Free tool · EUDR
Is my product covered by the EUDR?
Pick what best describes your product and see whether it falls under the EU Deforestation Regulation — and exactly what you would need to collect if it does.
Coverage checker
What best describes your product?
Guidance only, not legal advice. EUDR scope is defined by the commodity and customs code in Annex I of Regulation (EU) 2023/1115.
How the checker works
The EUDR covers seven commodities — cattle, cocoa, coffee, oil palm, rubber, soya, and wood — and a long list of products derived from them. If your product is, or is made from, any of these, it is in scope. Everything else is out. The precise boundary is drawn by the customs (HS) code listed in Annex I of Regulation (EU) 2023/1115.
The seven covered commodities
- Cattle
- Cocoa
- Coffee
- Oil palm
- Rubber
- Soya
- Wood
How do I know if my product is covered by the EUDR?
Two questions. First, does it involve one of the seven commodities — directly, or as an ingredient or material? Second, does its HS codeappear in Annex I of the regulation? The commodity test is the quick filter the checker above runs; the Annex I code is the definitive answer. If you aren't sure of the code, look it up on the tariff browser.
What counts as a derived product?
More than the raw commodity. Annex I pulls in leather and hides (cattle), chocolate and cocoa butter (cocoa), palm-oil derivatives, tyres and rubber goods, soy meal and oil, and timber, paper, printed books, and furniture (wood). A finished good with any of these inside it can be in scope even if the commodity isn't obvious on the label.
What do I need to collect if I'm in scope?
Plot geolocation for every piece of land the commodity came from; evidence it was produced legally and is deforestation-free after the 31 December 2020 cut-off; and a Due Diligence Statement filed in TRACES before the goods clear customs. The full flow, and the dates, are on the EUDR overview.
Sources
- Regulation (EU) 2023/1115 (EUDR), incl. Annex I product scope — EUR-Lex
- European Commission — EU Deforestation Regulation guidance
Last reviewed 11 July 2026