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DPP in practice

Digital Product Passport for textiles under ESPR: framework, timeline and required data

The ESPR textile delegated act requires verifiable data from material suppliers (Tier 2-3) within the 18-month grace period. A DPP only complies if it captures that data at source — precisely what an ESPR-native platform orchestrates.

ByRafael Rodríguez · Founder & CEO
Published
Reading time8 min read

TL;DR: The essentials

  • The textile delegated act of the ESPR Regulation (EU) 2024/1781 is met with verifiable data from material suppliers (Tier 2-3): the right platform does not merely host the DPP, it captures and verifies it at source — that is the difference between a passive viewer and a traceability platform.
  • The minimum grace period under Article 4(4) ESPR is 18 months from the entry into force of the delegated act: an enforceable right, not a concession.
  • 60-70% of the ~35 datapoints required by JRC 145830 live in Tier 2-3 (spinning, weaving, finishing), not in the brand or the Tier 1 garment maker.
  • The operational timeline distinguishes three milestones: OJEU publication, entry into force (20 days later) and mandatory application (18 months later). Base scenario: textile application Q2 2029.
  • The DPP intersects with the ECGT, textile EPR 2025/1892, CSDDD and post-Omnibus CSRD 2026/470: the data architecture must be designed with multiple uses in mind.
Key figures
Cifra 1 de 4:
18months
MINIMUM GRACE PERIOD · ART. 4.4 ESPR
Article 4(4) of the ESPR Regulation sets a minimum grace period of 18 months between OJEU publication of the delegated act and mandatory application. It is an enforceable right.
Cifra 2 de 4:
18 jul 2024
Date of effective repeal of the former Ecodesign Directive 2009/125/EC and formal replacement by the ESPR framework. Verbatim citation of Article 79(1).
Cifra 3 de 4:
2027
INDICATIVE HORIZON · TEXTILE DELEGATED ACT
Indicative horizon for adoption of the ESPR textile delegated act according to JRC 145830 Table 1 and Working Plan COM(2025) 187 final.
Cifra 4 de 4:
~35datapoints
Estimated mandatory datapoints in the canonical textile DPP according to Table 13 of JRC 145830 (p. 44). The exact number will be set in the delegated act.
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Genealogy

From Ecodesign 2009 to ESPR 2024: why textiles enter now

The European regulatory framework on ecodesign has undergone a structural mutation. Directive 2009/125/EC established a perimeter restricted exclusively to energy-related products. This approach is insufficient to achieve climate neutrality by 2050 mandated by the European Green Deal. The entry into force of Regulation (EU) 2024/1781 (ESPR) extends the perimeter to almost all physical goods placed on the Union market, with listed exceptions such as food or medicines.

The ESPR redefines ecodesign requirements to encompass aspects of circularity. Article 5 requires improvements in durability, reliability, reparability, recycled content and the presence of substances of concern. The architecture of the legal text certifies this change of era: "Directive 2009/125/EC is repealed with effect from 18 July 2024." The digital product passport emerges as the mandatory vehicle for conveying this new informational density throughout the entire value chain.

The textile sector enters as an explicit priority category of the ESPR Working Plan 2025-2030 (COM(2025) 187 final). The regulatory method is horizontal framework + delegated acts by category: the regulation creates the general architecture; the delegated act activates the material obligation by sector. For textiles, the delegated act does not yet exist.

Regulatory genealogy

From Ecodesign 2009 to ESPR 2024

  1. Directive 2009/125/EC (Ecodesign)

    Original framework limited to energy-related products. Replaced by the ESPR on 18 July 2024 (Art. 79.1).

  2. OJEU publication of the ESPR Regulation

    Regulation (EU) 2024/1781 published in the Official Journal. It replaces the 2009 Ecodesign framework, extending to "almost any physical product".

  3. Effective repeal of Directive 2009/125 + entry into force of ESPR

    Art. 79.1 ESPR sets the formal replacement. From this date the ESPR is directly binding.

  4. JRC 145830 published

    Technical methodology with Table 13 of ~35 mandatory datapoints estimated for the textile DPP. De facto binding soft law. It closes the retrospective genealogical arc Ecodesign → ESPR → technical methodology for application.

Regulation (EU) 2024/1781 operates as a framework regulation. Its text establishes systemic obligations, obliged parties and penalties, but delegates the technical specification of the exact parameters to delegated acts by product group. The adoption of a delegated act triggers the compliance clock for economic operators.

The European legislator has provided a temporal cushioning mechanism. Article 4(4) of the ESPR provides: "The date of application of a delegated act shall not be earlier than 18 months from its entry into force, except in duly justified cases." This grace period of over a year and a half defines the critical preparation window.

The regulatory corpus is complemented by horizontal delegated acts. Delegated Regulation (EU) 2026/296 governs the exemptions applicable to the ban on the destruction of unsold goods. Implementing Regulation (EU) 2026/2 sets the unified format for disclosing information on discarding practices. Both texts oblige enterprises to keep audited control of inventory flows. Proposal COM(2025) 504 advances towards the systematic digitalisation of the declaration of conformity.

Datapoints

What data JRC 145830 requires and where it lives in the chain

The Joint Research Centre (JRC) articulates the technical methodology underlying the digital passport. Report JRC 145830 defines the parameters that will feed the textile delegated act. Documentary analysis reveals a requirement of approximately 35 mandatory datapoints per commercial reference.

The taxonomy reveals a shift of the burden of proof towards the deep links of manufacturing. Between 60% and 70% of the required identifiers operationally reside at the Tier 2 and Tier 3 levels of the chain. The CIRPASS consortium, through its deliverable D2.1, corroborates this asymmetric distribution. The spinning processor holds the primary certificates on chemical substances. The weaver possesses the physical evidence on the exact recycled material content. The Tier 1 assembler lacks direct visibility over these physico-chemical variables.

The methodological list includes the registration of substances of very high concern (SVHC), energy consumption per batch, and the percentage of pre-consumer versus post-consumer recycled fibres. The capture format must support semantic interoperability. The W3C verifiable credentials model allows the material contribution to be digitally signed without revealing trade secrets to competitors.

JRC 145830 · Table 13

Verifiable selection of textile DPP datapoints

Explicit representative selection of the corpus. Full list of ~35 datapoints in the original document. Document against the primary source before implementing.

Source

DatapointBlockResponsible tierFormatStatus
Fibre compositionPrimary material identification and proportions
Main fibre composition1CompositionTier 2 (spinning)string ISO 1833obligatorio
% pre-consumer recycled fibresCompositionTier 2-3numeric (0-100)obligatorio
% post-consumer recycled fibresCompositionTier 2-3numeric (0-100)obligatorio
SVHC registration (REACH)CompositionTier 2 (dyeing)string + URI ECHAobligatorio
Geographic originGeographic traceability per production link
Raw material country of originOriginTier 3ISO 3166-1 alpha-2obligatorio
Fabric manufacturing countryOriginTier 2 (weaving)ISO 3166-1 alpha-2obligatorio
Final assembly countryOriginTier 1ISO 3166-1 alpha-2obligatorio
Production processesPhysico-chemical operations and consumption
Energy consumption per batchProcessesTier 2 (dyeing)numeric kWh/kgobligatorio
Use of controlled chemical substancesProcessesTier 2string + CAS numberobligatorio
Process certifications (GOTS/OEKO-TEX)ProcessesTier 2W3C VC 2.0condicional
Tested durabilityResults of standardised physical tests
Abrasion resistanceDurabilityTier 1-2ISO 12947-2 ciclosopcional
Dimensional stability to washingDurabilityTier 1-2ISO 5077 %opcional
Reparability indexDurabilityBrand / Tier 1numeric 1-10condicional
Care instructionsConsumer information on prolonged use
Standardised care symbolsCareBrand / Tier 1ISO 3758obligatorio
Optimal washing temperatureCareBrand / Tier 1numeric °Cobligatorio
End-of-life routesRecyclability, reparability and reuse
Recyclability by fibreEnd-of-lifeTier 2enum + descriptionobligatorio
Separate collection pointsEnd-of-lifeBrand (EPR SCRAP)registry URIcondicional
Applicable EPR modulation schemeEnd-of-lifeBrandstring + URI EPRobligatorio
Timeline

Operational timeline: publication, entry into force and mandatory application

The chronology of legal obligations is stratified into distinct milestones. Article 25(1) decrees: "From 19 July 2026, the destruction of unsold consumer products listed in Annex VII shall be prohibited." This provision directly impacts the inventory liquidation forecasts of large textile corporations.

The development of the textile delegated act contemplates three temporal scenarios. The optimistic scenario assumes publication of the draft in the last quarter of 2026 and formal adoption in early 2027: mandatory application at the end of 2028 after the grace period expires. The base scenario places adoption at the end of 2027 and shifts enforceability to mid-2029. The pessimistic scenario contemplates delays: adoption 2028, application at the border 2030.

Temporal uncertainty does not exempt economic agents from preparing the data infrastructure. Textile sourcing cycles span prolonged design and manufacturing lapses. A collection conceived today will enter the market under the jurisdiction of the future delegated acts. The restructuring of ERP systems consumes integration periods longer than the legal grace period itself.

Operational timeline

Publication, entry into force and application milestones

  1. ESPR OJEU published

  2. ESPR entry into force (+20 days OJEU)

  3. Corrigenda R02 and R03 published

    Binding adjustments to the text of Reg 2024/1781 published in the OJEU.

  4. Application of the ban on destruction of unsold textiles

    Art. 25.1 ESPR for large enterprises. Delegated Reg 2026/2 sets out the listed exemptions.

  5. Indicative horizon for adoption of the textile delegated act

    Working Plan COM(2025) 187. Minimum grace period: 18 months from OJEU (Art. 4.4).

  6. Mandatory application of textile DPP (base scenario)

    If the delegated act is published Q4 2027, effective application falls in Q2 2029 (OJEU + 18 months Art. 4.4).

Interfaces

How the DPP intersects with ECGT, textile EPR, CSDDD and post-Omnibus CSRD

Directive (EU) 2024/825 ECGT prohibits generic greenwashing. Environmental claims require independent technical verification. The digital passport acts as a verifiable evidentiary layer: it links each claim to its traceable technical data. An enterprise cannot declare a fabric as sustainable if the digital record does not expose the exact water-efficiency metric.

Directive (EU) 2025/1892 textile EPR establishes the ecological modulation of SCRAP fees. The amount paid to the collective schemes will depend on the durability of the good. The DPP will supply the reparability rating used to calculate the financial penalty.

The CSDDD Directive 2024/1760 imposes the mapping of risks in the chain. The traceability architecture required for the DPP structurally supports this mapping. The technical effort of identifying the Tier 3 processor serves to audit its chemical consumption under ESPR and its labour standards under CSDDD.

The Omnibus Regulation (EU) 2026/470, published in the OJEU on 26 February 2026, redefines the intersection with the CSRD. The framework establishes a double and cumulative threshold: the textile enterprise becomes subject if it exceeds one thousand employees AND simultaneously exceeds 450 million euros in net turnover. Effective application from 1 January 2027. Medium-sized enterprises are excluded from mandatory CSRD reporting, but the DPP retains its unavoidable mandatory nature regardless of size.

Scenarios

Operational implications by size: three verifiable scenarios

Operational impact takes on divergent profiles depending on scale. The first scenario corresponds to the large textile enterprise. This corporation manages a massive volume of references and operates under public scrutiny. The flow requires automated integration between the product lifecycle manager (PLM) and the digital passport repository. Manual data entry is unviable against the turnover of collections.

The second scenario affects the medium-sized enterprise. This organisation lacks the financial muscle to impose unilateral conditions on its Asian suppliers. Its compliance strategy must rely on the standardisation of information requests. It depends critically on its Tier 1 suppliers to consolidate the declarations of the lower links.

The third scenario covers the textile micro-enterprise. The legislator contemplates specific exemptions for this stratum regarding inventory destruction. The obligation to issue the digital passport remains in force and conditions market access. The micro-enterprise will operate through simplified web portals for generating unique identifiers.

Edge cases

Border scenarios in the textile chain: 8 edge cases

1. White label and external manufacturing: the economic operator that places the product on the EU market under its own brand assumes the obligations of the manufacturer, and must contractually require the DPP from its supplier.

2. Sales through marketplaces: online marketplace providers must cooperate with market surveillance authorities (Art. 30) and remove listings of products without a valid DPP.

3. Dual EU/extra-EU distribution: the ESPR applies only to goods placed on the Union market. Production destined for direct extra-EU export falls outside the customs scope of the DPP.

4. Crossing the [CSRD](/recursos/glosario/csrd) threshold: a growing brand that reaches the CSRD metrics must align its DPP data repository with the ESRS standards for sustainability auditing.

5. Pure B2B circuits: intermediate products (fabrics, trims) may require partial passports or B2B data transmission so that the final assembler (Tier 1) builds the definitive DPP.

6. DTC from outside the EU: e-commerce shipments to European consumers must have a valid DPP to clear customs.

7. Importer of a non-EU brand: if the manufacturer is not established in the EU and has no authorised representative, the importer assumes legal responsibility (Art. 29).

8. Second-hand and reconditioning: refurbishment processes require updating the DPP in the Life-cycle Log to reflect changes in components or warranties.

Edge cases · 8 border scenarios

Border cases in the textile chain under ESPR

  1. White label brand (private label)

    The economic operator that places the product on the EU market under its own brand assumes the obligations of the manufacturer, and must contractually require the DPP from its supplier.

  2. Sales through marketplaces

    Online marketplace providers must cooperate with market surveillance authorities (Art. 30) and remove listings of products without a valid DPP.

  3. Dual EU/extra-EU distribution

    The ESPR applies only to goods placed on the Union market. Production destined for direct extra-EU export falls outside the customs scope of the DPP.

  4. Brand crossing the CSRD threshold

    A growing brand that reaches the CSRD metrics must align its DPP data repository with the ESRS standards for sustainability auditing.

  5. Pure B2B circuits

    Intermediate products (fabrics, trims) may require partial passports or B2B data transmission so that the final assembler (Tier 1) builds the definitive DPP.

  6. DTC from outside the EU

    E-commerce shipments to European consumers must have a valid DPP to clear customs.

  7. Importer of a non-EU brand

    If the manufacturer is not established in the EU and has no authorised representative, the importer assumes legal responsibility (Art. 29).

  8. Second-hand and reconditioning

    Refurbishment processes require updating the DPP in the Life-cycle Log to reflect changes in components or warranties.

Action

5 operational decisions for the next 12 months

1. [Tier 2](/recursos/glosario/tier-1-2-3)-3 documentary mapping (3-4 months): deploy traceability audits on spinning and dyeing suppliers. Identify factories that lack basic digitalisation or chemical substance certifications (REACH, SVHC). Success criterion: Tier 2-3 inventory with documentary owners per block of JRC Table 13.

2. Contractual clauses with garment makers (1-2 months): amend sourcing contracts to require real-time data transfer in interoperable formats (JSON-LD), penalising opacity. Criterion: DPP clause in every manufacturing contract signed after Q3 2026.

3. Inventory of available data vs gap (2-3 months): compare current ERP/PLM data against the ~35 datapoints foreseen in JRC 145830, identifying the gaps in primary information. Criterion: matrix of JRC datapoints × owner × source.

4. Federated data architecture (1 month): set up decentralised repositories (DDR) with decentralised identifiers (DIDs) or URIs, ensuring the data resides at source but is accessible via the EU registry. Criterion: signed DPP technical architecture document.

5. Regulatory monitoring and version control (ongoing): establish protocols to update the DPP against changes in the production line or firmware updates. Criterion: regulatory monitoring with a response SLA of ≤2 weeks after EUR-Lex publication.

Operational matrix

Datapoints × Responsible tier × Documentary source

Closing of criterion §6 decision 3 — operational matrix by block: where the data lives + how it is documented.

JRC blockResponsible tierDocumentary sourceTransfer format
Fibre composition1Tier 2 (spinning) + Tier 3 (raw material)ISO 1833 analysis certificate + supplier delivery note + GOTS/RCS chain-of-custodyJSON-LD + W3C VC 2.0
Geographic originTier 1 (assembly) + Tier 2 (weaving) + Tier 3 (cultivation/extraction)Customs invoice + declaration of origin + on-site auditISO 3166-1 + URI
Production processesTier 2 (dyeing/finishing)Bill of materials + energy consumption record + REACH/SVHC listJSON-LD + EPCIS 2.0
Tested durabilityTier 1-2 (accredited laboratory)ISO 12947-2 test report + ISO 5077 + Loi AGEC referencenumeric + W3C VC
Care instructionsBrand / Tier 1Product technical sheet + ISO 3758 labelstring + iconos URI
End-of-life routesBrand (EPR) + Tier 2 (recyclability)SCRAP registration + recyclability analysis + collection point URIsenum + URI registro EPR

Operational actions · next 12 months

5 actionable operational decisions

  1. Tier 2-3 documentary mapping

    Deploy traceability audits on spinning and dyeing suppliers. Identify factories that lack basic digitalisation or chemical substance certifications (REACH, SVHC).

    3-4 months
  2. Contractual clauses with garment makers

    Amend sourcing contracts to require real-time data transfer in interoperable formats (JSON-LD), penalising opacity.

    1-2 months
  3. Inventory of available data vs gap

    Compare current ERP/PLM data against the ~35 datapoints foreseen in JRC 145830, identifying the gaps in primary information.

    2-3 months
  4. Federated data architecture

    Set up decentralised repositories (DDR) with decentralised identifiers (DIDs) or URIs, ensuring the data resides at source but is accessible via the EU registry.

    1 month
  5. Regulatory monitoring and version control

    Establish protocols to update the DPP against changes in the production line or regulatory firmware updates.

    ongoing
Frequently asked questions

Cited sources

  1. Parlamento Europeo y ConsejoOfficial Journal of the European Union28 jun 2024Regulation in force
  2. Joint Research Centre · Publications Office of the European Union19 mar 2026Technical document · DOI 10.2760/4511279
  3. European Commission, DG Environmentabr 2025Multi-annual work plan
  4. CIRPASS Consortium · WP217 jul 2023Horizon Europe project deliverable
  5. Official Journal of the European Union13 jun 2024Directive in force
  6. Official Journal of the European Union27 sep 2011Regulation in force
  7. Official Journal of the European Union10 feb 2026Implementing Regulation
  8. Official Journal of the European Union22 abr 2026Delegated Regulation
  9. Official Journal of the European Union13 jun 2024Directive in force
  10. European Parliamentary Research Service2024Parliamentary study
  11. Official Journal of the European Union10 sep 2025Directive under transposition
  12. Official Journal of the European Union26 feb 2026Directive in force
  13. World Wide Web Consortium2025Technical specification
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