Electronics & EEE fall under the EU Ecodesign for Sustainable Products Regulation (ESPR 2024/1781). Electronics and electrical equipment (EEE) are in the ESPR pipeline, with repairability requirements expected from around 2027–2028. This page covers what that means in practice: the timeline, the data a passport must carry, who is legally responsible, and how to get ready.
Electronics and electrical equipment (EEE) are in the ESPR pipeline, with repairability requirements expected from around 2027–2028. The precise data set for electronics is fixed by a delegated act under ESPR — the framework is law since July 2024; the sector detail arrives act by act. The central EU DPP Registry opened for registration on 19 July 2026, so identifiers can be filed as each group's rules take effect.
Across product groups the passport draws from the same families of data. For electronics, expect:
Each claim needs its evidence — a certificate or test report with traceable provenance, not just a stated value. Market-surveillance and customs authorities can inspect the record.
The manufacturer or, for imported devices, the EU importer or authorised representative carries the obligation. The duty cannot be delegated: if a platform registers the passport on your behalf, you — the economic operator placing the product on the EU market — remain accountable.
Electronics also intersect with existing schemes (EPREL, WEEE, RoHS); a DPP does not replace them but links to them. PassPer builds the passport from the documents you already hold — spec sheets, certificates, supplier declarations — with AI extraction and human review, then handles the GS1 Digital Link carrier, the registry filing and the long-term hosting. Pricing starts at €79/month with a free 30-day pilot.
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