One of the most common misunderstandings in EU product compliance is the difference between an EU Authorised Representative (EC REP) and an importer. Many manufacturers assume: 👉 “The importer will handle everything.”
This assumption is dangerous. Because under EU law, both roles have clearly defined – and very different – responsibilities. Misunderstanding this can lead to:
- compliance gaps
- unclear liability
- enforcement risks
What Is an Importer?
An importer is a company established in the EU that places a product from a non-EU country on the EU market.
👉 Key function: The importer is the economic operator that introduces the product into the EU.
What Is an EC REP (EU Authorised Representative)?
An EC REP is a company or person in the EU appointed by the manufacturer through a formal mandate.
👉 Key function: The EC REP acts as a communication interface with authorities.
EC REP vs Importer: Core Difference
Who Is Legally Responsible?
Manufacturer
always responsible for product compliance
Importer
responsible for ensuring product compliance before placing on market
EC REP
responsible for formal communication and documentation handling
👉 Important: The EC REP does not replace the importer.
Why This Confusion Is Dangerous
If roles are unclear:
❌ documentation may be missing
❌ authorities have no clear contact
❌ responsibilities overlap or are ignored
👉 Result: Enforcement action becomes more likely.
Real-World Scenario
Typical situation: A manufacturer sells products to multiple EU distributors.
- No clear importer defined
- No EU Authorised Representative appointed
👉 Result: Authorities cannot identify:
- responsible economic operator
- documentation holder
→ escalation risk increases significantly
Importer Obligations in Detail
Importers must:
- verify CE marking
- ensure documentation exists
- confirm manufacturer compliance
- provide traceability information
- ensure correct labelling
👉 They carry real legal responsibility.
EC REP Responsibilities in Detail
The EC REP must:
- provide Declaration of Conformity
- supply technical documentation
- act as authority contact
- forward requests
- monitor deadlines
👉 Focus = formal compliance structure
Can One Company Be Both?
Yes — but with risks. A company can act as: importer AND EC REP
However, in real-world scenarios with multiple distributors or wholesalers, this setup becomes significantly more complex and risky.
Typical Scenario: Multiple Importers, One EC REP
A common structure:
- Manufacturer (non-EU)
- Several EU-based wholesalers / distributors
- Each wholesaler acts as importer
- One single EC REP is appointed
👉 Result:
- multiple importers
- one central authorised representative
Why This Creates Complexity
Each importer has independent legal obligations.
This means:
- every importer must verify compliance
- every importer must ensure proper labelling
- every importer must ensure traceability
👉 BUT:
The EC REP is:
- only one entity
- mandated by the manufacturer
- not controlled by the importers
Key Risk: Fragmented Responsibility
When multiple importers are involved:
❌ No single point of control
Each importer may:
- interpret compliance differently
- use different documentation versions
- apply different labelling
❌ Inconsistent documentation flow
The EC REP:
- holds documentation
- responds to authorities
BUT:
- importers may not use the same documents
- outdated versions may circulate
❌ Authority confusion
Authorities may ask:
👉 Who is responsible?
Possible answers:
- manufacturer (non-EU)
- importer A
- importer B
- EC REP
👉 If roles are unclear → escalation
Critical Risk: Market Surveillance Cases
In case of an investigation:
- authorities contact EC REP
- EC REP requests information from manufacturer
- BUT issue may originate from specific importer
👉 Without clear structure:
- delays occur
- responsibilities shift
- risk increases
Legal Reality
- Each importer is individually liable
- EC REP is not responsible for importer actions
- Manufacturer remains ultimately responsible
👉 This creates a multi-layer risk structure
Best Practice for Multi-Importer Setups
To avoid problems:
- Centralised documentation
one master documentation set
controlled versioning
aligned across all importers - Clear role definition
importer responsibilities documented
EC REP mandate clearly limited
no overlap - Communication structure
defined escalation path
EC REP ↔ manufacturer ↔ importers - Labelling consistency
identical information across all products
EC REP correctly listed everywhere
Why This Matters More in 2026
Authorities are focusing on:
- clear responsibility structures
- traceability
- non-EU manufacturers
- online sales channels
👉 unclear roles = red flag
Best Practice Setup
For a clean compliance structure:
- define importer clearly
- appoint EU Authorised Representative
- document responsibilities
- ensure documentation access
- establish communication process
Common Mistakes
- assuming importer replaces EU AR
- no formal mandate
- unclear documentation ownership
- missing traceability
- inconsistent labelling
Conclusion: Two Roles – Different Responsibilities
The importer and the EC REP are not interchangeable.
They serve different purposes:
Importer → market access + responsibility
EC REP → communication + structure
Understanding this difference is critical to:
- avoid compliance gaps
- reduce risk
- ensure market access
If you are unsure whether your setup is compliant:
👉 We offer a structured compliance screening for non-EU manufacturers.
- review of your current setup
- identification of gaps
- clear recommendations
Contact us to assess your EU compliance status before authorities do.
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