A Brussels practice. Focused by design.
Euraxis is a Brussels-based monitoring and institutional monitoring practice covering European institutions, legislation, and supervisory authorities. We work with trade associations, legal teams, consultancies, and firms operating in regulated sectors with EU exposure.
Euraxis was established to provide structured monitoring of EU institutional and regulatory procedure. The practice combines legislative tracking, supervisory monitoring, and editorial briefing work for organisations operating in regulated sectors.
We do not conduct lobbying activity or political strategy work. Our remit is procedural intelligence, institutional monitoring, and information management.
- 01Procedure over commentary
We report institutional movement, not opinion on it.
- 02Attribution discipline
Sources are cited when public. Background remains background.
- 03Narrow remit
Monitoring, structuring, and briefing. No advocacy, no representation.
- 04Continuity of file
The same analyst stays on the dossier across the engagement.
Multilingual analysts tracking legislative drafts, committee agendas, supervisory signals, and institutional procedure.
Internal tagging systems, document standardisation, workflow automation, and procedural databases.
Weekly bulletins, briefing notes, dashboard updates, and client reporting schedules.
GDPR-aligned handling, NDAs, document retention, and operational confidentiality procedures.
Euraxis works alongside legal, compliance, and public-policy teams requiring structured visibility into EU institutional and regulatory procedure.
The practice does not provide lobbying mandates or political strategy work. Its remit is limited to monitoring, procedural analysis, and institutional reporting.
“The file is the client. Confidentiality is the method. Procedure is the product.”
Euraxis is privately held and entirely fee-funded. The firm does not accept advertising, sponsored content, or lobbying mandates connected to the files it monitors.
Analysts are required to declare conflicts of interest. Engagements that cannot be managed within the firm's independence framework are declined.