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EU Green Claims Directive: Complete Guide for Businesses (2026)

The EU Green Claims Directive will fundamentally change how businesses make environmental claims in Europe. Unlike the ECGT Directive — which bans generic claims — the Green Claims Directive goes further: it requires independent, third-party verification of environmental claims before they're used in marketing. Enforcement is expected between 2027 and 2028.

What Is the EU Green Claims Directive?

The Green Claims Directive (formally proposed as COM/2023/166) is a European Commission legislative proposal that would create binding rules for substantiating and communicating environmental claims in the EU single market. It sits alongside — and goes further than — the ECGT Directive already in force.

The core principle: if you want to tell EU consumers your product is better for the environment, you must prove it before you say it. Not after being caught. Before.

This represents a paradigm shift. Until 2024, the default was that companies could make environmental claims unless regulators proved them false. Under the Green Claims Directive, the burden flips: companies must substantiate claims before marketing them.

The directive covers explicit environmental claims ("made from recycled materials"), implicit claims (green packaging design, leaf imagery), and environmental labels (whether certified or self-declared).

Related: What Is Greenwashing? Complete Guide

Legislative Timeline

DateEventStatus
March 2023European Commission proposal (COM/2023/166)Complete
November 2023European Parliament position adoptedComplete
2024Council trilogue negotiationsComplete
2025Expected formal adoption by CouncilIn progress
2025–2026Publication in Official Journal; 18-month transposition period beginsPending
2027–2028National enforcement begins across EU member statesPending

Note the distinction from the ECGT Directive (2024/825), already adopted March 2024 with enforcement from September 27, 2026. Both apply simultaneously but address different aspects of green marketing.

Core Requirements

1. Substantiation Before Use

Article 3 of the proposed directive requires that explicit environmental claims be based on internationally recognized scientific evidence, state-of-the-art technical knowledge, Life Cycle Assessment (LCA) methodology per ISO 14040/14044 for product-level claims, and consideration of all significant environmental impacts — not just favorable ones.

The "hidden trade-off" sin — promoting one environmental attribute while ignoring larger harms — becomes explicitly illegal. You cannot claim "sustainable cotton" if your water consumption or dyeing process causes greater environmental damage than conventional alternatives.

2. Third-Party Verification

This is the structural change that distinguishes the Green Claims Directive from everything before it. Claims must be verified by an accredited conformity assessment body before going live. This body must be independent of the claiming company, accredited by a national accreditation body (per EU Regulation 765/2008), and free from conflicts of interest.

Self-certification is not enough. Internal environmental teams cannot serve as verifiers.

3. Environmental Labelling Restrictions

By 2026, new national or regional public sustainability label schemes are prohibited unless approved at EU level. Private label schemes must meet minimum criteria for transparency and substantiation — or be banned.

This targets the proliferation of homemade sustainability badges that companies design themselves to signal eco-friendliness without meeting any recognized standard.

4. Consumer Communication Requirements

Verified claims must be accompanied by a QR code or link to the verification certificate, clear identification of the scope of the claim (product, range, or company), and disclosure if the claim is future-facing (targets must be labelled as targets, not current status).

5. Carbon Offset Claim Restrictions

Claims of "carbon neutrality," "net zero," or "climate neutral" achieved primarily through carbon offsets face severe restrictions. The directive requires disclosure of the proportion of actual emission reductions vs. offsets, and offsets must meet strict additionality and permanence criteria.

See: Carbon Neutral Claims Under EU Law

Who It Affects

Business TypeApplies?Notes
Large EU corporationsYes, immediatelyFull requirements from day one of enforcement
SMEs (EU-based)Yes, with 12-month delayCommission proposed transitional period
Micro-enterprises (<10 employees)PartialExemptions under discussion; substantiation still required
Non-EU companies selling to EUYesAny business targeting EU consumers is covered
B2B-only companiesNoConsumer-facing claims only

Sectors with the highest compliance burden include fashion, food and beverage, energy, financial services, and cosmetics. See: Greenwashing by Industry

Penalties and Enforcement

Article 17 of the proposed directive sets minimum penalty requirements. Member states must ensure penalties that are effective, proportionate, and dissuasive. The minimum fine floor is 4% of annual global turnover. For a company with €500 million in revenue, that's a €20 million minimum fine.

Additional enforcement tools include mandatory corrective advertising, temporary or permanent bans on specific claims, seizure of profits attributable to the violation, and public blacklisting of repeat offenders on official authority websites.

Enforcement is coordinated through the Consumer Protection Cooperation (CPC) network. A French retailer making misleading claims visible in Germany can face German enforcement action.

Use our free greenwashing scanner to audit your website before enforcement begins.

Green Claims Directive vs ECGT: Key Differences

AspectECGT Directive (2024/825)Green Claims Directive
StatusIn force since March 2024Proposed; adoption expected 2025
EnforcementSeptember 27, 20262027–2028
Core mechanismBans specific generic claimsPre-approval verification requirement
Banned terms28+ banned/restricted termsNo banned list; substantiation required for all
VerificationNot required pre-publicationRequired before use
PenaltiesSet by member statesMinimum 4% of turnover

The practical implication: the ECGT sets the floor (what you can't say), while the Green Claims Directive sets the ceiling (what you must prove before saying anything).

How to Prepare Now

Phase 1: Audit (Now — 3 months)

  • Inventory every environmental claim your business makes: website, packaging, advertising, social media, investor communications
  • Run your website through our free scanner to identify ECGT-banned terms immediately
  • Map which claims have existing substantiation and which don't
  • Identify claims based on carbon offsets for special attention

Phase 2: Prioritize and remediate (3–9 months)

  • Remove or rewrite claims that can't be substantiated
  • Commission lifecycle assessments for product-level environmental claims you want to keep
  • Identify which certification schemes are appropriate for your sector
  • Implement a pre-publication review process for all marketing with environmental content

Phase 3: Certify and verify (6–18 months)

  • Engage an accredited conformity assessment body for verification of priority claims
  • Apply for relevant certifications: EU Ecolabel, ISO 14021, sector-specific standards
  • Train marketing, product, and procurement teams on compliant claim-making
  • Set up monitoring to catch new claims before they go live

Further reading: How to Avoid Greenwashing — Business Guide

Recognized Certification Schemes

CertificationScopeVerification Type
EU EcolabelWide product categoriesThird-party, EU official
ISO 14021Self-declared environmental claimsStandard methodology
ISO 14025Type III Environmental Declarations (LCA-based)Third-party verified
B Corp CertificationCompany-level sustainabilityThird-party (B Lab)
FSC / PEFCWood and paper productsThird-party
FairtradeAgricultural productsThird-party
EU Energy LabelAppliances and electronicsMandatory EU scheme
EU Organic LogoFood and agricultural productsThird-party, EU official

Self-invented company badges — even if backed by internal data — will not satisfy the Green Claims Directive's verification requirement.

Don't Wait for Enforcement

Scan your website now for ECGT-banned green terms. Free, no signup, results in 60 seconds.

Free Compliance Scan

Frequently Asked Questions

When does the EU Green Claims Directive come into force?

Formal adoption is expected in 2025, followed by an 18-month transposition period. Most analysts expect national enforcement to begin in 2027–2028. The ECGT Directive (separate) enforces from September 27, 2026.

Does the Green Claims Directive apply to UK businesses?

Not directly post-Brexit, but any UK business selling to EU consumers is subject to it. The UK has its own equivalent through the CMA's Green Claims Code.

What's the difference between the ECGT and Green Claims Directive?

The ECGT bans specific generic claims and is already in force. The Green Claims Directive requires pre-approval verification for all environmental claims — it's broader and not yet in force. Compliance with one doesn't guarantee compliance with the other.

Do SMEs get a transition period?

The Commission proposed a 12-month additional delay for SMEs. The core substantiation requirement applies to all businesses from day one.

What happens to my existing certifications?

EU-recognized certifications (EU Ecolabel, organic, energy labels) remain valid. Private or in-house sustainability badges will likely need review, upgrade, or removal once the directive is enforceable.

Bottom Line

The EU Green Claims Directive represents the most significant change to environmental marketing law in European history. Businesses that start preparing now face far lower costs and risks than those who wait for the enforcement date. Start with a free scan of your website to identify your current exposure under the ECGT rules already in force.

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