---
title: "ESPR Ecodesign Evidence Checklist"
canonical_url: "https://www.sorena.io/artifacts/eu/ecodesign-for-sustainable-products-regulation/ecodesign-evidence-checklist"
source_url: "https://www.sorena.io/artifacts/eu/ecodesign-for-sustainable-products-regulation/ecodesign-evidence-checklist"
author: "Sorena AI"
description: "Checklist for collecting ESPR ecodesign evidence from delegated acts, technical documentation, supplier substantiation, DPP mapping, standards, and market surveillance records."
published_at: "2026-05-09"
updated_at: "2026-05-09"
keywords:
  - "ESPR ecodesign evidence checklist"
  - "Regulation EU 2024/1781"
  - "delegated acts"
  - "performance requirements"
  - "information requirements"
  - "technical documentation"
  - "digital product passport"
  - "supplier evidence"
  - "market surveillance"
  - "ESPR"
  - "EU Ecodesign for Sustainable Products Regulation"
  - "ecodesign evidence"
---
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---

# ESPR Ecodesign Evidence Checklist

Checklist for collecting ESPR ecodesign evidence from delegated acts, technical documentation, supplier substantiation, DPP mapping, standards, and market surveillance records.

*ESPR* *Checklist* *EU*

## ESPR Ecodesign Evidence Checklist

A source-grounded checklist for turning each ESPR delegated act into product evidence, supplier substantiation, technical documentation, DPP fields, and authority-ready records.

Use it when a product group becomes covered by an ESPR delegated act or when an existing ecodesign file needs to be refreshed against updated standards, methods, or product data.

ESPR evidence work starts with the applicable delegated act, not with a generic sustainability claim. For each covered product group, capture the product boundary, the performance and information requirements, the verification method, the DPP obligations, the conformity assessment module, and the records that manufacturers, importers, distributors, suppliers, notified bodies, customs, or market surveillance authorities may need to inspect.

## 1. Extract the delegated act before collecting evidence

Create one evidence row for each product group or horizontal requirement covered by the applicable delegated act. The row should identify the covered product descriptions and commodity codes, the exact ecodesign requirements, the test, measurement or calculation methods, any harmonised standards or common specifications, the conformity assessment module, required manufacturer information, transitional period, and review date.

Do not add product-specific thresholds, banned substances, DPP fields, labels, or application dates unless the delegated act or another grounded source actually specifies them. ESPR is framework legislation; the concrete rules are adopted product-by-product or horizontally.

- Evidence fields: delegated act title, CELEX or ELI URL, product group definition, commodity codes, requirement type, application date, transitional period, review date, and internal product families mapped to the scope.
- Requirement extraction: separate Article 6 performance requirements from Article 7 information requirements, and flag any Article 4 additional obligations on technical documentation, market quantities, in-use data, digital tools, or supply-chain actors.
- Approval gate: legal or product compliance confirms that the evidence row cites the binding delegated act and does not rely on a draft, consultation page, or working-plan priority as if it already imposed product requirements.
- Change trigger: reopen the row when the delegated act is amended, harmonised standards are published or withdrawn, common specifications are adopted or repealed, or the product design, production process, supplier input, or declared conformity route changes.

Sources for this answer:

- [Regulation (EU) 2024/1781 (ESPR)](https://data.europa.eu/eli/reg/2024/1781/oj?ref=sorena.io) - Article 8 lists the minimum content of ESPR delegated acts, including product group definitions, ecodesign requirements, methods, standards or common specifications, conformity assessment, manufacturer information, transitional periods, and review dates.
- [European Commission - Ecodesign for Sustainable Products Regulation](https://commission.europa.eu/energy-climate-change-environment/standards-tools-and-labels/products-labelling-rules-and-requirements/ecodesign-sustainable-products-regulation_en?ref=sorena.io) - Commission implementation page explaining that ESPR lays the framework and that concrete product rules are developed product-by-product or horizontally.

*Recommended next step*

*Placement: after evidence section*

## Turn ESPR requirements into audit-ready product evidence

Use Sorena to map ESPR delegated-act requirements to technical documentation, supplier records, DPP fields, standards coverage, and authority response packs.

- [Open Research Copilot](/solutions/research-copilot.md): Answer ESPR implementation questions with cited source material.
- [Discuss ESPR implementation](/contact.md): Review delegated-act scope, DPP evidence, and product compliance records with Sorena.

## 2. Map performance and information requirements to proof

For every requirement, record whether the proof is a measured value, a calculation, a design feature, a document, a label disclosure, a DPP data element, a supplier declaration, or a process control. ESPR requires ecodesign requirements to be verifiable, including by direct checks of the product or by technical documentation.

Keep the evidence matrix neutral until the delegated act defines the product-specific details. The regulation identifies product aspects such as durability, repairability, substances of concern, energy and resource efficiency, recycled content, remanufacturing, recyclability, environmental impacts, carbon footprint, and waste generation, but it does not itself turn every aspect into a requirement for every product group.

- Performance proof: record the product parameter, threshold or non-quantitative requirement, measurement or calculation method, sample or model tested, test report, result, margin, reviewer, and affected product model.
- Information proof: record the required audience, delivery channel, language or accessibility need, label or manual text, DPP field, free-access website or application link, and version control for the disclosed information.
- Substances proof: where an information requirement applies, capture substance name or code, product location, concentration or range, safe-use instructions, and end-of-life information; record any delegated-act threshold or exemption separately.
- Design-change proof: link each requirement to product design, manufacturing, software or firmware, service information, repair data, spare-parts process, or packaging controls so later changes trigger reassessment.

Sources for this answer:

- [Regulation (EU) 2024/1781 (ESPR)](https://data.europa.eu/eli/reg/2024/1781/oj?ref=sorena.io) - Articles 5, 6 and 7 define ecodesign aspects, performance requirements, information requirements, substances-of-concern tracking, and the requirement that ecodesign requirements be verifiable.
- [European Commission - Ecodesign for Sustainable Products Regulation](https://commission.europa.eu/energy-climate-change-environment/standards-tools-and-labels/products-labelling-rules-and-requirements/ecodesign-sustainable-products-regulation_en?ref=sorena.io) - Commission overview listing the types of ESPR ecodesign rules, including durability, reparability, resource efficiency, substances affecting circularity, recycled content, footprints, waste, and product sustainability information.

## 3. Build the technical documentation file

The manufacturer evidence file should make the product's conformity assessable against the delegated act. Keep it model-specific where the declaration is model-specific, and preserve the link between requirement, method, result, and document version.

Importers and authorised representatives also need access to conformity documentation for their ESPR roles. If the delegated act changes the retention period or requires digital availability of parts of the technical documentation, reflect that in the evidence register.

- Core file: product description and intended use, design and manufacturing drawings or schemes, explanations needed to understand operation, and the applicable requirements from the delegated act.
- Standards file: list harmonised standards, common specifications, or other technical specifications applied in full or in part; where not applied, describe the alternative solution used to meet the requirement.
- Results file: design calculations, examinations, measurements, conformity comparison against the delegated-act requirement, test reports, and copies of information supplied under Article 7.
- Declaration file: EU declaration of conformity, CE marking or any alternative conformity marking rule, responsible signatory, applicable Union acts, notified-body certificate or approval decision where relevant, and retention owner.

Sources for this answer:

- [Regulation (EU) 2024/1781 (ESPR)](https://data.europa.eu/eli/reg/2024/1781/oj?ref=sorena.io) - Article 27 and Annex IV describe manufacturer technical documentation, conformity assessment, EU declaration of conformity, retention, and production controls.
- [Regulation (EU) 2024/1781 (ESPR)](https://data.europa.eu/eli/reg/2024/1781/oj?ref=sorena.io) - Articles 28 and 29 set documentation access duties for authorised representatives and importers, including keeping or making technical documentation available to market surveillance authorities.

## 4. Substantiate supplier and supply-chain inputs

Supplier substantiation should be tied to the product parameters and information fields in the delegated act. Use supplier data to support, not replace, the manufacturer's conformity evidence.

Where a delegated act specifies Article 38 obligations, supply-chain actors must provide relevant information free of charge, allow manufacturer assessment when information is not provided, and enable notified bodies or competent authorities to verify the accuracy of relevant activity information.

- Supplier request: identify the supplied material, component, service, process, or data element; cite the delegated-act requirement; request the data format, method, sampling basis, date, and supporting documents.
- Supplier response: retain declarations, test reports, certificates, bills of material, material composition data, production-process data, traceability identifiers, and any stated limitations or exclusions.
- Escalation path: if the supplier cannot provide information, record whether manufacturer assessment of documents or facilities is needed and who can approve use of the input while evidence is incomplete.
- Verification link: mark supplier data that may need verification by a notified body, competent national authority, market surveillance authority, or internal quality audit.

Sources for this answer:

- [Regulation (EU) 2024/1781 (ESPR)](https://data.europa.eu/eli/reg/2024/1781/oj?ref=sorena.io) - Article 38 specifies supply-chain actor obligations when a delegated act requires them, including free relevant information and verification access.
- [Regulation (EU) 2024/1781 (ESPR)](https://data.europa.eu/eli/reg/2024/1781/oj?ref=sorena.io) - Recital 77 explains why supplier information may be needed for manufacturers, notified bodies, and national authorities to verify ecodesign compliance.

## 5. Map evidence to the digital product passport

Treat DPP mapping as a requirement-by-requirement exercise. The applicable delegated act decides the data to include, the carrier, placement, model/batch/item level, access rights, update rights, availability period, and how the passport is accessible before sale, including distance selling.

Separate evidence used to prove conformity from data intended for passport access. Some compliance documentation may be included in the DPP under Annex III, but only the applicable delegated act tells the team which fields are required for that product group.

- DPP scope: record whether the passport is at model, batch, or item level, and connect that level to the product identifier used in the technical documentation and declaration of conformity.
- DPP access: identify which actors can access each data field, including customers, repairers, recyclers, market surveillance authorities, customs authorities, and other actors named in the delegated act.
- DPP data quality: assign owners for accuracy, completeness, updates, authentication, integrity, privacy, and backup through a DPP service provider where required.
- DPP customs link: where the product is covered, retain the unique registration identifier and commodity code evidence needed for registry and customs checks once the relevant systems apply.

Sources for this answer:

- [Regulation (EU) 2024/1781 (ESPR)](https://data.europa.eu/eli/reg/2024/1781/oj?ref=sorena.io) - Articles 9 to 15 and Annex III define DPP availability, data, carriers, access, update rights, technical design, registry, web portal, and customs-control links.
- [European Commission - Digital Product Passport consultation](https://single-market-economy.ec.europa.eu/news/commission-launches-consultation-digital-product-passport-2025-04-09_en?ref=sorena.io) - Commission news explains the DPP as an ESPR mechanism to store and share sustainability, durability, environmental, instruction, and conformity information with consumers, businesses, and public authorities.

## 6. Record standards, methods, and common specifications

The evidence checklist should show exactly which method was used for each requirement. ESPR allows tests, measurements, and calculations to use harmonised standards or other reliable, accurate, reproducible methods that reflect the generally recognised state of the art and satisfy the applicable delegated act.

Presumption of conformity depends on coverage. A standard, EU Ecolabel criterion, or common specification supports only the requirements it actually covers; keep a coverage note rather than treating a standard reference as blanket compliance.

- Method field: requirement, method source, version, scope covered, lab or calculation owner, sample basis, uncertainty or assumptions, and evidence artifact.
- Harmonised standard field: OJEU reference status, standard parts applied, requirements covered, requirements not covered, and fallback method for uncovered requirements.
- Common specification field: implementing act reference, reason it applies, requirements covered, and removal plan if a harmonised standard later replaces the common specification.
- Standards watch: monitor CEN and CENELEC ecodesign and DPP standardisation activity, including material efficiency and DPP framework work, without treating non-mandatory guidance as a legal requirement.

Sources for this answer:

- [Regulation (EU) 2024/1781 (ESPR)](https://data.europa.eu/eli/reg/2024/1781/oj?ref=sorena.io) - Articles 39 to 42 cover test, measurement and calculation methods, presumption of conformity, harmonised standards, EU Ecolabel coverage, and common specifications.
- [CEN-CENELEC - Ecodesign, Labelling and Traceability of Products](https://www.cencenelec.eu/areas-of-work/cen-cenelec-topics/ecodesign-labelling-and-traceability-of-products/?ref=sorena.io) - CEN-CENELEC page showing standards activity supporting ESPR, including technical committees for ecodesign, material efficiency, and the Digital Product Passport framework and system.

## 7. Prepare market surveillance and corrective-action evidence

Close the checklist with the records an authority can ask for. ESPR gives market surveillance authorities routes to request conformity information, evaluate products presenting a risk, require corrective action, restrict products, withdraw or recall them, and act on formal non-compliance such as missing CE marking, missing or incorrect declaration, or incomplete technical documentation.

Keep enforcement evidence factual. Member States set penalties, and the regulation requires them to be effective, proportionate and dissuasive, with at least fines and time-limited exclusion from public procurement procedures. Do not invent national penalty amounts in this checklist.

- Authority request pack: technical documentation, EU declaration of conformity, DPP access evidence, product identifiers, economic-operator contacts, supplier traceability, quantities and exact models supplied, and response owner.
- Distance-selling pack: manufacturer name and contact, EU responsible economic operator where needed, product picture, type, and other identifiers shown clearly and visibly in the product offer.
- Corrective-action pack: suspected non-compliance, affected markets, affected models, root cause, authority notifications, withdrawal or recall decision, corrective action, retest or reassessment evidence, and closure approval.
- Formal non-compliance pack: CE marking status, notified-body number where required, declaration completeness, technical documentation completeness, manufacturer/importer information, and any administrative requirement from the delegated act.

Sources for this answer:

- [Regulation (EU) 2024/1781 (ESPR)](https://data.europa.eu/eli/reg/2024/1781/oj?ref=sorena.io) - Articles 36, 66 to 71 and 74 support authority-ready evidence for distance selling, market surveillance strategy, safeguard procedures, formal non-compliance, and penalties.
- [Regulation (EU) 2024/1781 (ESPR)](https://data.europa.eu/eli/reg/2024/1781/oj?ref=sorena.io) - Articles 27 to 30 require manufacturers, importers and distributors to act when they know or suspect non-conformity and to cooperate with competent authorities.

## Primary sources

- [Regulation (EU) 2024/1781 (ESPR)](https://data.europa.eu/eli/reg/2024/1781/oj?ref=sorena.io) - Primary legal source for delegated acts, ecodesign requirements, technical documentation, supply-chain evidence, DPP obligations, standards/common specifications, conformity assessment, market surveillance, formal non-compliance, and penalties.
  - Quote: "establishing a framework for the setting of ecodesign requirements"
- [European Commission - Ecodesign for Sustainable Products Regulation](https://commission.europa.eu/energy-climate-change-environment/standards-tools-and-labels/products-labelling-rules-and-requirements/ecodesign-sustainable-products-regulation_en?ref=sorena.io) - Commission overview used for ESPR scope, the framework nature of later product rules, examples of performance and information rules, DPP purpose, and working-plan implementation context.
  - Quote: "Making sustainable products the norm"
- [European Commission - Digital Product Passport consultation](https://single-market-economy.ec.europa.eu/news/commission-launches-consultation-digital-product-passport-2025-04-09_en?ref=sorena.io) - Commission source used for the DPP's role in storing and sharing sustainability, durability, environmental, instruction, and conformity information for consumers, businesses, and public authorities.
  - Quote: "available to consumers, businesses and relevant public authorities"
- [CEN-CENELEC - Ecodesign, Labelling and Traceability of Products](https://www.cencenelec.eu/areas-of-work/cen-cenelec-topics/ecodesign-labelling-and-traceability-of-products/?ref=sorena.io) - Standards-body source used to ground references to CEN-CENELEC technical standardisation activity supporting ESPR, material efficiency, and the DPP framework and system.
  - Quote: "Ecodesign for Sustainable Products Regulation"

## Related Topic Guides

- [ESPR and DPP connection: delegated acts, identifiers, and access](/artifacts/eu/ecodesign-for-sustainable-products-regulation/espr-and-dpp-connection.md): How ESPR connects ecodesign information requirements to Digital Product Passports, including delegated acts, data carriers, identifiers, access rights, registry, and architecture choices.
- [ESPR Applicability Test for Products and DPP Readiness](/artifacts/eu/ecodesign-for-sustainable-products-regulation/applicability-test.md): A source-linked ESPR applicability test for physical product scope, exclusions, delegated-act dependency, economic operator triage, DPP readiness, unsold goods, and evidence.
- [ESPR compliance checklist for delegated acts and DPP readiness](/artifacts/eu/ecodesign-for-sustainable-products-regulation/checklist.md): A source-linked ESPR checklist for monitoring delegated acts, mapping product requirements, preparing technical documentation, and building DPP and unsold-goods evidence.
- [ESPR compliance program operating model](/artifacts/eu/ecodesign-for-sustainable-products-regulation/compliance-program-operating-model.md): Build an ESPR operating model for product-group intake, delegated-act monitoring, supplier evidence, DPP governance, release gates, and authority response.
- [ESPR compliance: delegated acts, DPP and evidence](/artifacts/eu/ecodesign-for-sustainable-products-regulation/compliance.md): Practical ESPR compliance guidance for mapping product delegated acts, Digital Product Passport dependencies, unsold goods duties, technical documentation, standards, and market-surveillance evidence.
- [ESPR deadlines and compliance calendar](/artifacts/eu/ecodesign-for-sustainable-products-regulation/deadlines-and-compliance-calendar.md): Source-linked ESPR calendar for framework dates, delegated-act dependency, working-plan monitoring, unsold-goods disclosure, and DPP readiness limits.
- [ESPR delegated act intake by product group](/artifacts/eu/ecodesign-for-sustainable-products-regulation/delegated-act-intake-by-product-group.md): A grounded intake checklist for tracking ESPR delegated acts by product group, covering product identification, DPP data, ecodesign requirements, conformity evidence, and source limits.
- [ESPR delegated act intake workflow](/artifacts/eu/ecodesign-for-sustainable-products-regulation/delegated-act-intake-workflow.md): A source-grounded intake workflow for ESPR delegated acts: trigger checks, product-group scope, requirement extraction, DPP impacts, release gates, owners, and evidence outputs.
- [ESPR delegated acts FAQ: product rules, DPP impact, and monitoring](/artifacts/eu/ecodesign-for-sustainable-products-regulation/faq/delegated-acts.md): Standalone FAQ on ESPR delegated acts, why product-group duties depend on them, what teams should monitor, and how they shape Digital Product Passport information.
- [ESPR delegated acts watchlist for product and DPP teams](/artifacts/eu/ecodesign-for-sustainable-products-regulation/espr-delegated-acts-watchlist.md): Track ESPR delegated-act priorities without inventing dates: product groups, source status, likely requirement types, DPP impact, evidence owners, and open source gaps.
- [ESPR destruction ban and unsold goods FAQ](/artifacts/eu/ecodesign-for-sustainable-products-regulation/faq/destruction-ban.md): What ESPR says about preventing destruction of unsold consumer products, annual disclosure, the Annex VII apparel and footwear ban, and grounded derogation evidence.
- [ESPR destruction of unsold goods: disclosure, ban scope, and records](/artifacts/eu/ecodesign-for-sustainable-products-regulation/destruction-of-unsold-goods.md): Source-linked ESPR guide to unsold consumer product disclosure, destruction-ban scope, records, derogations, and national enforcement limits.
- [ESPR DPP information mapping workflow](/artifacts/eu/ecodesign-for-sustainable-products-regulation/dpp-information-mapping-workflow.md): Map ESPR delegated-act information requirements into DPP data elements, source systems, access levels, identifiers, carriers, validation evidence, and unresolved design decisions.
- [ESPR durability, repairability, and recyclability evidence](/artifacts/eu/ecodesign-for-sustainable-products-regulation/durability-repairability-and-recyclability-evidence.md): Build ESPR evidence for durability, repairability, and recyclability without inventing product-group tests before the applicable delegated act is known.
- [ESPR ecodesign requirement types: performance, information, and DPP links](/artifacts/eu/ecodesign-for-sustainable-products-regulation/ecodesign-requirement-types.md): Source-grounded guide to ESPR ecodesign requirement types, product parameters, delegated-act dependency, DPP links, and evidence implications.
- [ESPR FAQ: scope, delegated acts, DPP, unsold goods](/artifacts/eu/ecodesign-for-sustainable-products-regulation/faq.md): Standalone ESPR FAQ answers on product scope, delegated acts, Digital Product Passports, unsold goods, product priorities, standards, surveillance, and source limits.
- [ESPR harmonised standards and common specifications](/artifacts/eu/ecodesign-for-sustainable-products-regulation/standards-and-common-specifications.md): How ESPR uses harmonised standards, common specifications, delegated acts, and DPP standards evidence without inventing product-specific requirements.
- [ESPR Information Requirements to DPP Mapping](/artifacts/eu/ecodesign-for-sustainable-products-regulation/information-requirements-to-dpp-mapping.md): Map ESPR information requirements into Digital Product Passport data classes, source systems, access rules, carrier choices, validation checks, and evidence records.
- [ESPR Information Requirements, Labels, and Disclosure](/artifacts/eu/ecodesign-for-sustainable-products-regulation/information-requirements-labeling-and-disclosure.md): Grounded ESPR guide to delegated-act information requirements, product labels, digital product passport access, data carriers, and unsold-goods disclosure.
- [ESPR market surveillance FAQ: evidence, DPP data, and authority requests](/artifacts/eu/ecodesign-for-sustainable-products-regulation/faq/market-surveillance.md): Standalone FAQ on ESPR market surveillance: technical documentation, conformity evidence, DPP data, authority response, delegated-act limits, and national penalties.
- [ESPR market surveillance technical documentation checklist](/artifacts/eu/ecodesign-for-sustainable-products-regulation/market-surveillance-technical-documentation.md): Source-grounded ESPR checklist for technical documentation, conformity evidence, DPP records, and responses to market surveillance authority requests.
- [ESPR penalties and fines: Member State rules and evidence](/artifacts/eu/ecodesign-for-sustainable-products-regulation/penalties-and-fines.md): A conservative ESPR penalties guide explaining Article 74, why fine amounts depend on Member State law, and which conformity and market-surveillance evidence matters.
- [ESPR Product Priorities and Delegated Acts Tracker](/artifacts/eu/ecodesign-for-sustainable-products-regulation/product-priorities-and-delegated-acts-tracker.md): Track ESPR priority product groups, source status, delegated-act progress, expected DPP impact, owners, evidence, and source gaps without treating preliminary studies as binding obligations.
- [ESPR product priorities FAQ: working plan and delegated acts](/artifacts/eu/ecodesign-for-sustainable-products-regulation/faq/product-priorities.md): Standalone FAQ on ESPR product priorities, the Commission working plan, delegated-act dependency, monitoring points, and limits of preliminary source material.
- [ESPR requirements: delegated acts, ecodesign, DPP, and evidence](/artifacts/eu/ecodesign-for-sustainable-products-regulation/requirements.md): ESPR requirements explained as a framework for delegated acts, ecodesign performance and information rules, Digital Product Passports, unsold goods, technical documentation, and market surveillance.
- [ESPR unsold goods disclosure FAQ](/artifacts/eu/ecodesign-for-sustainable-products-regulation/faq/unsold-goods-disclosure.md): Standalone FAQ on the ESPR Article 24 duty to disclose discarded unsold consumer products, its relationship to the destruction ban, records, and source limits.
- [ESPR unsold goods disclosure tracker](/artifacts/eu/ecodesign-for-sustainable-products-regulation/unsold-goods-disclosure-tracker.md): Track ESPR unsold consumer product disclosure fields, website publication evidence, destruction-ban status, owners, and unresolved source gaps.
- [ESPR vs Batteries Regulation Comparison](/artifacts/eu/ecodesign-for-sustainable-products-regulation/espr-vs-batteries-regulation.md): Compare ESPR delegated-act planning with the Batteries Regulation product-specific regime, including DPP overlap, battery passport evidence, timing limits, and source boundaries.
- [ESPR vs Ecodesign Directive](/artifacts/eu/ecodesign-for-sustainable-products-regulation/espr-vs-ecodesign-directive.md): Compare ESPR with the earlier Ecodesign Directive across scope, legal form, delegated acts, DPP requirements, unsold goods, transition rules, and evidence.
- [ESPR vs GPSR: Sustainability vs Product Safety](/artifacts/eu/ecodesign-for-sustainable-products-regulation/espr-vs-gpsr.md): A source-limited comparison of ESPR sustainability and product-information requirements against GPSR product-safety context, with evidence and DPP reuse limits.
- [ESPR vs PPWR Comparison](/artifacts/eu/ecodesign-for-sustainable-products-regulation/espr-vs-ppwr.md): Compare ESPR product ecodesign and Digital Product Passport work with the separate PPWR packaging regime, using only source-linked ESPR and packaging-boundary claims.
- [ESPR vs REACH and RoHS Comparison](/artifacts/eu/ecodesign-for-sustainable-products-regulation/espr-vs-reach-and-rohs.md): Compare ESPR ecodesign, sustainability, information, and digital product passport requirements with source-limited REACH and RoHS substance-control context.
- [EU ESPR DPP obligations FAQ](/artifacts/eu/ecodesign-for-sustainable-products-regulation/faq/dpp-obligations.md): Standalone FAQ on Digital Product Passport obligations under ESPR, covering delegated acts, identifiers, carriers, access rights, data governance, and supplier evidence limits.
- [Timeline for ESPR: practical implementation guide](/artifacts/eu/ecodesign-for-sustainable-products-regulation/timeline.md): Practical ESPR guidance for Timeline, with source-linked decisions, owners, evidence records, and implementation steps.
- [What ESPR is and why it matters](/artifacts/eu/ecodesign-for-sustainable-products-regulation/what-is-espr-and-why-it-matters.md): A grounded explainer of the EU Ecodesign for Sustainable Products Regulation, including scope, delegated acts, DPPs, unsold goods, and enforcement limits.
- [Which products are in scope of the EU ESPR?](/artifacts/eu/ecodesign-for-sustainable-products-regulation/faq/products-in-scope.md): Standalone FAQ on ESPR product scope, excluded products, delegated-act dependency, working-plan monitoring, and the digital product passport link.


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