RegulationsPhasing in

EUDR: EU Deforestation Regulation

EU regulation that requires certain commodities and the products made from them, such as wood, rubber, soy, palm oil, coffee, cocoa and cattle, to be free from recent deforestation before they can be sold in the EU, backed by due diligence and geolocation data.

Issuer
European Union
Updated
2026-06-12

Overview

The EUDR aims to keep products linked to forest loss out of the EU market. If a commodity such as cocoa or timber was grown on recently cleared forest, it cannot be sold in the EU, and companies have to prove where it came from.

Key point

The regulation rests on geolocation. Operators must record the exact coordinates of the land where the commodity was produced, then run due diligence to confirm that land was not deforested after the cut-off date.

The commodities in scope

Wood
Timber and many wood-based products
Cattle
Beef, leather and related goods
Soy and palm oil
Two of the largest drivers of land clearing
Coffee, cocoa, rubber
Plus products derived from each of these

How compliance works

A company placing a covered product on the EU market files a due diligence statement. It ties the goods to the plots of land they came from through geolocation coordinates and assesses the risk that those plots were recently deforested. Goods that cannot be shown to be deforestation-free are not allowed onto the market.

The EUDR is one of the targeted laws that put due diligence to work on a specific harm. It sits alongside the broader CSDDD, which sets a general human-rights and environmental duty, while the EUDR focuses sharply on deforestation in a defined set of commodities.

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

Learn 4 flashcards

Related entries

EUdeforestationdue diligencesupply chaincommodities