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RoHS Directive 2011/65/EU

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

Directive 2011/65/EU of the European Parliament and of the Council of 8 June 2011 on the restriction of the use of certain hazardous substances in electrical and electronic equipment — the "RoHS Directive" or RoHS 2 — replaced Directive 2002/95/EC and has applied since 2 January 2013. It restricts ten substances in electrical and electronic equipment (EEE) at threshold concentrations and requires CE marking attesting to conformity. The Directive is repeatedly amended through Commission Delegated Directives that adjust the list of exemptions in Annexes III and IV. Published as OJ L 174, 1.7.2011, p. 88.

Legal status and timeline

Scope: products covered

Article 2 applies to EEE falling within the eleven categories listed in Annex I:

  1. Large household appliances;
  2. Small household appliances;
  3. IT and telecommunications equipment;
  4. Consumer equipment;
  5. Lighting equipment;
  6. Electrical and electronic tools;
  7. Toys, leisure and sports equipment;
  8. Medical devices;
  9. Monitoring and control instruments including industrial monitoring and control instruments;
  10. Automatic dispensers;
  11. Other EEE not covered by any of the above categories.

Category 11 is an "open scope" category making the Directive applicable to all EEE not specifically excluded. Cables, spare parts, and components for repair are within scope where they are EEE.

Exclusions (Article 2(4))

Restricted substances (Annex II)

Annex II lists the ten restricted substances and their maximum concentration values (by weight in homogeneous materials):

The threshold applies per homogeneous material — defined as a material that cannot be mechanically disjointed into different materials. The threshold is not at the product level. A 0.1% threshold permits up to 1,000 ppm.

Exemptions (Annexes III and IV)

Annex III lists exemptions applicable to all categories of EEE. Annex IV lists exemptions specific to medical devices and monitoring and control instruments. Each exemption has a validity date (typically 5 to 7 years) after which it must be re-evaluated. The Commission adopts Delegated Directives extending, modifying, or removing exemptions. Notable examples:

Manufacturers relying on an exemption must document its application in the technical file and verify that the exemption remains in force at the time of placing each batch on the market.

Conformity assessment

Article 7(b) requires the manufacturer to carry out the internal production control procedure set out in Module A of Annex II of Decision No 768/2008/EC — i.e., self-declaration. No Notified Body is involved. The manufacturer compiles the technical documentation, manufactures in conformity, draws up the EU Declaration of Conformity, and affixes the CE marking. See conformity assessment modules.

Technical documentation

Article 7(c) requires the manufacturer to ensure that procedures are in place for series production to remain in conformity. EN IEC 63000:2018 (previously EN 50581) is the harmonised standard for technical documentation supporting compliance with RoHS. It specifies the content of the file: assessment of materials, sub-assemblies, components against the restricted substance thresholds; documentation from suppliers (material declarations, test reports); reasoning where suppliers' documentation is treated as sufficient; sampling and analytical testing where suppliers' documentation is insufficient.

Retention: 10 years (Article 7(c)). See technical documentation.

EU Declaration of Conformity

Article 13 and Annex VI. A single Declaration covering RoHS together with the LVD, EMC Directive, RED, and other applicable acts is the standard approach. See EU Declaration of Conformity.

Marking and labelling

Article 7(g) requires the manufacturer to affix the CE marking. No additional symbol is required by RoHS; the CE mark itself indicates conformity with RoHS along with other applicable acts. See affixing the CE mark.

Recent and upcoming changes

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