Purchase questions

First-visit answers for buyers who want clarity before they email.

This page is written for first-time visitors. It explains what Kairos Route is, which offer fits, how buying works, what buyers receive, and where the commercial boundaries sit before any written conversation starts.

01

Start here

What is Kairos Route?

Kairos Route is a Spain-based B2B brand built around three workflow offers: Kairos Route Compass, Kairos Route Workbench, and Kairos Route Agency Rights.

The brand is designed for teams that need a cleaner route through EU AI Act triage, drafting, and repeatable delivery decisions inside AI environments they already control.

Who is it built for?

It is built for B2B buyers: founders, internal compliance or policy teams, consultancies, legal-adjacent operators, and specialist service firms.

It is not positioned as consumer software or as a mass-market SaaS signup for casual users.

Is this software I log into?

No. Compass and Workbench are delivered packages used inside the buyer's own AI environment, and Agency Rights is a contractual add-on tied to a base package.

The public website does not sell a hosted Kairos Route application or a managed runtime service.

Do I need prior EU AI Act expertise before buying?

No. The offers are built to reduce the distance between uncertainty and structured action.

The deeper the case, the more useful prior expertise becomes, but the point of the commercial pack is to give teams a disciplined operating route rather than a blank page.

Is this legal advice or guaranteed compliance?

No. These offers are workflow and drafting tools, not legal advice, legal sign-off, or guaranteed compliance certification.

They are designed to improve structure and speed. Formal legal accountability still sits with the buyer and any qualified counsel they choose to involve.

02

Choosing the right offer

Which offer should most buyers start with?

Most first-time buyers should start with Compass when they need lower-friction triage, role mapping, and a structured first route.

Workbench is the better starting point when the team already knows it needs deeper specialist execution rather than an initial orientation pass.

When is Workbench the better fit than Compass?

Workbench is the stronger fit when the work is more demanding, the operators are more advanced, and the buyer wants a deeper expert package for a Claude-compatible environment.

Compass is intentionally lighter. Workbench exists for buyers who do not want to outgrow the package after the first serious use case.

When should Agency Rights be added?

Agency Rights should be added when Compass or Workbench will be used repeatedly across multiple external client engagements.

If the use stays internal to one organization, a base package without Agency Rights is usually the correct route.

Is Agency Rights a standalone product?

No. Agency Rights is an annual add-on tied to Compass or Workbench.

It extends service-delivery rights for client work. It is not sold as standalone software and it does not replace the base package.

Can a buyer combine offers later?

Yes. A buyer can start with Compass and later move into Workbench, or add Agency Rights when the delivery model changes.

The point of the product ladder is to let the commercial route become deeper only when the buyer actually needs that depth.

03

Buying and delivery

What is the current public pricing?

Compass is listed publicly at €39 launch.

Workbench is listed publicly at €490 launch, and Agency Rights at €2,500/year launch.

Why is Compass more self-serve while Workbench and Agency Rights are contact-led?

Compass is the lightest entry route, so it can use checkout when that path is live.

Workbench and Agency Rights stay contact-led because scope, covered package, and usage rights need to be explicit in writing before delivery.

Which AI environment does each product require?

Compass is built for the buyer's own ChatGPT environment.

Workbench is built for the buyer's own Claude-compatible environment. Agency Rights is not software; it is the contractual add-on that sits on top of a base package.

What do buyers receive in the first delivery?

Buyers receive the packaged files, setup guidance, and written commercial context attached to the offer they purchased.

For contact-led sales, the order, license position, and covered rights are clarified in writing before files are released.

How quickly can a team get first value?

Compass is designed to create movement quickly, especially for first-pass triage and role mapping.

Workbench is better when the team already knows it needs deeper structured drafting rather than an initial diagnosis.

Does Kairos Route process our internal data on its own infrastructure?

The public offers are designed around buyer-controlled AI environments rather than a Kairos Route-hosted application.

That means the working environment sits with the buyer, while Kairos Route delivers the package, guidance, and commercial terms around it.

04

Use and rights

Can our internal team use the outputs?

Yes. The standard route is internal organizational use within the buyer's own operations.

Agency Rights only becomes relevant when delivery spans multiple external clients.

Can we use the package across multiple client engagements?

Yes, but only when the covered base package is paired with Agency Rights.

Without that add-on, the standard route is internal use by the buyer rather than repeated multi-client delivery.

Can we redistribute or white-label the package itself?

No. Buyers may deliver resulting work product within their own professional responsibility, but they may not redistribute the underlying package as if it were the client's product.

Agency Rights extends service-delivery rights. It does not create resale, white-label, or sublicensing rights.

Are updates, calls, or training included?

No updates are included by default unless the written order says otherwise.

Support is documentation-first and email-only unless a written agreement expands it.

What happens before files are released?

For contact-led sales, the commercial terms, covered package, and relevant rights are confirmed in writing before delivery.

That written step is part of the product design. It keeps scope and rights clear before access begins.