Fresh insight — April 2026

GPSR Enforcement 2026: Real Cases, Fines & Lessons from the First Year

It has now been over 16 months since the General Product Safety Regulation (GPSR) became fully enforceable across the EU on December 13, 2024. For the first time, we can look back at a complete year of active enforcement and draw hard conclusions about what really happens to sellers who fail to appoint an EU Responsible Person or otherwise violate the regulation. This article breaks down the enforcement patterns that emerged in 2025, the types of consequences sellers actually faced, and the practical lessons every non-EU business needs to take away before expanding into the European market in 2026.

GPSR Enforcement: The First Year in Numbers

When the GPSR entered into full application, many sellers outside the EU took a wait-and-see approach. A common belief circulated in seller communities that enforcement would be slow, fragmented, or even delayed. That belief did not survive 2025. By the end of the first full enforcement year, the pattern across the EU was clear: market surveillance authorities, customs services, and marketplaces all coordinated to remove non-compliant products at unprecedented scale.

4,000+
Safety Gate alerts processed in 2025 — a sharp increase over previous years
27
EU member states actively enforcing, with cross-border coordination
18
Priority product categories flagged for enhanced surveillance
€450M
Consumer market that non-compliant sellers lose access to

The consistent message from regulators in 2025 was that GPSR is not a paperwork exercise. It is a live enforcement regime. Products without an EU Responsible Person or without proper compliance documentation were removed, blocked, or refused entry at every stage of the supply chain. Sellers who waited paid — in lost listings, seized shipments, and in some cases, direct financial penalties.

Marketplace Takedowns: Amazon, eBay, Etsy

The clearest and fastest enforcement in 2025 did not come from government agencies at all — it came from marketplaces themselves. Under GPSR, online platforms are now classified as economic operators with their own obligations. They face real legal exposure if they allow non-compliant listings to remain on their sites. Their response has been aggressive.

Amazon EU Marketplaces

Amazon began systematic enforcement at the start of 2025 across all seven EU marketplaces (amazon.de, amazon.fr, amazon.it, amazon.es, amazon.nl, amazon.se, amazon.pl). Automated scans identified listings that lacked the required manufacturer and Responsible Person contact data, and sellers received listing-level warnings followed by de-listings within days if the issue was not fixed.

The pattern that emerged on Amazon:

For the full technical walkthrough of Amazon's GPSR fields and how to complete them correctly, see our dedicated guide on GPSR requirements for Amazon sellers.

eBay and Etsy

eBay rolled out a similar compliance enforcement across its EU sites throughout 2025, with particular focus on electronics, toys, and cosmetics. Sellers who did not add a valid EU Responsible Person to their listings saw items end automatically, and those with repeated violations faced store-level restrictions. Read our detailed guidance on GPSR for eBay sellers and GPSR for Etsy sellers for platform-specific instructions.

Shopify Stores and Direct-to-Consumer

Shopify does not directly enforce GPSR the way marketplaces do, but non-compliance still catches up with D2C sellers through customs, advertising platforms, and payment processors. In 2025, several payment and advertising providers (including Meta and TikTok Ads) began requesting proof of EU compliance from merchants targeting EU audiences with consumer goods. If you run a Shopify store selling into the EU, review our guidance on GPSR compliance for Shopify sellers.

Marketplace Reality Check

If your listings were not de-listed in 2025, it does not mean you are compliant — it may simply mean your account has not yet been scanned. Marketplace enforcement is continuous. New scans and new categories are added regularly.

Customs Seizures at EU Borders

While marketplace takedowns are highly visible, the quieter and often more expensive form of GPSR enforcement in 2025 happened at EU customs. When goods arrive at ports and airports — Rotterdam, Hamburg, Antwerp, Gdańsk, Koper, among others — customs officers increasingly check for GPSR compliance as part of standard import clearance procedures.

What actually happens when a shipment is flagged:

  1. Hold for inspection: Customs retains the shipment and issues a formal request for compliance documentation, typically within 24-48 hours of arrival.
  2. Documentation window: The importer of record is given a limited window (often 3-10 working days) to provide the EU Responsible Person name and address, technical documentation, risk assessment, and any required declarations of conformity.
  3. Fee clock: During this window, storage fees, demurrage, and warehouse costs continue to accrue — often exceeding the value of small shipments.
  4. Disposition: If compliance cannot be proven in time, goods are typically destroyed, re-exported at the importer's expense, or (in the case of prohibited products) confiscated without compensation.

Several categories have been particularly targeted at borders: consumer electronics, lithium-ion battery products, children's toys, cosmetics, textiles with direct skin contact, and PPE. Sellers shipping into the EU in these categories without proper documentation have faced repeated seizures.

Safety Gate: The EU's Rapid Alert Machine

The EU Safety Gate (the successor to RAPEX) is the central nervous system of GPSR enforcement. Whenever a national authority in any member state identifies a dangerous or non-compliant product, it posts an alert that is instantly visible to all other member states — and to marketplaces, customs, and the public.

The effects of a Safety Gate alert cascade quickly:

For brands that build their reputation over years, a single Safety Gate entry can undo that work in days. This is why GPSR enforcement is not just about fines — the cascade effect can be far more damaging than any direct penalty.

Fines by Country: How Penalties Vary

GPSR itself does not set specific fine amounts. Instead, Article 44 requires member states to set penalties that are effective, proportionate, and dissuasive. This has produced significant variation across the EU. Some countries cap fines as a percentage of annual turnover, while others use fixed tiers.

A rough picture of how penalty frameworks look in 2026:

The important takeaway is that enforcement is now cross-border. A single violation flagged in one member state can trigger action in others, multiplying exposure. For a full breakdown of penalty categories and worst-case scenarios, see our detailed article on GPSR penalties and what happens without an EU Responsible Person.

What Triggers a GPSR Investigation

Looking back at the first year of enforcement, most actions did not start with random audits. They began with specific triggers. Understanding these triggers helps sellers avoid being on the wrong side of them.

1. Marketplace Automated Scans

By far the most common trigger in 2025. Amazon, eBay, and similar platforms run routine scans for listings missing required GPSR fields. These scans do not require a complaint — they are proactive and continuous. A listing live on Amazon for months can still be de-listed the moment a scan flags it.

2. Customer Complaints

A single customer complaint about product safety, received by the national authority or the marketplace, can open a formal investigation. In 2025, consumer complaints were a major driver of actions against toy, cosmetics, and small-appliance sellers.

3. Customs Intelligence

When customs officers identify a brand or shipper with repeated issues, that profile is shared across EU customs networks. Subsequent shipments from the same source receive enhanced scrutiny — even at different ports.

4. Cross-Referrals via Safety Gate

When one member state posts a Safety Gate alert, other member states actively investigate the same product, the same seller, and related brands. A single alert in Italy can trigger investigations in Germany, France, Poland, and beyond.

5. Proactive Market Surveillance Audits

Each member state runs its own annual surveillance program focused on priority categories — children's products, electrical appliances, cosmetics, PPE, and textiles with direct skin contact. Sellers operating in these categories without proper compliance are the most likely to face audits.

Five Lessons Sellers Must Take Away

Lesson 1: Compliance Is Not Optional

The wait-and-see strategy that some sellers adopted in early 2025 cost them significantly. Those who delayed appointing an EU Responsible Person lost listings, lost shipments, and in some cases lost their entire EU market share to compliant competitors. At €199 per year for basic GPSR compliance, the math is straightforward — compliance is a rounding error compared to the cost of enforcement.

Lesson 2: Marketplaces Enforce Faster Than Governments

If you are selling on Amazon or eBay, your first enforcement encounter will almost certainly come from the platform itself, not a government authority. Marketplaces have commercial incentives to act quickly and do not offer the due-process protections that government actions often involve. A de-listing decision arrives in your inbox, and you have days — not weeks — to fix the issue.

Lesson 3: Cross-Border Coordination Is Real

Sellers who assumed that being caught in one country would not affect their business in another learned otherwise. The Safety Gate system, combined with cross-border customs coordination, means a single enforcement action frequently cascades into 27 member states.

Lesson 4: Documentation Is as Important as the Responsible Person

Appointing an EU Responsible Person is the first step, but it is not sufficient. You also need the underlying technical documentation, risk assessment, and declarations of conformity that your Responsible Person can present to authorities on request. Review our GPSR compliance checklist for non-EU sellers to make sure nothing is missing.

Lesson 5: Labels and Listings Must Match

Several enforcement actions in 2025 involved sellers who had appointed a Responsible Person but failed to display the information correctly on product labels or online listings. GPSR requires the Responsible Person's name and address to be physically on the product (or its packaging, or accompanying documentation) and clearly visible on online listings before the consumer completes the purchase. Missing either of these creates a violation.

The Economics of Compliance

For a typical small seller, compliance costs €199-549 per year. The costs of non-compliance include: lost marketplace listings (often hundreds to thousands of euros per month in revenue), seized shipments (the cost of the goods plus storage and destruction fees), and administrative fines (from thousands to potentially millions of euros depending on the country and severity). The economic case for compliance is overwhelming.

What to Expect in 2026

The enforcement trajectory for 2026 is clear: more automation, more coordination, and deeper scrutiny. Key developments to watch include:

For non-EU sellers planning to enter or expand in the EU in 2026, the message is simple: compliance must come before the first sale. Appoint an EU Responsible Person, prepare your documentation, and verify your labels and listings before you go live. Services like EU GPSR can set this up in under 24 hours, and our guide to finding the right EU Authorized Representative explains what to look for and what to avoid.

Frequently Asked Questions

What are the GPSR fines in 2026?

GPSR fines are set by each EU member state and vary widely. Member states must set penalties that are "effective, proportionate, and dissuasive." In practice, financial penalties for serious or repeated violations range from thousands of euros for small sellers to several million euros for large manufacturers and marketplaces. Many member states cap fines at a percentage of annual turnover (typically 2-4%).

Can Amazon suspend my account for GPSR non-compliance?

Yes. Since December 2024, Amazon has been actively removing listings on its EU marketplaces (amazon.de, amazon.fr, amazon.it, amazon.es, amazon.nl, amazon.se, amazon.pl) that lack valid EU Responsible Person information. Repeated violations can result in full account suspension on EU stores.

How does the EU Safety Gate enforce GPSR?

The EU Safety Gate (formerly RAPEX) is the rapid alert system for dangerous non-food products. When national authorities identify unsafe products, they post alerts visible across all 27 member states. Products flagged in Safety Gate are removed from marketplaces and blocked at customs EU-wide. In 2025, Safety Gate processed over 4,000 alerts — a significant increase from previous years.

What triggers a GPSR compliance investigation?

Investigations are typically triggered by: (1) customer complaints about product safety, (2) marketplace automated scans detecting missing Responsible Person data, (3) border customs inspections of imported goods, (4) cross-referrals from other member states via Safety Gate, and (5) proactive market surveillance audits in sectors like toys, electronics, cosmetics, and textiles.

What happens if my products are seized at EU customs?

If customs authorities suspect GPSR non-compliance, they can hold your shipment for inspection. You typically have 3-10 working days to provide compliance documentation (including EU Responsible Person details and technical documentation). If you cannot prove compliance, goods may be destroyed, returned at your expense, or confiscated. You may also be liable for storage and disposal costs.

How can I avoid GPSR enforcement actions?

Appoint an EU Responsible Person before selling any products in the EU. Ensure your product labels, packaging, and marketplace listings contain the required information (manufacturer name/address, Responsible Person name/address, product identifier, safety warnings in local languages). Maintain technical documentation. Keep contact details with authorities up to date. Services like EU GPSR can handle this for as little as €199/year.

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