BBQ in the EU & UK
CERT Technical
BBQ in the EU & UK

CERT provides specialist regulatory and technical support across all product sectors, including BBQs. We help businesses navigate complex EU and UK requirements with clarity and confidence.

Interested in tailored support? Register your project interest so we can arrange a complimentary call with the relevant regulatory professional in our team.

BBQs supplied in the EU and UK sit at the intersection of general product safety law, gas‑appliance or solid‑fuel rules, and outdoor‑equipment standards. They must be correctly scoped, designed, tested, labelled, and documented so they are safe in realistic outdoor conditions and clearly communicate residual burn, fire, and carbon‑monoxide risks.

What counts as BBQ

BBQ equipment includes gas barbecues and outdoor gas grills, charcoal and solid‑fuel BBQs and smokers, portable and disposable BBQs for picnics and camping, and fixed or modular outdoor cooking stations with side burners or planchas.

Key differentiators are fuel type (LPG, natural gas, charcoal, pellets), installation (portable, trolley, built‑in, or connected to fixed gas pipework), and intended setting (domestic gardens and balconies, communal areas, or catering use), which together determine whether the product is a gas appliance under the Gas Appliances Regulation, a solid‑fuel appliance managed mainly under GPSR and appliance standards, or an accessory such as stands or windshields with separate expectations.

Core obligations include:

  • Confirming whether the product is in scope of gas‑appliance, electrical, pressure‑equipment or solid‑fuel rules, and identifying the correct route for CE/UKCA marking or other conformity assessment where required.

  • Designing the BBQ to meet essential safety and performance requirements on construction, stability, combustion quality, temperature limits, ignition, shut‑off, materials, and protection against burns, fire and carbon‑monoxide exposure, using relevant EN and national standards as the primary benchmark where practicable.

  • Maintaining a technical file and supporting documentation, including risk assessments tailored to realistic outdoor use, bills of materials and drawings, test reports, Certificates of Conformity, inspection records and change‑control/variant tracking.

  • Implementing quality control, factory production control and traceability systems, including monitoring of critical components such as burners, regulators, hoses, valves, ignition systems, coatings and load‑bearing structures, and ensuring appropriate oversight of suppliers and subcontractors.

  • Preparing and retaining formal declarations (e.g. EU/UK Declarations of Conformity), instructions and safety information that reflect the actual design, fuel categories and intended uses, and align with the markings and symbols applied to the appliance and its packaging.

Markings and information

BBQs must bear durable and legible product identification, including model or type designation, manufacturer name and postal address, and, where applicable, importer details for EU/UK‑placed products. Marking must remain visible and readable during the foreseeable life of the product and should allow clear linkage to the corresponding technical documentation and declarations.

Depending on the fuel and design, BBQs normally require: clear indication of fuel type and, for gas appliances, gas category, supply pressure and relevant connection information; prominent warnings such as “outdoor use only” and “do not use indoors, in tents, vehicles or enclosed spaces”, with explicit reference to carbon‑monoxide hazards where appropriate; instructions covering assembly and installation (including stability and clearances), lighting and shut‑down procedures, pre‑heating and cooking guidance, ventilation and minimum distance from combustibles, and safe placement on stable, non‑combustible surfaces; maintenance guidance for cleaning burners, drip trays and grease channels, checking hoses, regulators and connections, and inspecting for damage or corrosion before each season or after storage or transport; where required under gas‑appliance or other legislation, CE/UKCA marking, notified‑body or approved‑body details, and data‑plate information consistent with the tested configuration and the contents of the declaration of conformity.

All information must be permanent, conspicuous and legible, provided in appropriate national language(s), and presented in a way that does not obscure or contradict other mandatory warnings or create a misleading impression of safety or performance.

How we can help

We help brands map the correct combination of GPSR, Gas Appliances Regulation (and UK equivalents), electrical and EMC rules for hybrid products, and outdoor‑equipment standards for gas and solid‑fuel BBQs, burners, and cooking stations.

Support typically includes risk assessments tailored to outdoor use, test report reviews e.g. EN 498, EN 484, EN 497, and related standards, development and review of instructions and construction manuals, and detailed checks of markings, warnings, and artwork so product information accurately reflects hazards, fuel categories, and safe‑use expectations.

With tailored, end‑to‑end solutions, CERT helps you launch BBQs that are safe, compliant, and ready for market—backed by clear documentation and expert support.

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