ConceptsVoluntary specification

Halogen-Free

A voluntary specification for electronics, where bromine and chlorine are kept below set thresholds, driven by concerns about brominated flame retardants.

Updated
2026-06-12

Overview

Halogen-free is a voluntary specification for electronics rather than a legal requirement. A product is usually called halogen-free when bromine and chlorine stay below agreed thresholds. The term sets a target for the materials in a board or component, and it ends up written into customer specifications and supplier declarations.

What
Voluntary electronics specification
Common reference
IEC 61249-2-21
Bromine and chlorine
Each at most 900 ppm
Total halogens
At most 1500 ppm

What the thresholds mean

A widely used reference is IEC 61249-2-21. It sets bromine at most 900 ppm, chlorine at most 900 ppm, and total halogens at most 1500 ppm. These numbers come from the standard, not from law, so a buyer is free to set tighter or different limits in a contract. Meeting the thresholds is what lets a supplier label material as halogen-free.

Why it matters

The push comes from concerns about brominated flame retardants, including PBDE, and the brominated dioxins they can form. Customers respond by demanding halogen-free parts, which turns the specification into a declarable item flowing through the supply chain.

Key point

Halogen-free is a specification, not a ban. The legal restrictions on specific brominated substances are separate, so a part can be halogen-free yet still need its own compliance checks.

Note: general educational information, not legal advice. Check the official source before relying on it.

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specificationflame retardantelectronics