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EMC Directive 2014/30/EU

Last reviewed: May 2026 · Legal status verified against EUR-Lex.

Directive 2014/30/EU of the European Parliament and of the Council of 26 February 2014 on the harmonisation of the laws of the Member States relating to electromagnetic compatibility — commonly the "EMC Directive" — applies to all equipment liable to cause electromagnetic disturbance or whose performance is liable to be affected by such disturbance. It replaced Directive 2004/108/EC and has applied since 20 April 2016. The Directive was published in the OJEU as OJ L 96, 29.3.2014, p. 79. No replacement regulation is under preparation as of May 2026.

Legal status and timeline

Scope: products covered

Article 2(1) of the Directive applies to "any apparatus or fixed installation". Article 3(1)(1) defines "apparatus" as any finished appliance or combination thereof made commercially available as a single functional unit, intended for the end-user and liable to generate electromagnetic disturbance, or the performance of which is liable to be affected by such disturbance. "Fixed installation" (Article 3(1)(3)) is a particular combination of several types of apparatus assembled, installed, and intended to be used permanently at a predefined location.

Article 2(2) — exclusions

Equipment outside the EMC Directive's scope:

Fixed installations

Fixed installations are subject to the essential requirements (Article 19, Annex II) but are not CE-marked and do not require a Declaration of Conformity. The person responsible for the assembly must apply good engineering practice, document the practices used, and keep the documentation for as long as the installation is in operation. Apparatus that is part of a fixed installation and is also placed on the market as standalone equipment must comply with the Directive in its own right.

Essential requirements

Annex I sets out two essential requirements:

  1. Emission — equipment must be designed and manufactured so that the electromagnetic disturbance generated does not exceed a level above which radio and telecommunication equipment or other equipment cannot operate as intended.
  2. Immunity — equipment must have a level of immunity to the electromagnetic disturbance to be expected in its intended use which allows it to operate without unacceptable degradation of its intended use.

The Directive does not prescribe quantitative limits. These come from the harmonised standards. The choice of which standards apply depends on the type of equipment (e.g., residential vs. industrial, audio vs. lighting, IT vs. industrial measurement).

Conformity assessment

Article 14 and Annex II / Annex III provide two conformity assessment options for apparatus:

The four-digit Notified Body identification number appears next to the CE marking only where Module B + C has been used (and even then, only where the Module C part involves the body — under plain B + C without C2 surveillance, the number does not appear on the product). In practice, the overwhelming majority of EMC-only products use Module A and bear no Notified Body number.

Technical documentation

Annex II, point 2, requires the technical documentation to make it possible to assess conformity with the essential requirements. It must contain:

The retention period is ten years from the date the apparatus was placed on the market (Article 7(7)).

EU Declaration of Conformity

Annex IV sets the contents. The Declaration must reference the EMC Directive and the harmonised standards applied. Where the apparatus is also covered by other Union acts (typically Low Voltage Directive, RoHS Directive), a single Declaration covering all applicable acts is issued. See EU Declaration of Conformity.

Marking and labelling

Article 18 requires the CE marking affixed in accordance with Article 30 of Regulation 765/2008 (affixing the CE mark). Annex V sets the dimensions and proportions (referencing Annex II of Regulation 765/2008). Apparatus must bear:

Harmonised standards

EMC harmonised standards fall into three categories:

The Commission's harmonised standards list for the EMC Directive is updated regularly; see harmonised standards.

Recent and upcoming changes

No structural amendment to the EMC Directive has been adopted since 2016. The principal developments:

Related legislation

Common errors

Sources