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Christian Feuring
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On December 17, 2025, the European Parliament and Council approved targeted amendments to the EU Deforestation Regulation (EUDR). These changes focus on easing implementation pressure while keeping the regulation’s core objectives intact.
The result is more time and some procedural relief for certain actors, but no fundamental change in responsibility for first operators and importers. Understanding where obligations remain unchanged and where they have shifted is essential for planning compliance in 2026 and beyond.
Despite frequent speculation, the December vote does not represent a rollback of the EUDR. Companies that first place relevant products on the EU market remain fully responsible for ensuring deforestation-free and legal sourcing. Traceability requirements, including geolocation data for plots of land, risk assessment and mitigation measures, and the submission of DDS via the EU Information System remain central pillars of the regulation. The EUDR’s objective remains intact: to prevent deforestation-linked products from entering the EU market.
Before diving deeper, it is worth addressing recurring misconceptions in the market.
Since the EUDR entered into force, companies across industries have been preparing for its far-reaching requirements. The vote on December 17, 2025 responds to feedback on implementation challenges, in particular concerning the EU Information System. Below, we break down the most relevant changes and what they mean in practice.
In short, some processes have been simplified, but the substance of the EUDR remains unchanged, especially for companies closest to market entry.
The most visible outcome of the December 2025 amendments is the revised application schedule. Large and medium-sized companies must comply with the EUDR by December 30, 2026. Micro- and small enterprises benefit from an extended deadline until June 30, 2027, unless they already fall under the EU Timber Regulation (EUTR). For companies that are not yet fully prepared, this extension offers valuable breathing room. However, it should be seen as an opportunity to build robust processes rather than a reason to postpone compliance efforts.
The amendments further clarify roles along the supply chain while keeping primary responsibility with those closest to the point of import or first placement on the EU market.
Many companies operate in mixed roles, depending on the transaction. For example, a company may act as an operator when importing, but as a downstream trader when sourcing within the EU. Flexible, automated systems that account for these role changes are therefore essential for scalable compliance and audit readiness.
The amendments require the European Commission to publish an assessment by 30 April 2026 on administrative burden and implementation impact. The focus will be on small operators and potential improvements to the EUDR Information System (TRACES).
This is an evaluative report only. There is no automatic commitment to further legislative changes. Given its limited scope, most companies should not expect major requirement reductions and should instead use the extended timelines to establish robust processes now.
Targeted relief applies to small and micro primary operators located in low-risk countries:
These simplifications do not apply to operators in medium- or high-risk countries, who must follow standard due diligence and DDS submission requirements.
Exports are simplified: in most cases, no separate DDS submission or explicit customs references are required. However, maintaining full traceability records remains advisable. If products are re-imported into the EU, the new importer will need complete datasets to submit compliant documentation.
The EU Timber Regulation (EUTR) remains applicable until the revised EUDR dates take effect. This avoids regulatory gaps for timber and timber-based products during the transition period.
Printed products such as books, newspapers and printed images are removed from the scope of the EUDR. This affects companies dealing with CN chapter 49 products (“CN 49 ex”). However, many companies in publishing and print-related industries remain in scope due to other procurement or import activities, particularly related to wood or packaging materials.
For importers and first operators, the message is clear: full compliance is still required, but there is now more time to get it right. This is the moment to move away from fragile, manual “deadline solutions” and toward scalable, automated processes that can withstand audits, volume increases and supplier changes.
For downstream operators, understanding your exact role in each transaction is essential. Even without DDS submission obligations, structured traceability and supplier risk management remain critical for limiting liability and responding to substantiated concerns.
Across industries, many companies are using the additional time to strengthen existing processes rather than slowing down. Those that invest now in stable, automated compliance foundations will be better positioned not only for the EUDR, but also for future regulatory and digitalization requirements.
Companies that already have an EUDR solution in place should build on their existing setup beyond pure compliance, for example by using established data structures and workflows for supplier management, other regulatory requirements, and broader digitalization initiatives.
If you would like to discuss how these updates affect your specific setup, we are available to support you.
Talk to an expert.