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ESPR Unsold Consumer Products

Unsold consumer products with circular economy overlays illustrating ESPR Regulation (EU) 2024/1781 compliance.

A comprehensive guide to the obligations under Articles 24 and 25 of Regulation (EU) 2024/1781, the Delegated Regulation on derogations, and the Implementing Regulation on disclosure format — for enterprises, compliance teams, and ESG professionals.

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Product categories covered by disclosure
CN code groups
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Derogations from the destruction ban
Delegated Reg. C(2026) 659
Destruction ban applies to large enterprises
Article 25(1) ESPR

1. What the ESPR requires regarding unsold consumer products

The Ecodesign for Sustainable Products Regulation (ESPR), formally Regulation (EU) 2024/1781, entered into force on 18 July 2024. Alongside its framework for setting ecodesign requirements for products placed on the EU market, the ESPR introduces two distinct mechanisms addressing the destruction of unsold consumer products.

Disclosure obligations (Article 24): large enterprises that discard unsold consumer products — directly or through third parties — must publicly disclose information on the number, weight, reasons for discarding, waste treatment operations, and preventive measures. This obligation has applied since the first full financial year after the ESPR entered into force. Medium-sized enterprises become subject from 19 July 2030.

Destruction prohibition (Article 25): the ESPR prohibits the destruction of unsold consumer products listed in Annex VII — currently apparel, clothing accessories and footwear. The prohibition applies to large enterprises from 19 July 2026 and to medium-sized enterprises from 19 July 2030.

Prevention duty (Article 23): all economic operators — regardless of size — must take measures that can reasonably be expected to prevent the need to destroy unsold consumer products.

On 9 February 2026, the European Commission adopted two secondary instruments: Delegated Regulation C(2026) 659 (derogations from the destruction ban) and Implementing Regulation C(2026) 660 (standardised disclosure format, product categorisation, and verification framework).

Definition: destruction

Under Article 2(34) of the ESPR, ‘destruction’ means discarding an unsold consumer product as waste for any type of waste treatment operation. Donating, remanufacturing, refurbishing, or preparing for reuse does not constitute destruction.

2. Who is in scope

The ESPR applies obligations differentially based on enterprise size, following the standard EU classification under Directive 2013/34/EU.

Large
Disclosure now Ban Jul 2026 Prevention now
Medium
Disclosure 2030 Ban 2030 Prevention now
Small
Exempt Exempt Prevention now
Micro
Exempt Exempt Prevention now
Active obligation
Future obligation
Exempt

At Generation Impact Global, we help organisations navigate complex regulatory landscapes including the interplay between ESRS sustainability standards and operational compliance frameworks like the ESPR.

3. Which products are covered

The destruction ban (Article 25) currently covers only Annex VII products — apparel, clothing accessories and footwear. The disclosure obligation (Article 24) is far broader: Implementing Regulation C(2026) 660 lists over 50 product categories. Click any sector to see the specific CN codes.

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Hygiene & cleaning
4 categories
Soap (3401) · Detergents (3402) · Paper hygiene products (4818) · Sanitary products (9619)
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Textiles & furnishings
6 categories
Blankets (6301) · Bed linen (6302) · Curtains (6303) · Furnishing articles (6304) · Tents, camping goods (6306) · Other made-up articles (6307)
👜
Leather goods & luggage
3 categories
Suitcases, handbags, wallets (4202) · Leather apparel (4203) · Furskin articles (4303)
📱
Electronics & IT
11 categories
Smartphones (8517) · Computers (8471) · Monitors/TVs (8528) · Headphones (8518) · Sound equipment (8519) · Video equipment (8521) · Storage media (8523) · Flat panels (8524) · Cameras (9006) · Printers (8443) · Hand tools (8467)
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Household appliances
7 categories
Refrigerators (8418) · Washing machines (8450) · Dishwashers (8422) · Vacuum cleaners (8508) · Domestic appliances (8509) · Shavers (8510) · Irons, hairdryers (8516)
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Energy & lighting
5 categories
Air conditioning (8415) · Water heaters (8516) · LED lamps (8539) · Batteries (8506) · Accumulators (8507) · Portable lamps (8513)
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Furniture & bedding
3 categories
Seats (9401) · Other furniture (9403) · Mattresses, cushions, quilts (9404)
🎮
Toys, leisure & automotive
3 categories
Toys, puzzles, models (9503) · Video game consoles (9504) · New pneumatic tyres (4011)

Products are disclosed at the 2-digit CN code level by default. Products in Annex II require the more granular 4-digit CN code. Components, intermediate products, or products not primarily intended for consumers are excluded.

4. The destruction ban and its 10 derogations

Delegated Regulation C(2026) 659 sets out 10 circumstances under which unsold apparel and footwear may be destroyed despite the general ban. Each requires specific documentation retained for five years. Select a derogation below for details.

Art. 2(a)
Dangerous product
The product is dangerous within the meaning of GPSR (EU) 2023/988, posing a risk to health or safety where no other mitigation measures are possible.
Documentation required

Safety assessment per GPSR Articles 6–8, or test report indicating non-compliant chemicals with reference to applicable law.

Art. 2(b)
Non-compliance with law (non-safety)
The product is unfit for purpose due to non-compliance with EU or national law for reasons other than safety — for example, ethical grounds such as forced labour — and destruction is required by law or is the appropriate corrective action.
Documentation required

Self-assessment statement indicating the type of non-compliance and applicable law.

Art. 2(c)
IP infringement
The product infringes intellectual property rights, established by a final judicial decision, alternative dispute resolution, notification by a rights holder or competent authority, or a substantiated internal investigation.
Documentation required

The relevant judicial decision, ADR decision, notification, or internal investigation documentation.

Art. 2(d)
Expired IP licence
The product is subject to a valid licence restricting sale or distribution after a specified date, and that date has expired. The operator must demonstrate that destruction is proportionate.
Documentation required

The licence, contract, or agreement specifying the restriction, plus justification that destruction is appropriate and proportionate.

Art. 2(e)
Unsuitable for reuse
The product cannot be prepared for reuse or remanufactured because it is technically unfeasible to remove or render permanently inaccessible labels, logos, or design characteristics that are IP-protected or considered inappropriate (e.g. products perpetuating discrimination or exploiting stereotypes).
Documentation required

Inspection report or supporting documentation demonstrating that technical options were assessed and found unfeasible, including visual evidence, technical analysis, or expert opinions.

Art. 2(f)
Damaged product
The product is unacceptable for consumer use due to physical damage, deterioration, or contamination during handling, storage, transport, retail, or consumer return. Repair and refurbishment must be not technically feasible or not cost-effective.
Documentation required

Either: (i) evidence of quality assessment procedures including sorting that prioritises restocking and repairs; or (ii) an inspection record documenting the damage and unfeasibility of corrective measures.

Art. 2(g)
Design/manufacturing defect
The product is unfit for its intended purpose due to a design or manufacturing defect rendering it non-functional, and repair is not technically feasible.
Documentation required

Same as derogation (f): quality assessment evidence or inspection record documenting the defect and unfeasibility of repair.

Art. 2(h)
Not accepted for donation
The product was offered for donation to at least three social economy entities within the EU, or listed on the operator’s website for a minimum of eight weeks, and was not accepted. This derogation applies only where derogations (a) to (g) are not applicable.
Documentation required

Evidence of the offer for donation.

Art. 2(i)
Social economy entity — no recipient
The product was received by a social economy entity as a donation, but no recipient could be found.
Documentation required

Declaration attesting that the product was received as a donation and no recipient was found.

Art. 2(j)
Prepared for reuse — no recipient
The product was prepared for reuse by a waste treatment operator under Directive 2008/98/EC, but no recipient could be found.
Documentation required

Documentation demonstrating receipt from a waste treatment operator and that no recipient was found.

Definition: cost-effective

Article 1(2) defines ‘cost-effective’ as the cost of repairing a product not outweighing the total cost of destruction plus replacement costs (materials, manufacturing, packaging, transport, stocking and administration). Relevant to derogation (f).

Where a derogation applies, destruction must still follow the waste hierarchy, prioritising recycling over other recovery and disposal. Operators must provide a statement on the applicable derogation to the receiving waste treatment operator (Article 4). Parliament and Council have a two-month scrutiny period — if objections are raised, the ban applies without derogations.

5. The disclosure format: what companies must report

Annex I of Implementing Regulation C(2026) 660 prescribes a standardised format. The disclosure must be published within 12 months after the financial year-end, on the company’s website or linked from a CSRD management report.

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Entity identification
Legal name · EUID · Standalone or consolidated · FY dates
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Product data
CN code · Units discarded · Weight (kg) · Packaging included · Reason
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Waste treatment
Reuse % · Recycling % · Other recovery % · Disposal % · Unknown %

Prevention measures: companies must disclose both measures taken in the preceding financial year and measures planned for the future. Companies already subject to SFDR sustainability disclosure obligations may find overlapping data requirements, particularly around waste and circular economy indicators.

Disclosure data structure: waste treatment breakdown (illustrative)

Illustrative example only. Actual percentages will vary by operator. ‘Total destruction’ = recycling + other recovery + disposal.

6. How national authorities will verify compliance

Annex III establishes a risk-based verification framework. Authorities will consider: the absence of disclosure or unusually low figures; past non-compliance records; high percentages of ‘unknown’ waste treatment; the operator’s size and activity profile; and cross-referencing data from other sources (e.g. tax declarations).

The 10% tolerance threshold

If the difference between disclosed figures and supporting documentation is less than 10%, the operator is considered compliant. Exceeding this triggers potential non-compliance findings. Companies should ensure internal tracking systems are robust enough to stay within this margin.

7. Documentation retention requirements

Derogation documentation (Article 3, Delegated Regulation): retained for five years after destruction, in electronic form, available to authorities within 30 days of a request. May be prepared collectively where the same circumstances affect multiple products.

Delivery documentation (Article 4, Implementing Regulation): retained for five years after disclosure, including waste treatment operator statements.

8. Key compliance dates

18 July 2024
ESPR enters into force. Prevention duty applies. Disclosure begins for first full FY. Large
9 February 2026
Commission adopts Delegated Reg. C(2026) 659 and Implementing Reg. C(2026) 660.
~March 2026
Implementing Regulation enters into force (20 days after OJ publication).
19 July 2026
Destruction ban applies. Delegated Regulation on derogations applies. Large
~Feb/March 2027
Standardised disclosure format applies. First Annex I disclosures due. Large
19 July 2030
All obligations extend to medium-sized enterprises. Medium
~2031/2032
Commission review of both Delegated and Implementing Regulations.

9. Implications for ESG reporting and investment due diligence

From 2027, large enterprises across consumer goods sectors will publish standardised data on how many products they discard, why, and what happens to them. This creates a new source of comparable, structured information for fund managers and ESG analysts.

SFDR alignment: several ESPR data points align with SFDR PAI indicators on waste, hazardous waste, and circular economy. EU Taxonomy: preventive measures disclosures provide evidence for or against alignment with the circular economy objective. CSRD integration: ESPR data incorporated into management reports reaches investors through established channels.

Derogation patterns as risk signals: frequent reliance on (f) may indicate supply chain handling issues; repeated use of (h) may signal overproduction; reliance on (c)/(d) may reflect licensing management practices.

ESPR compliance tools

Use our interactive ESPR scope checker to determine which obligations apply to your organisation, or download the official EU disclosure template.

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Frequently asked questions

What is the ESPR destruction ban on unsold consumer products?

Which products are covered by the ESPR disclosure obligation?

What are the 10 derogations from the ESPR destruction ban?

When must companies start disclosing information on unsold consumer products?

Can the ESPR disclosure be included in a CSRD sustainability report?

What documentation must companies retain?

How will national authorities verify ESPR disclosures?

Legal references