Every change, as a redline
See the literal before/after of the rule text — deletions struck in red, insertions marked — with the affected products and the required action attached. No summary you have to trust blind.
Regulatory change management · for SME compliance
RegDelta runs an agent across your regulators every day and keeps a citation-pinned obligation map current: redline diffs of what changed, who it affects, and the deadline. The audit-ready record, not another newsletter.
The problem
A missed effective date isn't atypo. It's a career-level liability.
State-level fragmentation in privacy, AI, and licensing has made a one-person compliance function impossible to run on Google Alerts and a spreadsheet. RegDelta turns that firehose into a maintained record you can hand an examiner.
You can't cite a chatbot to an examiner. Every obligation node pins the exact source text, citation, and effective date — versioned, not regenerated.
An immutable "we detected rule X on date Y and acted" history is the artifact you show in an exam — and the reason cancelling costs you your defensibility record.
Federal Register, eCFR, and agency dockets are openly crawlable — immune to the bot-blocking wall now strangling general-web agents.
Onboarding compiles your products × jurisdictions × license types into a monitored primary-source set. From there it runs on a schedule, every day.
Content-hash and structure-aware diffing across Federal Register, eCFR, agency dockets, and state bulletins detects the exact text that changed since the last snapshot.
A cheap-model pass classifies each diff against your company profile, then a frontier pass drafts a change card. An entailment check runs before anything publishes.
Topic-scoped obligation articles update with a redline against prior rule text, affected products, required action, and deadline — high-materiality items alert immediately, the rest land in a weekly digest.
Web SaaS as the source of truth — obligation map, redline diffs, immutable change log, examiner-facing export — with Slack and email delta alerts.
See the literal before/after of the rule text — deletions struck in red, insertions marked — with the affected products and the required action attached. No summary you have to trust blind.
"BNPL lending — California." "Data privacy — Texas." Each obligation node carries pinned source text, effective date, comment deadline, and a full version history that only grows.
High-materiality changes alert immediately to Slack and email. Everything else batches into one weekly digest — so the signal never drowns in noise.
Full versioned change history exports as an examiner-facing PDF or CSV audit log — "detected on, classified as, acted by." It's the defensibility record an exam asks for, and the reason this is a system of record rather than a feed. Gated to paid tiers, because it's the retention asset.
Before an edit goes live, an entailment check and deterministic validators confirm dates parse, citations resolve, and the summary is actually supported by the cited source text. RegDelta is built for high recall on material changes — but no automated system catches everything, so high-materiality cards pass through an editorial review queue, and the export exists precisely so a human can verify the chain.
RegDelta launches focused on one regulatory domain and a defined set of jurisdictions, done at audit quality — not a shallow "everything" promise it can't keep.
The Federal Register API, regulations.gov, and eCFR XML are open and machine-readable — the backbone of clean, structure-aware redlines.
State regulator bulletins and legislature trackers, expanding jurisdiction by jurisdiction. Some state admin codes sit behind restrictive portals — we're upfront about which states get full redlines versus citation-and-alert.
The honest version of this product is a single vertical — say consumer lending or money transmission — across a focused set of jurisdictions, human-QA'd, rather than a 50-state "we never miss anything" claim no small team can deliver at launch. Coverage grows by jurisdiction and domain; pricing follows that same axis. We'd rather tell you a state is "cite-and-alert only" than imply a redline we can't stand behind.
Three tiers, with the expansion axis priced per jurisdiction and per client — because seats don't grow on a 1–3 person team, regulation does. Indicative pre-launch pricing.
One regulatory domain, 3 jurisdictions. The obligation map and redline change cards.
15 jurisdictions, real-time Slack alerts, and the examiner-facing audit export.
For fractional-compliance consultancies and accounting firms managing many clients.
Pre-launch pricing, shown for reference. Land with a free 30-day regulatory exposure scan that maps your obligations before you pay. Annual prepay planned (2 months free).
RegDelta is engineered for high recall on material changes: every published change card pins the exact source text and citation, and passes an entailment check plus deterministic validators (dates parse, citations resolve, the summary is supported by the source) before going live. High-materiality items also route through an editorial review queue. That said — no automated monitoring system catches every change, and the fatal error class for any such tool is omission, which a summary check cannot detect. RegDelta is a research and monitoring tool that makes your review faster and defensible; it is not a substitute for your own compliance judgment, and you remain responsible for what you file.
Federal sources (Federal Register, eCFR, regulations.gov, agency dockets) are open and structured, so they get full redline diffs. State coverage expands jurisdiction by jurisdiction; some state administrative codes are published through restrictive third-party portals, so for those we're explicit about which states get full redlines versus citation-and-alert. We launch deep in one domain and a defined jurisdiction set rather than promising shallow 50-state coverage we couldn't stand behind in an exam.
General chatbots are stateless, don't track effective dates, and produce citation errors that are fatal in compliance — you can't show a regenerating answer to an examiner. Alerts and law-firm newsletters tell you something happened, not the redline, the applicability, or the deadline. Enterprise RCM (the kind sold to banks) is quote-only and far out of an SME budget. RegDelta sits in the gap: a maintained obligation map with an immutable, versioned audit trail, priced for a 1–3 person team.
No. RegDelta is a regulatory research and monitoring tool. It surfaces and organizes primary-source material so your compliance team can act faster — it does not interpret the law for your specific situation, does not constitute legal advice, and does not create an attorney–client relationship. For decisions that carry legal consequence, consult qualified counsel.
RegDelta · coming soon
RegDelta is pre-launch. Join the waitlist for early access and a free regulatory exposure scan that maps your obligations from your company profile — before you pay anything.
No spam. Waitlist form is illustrative pre-launch — early-access onboarding opens soon.