How to Prove Packaging Recyclability Under the PPWR
Learn how to prove packaging recyclability under the PPWR, including the upcoming performance grades and how to prepare your technical documentation.

You buy cardboard boxes, tape them up, and ship them across borders. Until now, you only had to report the total weight of that material to national authorities. The new European packaging laws change that dynamic entirely. Soon, you must mathematically prove your packaging can be recycled, or it will be barred from entering the European Union.
Understanding exactly how to prove packaging recyclability is critical for e-commerce operators. The regulation introduces a strict grading system that will dictate whether your shipping materials are legally permitted on the market and how much you will pay in waste management fees. Here is exactly how the new assessment process works and what evidence you need to gather.
- Packaging will be graded from A to C based on its Design for Recycling criteria.
- Materials scoring below 70 percent recyclability will be banned from 2030.
- You must maintain concrete proof of recyclability within your technical documentation.
- Recyclability grades will directly impact your financial costs through eco-modulated EPR fees.
What are the PPWR recyclability performance grades?
The days of making vague claims that a mailer bag is "100 percent recyclable" are over. The new law establishes strict requirements for recyclable packaging under Article 6. From 1 January 2030, all packaging must be assessed and assigned a formal recyclability performance grade based on its material composition.
The recyclability performance grades listed in Annex II divide packaging into three acceptable tiers. Grade A packaging is 95 percent or more recyclable by weight. Grade B packaging is 80 percent or more recyclable. Grade C packaging is 70 percent or more recyclable.
Design theory is no longer enough. If your shipping materials score below a 70 percent recyclability threshold in your technical documentation, the European Union will classify them as technically non-recyclable and ban them from the single market entirely.
This grading system will become even more aggressive over time. By 1 January 2038, the law phases out Grade C completely. From that date, only packaging achieving Grade A or Grade B will be legally permitted for sale or distribution within the European Union.
How do you officially assess and document recyclability?
You cannot just guess your packaging's grade. If your business acts as the legal manufacturer under the new rules or importer, you must calculate the recyclability performance using specific Design for Recycling criteria. These criteria dictate how easily the packaging components can be separated, sorted, and processed into high-quality secondary raw materials.
The European Commission is mandated to publish the exact harmonised criteria and assessment methodology via delegated acts by 1 January 2028. However, national authorities are not waiting for 2028 to enforce these principles. For example, Germany's Central Agency Packaging Register (ZSVR) updated the 2025 minimum standard for determining recyclability to intentionally mirror the upcoming European classification system, forcing companies to adapt early.
To prove your compliance, you must detail this assessment inside your Annex VII technical documentation. This file must contain the exact material weights, component breakdowns, and the final calculated recyclability grade, serving as the legal foundation for your Declaration of Conformity.
What does "recycled at scale" mean for 2035?
Proving that a custom polybag is technically capable of being recycled in a laboratory is only the first hurdle. The law requires that the material is actively recovered in the real world.
From 1 January 2035, a new factor is added to your assessment: the "recycled at scale" requirement. This means your packaging must be actively collected, sorted, and recycled across established infrastructure representing a significant portion of the European market. If you design a novel, complex material that fits a Grade A profile on paper but local municipal facilities cannot physically process it, that packaging will fail the assessment and lose its market access.
How does your recyclability grade affect EPR fees?
The most immediate impact of your recyclability assessment is financial. Understanding how EPR and PPWR interact is vital because the European Union is using your technical grades to dictate your tax burden.
From mid-2029, Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) financial contributions will be eco-modulated according to these exact performance grades. This means that if you invest in mono-material packaging that achieves a Grade A rating, you will receive financial discounts on your national waste fees. Conversely, if you rely on complex, multi-material packaging that barely scrapes a Grade C, you will face severe financial penalties and inflated invoices from producer responsibility organisations.
Do not wait until 2030 to discover your packaging fails the assessment. You need to map your material data now to avoid massive cost increases and blocked shipments. Join our waitlist to automate your packaging material tracking and secure your compliance documentation before the enforcement begins.
Sources:
- Regulation (EU) 2025/40 - Article 6: Recyclable packaging
- Regulation (EU) 2025/40 - Annex II: Recyclability performance grades
- ZSVR: Information about the minimum standard for determining the recyclability of packaging - 2025 edition
- The European Packaging and Packaging Waste Regulation (PPWR): A Strategic Compliance Framework for Global Supply Chains