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French EPR category guide

Chemical Product EPR in France

French DDS and chemical-product EPR guidance for paints, solvents, maintenance products and other hazardous household products.

Category overview

What businesses need to know

The DDS stream addresses defined chemical products whose waste can present a significant risk to health or the environment. Product composition, hazard, packaging size, intended user and exact regulatory family determine whether a product is covered.

EPR scope is product-specific. A product can fall under several streams, and its packaging may create an additional obligation. Confirm the current official scope before placing products on the French market.

Scope assessment

Products and businesses commonly affected

These examples are a starting point, not a substitute for checking the detailed legal and eco-organization nomenclature.

Products commonly in scope

  • Paints, varnishes, stains and related products
  • Solvents, thinners and selected cleaning products
  • Household maintenance and specialist chemical products
  • Pool, automotive and gardening chemicals within defined families
  • Containers holding covered chemical preparations

Who may be the producer?

  • Chemical-product manufacturers and formulators
  • Importers of paint, solvent and maintenance products
  • Private-label home-improvement and automotive brands
  • Foreign sellers supplying covered products in France
SCOPE NOTE 1

Hazardous classification alone does not prove that a product belongs to DDS.

SCOPE NOTE 2

Professional-only products and products governed by another regime require separate analysis.

SCOPE NOTE 3

Transport, chemical labelling and safety-data obligations remain separate from EPR.

Compliance roadmap

The French EPR process, step by step

Registration is only one part of compliance. Product classification, declarations, records and post-registration duties must remain aligned.

01

Confirm the product scope

Map each product against the official stream definitions. Review function, materials, intended user, sales channel, components and packaging instead of relying only on customs codes or catalogue labels.

02

Identify the French producer

Establish who first places the product on the French market. Depending on the supply chain, this may be a manufacturer, importer, private-label seller, distance seller or marketplace.

03

Choose a compliance route

Most producers join an approved eco-organization. An approved individual system may be possible, but it carries direct operational, collection, treatment and reporting responsibilities.

04

Register and obtain the IDU

Complete the relevant onboarding, provide company and product information and obtain the unique identifier for this EPR stream. Each applicable stream can issue a separate IDU.

05

Declare and finance quantities

Submit products first placed on the French market using the required units, weights and category codes. Eco-contributions are normally calculated from these declarations.

06

Maintain ongoing compliance

Keep auditable records, renew declarations, monitor fee schedules and eco-modulation, and apply any stream-specific sorting, take-back, consumer-information or prevention obligations.

Declaration readiness

Data to prepare before registration

Reliable source data reduces classification errors and makes recurring declarations easier to audit. Keep the calculation method and source records alongside every submitted return.

Declaration periods, category codes, fee scales and minimum contributions vary by eco-organization and stream. Confirm the current member guide before calculating a return.

1

Regulatory product family and intended use

2

Units, volume and weight placed on the market

3

Chemical classification and packaging format

4

Household or professional destination

5

Product identifiers and supporting safety documentation

Supplier evidence, internal calculations and copies of submitted declarations

Cross-stream review

One product can create several obligations

EPR categories overlap by design. Assess the complete product, incorporated components, accessories, printed inserts and packaging.

Common questions

Chemicals EPR FAQ

Does every hazardous chemical fall under DDS EPR?+

No. DDS uses defined product families and scope criteria. Chemical hazard, customer type, use and packaging must be reviewed together.

Does EPR replace REACH or CLP compliance?+

No. EPR concerns end-of-life responsibility. Chemical registration, classification, safety data, transport and product labelling obligations continue to apply independently.

Does one IDU cover every French EPR stream?+

No. The IDU is stream-specific. A company covered by several streams can hold several unique identifiers and must maintain the registration and declarations for each one.

Must a business established outside France register?+

It may need to register when it directly places covered products on the French market, including through distance sales. The answer depends on the contractual chain, customer and role of any importer or marketplace.

Category assessment

Need help confirming your chemicals obligations?

We can review your products, identify overlapping streams and prepare the information needed for French registration and IDU applications.

Request an assessment

This page provides general information and is not legal advice. Product scope, approved schemes, fees and reporting rules can change. Confirm the rules that apply when your products are placed on the French market.