The consequences of GPSR non-compliance are real, enforced, and costly. Here's what you need to know.
By EU GPSR Team · Published March 18, 2026
Since December 2024, the GPSR (General Product Safety Regulation) enforcement wave has accelerated across the EU. Authorities and marketplaces are actively checking product documentation—and sellers without a proper EU Responsible Person are facing real consequences. This isn't a future problem. It's happening now.
The fastest consequence you'll face is marketplace suspension. Amazon, eBay, and other major platforms have implemented automated GPSR compliance checks since early 2025.
Here's how it works:
Amazon suspended thousands of listings from non-EU sellers in January 2025, citing missing GPSR compliance documentation. Sellers reported receiving automated notices: "Your product listing violates GPSR requirements. Provide an EU Responsible Person contact within 7 days or your listing will be removed." Many sellers lost 30–50% of their sales overnight before appointing an RP.
Impact: Immediate revenue loss. Marketplace visibility drops. Competitors fill the gap.
Customs authorities at EU borders are now actively screening shipments for GPSR compliance. Products arriving without proper documentation face seizure and destruction.
Real Cost Example: A shipment of 10,000 units (€50,000 value) arriving in Hamburg without GPSR documentation can be held for 30 days. Even if you quickly appoint an RP and provide docs, you've lost a month of sales, paid storage fees (€1,000+), and courier costs for reshipment. Total damage: €8,000–15,000.
The big one. Each EU member state sets its own penalty structure under the EU product safety framework, but they're not small.
Typical ranges:
Penalties are multiplied if:
Example: A seller with 15 non-compliant product listings in France could face €15,000–€100,000+ in combined fines. Add legal defense costs (€2,000–5,000), and you're looking at a six-figure problem.
If authorities determine your product presents a safety risk and you lack proper GPSR documentation, they can force a recall.
A recall of 5,000 units costs €30,000–50,000 in logistics alone—before legal fees, rebranding, or replacement production.
EU member states maintain public or semi-public compliance violation databases. Once you're flagged:
Reputation recovery takes 12–24 months and costs thousands in compliance audits, legal reviews, and market re-entry work.
While the GPSR establishes a harmonized framework across the European Union, each member state implements its own enforcement mechanisms and penalty structures. Understanding how different countries approach GPSR enforcement can help you prioritize your compliance efforts, especially if you sell in multiple EU markets.
Germany is one of the strictest enforcers of product safety regulations in Europe. The Bundesnetzagentur (BNetzA) and the Federal Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (BAuA) actively monitor online marketplaces. Administrative fines can reach up to €100,000 per violation, and authorities regularly coordinate with Amazon.de to remove non-compliant listings. German authorities also issue rapid alerts through the EU Safety Gate system, which can trigger cross-border enforcement actions.
The Direction Generale de la Concurrence, de la Consommation et de la Repression des Fraudes (DGCCRF) is France's primary market surveillance authority. France imposes administrative fines and conducts regular market surveillance inspections, both online and at physical retail locations. French authorities are particularly active in testing products in categories like toys, electronics, and cosmetics. Non-compliant sellers can face fines, product withdrawal orders, and public disclosure of violations.
Both Italy and Spain enforce GPSR through their national consumer protection agencies. While their fine structures tend to be slightly lower than Germany or France, enforcement is increasing year over year. These countries participate actively in cross-border cooperation through the EU Safety Gate network, meaning a violation detected in Italy can quickly trigger investigations in Spain and other member states. Sellers should not assume that smaller markets mean lighter enforcement.
The Netherlands is known for particularly aggressive enforcement of product safety regulations. The Dutch Food and Consumer Product Safety Authority (NVWA) and the Human Environment and Transport Inspectorate (ILT) conduct proactive surveillance and are frequent contributors to RAPEX/Safety Gate alerts. The Netherlands often leads coordinated enforcement actions and has been at the forefront of online marketplace monitoring. Fines can reach €25,000 or more per violation, and Dutch authorities are quick to issue product recall orders.
Avoiding GPSR penalties is not complicated, but it does require a proactive approach. Here are the key steps every non-EU seller should take to stay compliant and protect their business.
This is the most critical step. Before you list any product on an EU marketplace or ship goods to European customers, you must have a designated EU Responsible Person in place. This person or entity serves as the official point of contact for EU market surveillance authorities and must be established within the European Union.
Your EU Responsible Person must have access to all relevant product documentation, including technical files, test reports, declarations of conformity, risk assessments, and instructions for use. These documents must be available in the language of the member state where the product is sold. Incomplete documentation is one of the most common reasons for enforcement actions.
Every product sold in the EU must display the name and contact address of the EU Responsible Person on the product, its packaging, or an accompanying document. The label must also include a way for consumers and authorities to reach your EU representative. Review the GPSR compliance checklist to ensure your labeling meets all requirements.
When a market surveillance authority contacts your EU Responsible Person, a timely response is essential. Delayed or ignored communications can escalate a minor inquiry into a formal investigation. Your RP should acknowledge any authority contact within 48 hours and provide requested documentation within the timeframe specified.
The EU Safety Gate (formerly RAPEX) publishes weekly alerts about unsafe products found on the EU market. Monitoring these alerts for your product category helps you stay ahead of enforcement trends and identify potential issues with similar products before authorities come knocking.
GPSR compliance is not a one-time task. Product specifications change, regulations evolve, and documentation expires. Review your compliance files at least annually, update test reports when product designs change, and ensure your EU Responsible Person always has the most current versions of all required documents.
Understanding the inspection process can help you prepare and respond appropriately if your products are selected for review by EU authorities.
A market surveillance inspection typically begins when an authority identifies a product of interest, either through routine monitoring, consumer complaints, Safety Gate alerts, or targeted marketplace sweeps. The process generally follows these steps:
Having a well-prepared EU Responsible Person who maintains organized, up-to-date documentation is the best defense against a negative inspection outcome. Most inspections that result in severe penalties involve sellers who either had no EU RP appointed or whose documentation was incomplete or outdated.
Three steps:
That's it. No complex paperwork. No hidden costs. Just compliance.
EU Responsible Person service
Plus seizure costs, recall, reputational damage
The difference? Spending €199/year on proper compliance can save you €50,000+ in penalties, lost sales, and legal costs. It's not an expense—it's insurance.
Don't wait for a suspension notice or customs seizure. Appoint an EU Responsible Person today and sleep soundly knowing you're compliant.
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