Electronics & smartphone Digital Product Passport software
Since 20 June 2025, smartphones and tablets sold in the EU must meet the Ecodesign regulation (EU) 2023/1670 — including a repairability class, spare-part availability and battery endurance. dpp.gs turns those requirements into a structured passport behind a GS1 QR, ready for the broader electronics DPP under the ESPR.
What the electronics rules require
Regulation (EU) 2023/1670 sets ecodesign requirements for smartphones and tablets and applies from 20 June 2025. It mandates an EU repairability class, a free-fall/reliability index, a battery enduring at least 800 charge cycles while retaining 80% capacity, availability of spare parts for years after the last unit is sold, and a minimum operating-system / security-update period. The accompanying energy and repair information is published via the EPREL database and an energy label.
Under the ESPR, electronics and ICT are expected to need a fuller digital product passport. dpp.gs already structures repairability, durability, spare parts, energy class and RoHS/WEEE/REACH so you build once and extend as the rules expand.
What dpp.gs gives you for electronics
Repairability & durability class
EU repairability/durability class plus the free-fall reliability (FR) index from Reg 2023/1670.
Battery endurance
Record ≥800-cycle endurance at 80% capacity — the Ecodesign battery requirement.
Spare parts & availability
A structured spare-part list with availability windows and delivery times.
OS & security updates
The guaranteed operating-system and security-update period for the device.
Energy class & EPREL
EPREL energy class and a deep link, alongside RoHS, WEEE and REACH status.
USB-C common charger
Record common-charger (USB-C) conformance under the radio-equipment rules.
Live electronics passport
A repairable smartphone passport with repairability class, spare-part list, battery endurance, update period and energy class.
Frequently asked questions
When did the smartphone Ecodesign rules start?
Regulation (EU) 2023/1670 applies from 20 June 2025 for smartphones and tablets placed on the EU market, covering repairability, durability, battery endurance, spare parts and software-update periods.
Is there a full electronics digital product passport yet?
A dedicated electronics DPP is expected under the ESPR. The current Ecodesign and energy-labelling rules already require much of the data; dpp.gs structures all of it now so you extend rather than rebuild.
What is the repairability class?
An EU-defined class scoring how easily a device can be repaired — based on disassembly, spare-part availability and price, and repair information. dpp.gs stores the class and the FR (free-fall reliability) index.
Does dpp.gs link to EPREL?
Yes. You can store the EPREL energy class and a deep link to the product's EPREL record alongside the rest of the passport.
Create an electronics passport free
Repairability, spare parts, battery endurance and energy class in one GS1 passport. Two GTINs free.
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