What is the Digital Product Passport?
The DPP is a digital record attached to products sold in
the EU. It contains information about a product's origin, materials, environmental impact, and
how to repair or recycle it.
Think of it as an "identity card" for products — accessible
by scanning a QR code.
Key Dates
| When |
What Happens |
| July 2024 |
ESPR entered into force |
| July 2025 |
First product rules can take effect
|
| 2026–2030 |
Gradual rollout by product
category |
Which Products Need a DPP?
The first wave of products includes:
- Batteries
- Textiles and clothing
- Furniture
- Electronics
- Iron and steel
- Aluminium
- Tyres
More categories will be added over time.
Article 9 — General Rules
What it says: Products need a valid DPP before they can be sold
in the EU.
Requirements:
- Data must be accurate and up to date
- DPP must stay accessible throughout the product's
life
- A backup copy must be stored with an independent
provider
Article 10 — Technical Requirements
What it says: How the DPP system must work technically.
Requirements:
- Each product gets a unique identifier
- Data is accessed via a QR code or barcode on the
product
- Must use open standards
- Different users get different access levels
(consumers vs authorities)
- Must work with other EU systems
Article 11 — Traceability
What it says: Products must be traceable back to their
source.
Requirements:
- Link to the company that made or imported the
product
- Link to the manufacturing facility
- Use international standards for identifiers (like
GS1)
Article 12 — Central Registry
What it says: The EU Commission will run a central
database.
Purpose:
- Stores all product identifiers
- Helps authorities verify products
- Enables enforcement
Article 13 — Customs Checks
What it says: Border authorities can check DPP data.
How it works:
- Customs connects to the central registry
- They verify imported products have valid DPPs
- Integrated with EU Single Window for Customs
Who is Responsible?
| Role |
Responsibility |
| Manufacturers |
Create and maintain the DPP |
| Importers |
Ensure DPP exists for imported
products |
| Distributors |
Keep DPP accessible to customers
|
| DPP Service Providers |
Host backup copies of DPP data |
What Data Goes in a DPP?
The exact data depends on the product type, but typically
includes:
- Product identifier (model, batch, serial number)
- Manufacturer/importer details
- Materials and substances used
- Environmental footprint
- Repair and maintenance information
- Recycling instructions
- Compliance certificates
Technical Basics
How users access the DPP:
- Scan QR code on the product
- View information online
- Different access levels for different users
System architecture:
- Decentralised — companies manage their own
data
- Centralised registry — Commission stores
identifiers
- Open APIs — systems can communicate
Standards used:
- GS1 for product/company identifiers
- ISO standards for data formats
- EU interoperability frameworks
Useful Links
Document Information
Last Updated
February 2026
Regulation
EU 2024/1781 (ESPR)