EU Batteries Regulation: What Manufacturers, Importers, and Supply Chains Need to Know
Regulation (EU) 2023/1542 imposes cradle-to-grave obligations on every battery sold in the EU — from carbon footprint declarations and digital passports to mandatory recycled content and supply chain due diligence. Several critical deadlines have already passed and the next wave is arriving fast. This guide covers what the regulation requires, who it applies to, what has changed, and what to do now.
Regulation Overview
The EU Batteries Regulation — officially Regulation (EU) 2023/1542 — replaced the 2006 Batteries Directive on 18 February 2024. The shift from a directive to a regulation is significant: rules are now directly applicable and harmonised across all EU Member States, eliminating the discretion that created compliance inconsistencies under the old framework.
The regulation covers every battery placed on the EU market, regardless of form, chemistry, or whether the battery is standalone or embedded in a product. It establishes obligations across seven domains: substance restrictions, carbon footprint declarations, performance and durability standards, labelling and marking, the digital battery passport, supply chain due diligence, and end-of-life management including recycled content targets, collection rates, and recycling efficiency.
The regulatory ambition is clear: the EU intends to make sustainability and traceability conditions of market access. Non-compliant batteries will not be permitted for sale. For manufacturers and importers, this is not a reporting exercise — it is a market access requirement.
Scope & Battery Categories
The regulation defines five battery categories. Classification is the first and most consequential compliance decision, because it determines which obligations apply and when. Misclassification — particularly between portable and industrial batteries — is the most common early compliance error and can expose companies to obligations they did not anticipate.
Portable
Sealed, ≤5 kg, not industrial. Includes AA, AAA, button cells, phone and laptop batteries.
SLI
Starting, Lighting, Ignition — for vehicle starting/lighting systems. May also serve auxiliary power.
LMT
Light Means of Transport — sealed, ≤25 kg, for e-bikes, e-scooters, e-mopeds, hoverboards.
Industrial
For industrial use, or any battery >5 kg not LMT, SLI, or EV. Includes BESS. Key threshold: >2 kWh.
EV
For traction of hybrid or battery electric vehicles. Also L-category vehicle batteries exceeding 25 kg.
Exclusions are narrow. Only batteries designed specifically for military, space, or nuclear applications are excluded. Batteries embedded in products — from medical devices to power tools to industrial equipment — are fully in scope. Companies that do not consider themselves "battery companies" but incorporate batteries in their products frequently discover they hold compliance obligations under this regulation.
Who Is Affected
The regulation assigns obligations across the full value chain. Your legal role — manufacturer, importer, distributor, or producer — determines which requirements apply. For companies operating cross-border supply chains, particularly non-EU manufacturers selling into the EU market, identifying the correct legal role is critical and frequently complex.
Manufacturers
Bear primary responsibility: design compliance, CE marking, conformity assessment, carbon footprint declarations, recycled content documentation, labelling, battery passport creation, due diligence, and full technical documentation.
Importers
Must verify compliance before placing batteries on the EU market. Required to check CE marking, ensure documentation is available, keep records for 10 years, and inform authorities of non-conforming batteries.
Distributors
Must verify that CE marking and labelling are present before making batteries available on the market.
Producers (EPR)
Whoever first places batteries on the EU market must register in each Member State where they sell, finance waste management, and meet collection and recycling targets.
Fulfilment service providers bear economic operator responsibilities if no manufacturer, importer, or authorised representative is established in the EU — a provision with significant implications for e-commerce supply chains. Authorised representatives may be mandated by non-EU manufacturers to handle compliance tasks within the EU.
Compliance Timeline
Obligations are staggered across a 13-year implementation window (2024–2036), with different requirements activating at different times for different battery categories. The timeline below distinguishes obligations that have already taken effect from those still ahead.
Already in effect (before March 2026)
Upcoming obligations (after March 2026)
Core Compliance Requirements
Carbon Footprint Declarations (Article 7)
Carbon footprint declarations apply to EV, rechargeable industrial >2 kWh, and LMT batteries. The total lifecycle carbon footprint must be expressed as kg CO₂-equivalent per kWh of total energy provided over the expected service life, calculated using the EU Product Environmental Footprint (PEF) methodology.
Three provisions create particular compliance complexity. First, carbon offsets cannot be used to reduce reported emissions. Second, Power Purchase Agreements (PPAs) are excluded from the calculation — manufacturers using renewable energy through contractual instruments cannot count this in their declarations. Third, calculations must use company-specific primary data for all battery manufacturing processes, verified by a notified body. Secondary or generic data is not sufficient.
The regulation envisions a three-stage approach: declaration, then performance classes (A/B/C labels), then maximum thresholds beyond which batteries are banned from the EU market. As noted above, the delegated acts defining the detailed calculation methodology have experienced significant delays. Companies should check EUR-Lex for the latest adoption status before finalising their compliance approach.
Digital Battery Passport (Article 77)
From 18 February 2027, every EV, industrial >2 kWh, and LMT battery placed on the EU market must carry a digital passport accessible via a QR code physically printed or engraved on the battery. The passport must contain a substantial set of mandatory data attributes — the DIN DKE SPEC 99100 standard identifies over 90 required and recommended fields — covering:
- General battery and manufacturer information
- Compliance and certification data
- Carbon footprint data and supply chain due diligence documentation
- Materials composition, including critical raw materials
- Performance, durability, and state of health (dynamic, updated through lifecycle)
- End-of-life handling instructions
Access is tiered: the general public sees basic sustainability information; regulators get full access; recyclers and repairers see end-of-life and composition data. Data must be in open, interoperable, machine-readable format. The architecture is decentralised — there is no single EU-wide platform. The key reference standard is DIN DKE SPEC 99100, published in January 2025 by the Battery Pass consortium. CEN/CENELEC JTC 24 is developing harmonised technical standards expected by 2026.
Due Diligence (Articles 47–52)
Due diligence obligations now take effect on 18 August 2027, following a two-year postponement enacted by Regulation (EU) 2025/1561. This delay was explicitly designed to align with the timeline of the Corporate Sustainability Due Diligence Directive (CSDDD), and the Commission has stated it will prepare battery due diligence guidelines in parallel with CSDDD guidance, with guidelines expected by July 2026.
The requirements apply to economic operators placing batteries containing cobalt, natural graphite, lithium, or nickel on the EU market. SMEs are exempted; the current turnover threshold is approximately €40 million. The Omnibus IV package has proposed raising this to €150 million for small mid-cap enterprises, but this change remains at proposal stage and has not been formally adopted as of the date of this article. Requirements are aligned with the OECD Due Diligence Guidance for Responsible Supply Chains and the UN Guiding Principles. Companies must adopt a due diligence policy, implement management systems, identify and mitigate risks, establish grievance mechanisms, obtain third-party verification, and publish periodic reports.
Recycled Content (Article 8)
The regulation mandates minimum recycled content for cobalt, lead, lithium, and nickel in three phases. Disclosure begins in August 2028 for EV, industrial, and SLI batteries. Mandatory minimums apply from August 2031 (Phase 1: 16% cobalt, 85% lead, 6% lithium, 6% nickel) and increase in August 2036 (Phase 2: 26% cobalt, 85% lead, 12% lithium, 15% nickel). LMT batteries are added to mandatory minimums in Phase 2. Verification requires notified body involvement.
Collection, Recycling & EPR (Articles 56–71)
EPR obligations have been in effect since August 2025. Producers must register in each EU Member State where they sell batteries, finance or organise collection and recycling, and meet collection targets (63% for portable by end of 2027; 51% for LMT by end of 2028). Recycling efficiency targets are already active: 75% by weight for lead-acid, 65% for lithium-based. Financial contributions must be modulated by battery category, chemistry, recycled content, and carbon footprint — creating a direct financial incentive for sustainable design.
Removability (Article 11)
From 18 February 2027, most portable batteries in appliances must be removable and replaceable by the end-user using commonly available tools. Where end-user removal is not feasible, professional replaceability must be ensured. The Commission published guidelines in January 2025 (Notice C/2025/214). For consumer electronics companies, this requirement may necessitate multi-year product redesign cycles.
Status of Delegated & Implementing Acts
The gap between regulatory ambition and implementation is significant. Several critical delegated acts remain unadopted, creating uncertainty around exact compliance dates and methodologies. The table below summarises the current status.
| Delegated / Implementing Act | Status (March 2026) |
|---|---|
| Recycling efficiency methodology | Adopted (mid-2025) |
| Due diligence postponement (Reg. 2025/1561) | Adopted |
| Removability guidelines (Notice C/2025/214) | Published |
| Waste list update — black mass as hazardous | Adopted |
| CF methodology — EV batteries | Draft published 2024; verify current status on EUR-Lex |
| CF methodology — Industrial batteries | JRC report only (Apr 2025) |
| CF methodology — LMT batteries | Early stage |
| CF performance classes & max thresholds | Not started |
| Battery passport implementing acts | Standards in development |
| Recycled content verification methodology | Pending |
| Performance/durability minimum values | Pending |
The carbon footprint implementation chain has experienced significant delays relative to the original regulatory timetable. The EV battery methodology was originally due by February 2024; a draft was published for consultation in 2024 but formal adoption has been slow. The status of carbon footprint delegated acts is the fastest-moving element of this regulatory landscape — companies should monitor EUR-Lex directly. Where delegated acts remain unadopted, the entire carbon footprint chain — from declaration through performance classes to market-access thresholds — cannot be enforced against the nominal dates in the regulation.
Connections to Other EU Regulations
The EU Batteries Regulation does not exist in isolation. It intersects with — and in some cases, directly feeds into — several other major EU regulatory frameworks. Companies managing compliance across multiple regulations should map these interdependencies to avoid duplication and identify where a single data collection effort can satisfy multiple requirements.
CSDDD: The battery regulation's due diligence provisions are sector-specific (cobalt, lithium, nickel, graphite), while the CSDDD is broader. The Commission will publish battery-specific guidance in parallel with CSDDD guidelines. Different turnover thresholds apply.
ESPR & Digital Product Passport: The battery passport is the first legally binding DPP and the reference model for the broader system under the Ecodesign for Sustainable Products Regulation. The architecture and governance principles are shared. This makes battery passport compliance an investment in future-proofing across product categories.
Critical Raw Materials Act (CRMA): Shared objectives on supply chain security for lithium, cobalt, nickel, and graphite. The battery regulation sets product-level recycled content minimums; the CRMA sets EU-level benchmarks.
CSRD: Battery regulation data feeds directly into CSRD reporting obligations. The Omnibus simplification package aims to consolidate and simplify reporting across CSRD, CSDDD, and the EU Taxonomy.
Penalties & Enforcement
Enforcement is at Member State level. Article 93 required Member States to establish penalty rules by August 2025, specifying they must be effective, proportionate, and dissuasive. The regulation itself does not prescribe specific penalty amounts — these vary by jurisdiction. Germany adopted its national implementing legislation (Batteriegesetz/BattDG) in 2025.
Enforcement mechanisms include market withdrawal, product recall, sales bans, and financial penalties. Market surveillance operates under Regulation (EU) 2019/1020. The battery passport and electronic exchange systems function as enforcement tools by providing authorities with direct access to compliance data — making non-compliance significantly easier to detect than under the previous directive.
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How to Prepare: A Compliance Readiness Framework
The consensus across leading advisory and legal firms is unambiguous: start now, despite the regulatory uncertainty around delegated acts. Companies that wait for finalised rules before beginning preparation will not have sufficient time to build the data infrastructure, supplier relationships, and internal processes required for compliance.
Step 1: Classify and map
Classify every battery in your portfolio according to the five regulatory categories. This determines all downstream obligations. Then map your legal role — manufacturer, importer, distributor, producer — for each product and market. For companies with embedded batteries, this step frequently reveals obligations that were not previously on the compliance radar.
Step 2: Gap analysis
Conduct a gap analysis across all applicable obligations — carbon footprint data readiness, passport data architecture, due diligence systems, recycled content documentation, labelling compliance, and EPR registration status. Prioritise by deadline proximity and risk exposure.
Step 3: Supply chain engagement
Begin supplier engagement at least 18 months before deadlines. Carbon footprint calculation requires company-specific primary data per battery model per manufacturing plant — a data granularity that most supply chains are not currently equipped to provide. Due diligence requires visibility into raw material sourcing for cobalt, graphite, lithium, and nickel, often extending beyond Tier 2 suppliers.
Step 4: Digital infrastructure
Evaluate and select battery passport solutions early. Architecture decisions — centralised vs. decentralised data storage, integration with existing PLM/ERP systems, access control design — have long lead times. The DIN DKE SPEC 99100 standard provides the current reference for data attributes.
Step 5: Monitor and adapt
Track evolving delegated acts, national implementation differences, and the Omnibus IV simplification proposals. Assign clear internal ownership for battery regulation compliance — this is a cross-functional effort spanning legal, procurement, sustainability, product engineering, and IT.
Frequently Asked Questions
Conclusion
The EU Batteries Regulation creates a new operating environment where sustainability, traceability, and circularity are conditions of market access — not voluntary commitments. The regulatory intent is clear, even where the implementing details remain in motion. Companies that treat this as a phased compliance programme rather than a single deadline will be best positioned to maintain market access, manage supply chain risk, and build competitive advantage from the infrastructure they put in place.
The window for preparation is narrowing. The battery passport deadline is less than 12 months away. Due diligence obligations arrive in 18 months. The data, systems, and supplier relationships these require cannot be built overnight.
Disclaimer: This article is intended as a practical orientation guide, not legal advice. It reflects information available as of March 2026. Key areas of this regulation are evolving rapidly — in particular, the adoption status of carbon footprint delegated acts, the Omnibus IV simplification proposals (including proposed turnover threshold changes), and national implementation measures across Member States. Readers should verify all compliance-critical dates and obligations against the authoritative legal text on EUR-Lex and seek qualified legal counsel before making compliance decisions. Futureproof Solutions monitors regulatory developments continuously and updates this guidance accordingly.