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A Digital Product Passport is a digital record that contains structured information about a product, such as:
Access is commonly provided through QR codes or NFC tags attached to the product, packaging, or documentation — linking users to a digital page that presents the passport information.
ESPR is the regulatory framework that sets sustainability and information requirements for product groups. DPPs are one mechanism used to deliver and standardize the required information.
The exact DPP requirements (data fields, scope, and timelines) are expected to vary by product category, typically defined through delegated acts.
The EU’s goals include:
For companies, DPPs are also a way to demonstrate ESPR compliance with fewer manual requests and less fragmented documentation.
While exact fields depend on the product group, many DPPs typically require:
If you want a “do this now” baseline, ensure you can reliably maintain:
Digital Product Passports are expected to apply to many sectors, including:
More categories will be added over time, and requirements will evolve as standards mature.
Tracii helps brands and manufacturers create ESPR-aligned Digital Product Passports by providing:
This helps teams reduce manual work, improve data quality, and scale transparency without reinventing tooling for every product line.
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