What is a Digital Product Passport?

A Digital Product Passport (DPP) is a comprehensive digital record containing detailed information about a product's origin, composition, sustainability, and end-of-life options.

Key Components

Product Information

Manufacturer details, model numbers, serial numbers, and production dates

Materials & Composition

Detailed breakdown of materials used, including recycled content percentages

Performance Data

Energy efficiency, durability, repairability scores, and warranty information

Sustainability Information

Carbon footprint, recycling instructions, and circular economy data

Why DPPs Matter

  • Consumer Transparency: Buyers can make informed decisions based on complete product information
  • Circular Economy: Enables better recycling, repair, and reuse of products
  • Regulatory Compliance: Meets EU ESPR requirements for product transparency
  • Supply Chain Visibility: Tracks products from manufacture to end-of-life
  • Sustainability Goals: Helps companies and consumers reduce environmental impact

How DPPs Work

  1. Creation: Manufacturers create a digital passport containing all required product information
  2. QR Code: A unique QR code is generated and attached to the physical product
  3. Scanning: Consumers, recyclers, or regulators scan the QR code to access the passport
  4. Access: All stakeholders can view relevant product information through a web interface
  5. Updates: Product information can be updated throughout the product's lifecycle

Product Categories

Batteries

Mandatory from February 2027

Textiles

Requirements forthcoming

Electronics

Phased implementation

Construction

Under development

Learn More

Want to understand the EU regulation driving DPP adoption?

Read about EU ESPR →