis take step towards passenger reality after San Francisco Bay flight -
Cybersecurity becomes Britain’s most sought-after tech skill as pay and hiring surge -
New Brussels-Milan sleeper train to launch in September -
Germany’s Axel Springer buys 170-year-old Telegraph in £575m deal -
Christian Lindner to headline Vaduz finance forum as Liechtenstein banks confront market and geopolitical strain -
Wizz Air cleared to launch UK–US flights ahead of 2026 World Cup -
EU warns women face 50-year wait for equality as Brussels targets deepfakes, pay gaps and political exclusion -
AI now trusted to plan holidays more than work, shopping or health advice, survey finds -
Banijay and All3Media to merge in €4.4bn deal creating global TV production giant -
Abu Dhabi to build first Harry Potter land featuring both Hogwarts Castle and Diagon Alley -
Could AI finally mean fewer potholes? Swedish firm expands road-scanning technology across three continents


























