Paint Products in the EU & UK
CERT Technical
Paint Products in the EU & UK

CERT provides specialist regulatory and technical support across all product sectors, including paint products. 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.

Paints and coatings in the EU & UK are regulated as chemical products, with strict rules on safety, composition, VOCs and hazard communication. Paints and coatings must meet general product‑safety expectations, comply with stringent chemical and environmental rules, and provide clear information so users can store, apply, and dispose of products safely in their intended settings.

What counts as paint product

Paint products include decorative and protective coatings, primers, varnishes, wood stains, metal finishes and related coating systems in liquid or powder form for consumer, professional or industrial use.

Ranges can extend from low‑VOC decorative wall paints for DIY users to high‑performance industrial coatings, vehicle refinishing products and specialist anti‑corrosion or fire‑protective systems with more demanding technical and legal requirements.

The intended substrate, application method and user type determine whether the product is treated as a consumer article, an industrial mixture, or a dangerous good subject to transport of dangerous goods rules.

Core obligations include:

  • Meet general product‑safety requirements so that foreseeable use does not create unacceptable risks (flammability, inhalation, skin/eye contact, accidental ingestion), particularly for indoor use and vulnerable users.

  • Control hazardous substances and VOCs by complying with REACH/UK REACH restrictions and the VOC Paints Directive (2004/42/EC and UK equivalents), including category‑specific VOC limits and formaldehyde/heavy‑metal restrictions.

  • Classify and label mixtures correctly under CLP/GB CLP, using standard hazard pictograms, signal words, hazard and precautionary statements, plus any mandated supplementary information for specific ingredients.

  • Provide accurate, non‑misleading information and claims, including VOC content in g/l where required, and ensuring “low‑VOC”, “solvent‑free”, “eco”, or similar green claims are supported by evidence and consistent with composition and regulatory limits.

  • Maintain adequate technical documentation, covering formulations, raw‑material data, VOC calculations, classification rationale, test reports and records needed to demonstrate compliance to regulators and customers.

  • Ensure packaging, storage, and disposal information is clear, with durable identification (brand, product name, batch/lot, nominal volume) and instructions on ventilation, safe handling, storage conditions and disposal of residues and containers.

Markings and information

Paints and coatings must be formulated and packaged so foreseeable use does not present undue risks from flammability, inhalation, skin or eye contact, or accidental ingestion, with particular attention to indoor applications and vulnerable users.

Performance expectations typically include coverage and hiding power, drying and curing behaviour, adhesion to intended substrates, durability such as scrub or weather resistance, and any claimed special properties such as anti‑corrosion or fire‑retardant performance.

Clear information should explain ventilation needs, compatible substrates, mixing and thinning, application conditions, drying and re‑coat times, and safe cleaning and disposal of tools and leftover product. Paint manufacturers must manage controls on solvents, pigments, binders, additives and preservatives, including restrictions on substances of very high concern and other hazardous ingredients under REACH/UK REACH and related legislation.

Limits on volatile organic compounds (VOCs) apply to many decorative paints and varnishes under Directive 2004/42/EC and its UK transposition, driving ongoing reduction of hazardous solvents and problematic additives. Labelling, safety data sheets and marketing claims (for example “low‑odour”, “low‑VOC”, “solvent‑free”, “child‑safe” or “eco”) should accurately reflect composition, hazard classification and exposure profile so users are not misled about health or environmental impacts.

Paint containers need durable identification of brand, product name, batch or lot number, nominal volume and key safety and handling information appropriate to the product’s hazard profile and target user. Where mixtures are classified as hazardous, CLP/GB CLP rules require standardised hazard pictograms, signal words, hazard and precautionary statements and any required supplementary information, alongside clear directions for safe storage, use and disposal.

How we can help

We can help you map the right combination of product‑safety, chemical, environmental and transport requirements for decorative, professional and industrial products placed on the EU and UK markets.

Support typically includes regulatory scoping of ranges, review of formulations and raw‑material data against legal and retailer lists, advice on VOC and hazardous‑mixture classification, review of labels and safety data sheets, and structured checks to ensure that technical performance claims, safety information and sustainability messages are accurate, consistent and supported by appropriate evidence.

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

Slide