PFAS Compliance: How to Assess Exposure Across Your Product Portfolio

Blog
Last edited: March 20, 2026
Read time 5 min.

In the next few months, thousands of companies must demonstrate compliance with new PFAS restrictions across their product portfolios. The challenge is clear: identifying PFAS across products and packaging is rarely straightforward. These substances can appear in raw materials, surface treatments, or manufacturing processes that suppliers may have limited visibility into themselves. 

For compliance teams, the task is building a clear, documented picture of where PFAS may exist across hundreds or thousands of stock keeping units (SKUs). This requires systematic risk assessment, supplier engagement, and structured data collection. 

Where PFAS hide in your supply chain

PFAS can enter products at multiple stages of production. Identifying them requires tracing materials back through the supply chain, often beyond Tier 1 suppliers. 

Start with your Bill of Materials (BOM) 

Begin with your product’s Bill of Materials (BOM). Review each component for surface coatings and treatments, adhesives and sealants, polymer additives, and processing aids—substances used during manufacturing but sometimes omitted from final specifications. 

Many companies discover PFAS in unexpected places. A packaging supplier may use a PFAS-based release agent during production, even though the final material doesn’t contain PFAS as an ingredient. These hidden uses make supply chain transparency critical. 

For example, PPWR’s prohibition of PFAS in food contact packaging starting in August 2026 makes this particularly urgent for companies in that sector. The regulation covers intentionally added PFAS, including substances used in manufacturing processes that don’t appear in the final product. 

When suppliers lack complete PFAS information 

Suppliers often don’t have full visibility into PFAS content, especially at Tier 2 and Tier 3 levels where raw materials originate. Chemical formulations are frequently proprietary, and ingredient lists may only be shared when specifically requested. 

To improve results, be specific in your requests. Ask for PFAS content rather than general material safety information. Provide context about the regulatory deadline and the documentation needed to meet regulatory requirements. If a Tier 1 supplier cannot answer your questions, request introductions to their material suppliers to trace the information upstream. 

Though testing should be reserved for cases where documentation gaps pose real compliance risk, lab testing provides definitive answers for high-priority products when supplier data is unavailable or uncertain. 

Collect and verify PFAS data from suppliers 

Once you’ve identified high-risk products, the next step is gathering evidence of PFAS presence or absence. Structure your supplier engagement around both documentation requests and specific technical questions. 

Key Documentation to request from suppliers 

Safety Data Sheets (SDS)  
SDS list hazardous substances but may exclude PFAS below certain thresholds. Check for substances with “fluoro” in their names or with CAS numbers associated with known PFAS. 

Declarations of Conformity  
Ask suppliers to confirm whether their materials contain PFAS and, if so, at what concentration. For PPWR compliance, for example, food contact packaging must be certified PFAS-free. 

Test reports 
Lab testing can confirm the presence of PFAS when supplier declarations are unavailable or uncertain. Since testing is expensive, prioritize high-risk products or materials where supplier data is incomplete. 

Questions to ask suppliers about PFAS 

When reaching out to suppliers, structure your inquiries around these areas: 

  • Does the material contain any per- or polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS)? If so, which specific substances and at what concentration? 
  • For food contact applications: Is the material intended for this use, and are certifications confirming PFAS absence available? 
  • If PFAS are present: What PFAS-free alternatives exist, and what is your timeline for transitioning to compliant formulations? 
  • What documentation can you provide to support your declarations (test reports, certificates, formulation details)? 

Document all responses and maintain version control. Regulatory requirements evolve, and you may need to re-verify materials as restrictions expand. 

How to prioritize products for PFAS action 

Resource constraints mean that targeting efforts effectively is essential. Prioritize based on: 

  • Regulatory urgency – PPWR food contact packaging (August 2026 deadline) should be addressed first. 
  • Volume and revenue impact – High-volume products carry greater regulatory risk. 
  • Supplier cooperation – Products with responsive, transparent suppliers are easier to verify. 
  • Market access risk – Products sold in multiple jurisdictions may face overlapping restrictions. 

A simple High/Medium/Low classification helps allocate resources effectively. 

Automate PFAS management across your product portfolio 

For companies managing hundreds of SKUs from multiple suppliers, spreadsheets create friction at every step: version control becomes unclear, tracking supplier updates becomes difficult, regulatory changes go unnoticed, and generating audit-ready reports requires manual compilation.  

As PPWR and REACH deadlines approach, these manual processes become unsustainable. 

The osapiens HUB for Product Compliance (PFAS) addresses these challenges through automation and structured workflows. The platform centralizes supplier data collection via a dedicated portal with guided forms and automated validations, integrates directly with SCIP for single-click substance disclosures, tracks regulatory changes in real time and flags affected products automatically, and maintains version-controlled documentation with centralized certificate and declaration management. 

For organizations facing PPWR’s August 2026 deadline or preparing for broader REACH restrictions, this infrastructure shifts PFAS management from reactive firefighting to proactive risk mitigation. 


In the next few months, thousands of companies must demonstrate compliance with new PFAS restrictions across their product portfolios. The challenge is clear: identifying PFAS across products and packaging is rarely straightforward. These substances can appear in raw materials, surface treatments, or manufacturing processes that suppliers may have limited visibility into themselves. 

For compliance teams, the task is building a clear, documented picture of where PFAS may exist across hundreds or thousands of stock keeping units (SKUs). This requires systematic risk assessment, supplier engagement, and structured data collection. 

Where PFAS hide in your supply chain

PFAS can enter products at multiple stages of production. Identifying them requires tracing materials back through the supply chain, often beyond Tier 1 suppliers. 

Start with your Bill of Materials (BOM) 

Begin with your product’s Bill of Materials (BOM). Review each component for surface coatings and treatments, adhesives and sealants, polymer additives, and processing aids—substances used during manufacturing but sometimes omitted from final specifications. 

Many companies discover PFAS in unexpected places. A packaging supplier may use a PFAS-based release agent during production, even though the final material doesn’t contain PFAS as an ingredient. These hidden uses make supply chain transparency critical. 

For example, PPWR’s prohibition of PFAS in food contact packaging starting in August 2026 makes this particularly urgent for companies in that sector. The regulation covers intentionally added PFAS, including substances used in manufacturing processes that don’t appear in the final product. 

When suppliers lack complete PFAS information 

Suppliers often don’t have full visibility into PFAS content, especially at Tier 2 and Tier 3 levels where raw materials originate. Chemical formulations are frequently proprietary, and ingredient lists may only be shared when specifically requested. 

To improve results, be specific in your requests. Ask for PFAS content rather than general material safety information. Provide context about the regulatory deadline and the documentation needed to meet regulatory requirements. If a Tier 1 supplier cannot answer your questions, request introductions to their material suppliers to trace the information upstream. 

Though testing should be reserved for cases where documentation gaps pose real compliance risk, lab testing provides definitive answers for high-priority products when supplier data is unavailable or uncertain. 

Collect and verify PFAS data from suppliers 

Once you’ve identified high-risk products, the next step is gathering evidence of PFAS presence or absence. Structure your supplier engagement around both documentation requests and specific technical questions. 

Key Documentation to request from suppliers 

Safety Data Sheets (SDS)  
SDS list hazardous substances but may exclude PFAS below certain thresholds. Check for substances with “fluoro” in their names or with CAS numbers associated with known PFAS. 

Declarations of Conformity  
Ask suppliers to confirm whether their materials contain PFAS and, if so, at what concentration. For PPWR compliance, for example, food contact packaging must be certified PFAS-free. 

Test reports 
Lab testing can confirm the presence of PFAS when supplier declarations are unavailable or uncertain. Since testing is expensive, prioritize high-risk products or materials where supplier data is incomplete. 

Questions to ask suppliers about PFAS 

When reaching out to suppliers, structure your inquiries around these areas: 

  • Does the material contain any per- or polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS)? If so, which specific substances and at what concentration? 
  • For food contact applications: Is the material intended for this use, and are certifications confirming PFAS absence available? 
  • If PFAS are present: What PFAS-free alternatives exist, and what is your timeline for transitioning to compliant formulations? 
  • What documentation can you provide to support your declarations (test reports, certificates, formulation details)? 

Document all responses and maintain version control. Regulatory requirements evolve, and you may need to re-verify materials as restrictions expand. 

How to prioritize products for PFAS action 

Resource constraints mean that targeting efforts effectively is essential. Prioritize based on: 

  • Regulatory urgency – PPWR food contact packaging (August 2026 deadline) should be addressed first. 
  • Volume and revenue impact – High-volume products carry greater regulatory risk. 
  • Supplier cooperation – Products with responsive, transparent suppliers are easier to verify. 
  • Market access risk – Products sold in multiple jurisdictions may face overlapping restrictions. 

A simple High/Medium/Low classification helps allocate resources effectively. 

Automate PFAS management across your product portfolio 

For companies managing hundreds of SKUs from multiple suppliers, spreadsheets create friction at every step: version control becomes unclear, tracking supplier updates becomes difficult, regulatory changes go unnoticed, and generating audit-ready reports requires manual compilation.  

As PPWR and REACH deadlines approach, these manual processes become unsustainable. 

The osapiens HUB for Product Compliance (PFAS) addresses these challenges through automation and structured workflows. The platform centralizes supplier data collection via a dedicated portal with guided forms and automated validations, integrates directly with SCIP for single-click substance disclosures, tracks regulatory changes in real time and flags affected products automatically, and maintains version-controlled documentation with centralized certificate and declaration management. 

For organizations facing PPWR’s August 2026 deadline or preparing for broader REACH restrictions, this infrastructure shifts PFAS management from reactive firefighting to proactive risk mitigation.