EUDR compliance is reshaping how companies manage global supply chains—but understanding the regulation isn’t the hardest part. Operationalizing it is.
Organizations must now prove that products are deforestation-free, legally sourced, and fully traceable to origin. That requires plot-level geolocation data, structured due diligence, and audit-ready documentation—often across complex, multi-tier supply chains.
For most compliance leaders, the challenge isn’t awareness. It’s building a system that can collect, validate, and defend that data at scale. This guide breaks down how to move from fragmented supplier data to a centralized, technology-driven EUDR compliance framework.
Get the complete EUDR compliance framework.
Learn how to operationalize due diligence, risk assessment, and traceability at scale.
This guide is designed for compliance and regulatory leaders responsible for EUDR readiness and defensible due diligence programs.
It is especially relevant for:
Compliance and regulatory teams managing EUDR due diligence and audit readiness
Supply chain leaders responsible for traceability and supplier engagement
ESG and sustainability professionals overseeing deforestation risk and reporting
Procurement teams supporting supplier data collection and validation
EUDR compliance refers to the processes companies must follow to ensure products placed on the EU market are deforestation-free, legally sourced, and supported by verifiable data.
Under the EU Deforestation Regulation (EUDR), organizations must:
Trace commodities to their exact origin using plot-level geolocation data
Conduct due diligence across data collection, risk assessment, and mitigation
Submit a Due Diligence Statement (DDS) before placing products on the market
This represents a shift from trust-based sourcing to proof-based sourcing, where every claim must be backed by verifiable, audit-ready evidence.
EUDR compliance requirements are clear. Execution is not. Most organizations face three core challenges:
Limited supply chain visibility - Many supply chains span multiple tiers, regions, and smallholder networks. Without a complete map, traceability breaks down early.
Incomplete or inconsistent supplier data - Geolocation coordinates, legality documentation, and sourcing data are often missing or unreliable, making verification difficult.
Manual, disconnected processes - Data lives across spreadsheets, emails, and legacy systems, making it difficult to perform EUDR risk assessment or produce defensible documentation.
As a result, compliance becomes slow, reactive, and difficult to scale—especially as regulatory scrutiny increases.
EUDR compliance breaks down when data is fragmented and processes can’t scale.
See how compliance leaders are solving traceability and supplier data challenges.
To meet EUDR compliance requirements, companies must follow a structured due diligence process defined in the regulation:
Gather detailed product and supplier information, including:
Product description and quantity
Supplier and country of origin
Proof of legality
Plot-level geolocation data
Evaluate whether products pose any risk related to:
Deforestation after the December 31, 2020 baseline
Illegal land use
Human rights violations
If risk is identified, companies must:
Request additional documentation
Conduct audits or verification
Exclude noncompliant suppliers
Only products with “no or negligible risk” can be placed on the EU market.
Meeting EUDR compliance requirements at scale requires more than process—it requires structure.
This guide introduces a four-pillar framework to operationalize compliance across complex supply chains:
Establish end-to-end visibility across suppliers, intermediaries, and sourcing regions.
Capture plot-level coordinates and validate them using satellite and supporting documentation.
Evaluate deforestation, legality, and supplier risk using consistent, data-driven criteria.
Compile verified data and submit your DDS with confidence and audit-ready documentation.
Together, these pillars create a repeatable framework for managing EUDR compliance across products and regions.
A structured framework turns EUDR compliance into a repeatable, audit-ready process.
Learn how to apply these four pillars across your supply chain.
The biggest barrier to EUDR compliance isn’t regulation—it’s data.
Supplier data, geolocation coordinates, and risk assessments are often fragmented across systems. Without a single source of truth, teams struggle to validate information, complete due diligence, and respond to audits.
Technology bridges that gap.
EUDR compliance product traceability providers like Source Intelligence help organizations:
Centralize supplier and product data into a single system
Automate supplier outreach and data collection
Validate geolocation data using geospatial analytics
Standardize EUDR risk assessment and documentation
Generate and submit Due Diligence Statements (DDS)
This transforms compliance from a manual burden into a scalable, repeatable process.
EUDR compliance is not a one-time exercise. It requires ongoing data validation, supplier engagement, and risk monitoring.
The full guide explores how to build a technology-driven compliance framework that supports traceability, due diligence, and audit readiness at scale.
How to map complex supply chains for full EUDR traceability
How to collect and verify plot-level geolocation data
How to perform consistent, defensible EUDR risk assessment
How to streamline due diligence and DDS submission
How to scale compliance using automation and centralized data
Download the e-book to learn how to reduce risk, protect market access, and build a future-ready compliance program.
EUDR compliance requires companies to ensure that products placed on the EU market are deforestation-free, legally sourced, and supported by verifiable supply chain data.
This includes collecting traceability data, conducting due diligence, and submitting a Due Diligence Statement (DDS) before products can be placed on the market.
EUDR compliance requirements are built around a three-step due diligence process:
Data collection, including supplier information and plot-level geolocation
Risk assessment to evaluate deforestation, legality, and supply chain risk
Risk mitigation to address any identified risks before market access
Companies must demonstrate that risk is “negligible” before placing products on the EU market.
EUDR due diligence must be completed before each product is placed on the EU market or exported.
It must be repeated for every relevant product, even when sourcing from the same land or supplier, and must include updated geolocation and risk assessment data.
EUDR traceability requires companies to trace all relevant commodities back to the exact plot of land where they were produced.
This includes:
Collecting geographic coordinates for every production plot
Ensuring commodities are not mixed with materials of unknown origin
Maintaining traceability across all supply chain tiers
If geolocation data cannot be collected, the product cannot be placed on the EU market.
An EUDR risk assessment evaluates whether a product is linked to deforestation, illegal land use, or human rights risk after the December 31, 2020 cutoff.
If risk is greater than negligible, companies must take mitigation steps or exclude the product from the market.
If required EUDR data is missing, companies must not place the product on the EU market or export it.
This most often occurs when geolocation coordinates, legality documentation, or supplier data cannot be verified. In these cases, the product is considered non-compliant and cannot proceed to market, creating potential delays, disruptions, and regulatory exposure.